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authorMark Freeman <mark@golang.org>2025-05-12 13:59:27 -0400
committerGopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>2025-05-14 13:18:06 -0700
commita24f4db2a2bd3e897d466a11d269ac7e618a6f8a (patch)
treeb3c4644093519a200290449c2880d29222b16dd3 /src/internal/pkgbits
parentadcad7bea9f6933a219c7b05d8173cf8a4586092 (diff)
downloadgo-a24f4db2a2bd3e897d466a11d269ac7e618a6f8a.tar.xz
internal/pkgbits, cmd/compile/internal/noder: document string section
To understand this change, we begin with a short description of the UIR file format. Every file is a header followed by a series of sections. Each section has a kind, which determines the type of elements it contains. An element is just a collection of one or more primitives, as defined by package pkgbits. Strings have their own section. Elements in the string section contain only string primitives. To use a string, elements in other sections encode a reference to the string section. To illustrate, consider a simple file which exports nothing at all. package p In the meta section, there is an element representing a package stub. In that package stub, a string ("p") represents both the path and name of the package. Again, these are encoded as references. To manage references, every element begins with a reference table. Instead of writing the bytes for "p" directly, the package stub encodes an index in this reference table. At that index, a pair of numbers is stored, indicating: 1. which section 2. which element index within the section Effectively, elements always use *2* layers of indirection; first to the reference table, then to the bytes themselves. With some minor hand-waving, an encoding for the above package is given below, with (S)ections, (E)lements and (P)rimitives denoted. + Header | + Section Ends // each section has 1 element | | + 1 // String is elements [0, 1) | | + 2 // Meta is elements [1, 2) | + Element Ends | | + 1 // "p" is bytes [0, 1) | | + 6 // stub is bytes [1, 6) + Payload | + (S) String | | + (E) String | | | + (P) String { byte } 0x70 // "p" | + (S) Meta | | + (E) Package Stub | | | + Reference Table | | | | + (P) Entry Count uvarint 1 // there is a single entry | | | | + (P) 0th Section uvarint 0 // to String, 0th section | | | | + (P) 0th Index uvarint 0 // to 0th element in String | | | + Internals | | | | + (P) Path uvarint 0 // 0th entry in table | | | | + (P) Name uvarint 0 // 0th entry in table Note that string elements do not have reference tables like other elements. They behave more like a primitive. As this is a bit complicated and getting into details of the UIR file format, we omit some details in the documentation here. The structure will become clearer as we continue documenting. Change-Id: I12a5ce9a34251c5358a20f2f2c4d0f9bd497f4d0 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/671997 Reviewed-by: Robert Griesemer <gri@google.com> Auto-Submit: Mark Freeman <mark@golang.org> TryBot-Bypass: Mark Freeman <mark@golang.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'src/internal/pkgbits')
-rw-r--r--src/internal/pkgbits/doc.go53
1 files changed, 32 insertions, 21 deletions
diff --git a/src/internal/pkgbits/doc.go b/src/internal/pkgbits/doc.go
index b2c4888685..bd05daa3a6 100644
--- a/src/internal/pkgbits/doc.go
+++ b/src/internal/pkgbits/doc.go
@@ -16,51 +16,62 @@ zvarint = (* a zig-zag encoded signed variable-width integer *) .
uvarint = (* an unsigned variable-width integer *) .
# Strings
-Strings are not encoded directly. Rather, they are deduplicated during encoding
-and referenced where needed.
+A string is a series of bytes.
-String = [ Sync ] StringRef .
-StringRef = [ Sync ] Uint64 . // TODO(markfreeman): Document.
+// TODO(markfreeman): Does this need a marker?
+String = { byte } .
-StringSlice = Uint64 // the number of strings in the slice
- { String }
- .
+Strings are typically not encoded directly. Rather, they are deduplicated
+during encoding and referenced where needed; this process is called interning.
-// TODO(markfreeman) It is awkward to discuss references (and by extension
-// strings and constants). We cannot explain how they resolve without mention
-// of foreign concepts. Ideally, references would be defined in familar terms —
-// perhaps using an index on the byte array.
+StringRef = [ Sync ] Ref[String] .
+
+Note that StringRef is *not* equivalent to Ref[String] due to the extra marker.
+
+# References
+References specify the location of a value. While the representation here is
+fixed, the interpretation of a reference is left to other packages.
+
+Ref[T] = [ Sync ] Uint64 . // points to a value of type T
+
+# Slices
+Slices are a convenience for encoding a series of values of the same type.
+
+// TODO(markfreeman): Does this need a marker?
+Slice[T] = Uint64 // the number of values in the slice
+ { T } // the values
+ .
# Constants
Constants appear as defined via the package constant.
Constant = [ Sync ]
- Bool // whether the constant is a complex number
- Scalar // the real part
- [ Scalar ] // if complex, the imaginary part
+ Bool // whether the constant is a complex number
+ Scalar // the real part
+ [ Scalar ] // if complex, the imaginary part
.
A scalar represents a value using one of several potential formats. The exact
format and interpretation is distinguished by a code preceding the value.
Scalar = [ Sync ]
- Uint64 // the code
+ Uint64 // the code indicating the type of Val
Val
.
Val = Bool
| Int64
- | String
- | Term // big integer
- | Term Term // big ratio, numerator / denominator
- | BigBytes // big float, precision 512
+ | StringRef
+ | Term // big integer
+ | Term Term // big ratio, numerator / denominator
+ | BigBytes // big float, precision 512
.
Term = BigBytes
- Bool // whether the term is negative
+ Bool // whether the term is negative
.
-BigBytes = String . // bytes of a big value
+BigBytes = StringRef . // bytes of a big value
# Markers
Markers provide a mechanism for asserting that encoders and decoders are