Files
CHORUS/vendor/golang.org/x/tools/internal/pkgbits/doc.go
anthonyrawlins 9bdcbe0447 Integrate BACKBEAT SDK and resolve KACHING license validation
Major integrations and fixes:
- Added BACKBEAT SDK integration for P2P operation timing
- Implemented beat-aware status tracking for distributed operations
- Added Docker secrets support for secure license management
- Resolved KACHING license validation via HTTPS/TLS
- Updated docker-compose configuration for clean stack deployment
- Disabled rollback policies to prevent deployment failures
- Added license credential storage (CHORUS-DEV-MULTI-001)

Technical improvements:
- BACKBEAT P2P operation tracking with phase management
- Enhanced configuration system with file-based secrets
- Improved error handling for license validation
- Clean separation of KACHING and CHORUS deployment stacks

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-09-06 07:56:26 +10:00

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1.5 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2022 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
// Package pkgbits implements low-level coding abstractions for
// Unified IR's export data format.
//
// At a low-level, a package is a collection of bitstream elements.
// Each element has a "kind" and a dense, non-negative index.
// Elements can be randomly accessed given their kind and index.
//
// Individual elements are sequences of variable-length values (e.g.,
// integers, booleans, strings, go/constant values, cross-references
// to other elements). Package pkgbits provides APIs for encoding and
// decoding these low-level values, but the details of mapping
// higher-level Go constructs into elements is left to higher-level
// abstractions.
//
// Elements may cross-reference each other with "relocations." For
// example, an element representing a pointer type has a relocation
// referring to the element type.
//
// Go constructs may be composed as a constellation of multiple
// elements. For example, a declared function may have one element to
// describe the object (e.g., its name, type, position), and a
// separate element to describe its function body. This allows readers
// some flexibility in efficiently seeking or re-reading data (e.g.,
// inlining requires re-reading the function body for each inlined
// call, without needing to re-read the object-level details).
//
// This is a copy of internal/pkgbits in the Go implementation.
package pkgbits