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Russ Cox authored
Now that we can tell when a package is a split-off copy for testing, show that in the build failures. For example, instead of: # regexp/syntax ../../regexp/syntax/parse.go:9:2: can't find import: "strings" # path/filepath ../../path/filepath/match.go:12:2: can't find import: "strings" # flag ../../flag/flag.go:75:2: can't find import: "strings" we now print # regexp/syntax [strings.test] ../../regexp/syntax/parse.go:9:2: can't find import: "strings" # path/filepath [strings.test] ../../path/filepath/match.go:12:2: can't find import: "strings" # flag [strings.test] ../../flag/flag.go:75:2: can't find import: "strings" which gives more of a hint about what is wrong. This is especially helpful if a package is being built multiple times, since it explains why an error might appear multiple times: $ go test regexp encoding/json # regexp ../../regexp/exec.go:12:9: undefined: x # regexp [regexp.test] ../../regexp/exec.go:12:9: undefined: x FAIL regexp [build failed] FAIL encoding/json [build failed] $ Change-Id: Ie325796f6c3cf0e23f306066be8e65a30cb6b939 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/108155 Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Bryan C. Mills <bcmills@google.com>
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