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go1.22-race-1.22.1-150000.1.9.1 RPM for ppc64le

From OpenSuSE Leap 15.6 for ppc64le

Name: go1.22-race Distribution: SUSE Linux Enterprise 15
Version: 1.22.1 Vendor: SUSE LLC <https://www.suse.com/>
Release: 150000.1.9.1 Build date: Wed Mar 6 13:41:36 2024
Group: Development/Languages/Go Build host: ibs-power9-12
Size: 640072 Source RPM: go1.22-1.22.1-150000.1.9.1.src.rpm
Packager: https://www.suse.com/
Url: https://compiler-rt.llvm.org/
Summary: Go runtime race detector
Go runtime race detector libraries. Install this package if you wish to use the
-race option, in order to detect race conditions present in your Go programs.

Provides

Requires

License

BSD-3-Clause

Changelog

* Tue Mar 05 2024 jkowalczyk@suse.com
  - go1.22.1 (released 2024-03-05) includes security fixes to the
    crypto/x509, html/template, net/http, net/http/cookiejar, and
    net/mail packages, as well as bug fixes to the compiler, the go
    command, the runtime, the trace command, and the go/types and
    net/http packages.
    Refs boo#1218424 go1.22 release tracking
    CVE-2023-45289 CVE-2023-45290 CVE-2024-24783 CVE-2024-24784 CVE-2024-24785
    * go#65831 go#65390 boo#1220999 security: fix CVE-2024-24783 crypto/x509: Verify panics on certificates with an unknown public key algorithm
    * go#65849 go#65083 boo#1221002 security: fix CVE-2024-24784 net/mail: comments in display names are incorrectly handled
    * go#65850 go#65383 boo#1221001 security: fix CVE-2023-45290 net/http: memory exhaustion in Request.ParseMultipartForm
    * go#65859 go#65065 boo#1221000 security: fix CVE-2023-45289 net/http, net/http/cookiejar: incorrect forwarding of sensitive headers and cookies on HTTP redirect
    * go#65969 go#65697 boo#1221003 security: fix CVE-2024-24785 html/template: errors returned from MarshalJSON methods may break template escaping
    * go#65352 cmd/go: go generate fails silently when run on a package in a nested workspace module
    * go#65471 internal/testenv: TestHasGoBuild failures on the LUCI noopt builders
    * go#65474 internal/testenv: support LUCI mobile builders in testenv tests
    * go#65577 cmd/trace/v2: goroutine analysis page doesn't identify goroutines consistently
    * go#65618 cmd/compile: Go 1.22 build fails with 1.21 PGO profile on internal/saferio change
    * go#65619 cmd/compile: Go 1.22 changes support for modules that declare go 1.0
    * go#65641 cmd/cgo/internal/testsanitizers,x/build: LUCI clang15 builders failing
    * go#65644 runtime: crash in race detector when execution tracer reads from CPU profile buffer
    * go#65728 go/types: nil pointer dereference in Alias.Underlying()
    * go#65759 net/http: context cancellation can leave HTTP client with deadlocked HTTP/1.1 connections in Go1.22
    * go#65760 runtime: Go 1.22.0 fails to build from source on armv7 Alpine Linux
    * go#65818 runtime: go1.22.0 test with -race will SIGSEGV or SIGBUS or Bad Pointer
    * go#65852 cmd/go: "missing ziphash" error with go.work
    * go#65883 runtime: scheduler sometimes starves a runnable goroutine on wasm platforms
* Tue Feb 27 2024 jkowalczyk@suse.com
  - Packaging improvements:
    * Use %patch -P N instead of deprecated %patchN
* Tue Feb 06 2024 jkowalczyk@suse.com
  - Packaging improvements:
    * boo#1219988 ensure VERSION file is present in GOROOT
      as required by go tool dist and go tool distpack
* Tue Feb 06 2024 jkowalczyk@suse.com
  - go1.22 (released 2024-02-06) is a major release of Go.
    go1.22.x minor releases will be provided through February 2024.
    https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/Go-Release-Cycle
    go1.22 arrives six months after go1.21. Most of its changes are
    in the implementation of the toolchain, runtime, and libraries.
    As always, the release maintains the Go 1 promise of
    compatibility. We expect almost all Go programs to continue to
    compile and run as before.
    Refs boo#1218424 go1.22 release tracking
    * Language change: go1.22 makes two changes to for loops.
      Previously, the variables declared by a for loop were created
      once and updated by each iteration. In go1.22, each iteration
      of the loop creates new variables, to avoid accidental sharing
      bugs. The transition support tooling described in the proposal
      continues to work in the same way it did in Go 1.21.
    * Language change: For loops may now range over integers
    * Language change: go1.22 includes a preview of a language change
      we are considering for a future version of Go:
      range-over-function iterators. Building with
      GOEXPERIMENT=rangefunc enables this feature.
    * go command: Commands in workspaces can now use a vendor
      directory containing the dependencies of the workspace. The
      directory is created by go work vendor, and used by build
      commands when the -mod flag is set to vendor, which is the
      default when a workspace vendor directory is present.  Note
      that the vendor directory's contents for a workspace are
      different from those of a single module: if the directory at
      the root of a workspace also contains one of the modules in the
      workspace, its vendor directory can contain the dependencies of
      either the workspace or of the module, but not both.
    * go get is no longer supported outside of a module in the legacy
      GOPATH mode (that is, with GO111MODULE=off). Other build
      commands, such as go build and go test, will continue to work
      indefinitely for legacy GOPATH programs.
    * go mod init no longer attempts to import module requirements
      from configuration files for other vendoring tools (such as
      Gopkg.lock).
    * go test -cover now prints coverage summaries for covered
      packages that do not have their own test files. Prior to Go
      1.22 a go test -cover run for such a package would report: ?
      mymod/mypack [no test files] and now with go1.22, functions in
      the package are treated as uncovered: mymod/mypack coverage:
      0.0% of statements Note that if a package contains no
      executable code at all, we can't report a meaningful coverage
      percentage; for such packages the go tool will continue to
      report that there are no test files.
    * trace: The trace tool's web UI has been gently refreshed as
      part of the work to support the new tracer, resolving several
      issues and improving the readability of various sub-pages. The
      web UI now supports exploring traces in a thread-oriented
      view. The trace viewer also now displays the full duration of
      all system calls.  These improvements only apply for viewing
      traces produced by programs built with go1.22 or newer. A
      future release will bring some of these improvements to traces
      produced by older version of Go.
    * vet: References to loop variables The behavior of the vet tool
      has changed to match the new semantics (see above) of loop
      variables in go1.22. When analyzing a file that requires go1.22
      or newer (due to its go.mod file or a per-file build
      constraint), vetcode> no longer reports references to loop
      variables from within a function literal that might outlive the
      iteration of the loop. In Go 1.22, loop variables are created
      anew for each iteration, so such references are no longer at
      risk of using a variable after it has been updated by the loop.
    * vet: New warnings for missing values after append The vet tool
      now reports calls to append that pass no values to be appended
      to the slice, such as slice = append(slice). Such a statement
      has no effect, and experience has shown that is nearly always a
      mistake.
    * vet: New warnings for deferring time.Since The vet tool now
      reports a non-deferred call to time.Since(t) within a defer
      statement. This is equivalent to calling time.Now().Sub(t)
      before the defer statement, not when the deferred function is
      called. In nearly all cases, the correct code requires
      deferring the time.Since call.
    * vet: New warnings for mismatched key-value pairs in log/slog
      calls The vet tool now reports invalid arguments in calls to
      functions and methods in the structured logging package,
      log/slog, that accept alternating key/value pairs. It reports
      calls where an argument in a key position is neither a string
      nor a slog.Attr, and where a final key is missing its value.
    * runtime: The runtime now keeps type-based garbage collection
      metadata nearer to each heap object, improving the CPU
      performance (latency or throughput) of Go programs by
      1-3%. This change also reduces the memory overhead of the
      majority Go programs by approximately 1% by deduplicating
      redundant metadata. Some programs may see a smaller improvement
      because this change adjusts the size class boundaries of the
      memory allocator, so some objects may be moved up a size class.
      A consequence of this change is that some objects' addresses
      that were previously always aligned to a 16 byte (or higher)
      boundary will now only be aligned to an 8 byte boundary. Some
      programs that use assembly instructions that require memory
      addresses to be more than 8-byte aligned and rely on the memory
      allocator's previous alignment behavior may break, but we
      expect such programs to be rare. Such programs may be built
      with GOEXPERIMENT=noallocheaders to revert to the old metadata
      layout and restore the previous alignment behavior, but package
      owners should update their assembly code to avoid the alignment
      assumption, as this workaround will be removed in a future
      release.
    * runtime: On the windows/amd64 port, programs linking or loading
      Go libraries built with -buildmode=c-archive or
    - buildmode=c-shared can now use the SetUnhandledExceptionFilter
      Win32 function to catch exceptions not handled by the Go
      runtime. Note that this was already supported on the
      windows/386 port.
    * compiler: Profile-guided Optimization (PGO) builds can now
      devirtualize a higher proportion of calls than previously
      possible. Most programs from a representative set of Go
      programs now see between 2 and 14% improvement from enabling
      PGO.
    * compiler: The compiler now interleaves devirtualization and
      inlining, so interface method calls are better optimized.
    * compiler: go1.22 also includes a preview of an enhanced
      implementation of the compiler's inlining phase that uses
      heuristics to boost inlinability at call sites deemed
      "important" (for example, in loops) and discourage inlining at
      call sites deemed "unimportant" (for example, on panic
      paths). Building with GOEXPERIMENT=newinliner enables the new
      call-site heuristics; see issue #61502 for more info and to
      provide feedback.
    * linker: The linker's -s and -w flags are now behave more
      consistently across all platforms. The -w flag suppresses DWARF
      debug information generation. The -s flag suppresses symbol
      table generation. The -s flag also implies the -w flag, which
      can be negated with -w=0. That is, -s -w=0 will generate a
      binary with DWARF debug information generation but without the
      symbol table.
    * linker: On ELF platforms, the -B linker flag now accepts a
      special form: with -B gobuildid, the linker will generate a GNU
      build ID (the ELF NT_GNU_BUILD_ID note) derived from the Go
      build ID.
    * linker: On Windows, when building with -linkmode=internal, the
      linker now preserves SEH information from C object files by
      copying the .pdata and .xdata sections into the final
      binary. This helps with debugging and profiling binaries using
      native tools, such as WinDbg. Note that until now, C functions'
      SEH exception handlers were not being honored, so this change
      may cause some programs to behave differently.
    - linkmode=external is not affected by this change, as external
      linkers already preserve SEH information.
    * bootstrap: As mentioned in the Go 1.20 release notes, go1.22
      now requires the final point release of Go 1.20 or later for
      bootstrap. We expect that Go 1.24 will require the final point
      release of go1.22 or later for bootstrap.
    * core library: New math/rand/v2 package: go1.22 includes the
      first “v2” package in the standard library, math/rand/v2. The
      changes compared to math/rand are detailed in proposal
      go#61716. The most important changes are:
    - The Read method, deprecated in math/rand, was not carried
      forward for math/rand/v2. (It remains available in
      math/rand.) The vast majority of calls to Read should use
      crypto/rand’s Read instead. Otherwise a custom Read can be
      constructed using the Uint64 method.
    - The global generator accessed by top-level functions is
      unconditionally randomly seeded. Because the API guarantees
      no fixed sequence of results, optimizations like per-thread
      random generator states are now possible.
    - The Source interface now has a single Uint64 method; there is
      no Source64 interface.
    - Many methods now use faster algorithms that were not possible
      to adopt in math/rand because they changed the output
      streams.
    - The Intn, Int31, Int31n, Int63, and Int64n top-level
      functions and methods from math/rand are spelled more
      idiomatically in math/rand/v2: IntN, Int32, Int32N, Int64,
      and Int64N. There are also new top-level functions and
      methods Uint32, Uint32N, Uint64, Uint64N, Uint, and UintN.
    - The new generic function N is like Int64N or Uint64N but
      works for any integer type. For example a random duration
      from 0 up to 5 minutes is rand.N(5*time.Minute).
    - The Mitchell & Reeds LFSR generator provided by math/rand’s
      Source has been replaced by two more modern pseudo-random
      generator sources: ChaCha8 PCG. ChaCha8 is a new,
      cryptographically strong random number generator roughly
      similar to PCG in efficiency. ChaCha8 is the algorithm used
      for the top-level functions in math/rand/v2. As of go1.22,
      math/rand's top-level functions (when not explicitly seeded)
      and the Go runtime also use ChaCha8 for randomness.
    - We plan to include an API migration tool in a future release,
      likely Go 1.23.
    * core library: New go/version package: The new go/version
      package implements functions for validating and comparing Go
      version strings.
    * core library: Enhanced routing patterns: HTTP routing in the
      standard library is now more expressive. The patterns used by
      net/http.ServeMux have been enhanced to accept methods and
      wildcards. This change breaks backwards compatibility in small
      ways, some obvious—patterns with "{" and "}" behave
      differently— and some less so—treatment of escaped paths has
      been improved. The change is controlled by a GODEBUG field
      named httpmuxgo121. Set httpmuxgo121=1 to restore the old
      behavior.
    * Minor changes to the library As always, there are various minor
      changes and updates to the library, made with the Go 1 promise
      of compatibility in mind. There are also various performance
      improvements, not enumerated here.
    * archive/tar: The new method Writer.AddFS adds all of the files
      from an fs.FS to the archive.
    * archive/zip: The new method Writer.AddFS adds all of the files
      from an fs.FS to the archive.
    * bufio: When a SplitFunc returns ErrFinalToken with a nil token,
      Scanner will now stop immediately. Previously, it would report
      a final empty token before stopping, which was usually not
      desired. Callers that do want to report a final empty token can
      do so by returning []byte{} rather than nil.
    * cmp: The new function Or returns the first in a sequence of
      values that is not the zero value.
    * crypto/tls: ConnectionState.ExportKeyingMaterial will now
      return an error unless TLS 1.3 is in use, or the
      extended_master_secret extension is supported by both the
      server and client. crypto/tls has supported this extension
      since Go 1.20. This can be disabled with the tlsunsafeekm=1
      GODEBUG setting.
    * crypto/tls: By default, the minimum version offered by
      crypto/tls servers is now TLS 1.2 if not specified with
      config.MinimumVersion, matching the behavior of crypto/tls
      clients. This change can be reverted with the tls10server=1
      GODEBUG setting.
    * crypto/tls: By default, cipher suites without ECDHE support are
      no longer offered by either clients or servers during pre-TLS
      1.3 handshakes. This change can be reverted with the
      tlsrsakex=1 GODEBUG setting.
    * crypto/x509: The new CertPool.AddCertWithConstraint method can
      be used to add customized constraints to root certificates to
      be applied during chain building.
    * crypto/x509: On Android, root certificates will now be loaded
      from /data/misc/keychain/certs-added as well as
      /system/etc/security/cacerts.
    * crypto/x509: A new type, OID, supports ASN.1 Object Identifiers
      with individual components larger than 31 bits. A new field
      which uses this type, Policies, is added to the Certificate
      struct, and is now populated during parsing. Any OIDs which
      cannot be represented using a asn1.ObjectIdentifier will appear
      in Policies, but not in the old PolicyIdentifiers field. When
      calling CreateCertificate, the Policies field is ignored, and
      policies are taken from the PolicyIdentifiers field. Using the
      x509usepolicies=1 GODEBUG setting inverts this, populating
      certificate policies from the Policies field, and ignoring the
      PolicyIdentifiers field. We may change the default value of
      x509usepolicies in Go 1.23, making Policies the default field
      for marshaling.
    * database/sql: The new Null[T] type provide a way to scan
      nullable columns for any column types.
    * debug/elf: Constant R_MIPS_PC32 is defined for use with MIPS64
      systems. Additional R_LARCH_* constants are defined for use
      with LoongArch systems.
    * encoding: The new methods AppendEncode and AppendDecode added
      to each of the Encoding types in the packages encoding/base32,
      encoding/base64, and encoding/hex simplify encoding and
      decoding from and to byte slices by taking care of byte slice
      buffer management.
    * encoding: The methods base32.Encoding.WithPadding and
      base64.Encoding.WithPadding now panic if the padding argument
      is a negative value other than NoPadding.
    * encoding/json: Marshaling and encoding functionality now
      escapes '\b' and '\f' characters as \b and \f instead of \u0008
      and \u000c.
    * go/ast: The following declarations related to syntactic
      identifier resolution are now deprecated: Ident.Obj, Object,
      Scope, File.Scope, File.Unresolved, Importer, Package,
      NewPackage. In general, identifiers cannot be accurately
      resolved without type information. Consider, for example, the
      identifier K in T{K: ""}: it could be the name of a local
      variable if T is a map type, or the name of a field if T is a
      struct type. New programs should use the go/types package to
      resolve identifiers; see Object, Info.Uses, and Info.Defs for
      details.
    * go/ast: The new ast.Unparen function removes any enclosing
      parentheses from an expression.
    * go/types: The new Alias type represents type
      aliases. Previously, type aliases were not represented
      explicitly, so a reference to a type alias was equivalent to
      spelling out the aliased type, and the name of the alias was
      lost. The new representation retains the intermediate
      Alias. This enables improved error reporting (the name of a
      type alias can be reported), and allows for better handling of
      cyclic type declarations involving type aliases. In a future
      release, Alias types will also carry type parameter
      information. The new function Unalias returns the actual type
      denoted by an Alias type (or any other Type for that matter).
    * go/types: Because Alias types may break existing type switches
      that do not know to check for them, this functionality is
      controlled by a GODEBUG field named gotypesalias. With
      gotypesalias=0, everything behaves as before, and Alias types
      are never created. With gotypesalias=1, Alias types are created
      and clients must expect them. The default is gotypesalias=0. In
      a future release, the default will be changed to
      gotypesalias=1. Clients of go/types are urged to adjust their
      code as soon as possible to work with gotypesalias=1 to
      eliminate problems early.
    * go/types: The Info struct now exports the FileVersions map
      which provides per-file Go version information.
    * go/types: The new helper method PkgNameOf returns the local
      package name for the given import declaration.
    * go/types: The implementation of SizesFor has been adjusted to
      compute the same type sizes as the compiler when the compiler
      argument for SizesFor is "gc". The default Sizes implementation
      used by the type checker is now types.SizesFor("gc", "amd64").
    * go/types: The start position (Pos) of the lexical environment
      block (Scope) that represents a function body has changed: it
      used to start at the opening curly brace of the function body,
      but now starts at the function's func token.
    * html/template: Javascript template literals may now contain Go
      template actions, and parsing a template containing one will no
      longer return ErrJSTemplate. Similarly the GODEBUG setting
      jstmpllitinterp no longer has any effect.
    * io: The new SectionReader.Outer method returns the ReaderAt,
      offset, and size passed to NewSectionReader.
    * log/slog: The new SetLogLoggerLevel function controls the level
      for the bridge between the `slog` and `log` packages. It sets
      the minimum level for calls to the top-level `slog` logging
      functions, and it sets the level for calls to `log.Logger` that
      go through `slog`.
    * math/big: The new method Rat.FloatPrec computes the number of
      fractional decimal digits required to represent a rational
      number accurately as a floating-point number, and whether
      accurate decimal representation is possible in the first place.
    * net: When io.Copy copies from a TCPConn to a UnixConn, it will
      now use Linux's splice(2) system call if possible, using the
      new method TCPConn.WriteTo.
    * net: The Go DNS Resolver, used when building with
      "-tags=netgo", now searches for a matching name in the Windows
      hosts file, located at %SystemRoot%\System32\drivers\etc\hosts,
      before making a DNS query.
    * net/http: The new functions ServeFileFS, FileServerFS, and
      NewFileTransportFS are versions of the existing ServeFile,
      FileServer, and NewFileTransport, operating on an fs.FS.
    * net/http: The HTTP server and client now reject requests and
      responses containing an invalid empty Content-Length
      header. The previous behavior may be restored by setting
      GODEBUG field httplaxcontentlength=1.
    * net/http: The new method Request.PathValue returns path
      wildcard values from a request and the new method
      Request.SetPathValue sets path wildcard values on a request.
    * net/http/cgi: When executing a CGI process, the PATH_INFO
      variable is now always set to the empty string or a value
      starting with a / character, as required by RFC 3875. It was
      previously possible for some combinations of Handler.Root and
      request URL to violate this requirement.
    * net/netip: The new AddrPort.Compare method compares two
      AddrPorts.
    * os: On Windows, the Stat function now follows all reparse
      points that link to another named entity in the system. It was
      previously only following IO_REPARSE_TAG_SYMLINK and
      IO_REPARSE_TAG_MOUNT_POINT reparse points.
    * os: On Windows, passing O_SYNC to OpenFile now causes write
      operations to go directly to disk, equivalent to O_SYNC on Unix
      platforms.
    * os: On Windows, the ReadDir, File.ReadDir, File.Readdir, and
      File.Readdirnames functions now read directory entries in
      batches to reduce the number of system calls, improving
      performance up to 30%.
    * os: When io.Copy copies from a File to a net.UnixConn, it will
      now use Linux's sendfile(2) system call if possible, using the
      new method File.WriteTo.
    * os/exec: On Windows, LookPath now ignores empty entries
      in %PATH%, and returns ErrNotFound (instead of ErrNotExist)
      if no executable file extension is found to resolve an
      otherwise-unambiguous name.
    * os/exec: On Windows, Command and Cmd.Start no longer call
      LookPath if the path to the executable is already absolute and
      has an executable file extension. In addition, Cmd.Start no
      longer writes the resolved extension back to the Path field, so
      it is now safe to call the String method concurrently with a
      call to Start.
    * reflect: The Value.IsZero method will now return true for a
      floating-point or complex negative zero, and will return true
      for a struct value if a blank field (a field named _) somehow
      has a non-zero value. These changes make IsZero consistent with
      comparing a value to zero using the language == operator.
    * reflect: The PtrTo function is deprecated, in favor of
      PointerTo.
    * reflect: The new function TypeFor returns the Type that
      represents the type argument T. Previously, to get the
      reflect.Type value for a type, one had to use
      reflect.TypeOf((*T)(nil)).Elem(). This may now be written as
      reflect.TypeFor[T]().
    * runtime/metrics: Four new histogram metrics
      /sched/pauses/stopping/gc:seconds,
      /sched/pauses/stopping/other:seconds,
      /sched/pauses/total/gc:seconds, and
      /sched/pauses/total/other:seconds provide additional details
      about stop-the-world pauses. The "stopping" metrics report the
      time taken from deciding to stop the world until all goroutines
      are stopped. The "total" metrics report the time taken from
      deciding to stop the world until it is started again.
    * runtime/metrics: The /gc/pauses:seconds metric is deprecated,
      as it is equivalent to the new /sched/pauses/total/gc:seconds
      metric.
    * runtime/metrics: /sync/mutex/wait/total:seconds now includes
      contention on runtime-internal locks in addition to sync.Mutex
      and sync.RWMutex.
    * runtime/pprof: Mutex profiles now scale contention by the
      number of goroutines blocked on the mutex. This provides a more
      accurate representation of the degree to which a mutex is a
      bottleneck in a Go program. For instance, if 100 goroutines are
      blocked on a mutex for 10 milliseconds, a mutex profile will
      now record 1 second of delay instead of 10 milliseconds of
      delay.
    * runtime/pprof: Mutex profiles also now include contention on
      runtime-internal locks in addition to sync.Mutex and
      sync.RWMutex. Contention on runtime-internal locks is always
      reported at runtime._LostContendedRuntimeLock. A future release
      will add complete stack traces in these cases.
    * runtime/pprof: CPU profiles on Darwin platforms now contain the
      process's memory map, enabling the disassembly view in the
      pprof tool.
    * runtime/trace: The execution tracer has been completely
      overhauled in this release, resolving several long-standing
      issues and paving the way for new use-cases for execution
      traces.
    * runtime/trace: Execution traces now use the operating system's
      clock on most platforms (Windows excluded) so it is possible to
      correlate them with traces produced by lower-level
      components. Execution traces no longer depend on the
      reliability of the platform's clock to produce a correct
      trace. Execution traces are now partitioned regularly
      on-the-fly and as a result may be processed in a streamable
      way. Execution traces now contain complete durations for all
      system calls. Execution traces now contain information about
      the operating system threads that goroutines executed on. The
      latency impact of starting and stopping execution traces has
      been dramatically reduced. Execution traces may now begin or
      end during the garbage collection mark phase.
    * runtime/trace: To allow Go developers to take advantage of
      these improvements, an experimental trace reading package is
      available at golang.org/x/exp/trace. Note that this package
      only works on traces produced by programs built with go1.22 at
      the moment. Please try out the package and provide feedback on
      the corresponding proposal issue.
    * runtime/trace: If you experience any issues with the new
      execution tracer implementation, you may switch back to the old
      implementation by building your Go program with
      GOEXPERIMENT=noexectracer2. If you do, please file an issue,
      otherwise this option will be removed in a future release.
    * slices: The new function Concat concatenates multiple slices.
    * slices: Functions that shrink the size of a slice (Delete,
      DeleteFunc, Compact, CompactFunc, and Replace) now zero the
      elements between the new length and the old length.
    * slices: Insert now always panics if the argument i is out of
      range. Previously it did not panic in this situation if there
      were no elements to be inserted.
    * syscall: The syscall package has been frozen since Go 1.4 and
      was marked as deprecated in Go 1.11, causing many editors to
      warn about any use of the package. However, some non-deprecated
      functionality requires use of the syscall package, such as the
      os/exec.Cmd.SysProcAttr field. To avoid unnecessary complaints
      on such code, the syscall package is no longer marked as
      deprecated. The package remains frozen to most new
      functionality, and new code remains encouraged to use
      golang.org/x/sys/unix or golang.org/x/sys/windows where
      possible.
    * syscall: On Linux, the new SysProcAttr.PidFD field allows
      obtaining a PID FD when starting a child process via
      StartProcess or os/exec.
    * syscall: On Windows, passing O_SYNC to Open now causes write
      operations to go directly to disk, equivalent to O_SYNC on Unix
      platforms.
    * testing/slogtest: The new Run function uses sub-tests to run
      test cases, providing finer-grained control.
    * Ports: Darwin: On macOS on 64-bit x86 architecture (the
      darwin/amd64 port), the Go toolchain now generates
      position-independent executables (PIE) by default. Non-PIE
      binaries can be generated by specifying the -buildmode=exe
      build flag. On 64-bit ARM-based macOS (the darwin/arm64 port),
      the Go toolchain already generates PIE by default. go1.22 is
      the last release that will run on macOS 10.15 Catalina. Go 1.23
      will require macOS 11 Big Sur or later.
    * Ports: Arm: The GOARM environment variable now allows you to
      select whether to use software or hardware floating
      point. Previously, valid GOARM values were 5, 6, or 7. Now
      those same values can be optionally followed by ,softfloat or
      ,hardfloat to select the floating-point implementation. This
      new option defaults to softfloat for version 5 and hardfloat
      for versions 6 and 7.
    * Ports: Loong64: The loong64 port now supports passing function
      arguments and results using registers. The linux/loong64 port
      now supports the address sanitizer, memory sanitizer, new-style
      linker relocations, and the plugin build mode.
    * OpenBSD go1.22 adds an experimental port to OpenBSD on
      big-endian 64-bit PowerPC (openbsd/ppc64).
* Wed Jan 24 2024 jkowalczyk@suse.com
  - go1.22rc2 (released 2024-01-24) is a release candidate version of
    go1.22 cut from the master branch at the revision tagged
    go1.22rc2.
    Refs boo#1218424 go1.22 release tracking
* Tue Dec 19 2023 jkowalczyk@suse.com
  - go1.22rc1 (released 2023-12-19) is a release candidate version of
    go1.22 cut from the master branch at the revision tagged
    go1.22rc1.
    Refs boo#1218424 go1.22 release tracking
    * go1.22 now requires the final point release of go1.20 or later
      for bootstrap. Go upstream expects that go1.24 will require the
      final point release of Go 1.22 or later for bootstrap.

Files

/usr/share/go/1.22/src/runtime/race/race_linux_ppc64le.syso


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Fabrice Bellet, Wed Apr 10 00:01:49 2024