/usr/share/go-1.8/src/runtime/slice.go is in golang-1.8-src 1.8.3-2ubuntu1.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 | // Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
package runtime
import (
"unsafe"
)
type slice struct {
array unsafe.Pointer
len int
cap int
}
// maxElems is a lookup table containing the maximum capacity for a slice.
// The index is the size of the slice element.
var maxElems = [...]uintptr{
^uintptr(0),
_MaxMem / 1, _MaxMem / 2, _MaxMem / 3, _MaxMem / 4,
_MaxMem / 5, _MaxMem / 6, _MaxMem / 7, _MaxMem / 8,
_MaxMem / 9, _MaxMem / 10, _MaxMem / 11, _MaxMem / 12,
_MaxMem / 13, _MaxMem / 14, _MaxMem / 15, _MaxMem / 16,
_MaxMem / 17, _MaxMem / 18, _MaxMem / 19, _MaxMem / 20,
_MaxMem / 21, _MaxMem / 22, _MaxMem / 23, _MaxMem / 24,
_MaxMem / 25, _MaxMem / 26, _MaxMem / 27, _MaxMem / 28,
_MaxMem / 29, _MaxMem / 30, _MaxMem / 31, _MaxMem / 32,
}
// maxSliceCap returns the maximum capacity for a slice.
func maxSliceCap(elemsize uintptr) uintptr {
if elemsize < uintptr(len(maxElems)) {
return maxElems[elemsize]
}
return _MaxMem / elemsize
}
func makeslice(et *_type, len, cap int) slice {
// NOTE: The len > maxElements check here is not strictly necessary,
// but it produces a 'len out of range' error instead of a 'cap out of range' error
// when someone does make([]T, bignumber). 'cap out of range' is true too,
// but since the cap is only being supplied implicitly, saying len is clearer.
// See issue 4085.
maxElements := maxSliceCap(et.size)
if len < 0 || uintptr(len) > maxElements {
panic(errorString("makeslice: len out of range"))
}
if cap < len || uintptr(cap) > maxElements {
panic(errorString("makeslice: cap out of range"))
}
p := mallocgc(et.size*uintptr(cap), et, true)
return slice{p, len, cap}
}
func makeslice64(et *_type, len64, cap64 int64) slice {
len := int(len64)
if int64(len) != len64 {
panic(errorString("makeslice: len out of range"))
}
cap := int(cap64)
if int64(cap) != cap64 {
panic(errorString("makeslice: cap out of range"))
}
return makeslice(et, len, cap)
}
// growslice handles slice growth during append.
// It is passed the slice element type, the old slice, and the desired new minimum capacity,
// and it returns a new slice with at least that capacity, with the old data
// copied into it.
// The new slice's length is set to the old slice's length,
// NOT to the new requested capacity.
// This is for codegen convenience. The old slice's length is used immediately
// to calculate where to write new values during an append.
// TODO: When the old backend is gone, reconsider this decision.
// The SSA backend might prefer the new length or to return only ptr/cap and save stack space.
func growslice(et *_type, old slice, cap int) slice {
if raceenabled {
callerpc := getcallerpc(unsafe.Pointer(&et))
racereadrangepc(old.array, uintptr(old.len*int(et.size)), callerpc, funcPC(growslice))
}
if msanenabled {
msanread(old.array, uintptr(old.len*int(et.size)))
}
if et.size == 0 {
if cap < old.cap {
panic(errorString("growslice: cap out of range"))
}
// append should not create a slice with nil pointer but non-zero len.
// We assume that append doesn't need to preserve old.array in this case.
return slice{unsafe.Pointer(&zerobase), old.len, cap}
}
newcap := old.cap
doublecap := newcap + newcap
if cap > doublecap {
newcap = cap
} else {
if old.len < 1024 {
newcap = doublecap
} else {
for newcap < cap {
newcap += newcap / 4
}
}
}
var lenmem, newlenmem, capmem uintptr
const ptrSize = unsafe.Sizeof((*byte)(nil))
switch et.size {
case 1:
lenmem = uintptr(old.len)
newlenmem = uintptr(cap)
capmem = roundupsize(uintptr(newcap))
newcap = int(capmem)
case ptrSize:
lenmem = uintptr(old.len) * ptrSize
newlenmem = uintptr(cap) * ptrSize
capmem = roundupsize(uintptr(newcap) * ptrSize)
newcap = int(capmem / ptrSize)
default:
lenmem = uintptr(old.len) * et.size
newlenmem = uintptr(cap) * et.size
capmem = roundupsize(uintptr(newcap) * et.size)
newcap = int(capmem / et.size)
}
if cap < old.cap || uintptr(newcap) > maxSliceCap(et.size) {
panic(errorString("growslice: cap out of range"))
}
var p unsafe.Pointer
if et.kind&kindNoPointers != 0 {
p = mallocgc(capmem, nil, false)
memmove(p, old.array, lenmem)
// The append() that calls growslice is going to overwrite from old.len to cap (which will be the new length).
// Only clear the part that will not be overwritten.
memclrNoHeapPointers(add(p, newlenmem), capmem-newlenmem)
} else {
// Note: can't use rawmem (which avoids zeroing of memory), because then GC can scan uninitialized memory.
p = mallocgc(capmem, et, true)
if !writeBarrier.enabled {
memmove(p, old.array, lenmem)
} else {
for i := uintptr(0); i < lenmem; i += et.size {
typedmemmove(et, add(p, i), add(old.array, i))
}
}
}
return slice{p, old.len, newcap}
}
func slicecopy(to, fm slice, width uintptr) int {
if fm.len == 0 || to.len == 0 {
return 0
}
n := fm.len
if to.len < n {
n = to.len
}
if width == 0 {
return n
}
if raceenabled {
callerpc := getcallerpc(unsafe.Pointer(&to))
pc := funcPC(slicecopy)
racewriterangepc(to.array, uintptr(n*int(width)), callerpc, pc)
racereadrangepc(fm.array, uintptr(n*int(width)), callerpc, pc)
}
if msanenabled {
msanwrite(to.array, uintptr(n*int(width)))
msanread(fm.array, uintptr(n*int(width)))
}
size := uintptr(n) * width
if size == 1 { // common case worth about 2x to do here
// TODO: is this still worth it with new memmove impl?
*(*byte)(to.array) = *(*byte)(fm.array) // known to be a byte pointer
} else {
memmove(to.array, fm.array, size)
}
return n
}
func slicestringcopy(to []byte, fm string) int {
if len(fm) == 0 || len(to) == 0 {
return 0
}
n := len(fm)
if len(to) < n {
n = len(to)
}
if raceenabled {
callerpc := getcallerpc(unsafe.Pointer(&to))
pc := funcPC(slicestringcopy)
racewriterangepc(unsafe.Pointer(&to[0]), uintptr(n), callerpc, pc)
}
if msanenabled {
msanwrite(unsafe.Pointer(&to[0]), uintptr(n))
}
memmove(unsafe.Pointer(&to[0]), stringStructOf(&fm).str, uintptr(n))
return n
}
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