WARN [runner] The linter 'varcheck' is deprecated (since v1.49.0) due to: The owner seems to have abandoned the linter. Replaced by unused.
WARN [runner] The linter 'deadcode' is deprecated (since v1.49.0) due to: The owner seems to have abandoned the linter. Replaced by unused.
WARN [runner] The linter 'structcheck' is deprecated (since v1.49.0) due to: The owner seems to have abandoned the linter. Replaced by unused.
So that (*codegen).Visit is able to omit code generation for these
unused global vars. The most tricky part is to detect unused global
variables, it is done in several steps:
1. Collect the set of named used/unused global vars.
2. Collect the set of globally declared expressions that contain
function calls.
3. Pick up global vars from the set made at step 2.
4. Traverse used functions and puck up those global vars that are used
from these functions.
5. Rename all globals that are presented in the set made at step 1
but are not presented in the set made on step 3 or step 4.
Move all auxiliary function declaration after Main, so that INITSLOT
instructions counter works properly. `vmAndCompileInterop` loads program
and moves nextIP to the Main function offset if there's no _init
function. If _init is there, then nextIP will be moved to the start of
_init. In TestInline we don't handle instructions properly (CALL/JMP
don't change nextIP), we just perform instruction traversal from the
start point via Next(), thus INITSLOT counter value depends on the
starting instruction, which depends on _init presence.
If variable is unnamed and does not contain function call then it's
treated as unused and code generation may be omitted for it
initialization/declaration.
In case if global var is unnamed (and, as a consequence, unused) and
contains a function call inside its value specification, we need to emit
code for this var to be able to call the function as it can have
side-effects. See the example:
```
package foo
import "github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/pkg/interop/runtime"
var A = f()
func Main() int {
return 3
}
func f() int {
runtime.Notify("Valuable notification", 1)
return 2
}
```
Make NEP-11 code use getnep11balances the same way NEP-17 code uses
getnep17balances. This command was introduced well before getnep11balances
appeared, so it required always specifying contract explicitly. Now this
constraint can be relaxed somewhat in most cases.
1. In the single token mode compare known hashes instead of names, names can
be misleading.
2. Hardcode NEO/GAS, they are special (if not overrided by the wallet data).
We have this data available since 0.99.1 while all public networks require at
least 0.99.2 for compatibility and NeoFS setups use 0.99.2+ too. This data can
simplify account handling considerably making additional requests unneccessary
in many cases.
In the same way we do for NEP-17 tokens. This code predates "getnep11balances"
call, so this wasn't possible back then, but now we can improve the situation
(allow specifying names/symbols instead of hashes only).