It assumes that reflect.Value has a field named "flag",
which wasn't the case with obfuscated builds as we obfuscated it.
We already treated the reflect package as special,
for instance when not obfuscating Method or MethodByName.
In a similar fashion, mark reflect's rtype and Value types to not be
obfuscated alongside their field names. Note that rtype is the
implementation behind the reflect.Type interface.
This fix is fairly manual and repetitive.
transformCompile, transformLinkname, and transformAsm should all
use the same mechanism to tell if names should be obfuscated.
However, they do not do that right now, and that refactor feels too
risky for a bugfix release. We add more TODOs instead.
We're not adding go-spew to scripts/check-third-party.sh since the
project is largely abandoned. It's not even a Go module yet.
The only broken bit from it is what we've added to our tests.
Fixes#676.
Even when setting git's current directory to a temporary directory,
it could find a git repository in a parent directory and still malfunction.
Use the --git-dir flag to ensure that walking doesn't happen at all.
While here, ensure that "git apply" is always applying our patches,
and add a regression test to linker.txtar when not testing with -short.
This value is hard-coded in the linker and written in a header.
We could rewrite the final binary, like we used to do with import paths,
but that would require once again maintaining libraries to do so.
Instead, we're now modifying the linker to do what we want.
It's not particularly hard, as every Go install has its source code,
and rebuilding a slightly modified linker only takes a few seconds at most.
Thanks to `go build -overlay`, we only need to copy the files we modify,
and right now we're just modifying one file in the toolchain.
We use a git patch, as the change is fairly static and small,
and the patch is easier to understand and maintain.
The other side of this change is in the runtime,
as it also hard-codes the magic value when loading information.
We modify the code via syntax trees in that case, like `-tiny` does,
because the change is tiny (one literal) and the affected lines of code
are modified regularly between major Go releases.
Since rebuilding a slightly modified linker can take a few seconds,
and Go's build cache does not cache linked binaries,
we keep our own cached version of the rebuilt binary in `os.UserCacheDir`.
The feature isn't perfect, and will be improved in the future.
See the TODOs about the added dependency on `git`,
or how we are currently only able to cache one linker binary at once.
Fixes#622.