go env GOMOD - gives the path to the go.mod in use in module mode, and is
empty otherwise (i.e. GOPATH mode)
On Mon, 9 Dec 2019, 00:25 Dan Kortschak, wrote:
> Is there a way to query whether an invocation of the go command would
> be running in module mode?
>
> thanks
> Dan
>
> --
> You received
Hi Tong,
I meant public performance data from regular benchmarkings of public Go
benchmark sets, say the 'go1' set.
It could serve multiple purposes, as a source of perf. tuning
investigation, for cross-checking with internal data, etc.
I'm not proposing a 'cover-it-all' one but looking for dat
That's a really useful workaround! It makes much more sense now.
Conclusion: when `sigtramp` is returned, nothing is called before entering
`ayncPreempt`.
Thank you so much for releasing me from confusing :)
sigtramp is returned
asyncPreempt is called
OK
CALL runtimeĀ·sigtrampgo(SB)
CALL run
I've been playing with Go and Microsoft Graph and decided to combine the
two and have been writing a "wrapper" API to the RESTful Microsoft Graph
APIs.The source is available at https://github.com/bnixon67/msgraph4go
Microsoft Graph exposes REST APIs and client libraries to access data on
vario
Is there a way to query whether an invocation of the go command would
be running in module mode?
thanks
Dan
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On Sun, Dec 8, 2019 at 1:10 PM changkun wrote:
>
> Thank you so much for your hint, I think I've figured it out.
> The root cause seems similar to the "uncertainty principle".
>
> As an observer, by adding a `println` call in `asyncPreempt`
> as well as `asyncPreempt2` influences the actual behavi
The type definition above should read:
type whenceReader struct {
rio.ReaderAt
off int64
}
(I forgot to put the package name (i.e., "io." in front of ReaderAt.)
On Sunday, December 8, 2019 at 6:19:04 PM UTC-5, William Hanisch wrote:
>
> Suppose you (okay, okay, I) wan
Suppose you (okay, okay, I) want something like an io.SectionReader but
don't want to specify the end point of the section, just the start. That
is, method calls to Read should only return EOF when at the end of the
underlying source of the initially supplied io.ReaderAt. This can be
achieved,
Dear Ian,
Thank you so much for your hint, I think I've figured it out.
The root cause seems similar to the "uncertainty principle".
As an observer, by adding a `println` call in `asyncPreempt`
as well as `asyncPreempt2` influences the actual behavior
after signal handling. The `println` involv
On Sun, Dec 8, 2019 at 10:07 AM wrote:
>
> Thanks for your reply. Do you regularly edit standard libs as described (and
> then presumably edit them back)?
While debugging the standard library, yes, I do. But I also agree
that for this case it might be useful to have a more usable mechanism.
>
On Sun, Dec 8, 2019 at 7:02 AM changkun wrote:
>
> As we all know that a program is interrupted by a signal and entering kernel
> space then switch to a userspace signal handler. After the signal handler is
> accomplished, it will be reentering the kernel space then switch back to
> where was i
Thanks for your reply. Do you regularly edit standard libs as described (and
then presumably edit them back)?
I copied /usr/lib/go-1.13/net/rpc to my project directory, then changed all
imports of "net/rpc" to "./net/rpc", and then set debugLog (in my shadow copy,
not /usr/lib/go-1.13). It got t
You'll need to create a FlagSet instead and pass ContinueOnError as
the error handling. If .Parse() returns an error call
.PrintDefaults(), then print the error.
On Sun, Dec 8, 2019 at 4:00 AM Thomas Nyberg wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> Given the following file `flag_example.go`:
>
> package main
>
> imp
> I'm wondering if any of you other nuts can point out examples?
It's a hypothetical example but perhaps shows enough of what you're after?
https://github.com/go-modules-by-example/index/blob/master/015_semantic_import_versioning/README.md
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As we all know that a program is interrupted by a signal and entering
kernel space then switch to a userspace signal handler. After the signal
handler is accomplished, it will be reentering the kernel space then switch
back to where was interrupted.
I am recently reading the newly implemented a
Hello,
I looked at the source and noticed that if I move the following line up two
lines I guess basically what I'm looking for:
https://github.com/golang/go/blob/master/src/flag/flag.go#L874
But this is changing an unexported function. Is there a way to do something
like this without messing
Hello,
Given the following file `flag_example.go`:
package main
import "flag"
func main() {
flagName := flag.String("flagName", "flagValue", "Help message.")
flag.Parse()
_ = flagName
}
If I execute it with a bad flag passed I see the following:
$ ./flag_example -flagName
flag nee
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