mirror of https://github.com/golang/go.git
If a signal lands on a non-Go thread, and Go code doesn't want to handle it, currently we re-raise the signal in the signal handler after uninstalling our handler, so the C code can handle it. But if there is no C signal handler and the signal is ignored, there is no need to re-raise the signal. Just ignore it. This avoids uninstalling and reinstalling our handler, which, for some reason, changes errno when TSAN is used. And TSAN does not like errno being changed in the signal handler. Not really sure if this is the bset of complete fix, but it does fix the immediate problem, and it seems a reasonable thing to do by itself. Test case is CL 581722. Fixes #66427. Change-Id: I7a043d53059f1ff4080f4fc8ef4065d76ee7d78a Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/582077 Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Michael Knyszek <mknyszek@google.com> LUCI-TryBot-Result: Go LUCI <golang-scoped@luci-project-accounts.iam.gserviceaccount.com> |
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README.vendor
Vendoring in std and cmd
========================
The Go command maintains copies of external packages needed by the
standard library in the src/vendor and src/cmd/vendor directories.
There are two modules, std and cmd, defined in src/go.mod and
src/cmd/go.mod. When a package outside std or cmd is imported
by a package inside std or cmd, the import path is interpreted
as if it had a "vendor/" prefix. For example, within "crypto/tls",
an import of "golang.org/x/crypto/cryptobyte" resolves to
"vendor/golang.org/x/crypto/cryptobyte". When a package with the
same path is imported from a package outside std or cmd, it will
be resolved normally. Consequently, a binary may be built with two
copies of a package at different versions if the package is
imported normally and vendored by the standard library.
Vendored packages are internally renamed with a "vendor/" prefix
to preserve the invariant that all packages have distinct paths.
This is necessary to avoid compiler and linker conflicts. Adding
a "vendor/" prefix also maintains the invariant that standard
library packages begin with a dotless path element.
The module requirements of std and cmd do not influence version
selection in other modules. They are only considered when running
module commands like 'go get' and 'go mod vendor' from a directory
in GOROOT/src.
Maintaining vendor directories
==============================
Before updating vendor directories, ensure that module mode is enabled.
Make sure that GO111MODULE is not set in the environment, or that it is
set to 'on' or 'auto', and if you use a go.work file, set GOWORK=off.
Requirements may be added, updated, and removed with 'go get'.
The vendor directory may be updated with 'go mod vendor'.
A typical sequence might be:
cd src # or src/cmd
go get golang.org/x/net@master
go mod tidy
go mod vendor
Use caution when passing '-u' to 'go get'. The '-u' flag updates
modules providing all transitively imported packages, not only
the module providing the target package.
Note that 'go mod vendor' only copies packages that are transitively
imported by packages in the current module. If a new package is needed,
it should be imported before running 'go mod vendor'.