Question

I'm reading the code that package time, and then I want to know how the func After(d Duration) <-chan Time works.

I found the code follows:

func After(d Duration) <-chan Time {
    return NewTimer(d).C
}

func NewTimer(d Duration) *Timer {
    c := make(chan Time, 1)
    t := &Timer{
        C: c,
        r: runtimeTimer{
            when: nano() + int64(d),
            f:    sendTime,
            arg:  c,
        },
    }
    startTimer(&t.r)
    return t
}

So I found the definition of startTimer - it's so weird that function startTimer does not have a function body.

func startTimer(*runtimeTimer)

I want to know that :

  1. Where is the real code of startTimer
  2. Why an "abstract method" can exists here
  3. Why the author of Go wrote it like this

Thanks!

Was it helpful?

Solution

  1. The function is defined here:

    // startTimer adds t to the timer heap.
    //go:linkname startTimer time.startTimer
    func startTimer(t *timer) {
        if raceenabled {
            racerelease(unsafe.Pointer(t))
        }
        addtimer(t)
    }
    
  2. Function declarations:

    A function declaration may omit the body. Such a declaration provides the signature for a function implemented outside Go, such as an assembly routine.

  3. Not every programming language can express its own runtime entirely (C can, for example). Parts of the Go runtime and the standard library are in C, parts are in assembly while some other are in .goc, which is a not well documented hybrid of Go and C.

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