The Go Blog
Go 1.26 is released
Today the Go team is pleased to release Go 1.26. You can find its binary archives and installers on the download page.
Language changes
Go 1.26 introduces two significant refinements to the language syntax and type system.
First, the built-in new function, which creates a new variable, now allows its operand to be an
expression, specifying the initial value of the variable.
A simple example of this change means that code such as this:
x := int64(300)
ptr := &x
Can be simplified to:
ptr := new(int64(300))
Second, generic types may now refer to themselves in their own type parameter list. This change simplifies the implementation of complex data structures and interfaces.
Performance improvements
The previously experimental Green Tea garbage collector is now enabled by default.
The baseline cgo overhead has been reduced by approximately 30%.
The compiler can now allocate the backing store for slices on the stack in more situations, which improves performance.
Tool improvements
The go fix command has been completely rewritten to use the
Go analysis framework, and now includes a
couple dozen “modernizers”, analyzers
that suggest safe fixes to help your code take advantage of newer features of the language
and standard library. It also includes the
inline analyzer, which
attempts to inline all calls to each function annotated with a //go:fix inline directive.
Two upcoming blog posts will address these features in more detail.
More improvements and changes
Go 1.26 introduces many improvements over Go 1.25 across
its tools, the runtime,
compiler, linker,
and the standard library.
This includes the addition of three new packages: crypto/hpke,
crypto/mlkem/mlkemtest, and
testing/cryptotest.
There are port-specific changes
and GODEBUG settings updates.
Some of the additions in Go 1.26 are in an experimental stage and become exposed only when you explicitly opt in. Notably:
-
An experimental
simd/archsimdpackage provides access to “single instruction, multiple data” (SIMD) operations. -
An experimental
runtime/secretpackage provides a facility for securely erasing temporaries used in code that manipulates secret information, typically cryptographic in nature. -
An experimental
goroutineleakprofile in theruntime/pprofpackage that reports leaked goroutines.
These experiments are all expected to be generally available in a future version of Go. We encourage you to try them out ahead of time. We really value your feedback!
Please refer to the Go 1.26 Release Notes for the complete list of additions, changes, and improvements in Go 1.26.
Over the next few weeks, follow-up blog posts will cover some of the topics relevant to Go 1.26 in more detail. Check back later to read those posts.
Thanks to everyone who contributed to this release by writing code, filing bugs, trying out experimental additions, sharing feedback, and testing the release candidates. Your efforts helped make Go 1.26 as stable as possible. As always, if you notice any problems, please file an issue.
We hope you enjoy using the new release!
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