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doc/godebug.md
Go 1.22 disabled [`ConnectionState.ExportKeyingMaterial`](/pkg/crypto/tls/#ConnectionState.ExportKeyingMaterial) when the connection supports neither TLS 1.3 nor Extended Master Secret (implemented in Go 1.21). It can be reenabled with the [`tlsunsafeekm` setting](/pkg/crypto/tls/#ConnectionState.ExportKeyingMaterial). Go 1.22 changed how the runtime interacts with transparent huge pages on Linux.
Plain Text - Registered: Tue May 07 11:14:38 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Tue Apr 16 17:29:58 GMT 2024 - 13.5K bytes - Viewed (0) -
src/archive/tar/common.go
type ( sparseDatas []sparseEntry sparseHoles []sparseEntry ) // validateSparseEntries reports whether sp is a valid sparse map. // It does not matter whether sp represents data fragments or hole fragments. func validateSparseEntries(sp []sparseEntry, size int64) bool { // Validate all sparse entries. These are the same checks as performed by // the BSD tar utility.
Go - Registered: Tue Apr 30 11:13:12 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Fri Mar 15 16:01:50 GMT 2024 - 24.7K bytes - Viewed (2) -
doc/asm.html
Also, constants are always evaluated as 64-bit unsigned integers. Thus <code>-2</code> is not the integer value minus two, but the unsigned 64-bit integer with the same bit pattern. The distinction rarely matters but to avoid ambiguity, division or right shift where the right operand's high bit is set is rejected. </p> <h3 id="symbols">Symbols</h3> <p> Some symbols, such as <code>R1</code> or <code>LR</code>,
HTML - Registered: Tue May 07 11:14:38 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Tue Nov 28 19:15:27 GMT 2023 - 36.3K bytes - Viewed (0) -
src/bytes/bytes.go
func SplitN(s, sep []byte, n int) [][]byte { return genSplit(s, sep, 0, n) } // SplitAfterN slices s into subslices after each instance of sep and // returns a slice of those subslices. // If sep is empty, SplitAfterN splits after each UTF-8 sequence. // The count determines the number of subslices to return: // // n > 0: at most n subslices; the last subslice will be the unsplit remainder.
Go - Registered: Tue Apr 30 11:13:12 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Mon Feb 19 19:51:15 GMT 2024 - 33.8K bytes - Viewed (0) -
misc/go_android_exec/main.go
// walking the tree and copying it piecewise. If the directory tree // contains nested modules this could push a lot of unnecessary contents, // but for the golang.org/x repos it seems to be significantly (~2x) // faster than copying one file at a time (via filepath.WalkDir), // apparently due to high latency in 'adb' commands. if err := adb("push", modDir, deviceModDir); err != nil { return 0, err } } else {
Go - Registered: Tue Apr 30 11:13:12 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Mon Aug 21 17:46:57 GMT 2023 - 15.3K bytes - Viewed (0) -
src/cmd/api/main_test.go
) // tagKey returns the tag-based key to use in the pkgCache. // It is a comma-separated string; the first part is dir, the rest tags. // The satisfied tags are derived from context but only those that // matter (the ones listed in the tags argument plus GOOS and GOARCH) are used. // The tags list, which came from go/build's Package.AllTags, // is known to be sorted. func tagKey(dir string, context *build.Context, tags []string) string {
Go - Registered: Tue Apr 30 11:13:12 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Tue Apr 09 20:48:51 GMT 2024 - 31.4K bytes - Viewed (0) -
doc/go_mem.html
In the absence of data races, Go programs behave as if all the goroutines were multiplexed onto a single processor. This property is sometimes referred to as DRF-SC: data-race-free programs execute in a sequentially consistent manner. </p> <p> While programmers should write Go programs without data races, there are limitations to what a Go implementation can do in response to a data race.
HTML - Registered: Tue May 07 11:14:38 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Mon Mar 04 15:54:42 GMT 2024 - 26.6K bytes - Viewed (0)