Go 1.16 is not yet released. These are work-in-progress release notes. Go 1.16 is expected to be released in February 2021.
TODO
Go 1.16 adds support of 64-bit ARM architecture on macOS (also known as
Apple Silicon) with GOOS=darwin, GOARCH=arm64.
Like the darwin/amd64 port, the darwin/arm64
port supports cgo, internal and external linking, c-archive,
c-shared, and pie build modes, and the race
detector.
The iOS port, which was previously darwin/arm64, is now
moved to ios/arm64. GOOS=ios implies the
darwin build tag, just as GOOS=android
implies the linux build tag.
The ios/amd64 port is added, targetting the iOS simulator
running on AMD64-based macOS.
Go now supports the 64-bit ARM architecture on NetBSD (the
netbsd/arm64 port).
As announced in the Go 1.15 release notes,
Go 1.16 drops support for x87 mode compilation (GO386=387).
Support for non-SSE2 processors is now available using soft float
mode (GO386=softfloat).
Users running on non-SSE2 processors should replace GO386=387
with GO386=softfloat.
TODO
TODO
Build commands like go build and go
test no longer modify go.mod and go.sum
by default. Instead, they report an error if a module requirement or checksum
needs to be added or updated (as if the -mod=readonly flag were
used). Module requirements and sums may be adjusted with go
mod tidy or go get.
go install now accepts arguments with
version suffixes (for example, go install
example.com/cmd@v1.0.0). This causes go
install to build and install packages in module-aware mode,
ignoring the go.mod file in the current directory or any parent
directory, if there is one. This is useful for installing executables without
affecting the dependencies of the main module.
TODO: write and link to section in golang.org/ref/mod
TODO: write and link to blog post
go install, with or without a version suffix (as
described above), is now the recommended way to build and install packages in
module mode. go get should be used with the
-d flag to adjust the current module's dependencies without
building packages, and use of go get to build and
install packages is deprecated. In a future release, the -d flag
will always be enabled.
retract directives may now be used in a go.mod file
to indicate that certain published versions of the module should not be used
by other modules. A module author may retract a version after a severe problem
is discovered or if the version was published unintentionally.
TODO: write and link to section in golang.org/ref/mod
TODO: write and link to tutorial or blog post
The go mod vendor
and go mod tidy subcommands now accept
the -e flag, which instructs them to proceed despite errors in
resolving missing packages.
go test
When using go test, a test that
calls os.Exit(0) during execution of a test function
will now be considered to fail.
This will help catch cases in which a test calls code that calls
os.Exit(0) and thereby stops running all future tests.
If a TestMain function calls os.Exit(0)
that is still considered to be a passing test.
The go get -insecure flag is
deprecated and will be removed in a future version. This flag permits
fetching from repositories and resolving custom domains using insecure
schemes such as HTTP, and also bypassess module sum validation using the
checksum database. To permit the use of insecure schemes, use the
GOINSECURE environment variable instead. To bypass module
sum validation, use GOPRIVATE or GONOSUMDB.
See go help environment for details.
go get
go get example.com/mod@patch now
requires that some version of example.com/mod already be
required by the main module.
(However, go get -u=patch continues
to patch even newly-added dependencies.)
all pattern
When the main module's go.mod file
declares go 1.16 or higher, the all
package pattern now matches only those packages that are transitively imported
by a package or test found in the main module. (Packages imported by tests
of packages imported by the main module are no longer included.) This is
the same set of packages retained
by go mod vendor since Go 1.11.
-toolexec build flag
When the -toolexec build flag is specified to use a program when
invoking toolchain programs like compile or asm, the environment variable
TOOLEXEC_IMPORTPATH is now set to the import path of the package
being built.
-i build flag
The -i flag accepted by go build,
go install, and go test is
now deprecated. The -i flag instructs the go command
to install packages imported by packages named on the command line. Since
the build cache was introduced in Go 1.10, the -i flag no longer
has a significant effect on build times, and it causes errors when the install
directory is not writable.
list command
When the -export flag is specified, the BuildID
field is now set to the build ID of the compiled package. This is equivalent
to running go tool buildid on
go list -exported -f {{.Export},
but without the extra step.
The cgo tool will no longer try to translate C struct bitfields into Go struct fields, even if their size can be represented in Go. The order in which C bitfields appear in memory is implementation dependent, so in some cases the cgo tool produced results that were silently incorrect.
TODO
TODO
On Linux, the runtime now defaults to releasing memory to the
operating system promptly (using MADV_DONTNEED), rather
than lazily when the operating system is under memory pressure
(using MADV_FREE). This means process-level memory
statistics like RSS will more accurately reflect the amount of
physical memory being used by Go processes. Systems that are
currently using GODEBUG=madvdontneed=1 to improve
memory monitoring behavior no longer need to set this environment
variable.
TODO
This release includes additional improvements to the Go linker, reducing linker resource usage (both time and memory) and improving code robustness/maintainability. These changes form the second half of a two-release project to modernize the Go linker.
The linker changes in 1.16 extend the 1.15 improvements to all
supported architecture/OS combinations (the 1.15 performance improvements
were primarily focused on ELF-based OSes and
amd64 architectures). For a representative set of
large Go programs, linking is 20-35% faster than 1.15 and requires
5-15% less memory on average for linux/amd64, with larger
improvements for other architectures and OSes.
TODO: update with final numbers later in the release.
On Windows, go build -buildmode=c-shared now generates Windows
ASLR DLLs by default. ASLR can be disabled with --ldflags=-aslr=false.
TODO: mention significant additions like new packages (io/fs),
new proposal-scoped features (//go:embed), and so on
TODO: when the "Minor changes to the library" section is close to completion, decide if any changes are worth factoring out and highlighting in "Core library"
As always, there are various minor changes and updates to the library, made with the Go 1 promise of compatibility in mind.
TODO: complete this section, resolve TODOs below, add missing entries
The crypto/dsa package is now deprecated.
See issue #40337.
New will now panic if separate calls to the hash generation function fail to return new values. Previously, the behavior was undefined and invalid outputs were sometimes generated.
I/O operations on closing or closed TLS connections can now be detected using
the new ErrClosed error. A typical use
would be errors.Is(err, net.ErrClosed). In earlier releases
the only way to reliably detect this case was to match the string returned
by the Error method with "tls: use of closed connection".
A default deadline is set in Close before sending the close notify alert, in order to prevent blocking indefinitely.
(*Conn).HandshakeContext was added to allow the user to control cancellation of an in-progress TLS Handshake. The context provided is propagated into the ClientHelloInfo and CertificateRequestInfo structs and accessible through the new (*ClientHelloInfo).Context and (*CertificateRequestInfo).Context methods respectively. Canceling the context after the handshake has finished has no effect.
Clients now ensure that the server selects an ALPN protocol from the list advertised by the client.
TLS servers will now prefer other AEAD cipher suites (such as ChaCha20Poly1305)
over AES-GCM cipher suites if either the client or server doesn't have AES hardware
support, unless the application set both
Config.PreferServerCipherSuites
and Config.CipherSuites
or there are no other AEAD cipher suites supported.
The client is assumed not to have AES hardware support if it does not signal a
preference for AES-GCM cipher suites.
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/246637: make config.Clone return nil if the source is nil
ParseCertificate and
CreateCertificate both
now enforce string encoding restrictions for the fields DNSNames,
EmailAddresses, and URIs. These fields can only
contain strings with characters within the ASCII range.
CreateCertificate now verifies the generated certificate's signature using the signer's public key. If the signature is invalid, an error is returned, instead of a malformed certificate.
A number of additional fields have been added to the CertificateRequest type. These fields are now parsed in ParseCertificateRequest and marshalled in CreateCertificateRequest.
DSA signature verification is no longer supported. Note that DSA signature generation was never supported. See issue #40337.
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/257257: return additional chains from Verify on Windows
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/262343: add Unwrap to SystemRootsError
The error message for SyntaxError now begins with "json: ", matching the other errors in the package.
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/234818: allow semicolon in field key / struct tag
The encoder has always taken care to avoid using namespace prefixes
beginning with xml, which are reserved by the XML
specification.
Now, following the specification more closely, that check is
case-insensitive, so that prefixes beginning
with XML, XmL, and so on are also
avoided.
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/240014: add Func
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/261577: add a new ReadSeekCloser interface
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/264460: expose std via new Default function
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/264297: set local to true if network is any of "unix", or "unixgram"
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/247477: return overflow errors in Reader.ReadForm
The case of I/O on a closed network connection, or I/O on a network
connection that is closed before any of the I/O completes, can now
be detected using the new ErrClosed error.
A typical use would be errors.Is(err, net.ErrClosed).
In earlier releases the only way to reliably detect this case was to
match the string returned by the Error method
with "use of closed network connection".
In previous Go releases the default TCP listener backlog size on Linux systems,
set by /proc/sys/net/core/somaxconn, was limited to a maximum of 65535.
On Linux kernel version 4.1 and above, the maximum is now 4294967295.
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/238629: prefer /etc/hosts over DNS when no /etc/nsswitch.conf is present
In the net/http package, the
behavior of StripPrefix
has been changed to strip the prefix from the request URL's
RawPath field in addition to its Path field.
In past releases, only the Path field was trimmed, and so if the
request URL contained any escaped characters the URL would be modified to
have mismatched Path and RawPath fields.
In Go 1.16, StripPrefix trims both fields.
If there are escaped characters in the prefix part of the request URL the
handler serves a 404 instead of its previous behavior of invoking the
underlying handler with a mismatched Path/RawPath pair.
The net/http package now rejects HTTP range requests
of the form "Range": "bytes=--N" where "-N" is a negative suffix length, for
example "Range": "bytes=--2". It now replies with a 416 "Range Not Satisfiable" response.
Cookies set with SameSiteDefaultMode now behave according to the current
spec (no attribute is set) instead of generating a SameSite key without a value.
The net/http package now uses the new
(*tls.Conn).HandshakeContext
with the Request context
when performing TLS handshakes in the client or server.
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/250039: set Content-Length:0 for empty PATCH requests as with POST, PATCH
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/249440: match http scheme when selecting http_proxy
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/260637: flush ReverseProxy immediately if Content-Length is -1
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/247257: adds support for the SMTPUTF8 extension
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/242998: export errFinished as ErrProcessDone
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/219640: add NotifyContext to cancel context using system signals
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/264397: validate patterns in Match, Glob
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/264397: validate patterns in Match, Glob
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/248341: support multiple keys in struct tags
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/37222: make stack traces of endless recursion print only top and bottom 50
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/242258: add 24 byte allocation size class
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/254659: implement GODEBUG=inittrace=1 support
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/249677: provide Addr method for errors from SetPanicOnFault
ParseFloat now uses
the Eisel-Lemire
algorithm, improving performance by up to a factor of 2. This can
also speed up decoding textual formats like encoding/json.
SysProcAttr on Windows has a new NoInheritHandles field that disables inheriting handles when creating a new process.
DLLError on Windows now has an Unwrap function for unwrapping its underlying error.
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/210639: support POSIX semantics for Linux syscalls
TODO: https://golang.org/cl/254257: allow newlines inside action delimiters
A new CommentNode
was added to the parse tree. The Mode
field in the parse.Tree enables access to it.
The slim timezone data format is now used for the timezone database in
$GOROOT/lib/time/zoneinfo.zip and the embedded copy in this
package. This reduces the size of the timezone database by about 350 KB.
The unicode package and associated
support throughout the system has been upgraded from Unicode 12.0.0 to
Unicode 13.0.0,
which adds 5,930 new characters, including four new scripts, and 55 new emoji.
Unicode 13.0.0 also designates plane 3 (U+30000-U+3FFFF) as the tertiary
ideographic plane.