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.
Notice that this doesn't differentiate between (*T) and (T) receivers always
treating them as is. But we have the same problem with arguments now and the
number of inlined calls is limited, usually we want this behavior.
Set all necessary context before file traversal, not only import
maps. Also, we can skip restoring import maps because all our code is
processed via `For*` iterators which set necessary context.
We can also refactor this a bit to have all context in one place,
this will be done in #2086.
Signed-off-by: Evgeniy Stratonikov <evgeniy@nspcc.ru>
Our current algorithm marks function as used if it is called
at least ones, even if the callee function is itself unused.
This commit implements more clever traversal to collect usage
information more precisely.
Signed-off-by: Evgeniy Stratonikov <evgeniy@nspcc.ru>
On many occassions we can determine at compile-time if contract config lacks
some properties it needs. This includes all native contract invocations
through stdlib, as both hashes and methods are known at compile-time
there.
Signed-off-by: Evgeniy Stratonikov <evgeniy@nspcc.ru>
Some arguments can be inlined functions themselves thus requiring additional
attention. Otherwise we can get less local variables than really used by
STLOCs (and subsequent program crash).
Function name now consists of 3 parts:
1) full package path
2) method receiver type (if any)
3) function name itself .
Fix#1150.
Signed-off-by: Evgenii Stratonikov <evgeniy@nspcc.ru>
Closes#913.
Provide package info in the funcScope to check if function is defined
insided an interop package. As a good side-effect bytecode for builtins from `util`
is no longer emitted.
Related #941.
These don't belong to VM as they compile some Go code and run it in a VM. One
may call them integration tests, but I prefer to attribute them to
compiler. Moving these tests into pkg/compiler also allows to properly count
the compiler coverage they add:
-ok github.com/CityOfZion/neo-go/pkg/compiler (cached) coverage: 69.7% of statements
+ok github.com/CityOfZion/neo-go/pkg/compiler (cached) coverage: 84.2% of statements
This change also fixes `contant` typo and removes fake packages exposed to the
public by moving foo/bar/foobar into the testdata directory.