chore: vendor

This commit is contained in:
2024-08-04 11:06:58 +02:00
parent 2a5985e44e
commit 04aec8232f
3557 changed files with 981078 additions and 1 deletions

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vendor/github.com/docker/go/canonical/json/decode.go generated vendored Normal file

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vendor/github.com/docker/go/canonical/json/encode.go generated vendored Normal file

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vendor/github.com/docker/go/canonical/json/fold.go generated vendored Normal file
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// Copyright 2013 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 json
import (
"bytes"
"unicode/utf8"
)
const (
caseMask = ^byte(0x20) // Mask to ignore case in ASCII.
kelvin = '\u212a'
smallLongEss = '\u017f'
)
// foldFunc returns one of four different case folding equivalence
// functions, from most general (and slow) to fastest:
//
// 1) bytes.EqualFold, if the key s contains any non-ASCII UTF-8
// 2) equalFoldRight, if s contains special folding ASCII ('k', 'K', 's', 'S')
// 3) asciiEqualFold, no special, but includes non-letters (including _)
// 4) simpleLetterEqualFold, no specials, no non-letters.
//
// The letters S and K are special because they map to 3 runes, not just 2:
// - S maps to s and to U+017F 'ſ' Latin small letter long s
// - k maps to K and to U+212A '' Kelvin sign
//
// See https://play.golang.org/p/tTxjOc0OGo
//
// The returned function is specialized for matching against s and
// should only be given s. It's not curried for performance reasons.
func foldFunc(s []byte) func(s, t []byte) bool {
nonLetter := false
special := false // special letter
for _, b := range s {
if b >= utf8.RuneSelf {
return bytes.EqualFold
}
upper := b & caseMask
if upper < 'A' || upper > 'Z' {
nonLetter = true
} else if upper == 'K' || upper == 'S' {
// See above for why these letters are special.
special = true
}
}
if special {
return equalFoldRight
}
if nonLetter {
return asciiEqualFold
}
return simpleLetterEqualFold
}
// equalFoldRight is a specialization of bytes.EqualFold when s is
// known to be all ASCII (including punctuation), but contains an 's',
// 'S', 'k', or 'K', requiring a Unicode fold on the bytes in t.
// See comments on foldFunc.
func equalFoldRight(s, t []byte) bool {
for _, sb := range s {
if len(t) == 0 {
return false
}
tb := t[0]
if tb < utf8.RuneSelf {
if sb != tb {
sbUpper := sb & caseMask
if 'A' <= sbUpper && sbUpper <= 'Z' {
if sbUpper != tb&caseMask {
return false
}
} else {
return false
}
}
t = t[1:]
continue
}
// sb is ASCII and t is not. t must be either kelvin
// sign or long s; sb must be s, S, k, or K.
tr, size := utf8.DecodeRune(t)
switch sb {
case 's', 'S':
if tr != smallLongEss {
return false
}
case 'k', 'K':
if tr != kelvin {
return false
}
default:
return false
}
t = t[size:]
}
if len(t) > 0 {
return false
}
return true
}
// asciiEqualFold is a specialization of bytes.EqualFold for use when
// s is all ASCII (but may contain non-letters) and contains no
// special-folding letters.
// See comments on foldFunc.
func asciiEqualFold(s, t []byte) bool {
if len(s) != len(t) {
return false
}
for i, sb := range s {
tb := t[i]
if sb == tb {
continue
}
if ('a' <= sb && sb <= 'z') || ('A' <= sb && sb <= 'Z') {
if sb&caseMask != tb&caseMask {
return false
}
} else {
return false
}
}
return true
}
// simpleLetterEqualFold is a specialization of bytes.EqualFold for
// use when s is all ASCII letters (no underscores, etc) and also
// doesn't contain 'k', 'K', 's', or 'S'.
// See comments on foldFunc.
func simpleLetterEqualFold(s, t []byte) bool {
if len(s) != len(t) {
return false
}
for i, b := range s {
if b&caseMask != t[i]&caseMask {
return false
}
}
return true
}

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vendor/github.com/docker/go/canonical/json/indent.go generated vendored Normal file
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// Copyright 2010 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 json
import "bytes"
// Compact appends to dst the JSON-encoded src with
// insignificant space characters elided.
func Compact(dst *bytes.Buffer, src []byte) error {
return compact(dst, src, false)
}
func compact(dst *bytes.Buffer, src []byte, escape bool) error {
origLen := dst.Len()
var scan scanner
scan.reset()
start := 0
for i, c := range src {
if escape && (c == '<' || c == '>' || c == '&') {
if start < i {
dst.Write(src[start:i])
}
dst.WriteString(`\u00`)
dst.WriteByte(hex[c>>4])
dst.WriteByte(hex[c&0xF])
start = i + 1
}
// Convert U+2028 and U+2029 (E2 80 A8 and E2 80 A9).
if c == 0xE2 && i+2 < len(src) && src[i+1] == 0x80 && src[i+2]&^1 == 0xA8 {
if start < i {
dst.Write(src[start:i])
}
dst.WriteString(`\u202`)
dst.WriteByte(hex[src[i+2]&0xF])
start = i + 3
}
v := scan.step(&scan, c)
if v >= scanSkipSpace {
if v == scanError {
break
}
if start < i {
dst.Write(src[start:i])
}
start = i + 1
}
}
if scan.eof() == scanError {
dst.Truncate(origLen)
return scan.err
}
if start < len(src) {
dst.Write(src[start:])
}
return nil
}
func newline(dst *bytes.Buffer, prefix, indent string, depth int) {
dst.WriteByte('\n')
dst.WriteString(prefix)
for i := 0; i < depth; i++ {
dst.WriteString(indent)
}
}
// Indent appends to dst an indented form of the JSON-encoded src.
// Each element in a JSON object or array begins on a new,
// indented line beginning with prefix followed by one or more
// copies of indent according to the indentation nesting.
// The data appended to dst does not begin with the prefix nor
// any indentation, to make it easier to embed inside other formatted JSON data.
// Although leading space characters (space, tab, carriage return, newline)
// at the beginning of src are dropped, trailing space characters
// at the end of src are preserved and copied to dst.
// For example, if src has no trailing spaces, neither will dst;
// if src ends in a trailing newline, so will dst.
func Indent(dst *bytes.Buffer, src []byte, prefix, indent string) error {
origLen := dst.Len()
var scan scanner
scan.reset()
needIndent := false
depth := 0
for _, c := range src {
scan.bytes++
v := scan.step(&scan, c)
if v == scanSkipSpace {
continue
}
if v == scanError {
break
}
if needIndent && v != scanEndObject && v != scanEndArray {
needIndent = false
depth++
newline(dst, prefix, indent, depth)
}
// Emit semantically uninteresting bytes
// (in particular, punctuation in strings) unmodified.
if v == scanContinue {
dst.WriteByte(c)
continue
}
// Add spacing around real punctuation.
switch c {
case '{', '[':
// delay indent so that empty object and array are formatted as {} and [].
needIndent = true
dst.WriteByte(c)
case ',':
dst.WriteByte(c)
newline(dst, prefix, indent, depth)
case ':':
dst.WriteByte(c)
dst.WriteByte(' ')
case '}', ']':
if needIndent {
// suppress indent in empty object/array
needIndent = false
} else {
depth--
newline(dst, prefix, indent, depth)
}
dst.WriteByte(c)
default:
dst.WriteByte(c)
}
}
if scan.eof() == scanError {
dst.Truncate(origLen)
return scan.err
}
return nil
}

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// Copyright 2010 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 json
// JSON value parser state machine.
// Just about at the limit of what is reasonable to write by hand.
// Some parts are a bit tedious, but overall it nicely factors out the
// otherwise common code from the multiple scanning functions
// in this package (Compact, Indent, checkValid, nextValue, etc).
//
// This file starts with two simple examples using the scanner
// before diving into the scanner itself.
import "strconv"
// checkValid verifies that data is valid JSON-encoded data.
// scan is passed in for use by checkValid to avoid an allocation.
func checkValid(data []byte, scan *scanner) error {
scan.reset()
for _, c := range data {
scan.bytes++
if scan.step(scan, c) == scanError {
return scan.err
}
}
if scan.eof() == scanError {
return scan.err
}
return nil
}
// nextValue splits data after the next whole JSON value,
// returning that value and the bytes that follow it as separate slices.
// scan is passed in for use by nextValue to avoid an allocation.
func nextValue(data []byte, scan *scanner) (value, rest []byte, err error) {
scan.reset()
for i, c := range data {
v := scan.step(scan, c)
if v >= scanEndObject {
switch v {
// probe the scanner with a space to determine whether we will
// get scanEnd on the next character. Otherwise, if the next character
// is not a space, scanEndTop allocates a needless error.
case scanEndObject, scanEndArray:
if scan.step(scan, ' ') == scanEnd {
return data[:i+1], data[i+1:], nil
}
case scanError:
return nil, nil, scan.err
case scanEnd:
return data[:i], data[i:], nil
}
}
}
if scan.eof() == scanError {
return nil, nil, scan.err
}
return data, nil, nil
}
// A SyntaxError is a description of a JSON syntax error.
type SyntaxError struct {
msg string // description of error
Offset int64 // error occurred after reading Offset bytes
}
func (e *SyntaxError) Error() string { return e.msg }
// A scanner is a JSON scanning state machine.
// Callers call scan.reset() and then pass bytes in one at a time
// by calling scan.step(&scan, c) for each byte.
// The return value, referred to as an opcode, tells the
// caller about significant parsing events like beginning
// and ending literals, objects, and arrays, so that the
// caller can follow along if it wishes.
// The return value scanEnd indicates that a single top-level
// JSON value has been completed, *before* the byte that
// just got passed in. (The indication must be delayed in order
// to recognize the end of numbers: is 123 a whole value or
// the beginning of 12345e+6?).
type scanner struct {
// The step is a func to be called to execute the next transition.
// Also tried using an integer constant and a single func
// with a switch, but using the func directly was 10% faster
// on a 64-bit Mac Mini, and it's nicer to read.
step func(*scanner, byte) int
// Reached end of top-level value.
endTop bool
// Stack of what we're in the middle of - array values, object keys, object values.
parseState []int
// Error that happened, if any.
err error
// 1-byte redo (see undo method)
redo bool
redoCode int
redoState func(*scanner, byte) int
// total bytes consumed, updated by decoder.Decode
bytes int64
}
// These values are returned by the state transition functions
// assigned to scanner.state and the method scanner.eof.
// They give details about the current state of the scan that
// callers might be interested to know about.
// It is okay to ignore the return value of any particular
// call to scanner.state: if one call returns scanError,
// every subsequent call will return scanError too.
const (
// Continue.
scanContinue = iota // uninteresting byte
scanBeginLiteral // end implied by next result != scanContinue
scanBeginObject // begin object
scanObjectKey // just finished object key (string)
scanObjectValue // just finished non-last object value
scanEndObject // end object (implies scanObjectValue if possible)
scanBeginArray // begin array
scanArrayValue // just finished array value
scanEndArray // end array (implies scanArrayValue if possible)
scanSkipSpace // space byte; can skip; known to be last "continue" result
// Stop.
scanEnd // top-level value ended *before* this byte; known to be first "stop" result
scanError // hit an error, scanner.err.
)
// These values are stored in the parseState stack.
// They give the current state of a composite value
// being scanned. If the parser is inside a nested value
// the parseState describes the nested state, outermost at entry 0.
const (
parseObjectKey = iota // parsing object key (before colon)
parseObjectValue // parsing object value (after colon)
parseArrayValue // parsing array value
)
// reset prepares the scanner for use.
// It must be called before calling s.step.
func (s *scanner) reset() {
s.step = stateBeginValue
s.parseState = s.parseState[0:0]
s.err = nil
s.redo = false
s.endTop = false
}
// eof tells the scanner that the end of input has been reached.
// It returns a scan status just as s.step does.
func (s *scanner) eof() int {
if s.err != nil {
return scanError
}
if s.endTop {
return scanEnd
}
s.step(s, ' ')
if s.endTop {
return scanEnd
}
if s.err == nil {
s.err = &SyntaxError{"unexpected end of JSON input", s.bytes}
}
return scanError
}
// pushParseState pushes a new parse state p onto the parse stack.
func (s *scanner) pushParseState(p int) {
s.parseState = append(s.parseState, p)
}
// popParseState pops a parse state (already obtained) off the stack
// and updates s.step accordingly.
func (s *scanner) popParseState() {
n := len(s.parseState) - 1
s.parseState = s.parseState[0:n]
s.redo = false
if n == 0 {
s.step = stateEndTop
s.endTop = true
} else {
s.step = stateEndValue
}
}
func isSpace(c byte) bool {
return c == ' ' || c == '\t' || c == '\r' || c == '\n'
}
// stateBeginValueOrEmpty is the state after reading `[`.
func stateBeginValueOrEmpty(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if c <= ' ' && isSpace(c) {
return scanSkipSpace
}
if c == ']' {
return stateEndValue(s, c)
}
return stateBeginValue(s, c)
}
// stateBeginValue is the state at the beginning of the input.
func stateBeginValue(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if c <= ' ' && isSpace(c) {
return scanSkipSpace
}
switch c {
case '{':
s.step = stateBeginStringOrEmpty
s.pushParseState(parseObjectKey)
return scanBeginObject
case '[':
s.step = stateBeginValueOrEmpty
s.pushParseState(parseArrayValue)
return scanBeginArray
case '"':
s.step = stateInString
return scanBeginLiteral
case '-':
s.step = stateNeg
return scanBeginLiteral
case '0': // beginning of 0.123
s.step = state0
return scanBeginLiteral
case 't': // beginning of true
s.step = stateT
return scanBeginLiteral
case 'f': // beginning of false
s.step = stateF
return scanBeginLiteral
case 'n': // beginning of null
s.step = stateN
return scanBeginLiteral
}
if '1' <= c && c <= '9' { // beginning of 1234.5
s.step = state1
return scanBeginLiteral
}
return s.error(c, "looking for beginning of value")
}
// stateBeginStringOrEmpty is the state after reading `{`.
func stateBeginStringOrEmpty(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if c <= ' ' && isSpace(c) {
return scanSkipSpace
}
if c == '}' {
n := len(s.parseState)
s.parseState[n-1] = parseObjectValue
return stateEndValue(s, c)
}
return stateBeginString(s, c)
}
// stateBeginString is the state after reading `{"key": value,`.
func stateBeginString(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if c <= ' ' && isSpace(c) {
return scanSkipSpace
}
if c == '"' {
s.step = stateInString
return scanBeginLiteral
}
return s.error(c, "looking for beginning of object key string")
}
// stateEndValue is the state after completing a value,
// such as after reading `{}` or `true` or `["x"`.
func stateEndValue(s *scanner, c byte) int {
n := len(s.parseState)
if n == 0 {
// Completed top-level before the current byte.
s.step = stateEndTop
s.endTop = true
return stateEndTop(s, c)
}
if c <= ' ' && isSpace(c) {
s.step = stateEndValue
return scanSkipSpace
}
ps := s.parseState[n-1]
switch ps {
case parseObjectKey:
if c == ':' {
s.parseState[n-1] = parseObjectValue
s.step = stateBeginValue
return scanObjectKey
}
return s.error(c, "after object key")
case parseObjectValue:
if c == ',' {
s.parseState[n-1] = parseObjectKey
s.step = stateBeginString
return scanObjectValue
}
if c == '}' {
s.popParseState()
return scanEndObject
}
return s.error(c, "after object key:value pair")
case parseArrayValue:
if c == ',' {
s.step = stateBeginValue
return scanArrayValue
}
if c == ']' {
s.popParseState()
return scanEndArray
}
return s.error(c, "after array element")
}
return s.error(c, "")
}
// stateEndTop is the state after finishing the top-level value,
// such as after reading `{}` or `[1,2,3]`.
// Only space characters should be seen now.
func stateEndTop(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if c != ' ' && c != '\t' && c != '\r' && c != '\n' {
// Complain about non-space byte on next call.
s.error(c, "after top-level value")
}
return scanEnd
}
// stateInString is the state after reading `"`.
func stateInString(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if c == '"' {
s.step = stateEndValue
return scanContinue
}
if c == '\\' {
s.step = stateInStringEsc
return scanContinue
}
if c < 0x20 {
return s.error(c, "in string literal")
}
return scanContinue
}
// stateInStringEsc is the state after reading `"\` during a quoted string.
func stateInStringEsc(s *scanner, c byte) int {
switch c {
case 'b', 'f', 'n', 'r', 't', '\\', '/', '"':
s.step = stateInString
return scanContinue
case 'u':
s.step = stateInStringEscU
return scanContinue
}
return s.error(c, "in string escape code")
}
// stateInStringEscU is the state after reading `"\u` during a quoted string.
func stateInStringEscU(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if '0' <= c && c <= '9' || 'a' <= c && c <= 'f' || 'A' <= c && c <= 'F' {
s.step = stateInStringEscU1
return scanContinue
}
// numbers
return s.error(c, "in \\u hexadecimal character escape")
}
// stateInStringEscU1 is the state after reading `"\u1` during a quoted string.
func stateInStringEscU1(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if '0' <= c && c <= '9' || 'a' <= c && c <= 'f' || 'A' <= c && c <= 'F' {
s.step = stateInStringEscU12
return scanContinue
}
// numbers
return s.error(c, "in \\u hexadecimal character escape")
}
// stateInStringEscU12 is the state after reading `"\u12` during a quoted string.
func stateInStringEscU12(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if '0' <= c && c <= '9' || 'a' <= c && c <= 'f' || 'A' <= c && c <= 'F' {
s.step = stateInStringEscU123
return scanContinue
}
// numbers
return s.error(c, "in \\u hexadecimal character escape")
}
// stateInStringEscU123 is the state after reading `"\u123` during a quoted string.
func stateInStringEscU123(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if '0' <= c && c <= '9' || 'a' <= c && c <= 'f' || 'A' <= c && c <= 'F' {
s.step = stateInString
return scanContinue
}
// numbers
return s.error(c, "in \\u hexadecimal character escape")
}
// stateNeg is the state after reading `-` during a number.
func stateNeg(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if c == '0' {
s.step = state0
return scanContinue
}
if '1' <= c && c <= '9' {
s.step = state1
return scanContinue
}
return s.error(c, "in numeric literal")
}
// state1 is the state after reading a non-zero integer during a number,
// such as after reading `1` or `100` but not `0`.
func state1(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if '0' <= c && c <= '9' {
s.step = state1
return scanContinue
}
return state0(s, c)
}
// state0 is the state after reading `0` during a number.
func state0(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if c == '.' {
s.step = stateDot
return scanContinue
}
if c == 'e' || c == 'E' {
s.step = stateE
return scanContinue
}
return stateEndValue(s, c)
}
// stateDot is the state after reading the integer and decimal point in a number,
// such as after reading `1.`.
func stateDot(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if '0' <= c && c <= '9' {
s.step = stateDot0
return scanContinue
}
return s.error(c, "after decimal point in numeric literal")
}
// stateDot0 is the state after reading the integer, decimal point, and subsequent
// digits of a number, such as after reading `3.14`.
func stateDot0(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if '0' <= c && c <= '9' {
return scanContinue
}
if c == 'e' || c == 'E' {
s.step = stateE
return scanContinue
}
return stateEndValue(s, c)
}
// stateE is the state after reading the mantissa and e in a number,
// such as after reading `314e` or `0.314e`.
func stateE(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if c == '+' || c == '-' {
s.step = stateESign
return scanContinue
}
return stateESign(s, c)
}
// stateESign is the state after reading the mantissa, e, and sign in a number,
// such as after reading `314e-` or `0.314e+`.
func stateESign(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if '0' <= c && c <= '9' {
s.step = stateE0
return scanContinue
}
return s.error(c, "in exponent of numeric literal")
}
// stateE0 is the state after reading the mantissa, e, optional sign,
// and at least one digit of the exponent in a number,
// such as after reading `314e-2` or `0.314e+1` or `3.14e0`.
func stateE0(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if '0' <= c && c <= '9' {
return scanContinue
}
return stateEndValue(s, c)
}
// stateT is the state after reading `t`.
func stateT(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if c == 'r' {
s.step = stateTr
return scanContinue
}
return s.error(c, "in literal true (expecting 'r')")
}
// stateTr is the state after reading `tr`.
func stateTr(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if c == 'u' {
s.step = stateTru
return scanContinue
}
return s.error(c, "in literal true (expecting 'u')")
}
// stateTru is the state after reading `tru`.
func stateTru(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if c == 'e' {
s.step = stateEndValue
return scanContinue
}
return s.error(c, "in literal true (expecting 'e')")
}
// stateF is the state after reading `f`.
func stateF(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if c == 'a' {
s.step = stateFa
return scanContinue
}
return s.error(c, "in literal false (expecting 'a')")
}
// stateFa is the state after reading `fa`.
func stateFa(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if c == 'l' {
s.step = stateFal
return scanContinue
}
return s.error(c, "in literal false (expecting 'l')")
}
// stateFal is the state after reading `fal`.
func stateFal(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if c == 's' {
s.step = stateFals
return scanContinue
}
return s.error(c, "in literal false (expecting 's')")
}
// stateFals is the state after reading `fals`.
func stateFals(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if c == 'e' {
s.step = stateEndValue
return scanContinue
}
return s.error(c, "in literal false (expecting 'e')")
}
// stateN is the state after reading `n`.
func stateN(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if c == 'u' {
s.step = stateNu
return scanContinue
}
return s.error(c, "in literal null (expecting 'u')")
}
// stateNu is the state after reading `nu`.
func stateNu(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if c == 'l' {
s.step = stateNul
return scanContinue
}
return s.error(c, "in literal null (expecting 'l')")
}
// stateNul is the state after reading `nul`.
func stateNul(s *scanner, c byte) int {
if c == 'l' {
s.step = stateEndValue
return scanContinue
}
return s.error(c, "in literal null (expecting 'l')")
}
// stateError is the state after reaching a syntax error,
// such as after reading `[1}` or `5.1.2`.
func stateError(s *scanner, c byte) int {
return scanError
}
// error records an error and switches to the error state.
func (s *scanner) error(c byte, context string) int {
s.step = stateError
s.err = &SyntaxError{"invalid character " + quoteChar(c) + " " + context, s.bytes}
return scanError
}
// quoteChar formats c as a quoted character literal
func quoteChar(c byte) string {
// special cases - different from quoted strings
if c == '\'' {
return `'\''`
}
if c == '"' {
return `'"'`
}
// use quoted string with different quotation marks
s := strconv.Quote(string(c))
return "'" + s[1:len(s)-1] + "'"
}
// undo causes the scanner to return scanCode from the next state transition.
// This gives callers a simple 1-byte undo mechanism.
func (s *scanner) undo(scanCode int) {
if s.redo {
panic("json: invalid use of scanner")
}
s.redoCode = scanCode
s.redoState = s.step
s.step = stateRedo
s.redo = true
}
// stateRedo helps implement the scanner's 1-byte undo.
func stateRedo(s *scanner, c byte) int {
s.redo = false
s.step = s.redoState
return s.redoCode
}

486
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// Copyright 2010 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 json
import (
"bytes"
"errors"
"io"
)
// A Decoder reads and decodes JSON objects from an input stream.
type Decoder struct {
r io.Reader
buf []byte
d decodeState
scanp int // start of unread data in buf
scan scanner
err error
tokenState int
tokenStack []int
}
// NewDecoder returns a new decoder that reads from r.
//
// The decoder introduces its own buffering and may
// read data from r beyond the JSON values requested.
func NewDecoder(r io.Reader) *Decoder {
return &Decoder{r: r}
}
// UseNumber causes the Decoder to unmarshal a number into an interface{} as a
// Number instead of as a float64.
func (dec *Decoder) UseNumber() { dec.d.useNumber = true }
// Decode reads the next JSON-encoded value from its
// input and stores it in the value pointed to by v.
//
// See the documentation for Unmarshal for details about
// the conversion of JSON into a Go value.
func (dec *Decoder) Decode(v interface{}) error {
if dec.err != nil {
return dec.err
}
if err := dec.tokenPrepareForDecode(); err != nil {
return err
}
if !dec.tokenValueAllowed() {
return &SyntaxError{msg: "not at beginning of value"}
}
// Read whole value into buffer.
n, err := dec.readValue()
if err != nil {
return err
}
dec.d.init(dec.buf[dec.scanp : dec.scanp+n])
dec.scanp += n
// Don't save err from unmarshal into dec.err:
// the connection is still usable since we read a complete JSON
// object from it before the error happened.
err = dec.d.unmarshal(v)
// fixup token streaming state
dec.tokenValueEnd()
return err
}
// Buffered returns a reader of the data remaining in the Decoder's
// buffer. The reader is valid until the next call to Decode.
func (dec *Decoder) Buffered() io.Reader {
return bytes.NewReader(dec.buf[dec.scanp:])
}
// readValue reads a JSON value into dec.buf.
// It returns the length of the encoding.
func (dec *Decoder) readValue() (int, error) {
dec.scan.reset()
scanp := dec.scanp
var err error
Input:
for {
// Look in the buffer for a new value.
for i, c := range dec.buf[scanp:] {
dec.scan.bytes++
v := dec.scan.step(&dec.scan, c)
if v == scanEnd {
scanp += i
break Input
}
// scanEnd is delayed one byte.
// We might block trying to get that byte from src,
// so instead invent a space byte.
if (v == scanEndObject || v == scanEndArray) && dec.scan.step(&dec.scan, ' ') == scanEnd {
scanp += i + 1
break Input
}
if v == scanError {
dec.err = dec.scan.err
return 0, dec.scan.err
}
}
scanp = len(dec.buf)
// Did the last read have an error?
// Delayed until now to allow buffer scan.
if err != nil {
if err == io.EOF {
if dec.scan.step(&dec.scan, ' ') == scanEnd {
break Input
}
if nonSpace(dec.buf) {
err = io.ErrUnexpectedEOF
}
}
dec.err = err
return 0, err
}
n := scanp - dec.scanp
err = dec.refill()
scanp = dec.scanp + n
}
return scanp - dec.scanp, nil
}
func (dec *Decoder) refill() error {
// Make room to read more into the buffer.
// First slide down data already consumed.
if dec.scanp > 0 {
n := copy(dec.buf, dec.buf[dec.scanp:])
dec.buf = dec.buf[:n]
dec.scanp = 0
}
// Grow buffer if not large enough.
const minRead = 512
if cap(dec.buf)-len(dec.buf) < minRead {
newBuf := make([]byte, len(dec.buf), 2*cap(dec.buf)+minRead)
copy(newBuf, dec.buf)
dec.buf = newBuf
}
// Read. Delay error for next iteration (after scan).
n, err := dec.r.Read(dec.buf[len(dec.buf):cap(dec.buf)])
dec.buf = dec.buf[0 : len(dec.buf)+n]
return err
}
func nonSpace(b []byte) bool {
for _, c := range b {
if !isSpace(c) {
return true
}
}
return false
}
// An Encoder writes JSON objects to an output stream.
type Encoder struct {
w io.Writer
err error
canonical bool
}
// NewEncoder returns a new encoder that writes to w.
func NewEncoder(w io.Writer) *Encoder {
return &Encoder{w: w}
}
// Canonical causes the encoder to switch to Canonical JSON mode.
// Read more at: http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Canonical_JSON
func (enc *Encoder) Canonical() { enc.canonical = true }
// Encode writes the JSON encoding of v to the stream,
// followed by a newline character.
//
// See the documentation for Marshal for details about the
// conversion of Go values to JSON.
func (enc *Encoder) Encode(v interface{}) error {
if enc.err != nil {
return enc.err
}
e := newEncodeState(enc.canonical)
err := e.marshal(v)
if err != nil {
return err
}
if !enc.canonical {
// Terminate each value with a newline.
// This makes the output look a little nicer
// when debugging, and some kind of space
// is required if the encoded value was a number,
// so that the reader knows there aren't more
// digits coming.
e.WriteByte('\n')
}
if _, err = enc.w.Write(e.Bytes()); err != nil {
enc.err = err
}
encodeStatePool.Put(e)
return err
}
// RawMessage is a raw encoded JSON object.
// It implements Marshaler and Unmarshaler and can
// be used to delay JSON decoding or precompute a JSON encoding.
type RawMessage []byte
// MarshalJSON returns *m as the JSON encoding of m.
func (m *RawMessage) MarshalJSON() ([]byte, error) {
return *m, nil
}
// UnmarshalJSON sets *m to a copy of data.
func (m *RawMessage) UnmarshalJSON(data []byte) error {
if m == nil {
return errors.New("json.RawMessage: UnmarshalJSON on nil pointer")
}
*m = append((*m)[0:0], data...)
return nil
}
var _ Marshaler = (*RawMessage)(nil)
var _ Unmarshaler = (*RawMessage)(nil)
// A Token holds a value of one of these types:
//
// Delim, for the four JSON delimiters [ ] { }
// bool, for JSON booleans
// float64, for JSON numbers
// Number, for JSON numbers
// string, for JSON string literals
// nil, for JSON null
type Token interface{}
const (
tokenTopValue = iota
tokenArrayStart
tokenArrayValue
tokenArrayComma
tokenObjectStart
tokenObjectKey
tokenObjectColon
tokenObjectValue
tokenObjectComma
)
// advance tokenstate from a separator state to a value state
func (dec *Decoder) tokenPrepareForDecode() error {
// Note: Not calling peek before switch, to avoid
// putting peek into the standard Decode path.
// peek is only called when using the Token API.
switch dec.tokenState {
case tokenArrayComma:
c, err := dec.peek()
if err != nil {
return err
}
if c != ',' {
return &SyntaxError{"expected comma after array element", 0}
}
dec.scanp++
dec.tokenState = tokenArrayValue
case tokenObjectColon:
c, err := dec.peek()
if err != nil {
return err
}
if c != ':' {
return &SyntaxError{"expected colon after object key", 0}
}
dec.scanp++
dec.tokenState = tokenObjectValue
}
return nil
}
func (dec *Decoder) tokenValueAllowed() bool {
switch dec.tokenState {
case tokenTopValue, tokenArrayStart, tokenArrayValue, tokenObjectValue:
return true
}
return false
}
func (dec *Decoder) tokenValueEnd() {
switch dec.tokenState {
case tokenArrayStart, tokenArrayValue:
dec.tokenState = tokenArrayComma
case tokenObjectValue:
dec.tokenState = tokenObjectComma
}
}
// A Delim is a JSON array or object delimiter, one of [ ] { or }.
type Delim rune
func (d Delim) String() string {
return string(d)
}
// Token returns the next JSON token in the input stream.
// At the end of the input stream, Token returns nil, io.EOF.
//
// Token guarantees that the delimiters [ ] { } it returns are
// properly nested and matched: if Token encounters an unexpected
// delimiter in the input, it will return an error.
//
// The input stream consists of basic JSON values—bool, string,
// number, and null—along with delimiters [ ] { } of type Delim
// to mark the start and end of arrays and objects.
// Commas and colons are elided.
func (dec *Decoder) Token() (Token, error) {
for {
c, err := dec.peek()
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
switch c {
case '[':
if !dec.tokenValueAllowed() {
return dec.tokenError(c)
}
dec.scanp++
dec.tokenStack = append(dec.tokenStack, dec.tokenState)
dec.tokenState = tokenArrayStart
return Delim('['), nil
case ']':
if dec.tokenState != tokenArrayStart && dec.tokenState != tokenArrayComma {
return dec.tokenError(c)
}
dec.scanp++
dec.tokenState = dec.tokenStack[len(dec.tokenStack)-1]
dec.tokenStack = dec.tokenStack[:len(dec.tokenStack)-1]
dec.tokenValueEnd()
return Delim(']'), nil
case '{':
if !dec.tokenValueAllowed() {
return dec.tokenError(c)
}
dec.scanp++
dec.tokenStack = append(dec.tokenStack, dec.tokenState)
dec.tokenState = tokenObjectStart
return Delim('{'), nil
case '}':
if dec.tokenState != tokenObjectStart && dec.tokenState != tokenObjectComma {
return dec.tokenError(c)
}
dec.scanp++
dec.tokenState = dec.tokenStack[len(dec.tokenStack)-1]
dec.tokenStack = dec.tokenStack[:len(dec.tokenStack)-1]
dec.tokenValueEnd()
return Delim('}'), nil
case ':':
if dec.tokenState != tokenObjectColon {
return dec.tokenError(c)
}
dec.scanp++
dec.tokenState = tokenObjectValue
continue
case ',':
if dec.tokenState == tokenArrayComma {
dec.scanp++
dec.tokenState = tokenArrayValue
continue
}
if dec.tokenState == tokenObjectComma {
dec.scanp++
dec.tokenState = tokenObjectKey
continue
}
return dec.tokenError(c)
case '"':
if dec.tokenState == tokenObjectStart || dec.tokenState == tokenObjectKey {
var x string
old := dec.tokenState
dec.tokenState = tokenTopValue
err := dec.Decode(&x)
dec.tokenState = old
if err != nil {
clearOffset(err)
return nil, err
}
dec.tokenState = tokenObjectColon
return x, nil
}
fallthrough
default:
if !dec.tokenValueAllowed() {
return dec.tokenError(c)
}
var x interface{}
if err := dec.Decode(&x); err != nil {
clearOffset(err)
return nil, err
}
return x, nil
}
}
}
func clearOffset(err error) {
if s, ok := err.(*SyntaxError); ok {
s.Offset = 0
}
}
func (dec *Decoder) tokenError(c byte) (Token, error) {
var context string
switch dec.tokenState {
case tokenTopValue:
context = " looking for beginning of value"
case tokenArrayStart, tokenArrayValue, tokenObjectValue:
context = " looking for beginning of value"
case tokenArrayComma:
context = " after array element"
case tokenObjectKey:
context = " looking for beginning of object key string"
case tokenObjectColon:
context = " after object key"
case tokenObjectComma:
context = " after object key:value pair"
}
return nil, &SyntaxError{"invalid character " + quoteChar(c) + " " + context, 0}
}
// More reports whether there is another element in the
// current array or object being parsed.
func (dec *Decoder) More() bool {
c, err := dec.peek()
return err == nil && c != ']' && c != '}'
}
func (dec *Decoder) peek() (byte, error) {
var err error
for {
for i := dec.scanp; i < len(dec.buf); i++ {
c := dec.buf[i]
if isSpace(c) {
continue
}
dec.scanp = i
return c, nil
}
// buffer has been scanned, now report any error
if err != nil {
return 0, err
}
err = dec.refill()
}
}
/*
TODO
// EncodeToken writes the given JSON token to the stream.
// It returns an error if the delimiters [ ] { } are not properly used.
//
// EncodeToken does not call Flush, because usually it is part of
// a larger operation such as Encode, and those will call Flush when finished.
// Callers that create an Encoder and then invoke EncodeToken directly,
// without using Encode, need to call Flush when finished to ensure that
// the JSON is written to the underlying writer.
func (e *Encoder) EncodeToken(t Token) error {
...
}
*/

44
vendor/github.com/docker/go/canonical/json/tags.go generated vendored Normal file
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// Copyright 2011 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 json
import (
"strings"
)
// tagOptions is the string following a comma in a struct field's "json"
// tag, or the empty string. It does not include the leading comma.
type tagOptions string
// parseTag splits a struct field's json tag into its name and
// comma-separated options.
func parseTag(tag string) (string, tagOptions) {
if idx := strings.Index(tag, ","); idx != -1 {
return tag[:idx], tagOptions(tag[idx+1:])
}
return tag, tagOptions("")
}
// Contains reports whether a comma-separated list of options
// contains a particular substr flag. substr must be surrounded by a
// string boundary or commas.
func (o tagOptions) Contains(optionName string) bool {
if len(o) == 0 {
return false
}
s := string(o)
for s != "" {
var next string
i := strings.Index(s, ",")
if i >= 0 {
s, next = s[:i], s[i+1:]
}
if s == optionName {
return true
}
s = next
}
return false
}