--- title: "Go, Backwards Compatibility, and GODEBUG" layout: article --- ## Introduction {#intro} Go's emphasis on backwards compatibility is one of its key strengths. There are, however, times when we cannot maintain complete compatibility. If code depends on buggy (including insecure) behavior, then fixing the bug will break that code. New features can also have similar impacts: enabling the HTTP/2 use by the HTTP client broke programs connecting to servers with buggy HTTP/2 implementations. These kinds of changes are unavoidable and [permitted by the Go 1 compatibility rules](/doc/go1compat). Even so, Go provides a mechanism called GODEBUG to reduce the impact such changes have on Go developers using newer toolchains to compile old code. A GODEBUG setting is a `key=value` pair that controls the execution of certain parts of a Go program. The environment variable `GODEBUG` can hold a comma-separated list of these settings. For example, if a Go program is running in an environment that contains GODEBUG=http2client=0,http2server=0 then that Go program will disable the use of HTTP/2 by default in both the HTTP client and the HTTP server. It is also possible to set the default `GODEBUG` for a given program (discussed below). When preparing any change that is permitted by Go 1 compatibility but may nonetheless break some existing programs, we first engineer the change to keep as many existing programs working as possible. For the remaining programs, we define a new GODEBUG setting that allows individual programs to opt back in to the old behavior. A GODEBUG setting may not be added if doing so is infeasible, but that should be extremely rare. GODEBUG settings added for compatibility will be maintained for a minimum of two years (four Go releases). Some, such as `http2client` and `http2server`, will be maintained much longer, even indefinitely. When possible, each GODEBUG setting has an associated [runtime/metrics](/pkg/runtime/metrics/) counter named `/godebug/non-default-behavior/:events` that counts the number of times a particular program's behavior has changed based on a non-default value for that setting. For example, when `GODEBUG=http2client=0` is set, `/godebug/non-default-behavior/http2client:events` counts the number of HTTP transports that the program has configured without HTTP/2 support. ## Default GODEBUG Values {#default} When a GODEBUG setting is not listed in the environment variable, its value is derived from three sources: the defaults for the Go toolchain used to build the program, amended to match the Go version listed in `go.mod`, and then overridden by explicit `//go:debug` lines in the program. The [GODEBUG History](#history) gives the exact defaults for each Go toolchain version. For example, Go 1.21 introduces the `panicnil` setting, controlling whether `panic(nil)` is allowed; it defaults to `panicnil=0`, making `panic(nil)` a run-time error. Using `panicnil=1` restores the behavior of Go 1.20 and earlier. When compiling a work module or workspace that declares an older Go version, the Go toolchain amends its defaults to match that older Go version as closely as possible. For example, when a Go 1.21 toolchain compiles a program, if the work module's `go.mod` or the workspace's `go.work` says `go` `1.20`, then the program defaults to `panicnil=1`, matching Go 1.20 instead of Go 1.21. Because this method of setting GODEBUG defaults was introduced only in Go 1.21, programs listing versions of Go earlier than Go 1.20 are configured to match Go 1.20, not the older version. To override these defaults, starting in Go 1.23, the work module's `go.mod` or the workspace's `go.work` can list one or more `godebug` lines: godebug ( default=go1.21 panicnil=1 asynctimerchan=0 ) The special key `default` indicates a Go version to take unspecified settings from. This allows setting the GODEBUG defaults separately from the Go language version in the module. In this example, the program is asking for Go 1.21 semantics and then asking for the old pre-Go 1.21 `panic(nil)` behavior and the new Go 1.23 `asynctimerchan=0` behavior. Only the work module's `go.mod` is consulted for `godebug` directives. Any directives in required dependency modules are ignored. It is an error to list a `godebug` with an unrecognized setting. (Toolchains older than Go 1.23 reject all `godebug` lines, since they do not understand `godebug` at all.) The defaults from the `go` and `godebug` lines apply to all main packages that are built. For more fine-grained control, starting in Go 1.21, a main package's source files can include one or more `//go:debug` directives at the top of the file (preceding the `package` statement). The `godebug` lines in the previous example would be written: //go:debug default=go1.21 //go:debug panicnil=1 //go:debug asynctimerchan=0 Starting in Go 1.21, the Go toolchain treats a `//go:debug` directive with an unrecognized GODEBUG setting as an invalid program. Programs with more than one `//go:debug` line for a given setting are also treated as invalid. (Older toolchains ignore `//go:debug` directives entirely.) The defaults that will be compiled into a main package are reported by the command: {{raw ` go list -f '{{.DefaultGODEBUG}}' my/main/package `}} Only differences from the base Go toolchain defaults are reported. When testing a package, `//go:debug` lines in the `*_test.go` files are treated as directives for the test's main package. In any other context, `//go:debug` lines are ignored by the toolchain; `go` `vet` reports such lines as misplaced. ## GODEBUG History {#history} This section documents the GODEBUG settings introduced and removed in each major Go release for compatibility reasons. Packages or programs may define additional settings for internal debugging purposes; for example, see the [runtime documentation](/pkg/runtime#hdr-Environment_Variables) and the [go command documentation](/cmd/go#hdr-Build_and_test_caching). ### Go 1.23 Go 1.23 changed the channels created by package time to be unbuffered (synchronous), which makes correct use of the [`Timer.Stop`](/pkg/time/#Timer.Stop) and [`Timer.Reset`](/pkg/time/#Timer.Reset) method results much easier. The [`asynctimerchan` setting](/pkg/time/#NewTimer) disables this change. There are no runtime metrics for this change, This setting may be removed in a future release, Go 1.27 at the earliest. Go 1.23 changed the mode bits reported by [`os.Lstat`](/pkg/os#Lstat) and [`os.Stat`](/pkg/os#Stat) for reparse points, which can be controlled with the `winsymlink` setting. As of Go 1.23 (`winsymlink=1`), mount points no longer have [`os.ModeSymlink`](/pkg/os#ModeSymlink) set, and reparse points that are not symlinks, Unix sockets, or dedup files now always have [`os.ModeIrregular`](/pkg/os#ModeIrregular) set. As a result of these changes, [`filepath.EvalSymlinks`](/pkg/path/filepath#EvalSymlinks) no longer evaluates mount points, which was a source of many inconsistencies and bugs. At previous versions (`winsymlink=0`), mount points are treated as symlinks, and other reparse points with non-default [`os.ModeType`](/pkg/os#ModeType) bits (such as [`os.ModeDir`](/pkg/os#ModeDir)) do not have the `ModeIrregular` bit set. Go 1.23 changed [`os.Readlink`](/pkg/os#Readlink) and [`filepath.EvalSymlinks`](/pkg/path/filepath#EvalSymlinks) to avoid trying to normalize volumes to drive letters, which was not always even possible. This behavior is controlled by the `winreadlinkvolume` setting. For Go 1.23, it defaults to `winreadlinkvolume=1`. Previous versions default to `winreadlinkvolume=0`. ### Go 1.22 Go 1.22 adds a configurable limit to control the maximum acceptable RSA key size that can be used in TLS handshakes, controlled by the [`tlsmaxrsasize` setting](/pkg/crypto/tls#Conn.Handshake). The default is tlsmaxrsasize=8192, limiting RSA to 8192-bit keys. To avoid denial of service attacks, this setting and default was backported to Go 1.19.13, Go 1.20.8, and Go 1.21.1. Go 1.22 made it an error for a request or response read by a net/http client or server to have an empty Content-Length header. This behavior is controlled by the `httplaxcontentlength` setting. Go 1.22 changed the behavior of ServeMux to accept extended patterns and unescape both patterns and request paths by segment. This behavior can be controlled by the [`httpmuxgo121` setting](/pkg/net/http/#ServeMux). Go 1.22 added the [Alias type](/pkg/go/types#Alias) to [go/types](/pkg/go/types) for the explicit representation of [type aliases](/ref/spec#Type_declarations). Whether the type checker produces `Alias` types or not is controlled by the [`gotypesalias` setting](/pkg/go/types#Alias). For Go 1.22 it defaults to `gotypesalias=0`. For Go 1.23, `gotypesalias=1` will become the default. This setting will be removed in a future release, Go 1.27 at the earliest. Go 1.22 changed the default minimum TLS version supported by both servers and clients to TLS 1.2. The default can be reverted to TLS 1.0 using the [`tls10server` setting](/pkg/crypto/tls/#Config). Go 1.22 changed the default TLS cipher suites used by clients and servers when not explicitly configured, removing the cipher suites which used RSA based key exchange. The default can be reverted using the [`tlsrsakex` setting](/pkg/crypto/tls/#Config). Go 1.22 disabled [`ConnectionState.ExportKeyingMaterial`](/pkg/crypto/tls/#ConnectionState.ExportKeyingMaterial) when the connection supports neither TLS 1.3 nor Extended Master Secret (implemented in Go 1.21). It can be reenabled with the [`tlsunsafeekm` setting](/pkg/crypto/tls/#ConnectionState.ExportKeyingMaterial). Go 1.22 changed how the runtime interacts with transparent huge pages on Linux. In particular, a common default Linux kernel configuration can result in significant memory overheads, and Go 1.22 no longer works around this default. To work around this issue without adjusting kernel settings, transparent huge pages can be disabled for Go memory with the [`disablethp` setting](/pkg/runtime#hdr-Environment_Variable). This behavior was backported to Go 1.21.1, but the setting is only available starting with Go 1.21.6. This setting may be removed in a future release, and users impacted by this issue should adjust their Linux configuration according to the recommendations in the [GC guide](/doc/gc-guide#Linux_transparent_huge_pages), or switch to a Linux distribution that disables transparent huge pages altogether. Go 1.22 added contention on runtime-internal locks to the [`mutex` profile](/pkg/runtime/pprof#Profile). Contention on these locks is always reported at `runtime._LostContendedRuntimeLock`. Complete stack traces of runtime locks can be enabled with the [`runtimecontentionstacks` setting](/pkg/runtime#hdr-Environment_Variable). These stack traces have non-standard semantics, see setting documentation for details. Go 1.22 added a new [`crypto/x509.Certificate`](/pkg/crypto/x509/#Certificate) field, [`Policies`](/pkg/crypto/x509/#Certificate.Policies), which supports certificate policy OIDs with components larger than 31 bits. By default this field is only used during parsing, when it is populated with policy OIDs, but not used during marshaling. It can be used to marshal these larger OIDs, instead of the existing PolicyIdentifiers field, by using the [`x509usepolicies` setting.](/pkg/crypto/x509/#CreateCertificate). ### Go 1.21 Go 1.21 made it a run-time error to call `panic` with a nil interface value, controlled by the [`panicnil` setting](/pkg/builtin/#panic). Go 1.21 made it an error for html/template actions to appear inside of an ECMAScript 6 template literal, controlled by the [`jstmpllitinterp` setting](/pkg/html/template#hdr-Security_Model). This behavior was backported to Go 1.19.8+ and Go 1.20.3+. Go 1.21 introduced a limit on the maximum number of MIME headers and multipart forms, controlled by the [`multipartmaxheaders` and `multipartmaxparts` settings](/pkg/mime/multipart#hdr-Limits) respectively. This behavior was backported to Go 1.19.8+ and Go 1.20.3+. Go 1.21 adds the support of Multipath TCP but it is only used if the application explicitly asked for it. This behavior can be controlled by the [`multipathtcp` setting](/pkg/net#Dialer.SetMultipathTCP). There is no plan to remove any of these settings. ### Go 1.20 Go 1.20 introduced support for rejecting insecure paths in tar and zip archives, controlled by the [`tarinsecurepath` setting](/pkg/archive/tar/#Reader.Next) and the [`zipinsecurepath` setting](/pkg/archive/zip/#NewReader). These default to `tarinsecurepath=1` and `zipinsecurepath=1`, preserving the behavior of earlier versions of Go. A future version of Go may change the defaults to `tarinsecurepath=0` and `zipinsecurepath=0`. Go 1.20 introduced automatic seeding of the [`math/rand`](/pkg/math/rand) global random number generator, controlled by the [`randautoseed` setting](/pkg/math/rand/#Seed). Go 1.20 introduced the concept of fallback roots for use during certificate verification, controlled by the [`x509usefallbackroots` setting](/pkg/crypto/x509/#SetFallbackRoots). Go 1.20 removed the preinstalled `.a` files for the standard library from the Go distribution. Installations now build and cache the standard library like packages in other modules. The [`installgoroot` setting](/cmd/go#hdr-Compile_and_install_packages_and_dependencies) restores the installation and use of preinstalled `.a` files. There is no plan to remove any of these settings. ### Go 1.19 Go 1.19 made it an error for path lookups to resolve to binaries in the current directory, controlled by the [`execerrdot` setting](/pkg/os/exec#hdr-Executables_in_the_current_directory). There is no plan to remove this setting. ### Go 1.18 Go 1.18 removed support for SHA1 in most X.509 certificates, controlled by the [`x509sha1` setting](/pkg/crypto/x509#InsecureAlgorithmError). This setting will be removed in a future release, Go 1.22 at the earliest. ### Go 1.10 Go 1.10 changed how build caching worked and added test caching, along with the [`gocacheverify`, `gocachehash`, and `gocachetest` settings](/cmd/go/#hdr-Build_and_test_caching). There is no plan to remove these settings. ### Go 1.6 Go 1.6 introduced transparent support for HTTP/2, controlled by the [`http2client`, `http2server`, and `http2debug` settings](/pkg/net/http/#hdr-HTTP_2). There is no plan to remove these settings. ### Go 1.5 Go 1.5 introduced a pure Go DNS resolver, controlled by the [`netdns` setting](/pkg/net/#hdr-Name_Resolution). There is no plan to remove this setting.