Package loopclosure defines an Analyzer that checks for references to
enclosing loop variables from within nested functions.
Analyzer loopclosure
loopclosure: check references to loop variables from within nested functions
This analyzer reports places where a function literal references the
iteration variable of an enclosing loop, and the loop calls the function
in such a way (e.g. with go or defer) that it may outlive the loop
iteration and possibly observe the wrong value of the variable.
Note: An iteration variable can only outlive a loop iteration in Go versions <=1.21.
In Go 1.22 and later, the loop variable lifetimes changed to create a new
iteration variable per loop iteration. (See go.dev/issue/60078.)
In this example, all the deferred functions run after the loop has
completed, so all observe the final value of v [<go1.22].
for _, v := range list {
defer func() {
use(v) // incorrect
}()
}
One fix is to create a new variable for each iteration of the loop:
for _, v := range list {
v := v // new var per iteration
defer func() {
use(v) // ok
}()
}
After Go version 1.22, the previous two for loops are equivalent
and both are correct.
The next example uses a go statement and has a similar problem [<go1.22].
In addition, it has a data race because the loop updates v
concurrent with the goroutines accessing it.
for _, v := range elem {
go func() {
use(v) // incorrect, and a data race
}()
}
A fix is the same as before. The checker also reports problems
in goroutines started by golang.org/x/sync/errgroup.Group.
A hard-to-spot variant of this form is common in parallel tests:
func Test(t *testing.T) {
for _, test := range tests {
t.Run(test.name, func(t *testing.T) {
t.Parallel()
use(test) // incorrect, and a data race
})
}
}
The t.Parallel() call causes the rest of the function to execute
concurrent with the loop [<go1.22].
The analyzer reports references only in the last statement,
as it is not deep enough to understand the effects of subsequent
statements that might render the reference benign.
("Last statement" is defined recursively in compound
statements such as if, switch, and select.)
See: https://golang.org/doc/go_faq.html#closures_and_goroutines