// Copyright 2021 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 modload import ( "cmd/go/internal/cfg" "cmd/go/internal/gover" "cmd/go/internal/mvs" "cmd/go/internal/par" "context" "errors" "fmt" "maps" "os" "slices" "golang.org/x/mod/module" ) // editRequirements returns an edited version of rs such that: // // 1. Each module version in mustSelect is selected. // // 2. Each module version in tryUpgrade is upgraded toward the indicated // version as far as can be done without violating (1). // (Other upgrades are also allowed if they are caused by // transitive requirements of versions in mustSelect or // tryUpgrade.) // // 3. Each module version in rs.rootModules (or rs.graph, if rs is unpruned) // is downgraded or upgraded from its original version only to the extent // needed to satisfy (1) and (2). // // Generally, the module versions in mustSelect are due to the module or a // package within the module matching an explicit command line argument to 'go // get', and the versions in tryUpgrade are transitive dependencies that are // either being upgraded by 'go get -u' or being added to satisfy some // otherwise-missing package import. // // If pruning is enabled, the roots of the edited requirements include an // explicit entry for each module path in tryUpgrade, mustSelect, and the roots // of rs, unless the selected version for the module path is "none". func editRequirements(ctx context.Context, rs *Requirements, tryUpgrade, mustSelect []module.Version) (edited *Requirements, changed bool, err error) { if rs.pruning == workspace { panic("editRequirements cannot edit workspace requirements") } orig := rs // If we already know what go version we will end up on after the edit, and // the pruning for that version is different, go ahead and apply it now. // // If we are changing from pruned to unpruned, then we MUST check the unpruned // graph for conflicts from the start. (Checking only for pruned conflicts // would miss some that would be introduced later.) // // If we are changing from unpruned to pruned, then we would like to avoid // unnecessary downgrades due to conflicts that would be pruned out of the // final graph anyway. // // Note that even if we don't find a go version in mustSelect, it is possible // that we will switch from unpruned to pruned (but not the other way around!) // after applying the edits if we find a dependency that requires a high // enough go version to trigger an upgrade. rootPruning := orig.pruning for _, m := range mustSelect { if m.Path == "go" { rootPruning = pruningForGoVersion(m.Version) break } else if m.Path == "toolchain" && pruningForGoVersion(gover.FromToolchain(m.Version)) == unpruned { // We don't know exactly what go version we will end up at, but we know // that it must be a version supported by the requested toolchain, and // that toolchain does not support pruning. // // TODO(bcmills): 'go get' ought to reject explicit toolchain versions // older than gover.GoStrictVersion. Once that is fixed, is this still // needed? rootPruning = unpruned break } } if rootPruning != rs.pruning { rs, err = convertPruning(ctx, rs, rootPruning) if err != nil { return orig, false, err } } // selectedRoot records the edited version (possibly "none") for each module // path that would be a root in the edited requirements. var selectedRoot map[string]string // module path → edited version if rootPruning == pruned { selectedRoot = maps.Clone(rs.maxRootVersion) } else { // In a module without graph pruning, modules that provide packages imported // by the main module may either be explicit roots or implicit transitive // dependencies. To the extent possible, we want to preserve those implicit // dependencies, so we need to treat everything in the build list as // potentially relevant — that is, as what would be a “root” in a module // with graph pruning enabled. mg, err := rs.Graph(ctx) if err != nil { // If we couldn't load the graph, we don't know what its requirements were // to begin with, so we can't edit those requirements in a coherent way. return orig, false, err } bl := mg.BuildList()[MainModules.Len():] selectedRoot = make(map[string]string, len(bl)) for _, m := range bl { selectedRoot[m.Path] = m.Version } } for _, r := range tryUpgrade { if v, ok := selectedRoot[r.Path]; ok && gover.ModCompare(r.Path, v, r.Version) >= 0 { continue } if cfg.BuildV { fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "go: trying upgrade to %v\n", r) } selectedRoot[r.Path] = r.Version } // conflicts is a list of conflicts that we cannot resolve without violating // some version in mustSelect. It may be incomplete, but we want to report // as many conflicts as we can so that the user can solve more of them at once. var conflicts []Conflict // mustSelectVersion is an index of the versions in mustSelect. mustSelectVersion := make(map[string]string, len(mustSelect)) for _, r := range mustSelect { if v, ok := mustSelectVersion[r.Path]; ok && v != r.Version { prev := module.Version{Path: r.Path, Version: v} if gover.ModCompare(r.Path, v, r.Version) > 0 { conflicts = append(conflicts, Conflict{Path: []module.Version{prev}, Constraint: r}) } else { conflicts = append(conflicts, Conflict{Path: []module.Version{r}, Constraint: prev}) } continue } mustSelectVersion[r.Path] = r.Version selectedRoot[r.Path] = r.Version } // We've indexed all of the data we need and we've computed the initial // versions of the roots. Now we need to load the actual module graph and // restore the invariant that every root is the selected version of its path. // // For 'go mod tidy' we would do that using expandGraph, which upgrades the // roots until their requirements are internally consistent and then drops out // the old roots. However, here we need to do more: we also need to make sure // the modules in mustSelect don't get upgraded above their intended versions. // To do that, we repeatedly walk the module graph, identify paths of // requirements that result in versions that are too high, and downgrade the // roots that lead to those paths. When no conflicts remain, we're done. // // Since we want to report accurate paths to each conflict, we don't drop out // older-than-selected roots until the process completes. That might mean that // we do some extra downgrades when they could be skipped, but for the benefit // of being able to explain the reason for every downgrade that seems // worthwhile. // // Graph pruning adds an extra wrinkle: a given node in the module graph // may be reached from a root whose dependencies are pruned, and from a root // whose dependencies are not pruned. It may be the case that the path from // the unpruned root leads to a conflict, while the path from the pruned root // prunes out the requirements that would lead to that conflict. // So we need to track the two kinds of paths independently. // They join back together at the roots of the graph: if a root r1 with pruned // requirements depends on a root r2 with unpruned requirements, then // selecting r1 would cause r2 to become a root and pull in all of its // unpruned dependencies. // // The dqTracker type implements the logic for propagating conflict paths // through the pruned and unpruned parts of the module graph. // // We make a best effort to fix incompatibilities, subject to two properties: // // 1. If the user runs 'go get' with a set of mutually-compatible module // versions, we should accept those versions. // // 2. If we end up upgrading or downgrading a module, it should be // clear why we did so. // // We don't try to find an optimal SAT solution, // especially given the complex interactions with graph pruning. var ( roots []module.Version // the current versions in selectedRoot, in sorted order rootsDirty = true // true if roots does not match selectedRoot ) // rejectedRoot records the set of module versions that have been disqualified // as roots of the module graph. When downgrading due to a conflict or error, // we skip any version that has already been rejected. // // NOTE(bcmills): I am not sure that the rejectedRoot map is really necessary, // since we normally only downgrade roots or accept indirect upgrades to // known-good versions. However, I am having trouble proving that accepting an // indirect upgrade never introduces a conflict that leads to further // downgrades. I really want to be able to prove that editRequirements // terminates, and the easiest way to prove it is to add this map. // // Then the proof of termination is this: // On every iteration where we mark the roots as dirty, we add some new module // version to the map. The universe of module versions is finite, so we must // eventually reach a state in which we do not add any version to the map. // In that state, we either report a conflict or succeed in the edit. rejectedRoot := map[module.Version]bool{} for rootsDirty && len(conflicts) == 0 { roots = roots[:0] for p, v := range selectedRoot { if v != "none" { roots = append(roots, module.Version{Path: p, Version: v}) } } gover.ModSort(roots) // First, we extend the graph so that it includes the selected version // of every root. The upgraded roots are in addition to the original // roots, so we will have enough information to trace a path to each // conflict we discover from one or more of the original roots. mg, upgradedRoots, err := extendGraph(ctx, rootPruning, roots, selectedRoot) if err != nil { var tooNew *gover.TooNewError if mg == nil || errors.As(err, &tooNew) { return orig, false, err } // We're about to walk the entire extended module graph, so we will find // any error then — and we will either try to resolve it by downgrading // something or report it as a conflict with more detail. } // extendedRootPruning is an index of the pruning used to load each root in // the extended module graph. extendedRootPruning := make(map[module.Version]modPruning, len(roots)+len(upgradedRoots)) findPruning := func(m module.Version) modPruning { if rootPruning == pruned { summary, _ := mg.loadCache.Get(m) if summary != nil && summary.pruning == unpruned { return unpruned } } return rootPruning } for _, m := range roots { extendedRootPruning[m] = findPruning(m) } for m := range upgradedRoots { extendedRootPruning[m] = findPruning(m) } // Now check the resulting extended graph for errors and incompatibilities. t := dqTracker{extendedRootPruning: extendedRootPruning} mg.g.WalkBreadthFirst(func(m module.Version) { if max, ok := mustSelectVersion[m.Path]; ok && gover.ModCompare(m.Path, m.Version, max) > 0 { // m itself violates mustSelect, so it cannot appear in the module graph // even if its transitive dependencies would be pruned out. t.disqualify(m, pruned, dqState{dep: m}) return } summary, err := mg.loadCache.Get(m) if err != nil && err != par.ErrCacheEntryNotFound { // We can't determine the requirements of m, so we don't know whether // they would be allowed. This may be a transient error reaching the // repository, rather than a permanent error with the retrieved version. // // TODO(golang.org/issue/31730, golang.org/issue/30134): // decide what to do based on the actual error. t.disqualify(m, pruned, dqState{err: err}) return } reqs, ok := mg.RequiredBy(m) if !ok { // The dependencies of m do not appear in the module graph, so they // can't be causing any problems this time. return } if summary == nil { if m.Version != "" { panic(fmt.Sprintf("internal error: %d reqs present for %v, but summary is nil", len(reqs), m)) } // m is the main module: we are editing its dependencies, so it cannot // become disqualified. return } // Before we check for problems due to transitive dependencies, first // check m's direct requirements. A requirement on a version r that // violates mustSelect disqualifies m, even if the requirements of r are // themselves pruned out. for _, r := range reqs { if max, ok := mustSelectVersion[r.Path]; ok && gover.ModCompare(r.Path, r.Version, max) > 0 { t.disqualify(m, pruned, dqState{dep: r}) return } } for _, r := range reqs { if !t.require(m, r) { break } } }) // We have now marked all of the versions in the graph that have conflicts, // with a path to each conflict from one or more roots that introduce it. // Now we need to identify those roots and change their versions // (if possible) in order to resolve the conflicts. rootsDirty = false for _, m := range roots { path, err := t.path(m, extendedRootPruning[m]) if len(path) == 0 && err == nil { continue // Nothing wrong with m; we can keep it. } // path leads to a module with a problem: either it violates a constraint, // or some error prevents us from determining whether it violates a // constraint. We might end up logging or returning the conflict // information, so go ahead and fill in the details about it. conflict := Conflict{ Path: path, Err: err, } if err == nil { var last module.Version = path[len(path)-1] mustV, ok := mustSelectVersion[last.Path] if !ok { fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "go: %v\n", conflict) panic("internal error: found a version conflict, but no constraint it violates") } conflict.Constraint = module.Version{ Path: last.Path, Version: mustV, } } if v, ok := mustSelectVersion[m.Path]; ok && v == m.Version { // m is in mustSelect, but is marked as disqualified due to a transitive // dependency. // // In theory we could try removing module paths that don't appear in // mustSelect (added by tryUpgrade or already present in rs) in order to // get graph pruning to take effect, but (a) it is likely that 'go mod // tidy' would re-add those roots and reintroduce unwanted upgrades, // causing confusion, and (b) deciding which roots to try to eliminate // would add a lot of complexity. // // Instead, we report the path to the conflict as an error. // If users want to explicitly prune out nodes from the dependency // graph, they can always add an explicit 'exclude' directive. conflicts = append(conflicts, conflict) continue } // If m is not the selected version of its path, we have two options: we // can either upgrade to the version that actually is selected (dropping m // itself out of the bottom of the module graph), or we can try // downgrading it. // // If the version we would be upgrading to is ok to use, we will just plan // to do that and avoid the overhead of trying to find some lower version // to downgrade to. // // However, it is possible that m depends on something that leads to its // own upgrade, so if the upgrade isn't viable we should go ahead and try // to downgrade (like with any other root). if v := mg.Selected(m.Path); v != m.Version { u := module.Version{Path: m.Path, Version: v} uPruning, ok := t.extendedRootPruning[m] if !ok { fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "go: %v\n", conflict) panic(fmt.Sprintf("internal error: selected version of root %v is %v, but it was not expanded as a new root", m, u)) } if !t.check(u, uPruning).isDisqualified() && !rejectedRoot[u] { // Applying the upgrade from m to u will resolve the conflict, // so plan to do that if there are no other conflicts to resolve. continue } } // Figure out what version of m's path was present before we started // the edit. We want to make sure we consider keeping it as-is, // even if it wouldn't normally be included. (For example, it might // be a pseudo-version or pre-release.) origMG, _ := orig.Graph(ctx) origV := origMG.Selected(m.Path) if conflict.Err != nil && origV == m.Version { // This version of m.Path was already in the module graph before we // started editing, and the problem with it is that we can't load its // (transitive) requirements. // // If this conflict was just one step in a longer chain of downgrades, // then we would want to keep going past it until we find a version // that doesn't have that problem. However, we only want to downgrade // away from an *existing* requirement if we can confirm that it actually // conflicts with mustSelect. (For example, we don't want // 'go get -u ./...' to incidentally downgrade some dependency whose // go.mod file is unavailable or has a bad checksum.) conflicts = append(conflicts, conflict) continue } // We need to downgrade m's path to some lower version to try to resolve // the conflict. Find the next-lowest candidate and apply it. rejectedRoot[m] = true prev := m for { prev, err = previousVersion(ctx, prev) if gover.ModCompare(m.Path, m.Version, origV) > 0 && (gover.ModCompare(m.Path, prev.Version, origV) < 0 || err != nil) { // previousVersion skipped over origV. Insert it into the order. prev.Version = origV } else if err != nil { // We don't know the next downgrade to try. Give up. return orig, false, err } if rejectedRoot[prev] { // We already rejected prev in a previous round. // To ensure that this algorithm terminates, don't try it again. continue } pruning := rootPruning if pruning == pruned { if summary, err := mg.loadCache.Get(m); err == nil { pruning = summary.pruning } } if t.check(prev, pruning).isDisqualified() { // We found a problem with prev this round that would also disqualify // it as a root. Don't bother trying it next round. rejectedRoot[prev] = true continue } break } selectedRoot[m.Path] = prev.Version rootsDirty = true // If this downgrade is potentially interesting, log the reason for it. if conflict.Err != nil || cfg.BuildV { var action string if prev.Version == "none" { action = fmt.Sprintf("removing %s", m) } else if prev.Version == origV { action = fmt.Sprintf("restoring %s", prev) } else { action = fmt.Sprintf("trying %s", prev) } fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "go: %s\n\t%s\n", conflict.Summary(), action) } } if rootsDirty { continue } // We didn't resolve any issues by downgrading, but we may still need to // resolve some conflicts by locking in upgrades. Do that now. // // We don't do these upgrades until we're done downgrading because the // downgrade process might reveal or remove conflicts (by changing which // requirement edges are pruned out). var upgradedFrom []module.Version // for logging only for p, v := range selectedRoot { if _, ok := mustSelectVersion[p]; !ok { if actual := mg.Selected(p); actual != v { if cfg.BuildV { upgradedFrom = append(upgradedFrom, module.Version{Path: p, Version: v}) } selectedRoot[p] = actual // Accepting the upgrade to m.Path might cause the selected versions // of other modules to fall, because they were being increased by // dependencies of m that are no longer present in the graph. // // TODO(bcmills): Can removing m as a root also cause the selected // versions of other modules to rise? I think not: we're strictly // removing non-root nodes from the module graph, which can't cause // any root to decrease (because they're roots), and the dependencies // of non-roots don't matter because they're either always unpruned or // always pruned out. // // At any rate, it shouldn't cost much to reload the module graph one // last time and confirm that it is stable. rootsDirty = true } } } if rootsDirty { if cfg.BuildV { gover.ModSort(upgradedFrom) // Make logging deterministic. for _, m := range upgradedFrom { fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "go: accepting indirect upgrade from %v to %s\n", m, selectedRoot[m.Path]) } } continue } break } if len(conflicts) > 0 { return orig, false, &ConstraintError{Conflicts: conflicts} } if rootPruning == unpruned { // An unpruned go.mod file lists only a subset of the requirements needed // for building packages. Figure out which requirements need to be explicit. var rootPaths []string // The modules in mustSelect are always promoted to be explicit. for _, m := range mustSelect { if m.Version != "none" && !MainModules.Contains(m.Path) { rootPaths = append(rootPaths, m.Path) } } for _, m := range roots { if v, ok := rs.rootSelected(m.Path); ok && (v == m.Version || rs.direct[m.Path]) { // m.Path was formerly a root, and either its version hasn't changed or // we believe that it provides a package directly imported by a package // or test in the main module. For now we'll assume that it is still // relevant enough to remain a root. If we actually load all of the // packages and tests in the main module (which we are not doing here), // we can revise the explicit roots at that point. rootPaths = append(rootPaths, m.Path) } } roots, err = mvs.Req(MainModules.mustGetSingleMainModule(), rootPaths, &mvsReqs{roots: roots}) if err != nil { return nil, false, err } } changed = rootPruning != orig.pruning || !slices.Equal(roots, orig.rootModules) if !changed { // Because the roots we just computed are unchanged, the entire graph must // be the same as it was before. Save the original rs, since we have // probably already loaded its requirement graph. return orig, false, nil } // A module that is not even in the build list necessarily cannot provide // any imported packages. Mark as direct only the direct modules that are // still in the build list. (We assume that any module path that provided a // direct import before the edit continues to do so after. There are a few // edge cases where that can change, such as if a package moves into or out of // a nested module or disappears entirely. If that happens, the user can run // 'go mod tidy' to clean up the direct/indirect annotations.) // // TODO(bcmills): Would it make more sense to leave the direct map as-is // but allow it to refer to modules that are no longer in the build list? // That might complicate updateRoots, but it may be cleaner in other ways. direct := make(map[string]bool, len(rs.direct)) for _, m := range roots { if rs.direct[m.Path] { direct[m.Path] = true } } edited = newRequirements(rootPruning, roots, direct) // If we ended up adding a dependency that upgrades our go version far enough // to activate pruning, we must convert the edited Requirements in order to // avoid dropping transitive dependencies from the build list the next time // someone uses the updated go.mod file. // // Note that it isn't possible to go in the other direction (from pruned to // unpruned) unless the "go" or "toolchain" module is explicitly listed in // mustSelect, which we already handled at the very beginning of the edit. // That is because the virtual "go" module only requires a "toolchain", // and the "toolchain" module never requires anything else, which means that // those two modules will never be downgraded due to a conflict with any other // constraint. if rootPruning == unpruned { if v, ok := edited.rootSelected("go"); ok && pruningForGoVersion(v) == pruned { // Since we computed the edit with the unpruned graph, and the pruned // graph is a strict subset of the unpruned graph, this conversion // preserves the exact (edited) build list that we already computed. // // However, it does that by shoving the whole build list into the roots of // the graph. 'go get' will check for that sort of transition and log a // message reminding the user how to clean up this mess we're about to // make. 😅 edited, err = convertPruning(ctx, edited, pruned) if err != nil { return orig, false, err } } } return edited, true, nil } // extendGraph loads the module graph from roots, and iteratively extends it by // unpruning the selected version of each module path that is a root in rs or in // the roots slice until the graph reaches a fixed point. // // The graph is guaranteed to converge to a fixed point because unpruning a // module version can only increase (never decrease) the selected versions, // and the set of versions for each module is finite. // // The extended graph is useful for diagnosing version conflicts: for each // selected module version, it can provide a complete path of requirements from // some root to that version. func extendGraph(ctx context.Context, rootPruning modPruning, roots []module.Version, selectedRoot map[string]string) (mg *ModuleGraph, upgradedRoot map[module.Version]bool, err error) { for { mg, err = readModGraph(ctx, rootPruning, roots, upgradedRoot) // We keep on going even if err is non-nil until we reach a steady state. // (Note that readModGraph returns a non-nil *ModuleGraph even in case of // errors.) The caller may be able to fix the errors by adjusting versions, // so we really want to return as complete a result as we can. if rootPruning == unpruned { // Everything is already unpruned, so there isn't anything we can do to // extend it further. break } nPrevRoots := len(upgradedRoot) for p := range selectedRoot { // Since p is a root path, when we fix up the module graph to be // consistent with the selected versions, p will be promoted to a root, // which will pull in its dependencies. Ensure that its dependencies are // included in the module graph. v := mg.g.Selected(p) if v == "none" { // Version “none” always has no requirements, so it doesn't need // an explicit node in the module graph. continue } m := module.Version{Path: p, Version: v} if _, ok := mg.g.RequiredBy(m); !ok && !upgradedRoot[m] { // The dependencies of the selected version of p were not loaded. // Mark it as an upgrade so that we will load its dependencies // in the next iteration. // // Note that we don't remove any of the existing roots, even if they are // no longer the selected version: with graph pruning in effect this may // leave some spurious dependencies in the graph, but it at least // preserves enough of the graph to explain why each upgrade occurred: // this way, we can report a complete path from the passed-in roots // to every node in the module graph. // // This process is guaranteed to reach a fixed point: since we are only // adding roots (never removing them), the selected version of each module // can only increase, never decrease, and the set of module versions in the // universe is finite. if upgradedRoot == nil { upgradedRoot = make(map[module.Version]bool) } upgradedRoot[m] = true } } if len(upgradedRoot) == nPrevRoots { break } } return mg, upgradedRoot, err } type perPruning[T any] struct { pruned T unpruned T } func (pp perPruning[T]) from(p modPruning) T { if p == unpruned { return pp.unpruned } return pp.pruned } // A dqTracker tracks and propagates the reason that each module version // cannot be included in the module graph. type dqTracker struct { // extendedRootPruning is the modPruning given the go.mod file for each root // in the extended module graph. extendedRootPruning map[module.Version]modPruning // dqReason records whether and why each each encountered version is // disqualified in a pruned or unpruned context. dqReason map[module.Version]perPruning[dqState] // requiring maps each not-yet-disqualified module version to the versions // that would cause that module's requirements to be included in a pruned or // unpruned context. If that version becomes disqualified, the // disqualification will be propagated to all of the versions in the // corresponding list. // // This map is similar to the module requirement graph, but includes more // detail about whether a given dependency edge appears in a pruned or // unpruned context. (Other commands do not need this level of detail.) requiring map[module.Version][]module.Version } // A dqState indicates whether and why a module version is “disqualified” from // being used in a way that would incorporate its requirements. // // The zero dqState indicates that the module version is not known to be // disqualified, either because it is ok or because we are currently traversing // a cycle that includes it. type dqState struct { err error // if non-nil, disqualified because the requirements of the module could not be read dep module.Version // disqualified because the module is or requires dep } func (dq dqState) isDisqualified() bool { return dq != dqState{} } func (dq dqState) String() string { if dq.err != nil { return dq.err.Error() } if dq.dep != (module.Version{}) { return dq.dep.String() } return "(no conflict)" } // require records that m directly requires r, in case r becomes disqualified. // (These edges are in the opposite direction from the edges in an mvs.Graph.) // // If r is already disqualified, require propagates the disqualification to m // and returns the reason for the disqualification. func (t *dqTracker) require(m, r module.Version) (ok bool) { rdq := t.dqReason[r] rootPruning, isRoot := t.extendedRootPruning[r] if isRoot && rdq.from(rootPruning).isDisqualified() { // When we pull in m's dependencies, we will have an edge from m to r, and r // is disqualified (it is a root, which causes its problematic dependencies // to always be included). So we cannot pull in m's dependencies at all: // m is completely disqualified. t.disqualify(m, pruned, dqState{dep: r}) return false } if dq := rdq.from(unpruned); dq.isDisqualified() { t.disqualify(m, unpruned, dqState{dep: r}) if _, ok := t.extendedRootPruning[m]; !ok { // Since m is not a root, its dependencies can't be included in the pruned // part of the module graph, and will never be disqualified from a pruned // reason. We've already disqualified everything that matters. return false } } // Record that m is a dependant of r, so that if r is later disqualified // m will be disqualified as well. if t.requiring == nil { t.requiring = make(map[module.Version][]module.Version) } t.requiring[r] = append(t.requiring[r], m) return true } // disqualify records why the dependencies of m cannot be included in the module // graph if reached from a part of the graph with the given pruning. // // Since the pruned graph is a subgraph of the unpruned graph, disqualifying a // module from a pruned part of the graph also disqualifies it in the unpruned // parts. func (t *dqTracker) disqualify(m module.Version, fromPruning modPruning, reason dqState) { if !reason.isDisqualified() { panic("internal error: disqualify called with a non-disqualifying dqState") } dq := t.dqReason[m] if dq.from(fromPruning).isDisqualified() { return // Already disqualified for some other reason; don't overwrite it. } rootPruning, isRoot := t.extendedRootPruning[m] if fromPruning == pruned { dq.pruned = reason if !dq.unpruned.isDisqualified() { // Since the pruned graph of m is a subgraph of the unpruned graph, if it // is disqualified due to something in the pruned graph, it is certainly // disqualified in the unpruned graph from the same reason. dq.unpruned = reason } } else { dq.unpruned = reason if dq.pruned.isDisqualified() { panic(fmt.Sprintf("internal error: %v is marked as disqualified when pruned, but not when unpruned", m)) } if isRoot && rootPruning == unpruned { // Since m is a root that is always unpruned, any other roots — even // pruned ones! — that cause it to be selected would also cause the reason // for is disqualification to be included in the module graph. dq.pruned = reason } } if t.dqReason == nil { t.dqReason = make(map[module.Version]perPruning[dqState]) } t.dqReason[m] = dq if isRoot && (fromPruning == pruned || rootPruning == unpruned) { // Either m is disqualified even when its dependencies are pruned, // or m's go.mod file causes its dependencies to *always* be unpruned. // Everything that depends on it must be disqualified. for _, p := range t.requiring[m] { t.disqualify(p, pruned, dqState{dep: m}) // Note that since the pruned graph is a subset of the unpruned graph, // disqualifying p in the pruned graph also disqualifies it in the // unpruned graph. } // Everything in t.requiring[m] is now fully disqualified. // We won't need to use it again. delete(t.requiring, m) return } // Either m is not a root, or it is a pruned root but only being disqualified // when reached from the unpruned parts of the module graph. // Either way, the reason for this disqualification is only visible to the // unpruned parts of the module graph. for _, p := range t.requiring[m] { t.disqualify(p, unpruned, dqState{dep: m}) } if !isRoot { // Since m is not a root, its dependencies can't be included in the pruned // part of the module graph, and will never be disqualified from a pruned // reason. We've already disqualified everything that matters. delete(t.requiring, m) } } // check reports whether m is disqualified in the given pruning context. func (t *dqTracker) check(m module.Version, pruning modPruning) dqState { return t.dqReason[m].from(pruning) } // path returns the path from m to the reason it is disqualified, which may be // either a module that violates constraints or an error in loading // requirements. // // If m is not disqualified, path returns (nil, nil). func (t *dqTracker) path(m module.Version, pruning modPruning) (path []module.Version, err error) { for { dq := t.dqReason[m].from(pruning) if !dq.isDisqualified() { return path, nil } path = append(path, m) if dq.err != nil || dq.dep == m { return path, dq.err // m itself is the conflict. } m = dq.dep } }