• Russ Cox's avatar
    context: define behavior for Err before Done is closed · 6e2c4bc0
    Russ Cox authored
    The Context definition to date has not defined what Err returns
    before the Done channel is closed. Define that it returns nil,
    as most implementations do.
    
    All the standard context implementations (those in package
    context and in golang.org/x/net/context) return Err() == nil
    when Done is not yet closed. However, some non-standard
    implementations may exist that return Err() != nil in this case,
    as permitted by the Context definition before this date.
    Call these "errorful implementations".
    
    Because all the standard context implementations ensure that
    Err() == nil when Done is not yet closed, clients now exist that
    assume Err() != nil implies Done is closed and use calling Err
    as a quick short-circuit check instead of first doing a non-blocking
    receive from Done and then, if that succeeds, needing to call Err.
    This assumption holds for all the standard Context implementations,
    so these clients work fine in practice, even though they are making
    unwarranted assumptions about the Context implementations.
    Call these "technically incorrect clients".
    
    If a technically incorrect client encounters an errorful
    implementation, the client misbehaves. Because there are few
    errorful implementations, over time we expect that many clients
    will end up being technically incorrect without realizing it,
    leading to latent, subtle bugs. If we want to eliminate these
    latent, subtle bugs, there are two ways to do this:
    either make errorful implementations more common
    (exposing the client bugs more often) or redefine the Context
    interface so that the clients are not buggy after all.
    
    If we make errorful implementations more common, such
    as by changing the standard context implementations to
    return ErrNotDone instead of nil when Err is called before
    Done is closed, this will shake out essentially all of the
    technically incorrect clients, forcing people to find and fix
    those clients during the transition to Go 1.9.
    Technically this is allowed by the compatibility policy,
    but we expect there are many pieces of code assuming
    that Err() != nil means done, so updating will cause real pain.
    
    If instead we disallow errorful implementations, then they
    will need to be fixed as they are discovered, but the fault
    will officially lie in the errorful Context implementation,
    not in the clients. Technically this is disallowed by the compatibility
    policy, because these errorful implementations were "correct"
    in earlier versions of Go, except that they didn't work with
    common client code. We expect there are hardly any errorful
    implementations, so that disallowing them will be less disruptive
    and more in the spirit of the compatibility policy.
    
    This CL takes the path of expected least disruption,
    narrowing the Context interface semantics and potentially
    invalidating existing implementations. A survey of the
    go-corpus v0.01 turned up only five Context implementations,
    all trivial and none errorful (details in #19856).
    We are aware of one early Context implementation inside Google,
    from before even golang.org/x/net/context existed,
    that is errorful. The misbehavior of an open-source library
    when passed such a context is what prompted #19856.
    That context implementation would be disallowed after this CL
    and would need to be corrected. We are aware of no other
    affected context implementations. On the other hand, a survey
    of the go-corpus v0.01 turned up many instances of client
    code assuming that Err() == nil implies not done yet
    (details also in #19856). On balance, narrowing Context and
    thereby allowing Err() == nil checks should invalidate significantly
    less code than a push to flush out all the currently technically
    incorrect Err() == nil checks.
    
    If release feedback shows that we're wrong about this balance,
    we can roll back this CL and try again in Go 1.10.
    
    Fixes #19856.
    
    Change-Id: Id45d126fac70e1fcc42d73e5a87ca1b66935b831
    Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/40291
    Run-TryBot: Russ Cox <rsc@golang.org>
    Reviewed-by: 's avatarSameer Ajmani <sameer@golang.org>
    6e2c4bc0
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