Remove the use of reflection when packing and unpacking, instead
generate all the pack and unpack functions using msg_generate.
This will generate zmsg.go which in turn calls the helper functions from
msg_helper.go.
This increases the speed by about ~30% while cutting back on memory
usage. Not all RRs are using it, but that will be rectified in upcoming
PR.
Most of the speed increase is in the header/question section parsing.
These functions *are* not generated, but straight forward enough. The
implementation can be found in msg.go.
The new code has been fuzzed by go-fuzz, which turned up some issues.
All files that started with 'z', and not autogenerated were renamed,
i.e. zscan.go is now scan.go.
Reflection is still used, in subsequent PRs it will be removed entirely.
Remove trailing \n from t.Log and t.Error messages as it's unnecessary.
In some instances, combine multiple t.Error()s into one
To provide more consistency across the tests, rename e to err and use %v
as the format arg for errors.
Replace Logf and Errorf with Log and Error when it made sense. For
example t.Errorf("%v", err) to t.Error(err)
This new functions just compiles the domain to wire format, if that
works, the name is deemed OK. It is also much less strict than the
older code. Almost everything is allowed in the name, except two
dots back to back (there is an explicit test for that).
SplitDomainName would always include the '.' after each label segment. This was
inconsistent with the "." case (were it returned nil) and didn't seem too useful
since it required more processing to remove the '.' (like when building a
compression dictionary in Msg.Len() or Msg.Pack()). It also had issues with the
last segment, not including it in the split. It now returns all segments,
including the last, irrespective of the label being fully qualified.
A test has also been added to ensure no regressions.