The first makes our test scripts more consistent, as all external
program executions happen via "exec" and are not as easily confused
with custom builtin commands like our "generate-literals".
The second catches mistakes if any of our txtar files have duplicate
files, where all but one of the contents would be ignored before.
Changes literal obfuscation such that literals of any size will be obfuscated,
but beyond `maxSize` we only use the `simple` obfuscator.
This one seems to apply AND, OR, or XOR operators byte-wise and should be safe to use,
unlike some of the other obfuscators which are quadratic on the literal size or worse.
The test for literals is changed a bit to verify that obfuscation is applied.
The code written to the `extra_literals.go` file by the test helper now ensures
that Go does not optimize the literals away when we build the binary.
We also append a unique string to all literals so that we can test that
an unobfuscated build contains this string while an obfuscated build does not.
Now that we dropped Go 1.19, we can use it again,
since the referenced bug was fixed in Go 1.20.
This is a separate commit, as this change does alter the way we
obfuscate Go builds, so it's not just a cleanup.
garble's -literals flag and its patching of the runtime may leave unused imports.
We used to try to detect those and remove the imports,
but that was still buggy with edge cases like dot imports or renamed imports.
Moreover, it was potentially incorrect.
Completely removing an import from a package means we don't run its init funcs,
which could have side effects changing the behavior of a program.
As an example, database/sql drivers are registered at init time.
Instead, for each import in an obfuscated Go file,
add an unnamed declaration which references the imported package.
This may not be necessary for all imported packages,
as only a minority become unused due to garble,
but it's also relatively harmless to do so.
Fixes#658.
Only string literals over 8 characters in length are now being
obfuscated. This leads to around 20% smaller binaries when building with
-literals.
Fixes#618
We can drop the code that kicked in when GOGARBLE was empty.
We can also add the value in addGarbleToHash unconditionally,
as we never allow it to be empty.
In the tests, remove all GOGARBLE lines where it just meant "obfuscate
everything" or "obfuscate the entire main module".
cgo.txtar had "obfuscate everything" as a separate step,
so remove it entirely.
linkname.txtar started failing because the imported package did not
import strings, so listPackage errored out. This wasn't a problem when
strings itself wasn't obfuscated, as transformLinkname silently left
strings.IndexByte untouched. It is a problem when IndexByte does get
obfuscated. Make that kind of listPackage error visible, and fix it.
reflect.txtar started failing with "unreachable method" runtime throws.
It's not clear to me why; it appears that GOGARBLE=* makes the linker
think that ExportedMethodName is suddenly unreachable.
Work around the problem by making the method explicitly reachable,
and leave a TODO as a reminder to investigate.
Finally, gogarble.txtar no longer needs to test for GOPRIVATE.
The rest of the test is left the same, as we still want the various
values for GOGARBLE to continue to work just like before.
Fixes#594.
Following the best practices from upstream.
In particular, the "txt" extension is somewhat ambiguous.
This may cause some conflicts due to the git diff noise,
but hopefully we won't ever do this again.