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vendor/gopkg.in/warnings.v0/LICENSE generated vendored Normal file
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Copyright (c) 2016 Péter Surányi.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
met:
* Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer
in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
distribution.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
"AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

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Package warnings implements error handling with non-fatal errors (warnings).
import path: "gopkg.in/warnings.v0"
package docs: https://godoc.org/gopkg.in/warnings.v0
issues: https://github.com/go-warnings/warnings/issues
pull requests: https://github.com/go-warnings/warnings/pulls
A recurring pattern in Go programming is the following:
func myfunc(params) error {
if err := doSomething(...); err != nil {
return err
}
if err := doSomethingElse(...); err != nil {
return err
}
if ok := doAnotherThing(...); !ok {
return errors.New("my error")
}
...
return nil
}
This pattern allows interrupting the flow on any received error. But what if
there are errors that should be noted but still not fatal, for which the flow
should not be interrupted? Implementing such logic at each if statement would
make the code complex and the flow much harder to follow.
Package warnings provides the Collector type and a clean and simple pattern
for achieving such logic. The Collector takes care of deciding when to break
the flow and when to continue, collecting any non-fatal errors (warnings)
along the way. The only requirement is that fatal and non-fatal errors can be
distinguished programmatically; that is a function such as
IsFatal(error) bool
must be implemented. The following is an example of what the above snippet
could look like using the warnings package:
import "gopkg.in/warnings.v0"
func isFatal(err error) bool {
_, ok := err.(WarningType)
return !ok
}
func myfunc(params) error {
c := warnings.NewCollector(isFatal)
c.FatalWithWarnings = true
if err := c.Collect(doSomething()); err != nil {
return err
}
if err := c.Collect(doSomethingElse(...)); err != nil {
return err
}
if ok := doAnotherThing(...); !ok {
if err := c.Collect(errors.New("my error")); err != nil {
return err
}
}
...
return c.Done()
}
For an example of a non-trivial code base using this library, see
gopkg.in/gcfg.v1
Rules for using warnings
- ensure that warnings are programmatically distinguishable from fatal
errors (i.e. implement an isFatal function and any necessary error types)
- ensure that there is a single Collector instance for a call of each
exported function
- ensure that all errors (fatal or warning) are fed through Collect
- ensure that every time an error is returned, it is one returned by a
Collector (from Collect or Done)
- ensure that Collect is never called after Done

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// Package warnings implements error handling with non-fatal errors (warnings).
//
// A recurring pattern in Go programming is the following:
//
// func myfunc(params) error {
// if err := doSomething(...); err != nil {
// return err
// }
// if err := doSomethingElse(...); err != nil {
// return err
// }
// if ok := doAnotherThing(...); !ok {
// return errors.New("my error")
// }
// ...
// return nil
// }
//
// This pattern allows interrupting the flow on any received error. But what if
// there are errors that should be noted but still not fatal, for which the flow
// should not be interrupted? Implementing such logic at each if statement would
// make the code complex and the flow much harder to follow.
//
// Package warnings provides the Collector type and a clean and simple pattern
// for achieving such logic. The Collector takes care of deciding when to break
// the flow and when to continue, collecting any non-fatal errors (warnings)
// along the way. The only requirement is that fatal and non-fatal errors can be
// distinguished programmatically; that is a function such as
//
// IsFatal(error) bool
//
// must be implemented. The following is an example of what the above snippet
// could look like using the warnings package:
//
// import "gopkg.in/warnings.v0"
//
// func isFatal(err error) bool {
// _, ok := err.(WarningType)
// return !ok
// }
//
// func myfunc(params) error {
// c := warnings.NewCollector(isFatal)
// c.FatalWithWarnings = true
// if err := c.Collect(doSomething()); err != nil {
// return err
// }
// if err := c.Collect(doSomethingElse(...)); err != nil {
// return err
// }
// if ok := doAnotherThing(...); !ok {
// if err := c.Collect(errors.New("my error")); err != nil {
// return err
// }
// }
// ...
// return c.Done()
// }
//
// For an example of a non-trivial code base using this library, see
// gopkg.in/gcfg.v1
//
// Rules for using warnings
//
// - ensure that warnings are programmatically distinguishable from fatal
// errors (i.e. implement an isFatal function and any necessary error types)
// - ensure that there is a single Collector instance for a call of each
// exported function
// - ensure that all errors (fatal or warning) are fed through Collect
// - ensure that every time an error is returned, it is one returned by a
// Collector (from Collect or Done)
// - ensure that Collect is never called after Done
//
// TODO
//
// - optionally limit the number of warnings (e.g. stop after 20 warnings) (?)
// - consider interaction with contexts
// - go vet-style invocations verifier
// - semi-automatic code converter
package warnings // import "gopkg.in/warnings.v0"
import (
"bytes"
"fmt"
)
// List holds a collection of warnings and optionally one fatal error.
type List struct {
Warnings []error
Fatal error
}
// Error implements the error interface.
func (l List) Error() string {
b := bytes.NewBuffer(nil)
if l.Fatal != nil {
fmt.Fprintln(b, "fatal:")
fmt.Fprintln(b, l.Fatal)
}
switch len(l.Warnings) {
case 0:
// nop
case 1:
fmt.Fprintln(b, "warning:")
default:
fmt.Fprintln(b, "warnings:")
}
for _, err := range l.Warnings {
fmt.Fprintln(b, err)
}
return b.String()
}
// A Collector collects errors up to the first fatal error.
type Collector struct {
// IsFatal distinguishes between warnings and fatal errors.
IsFatal func(error) bool
// FatalWithWarnings set to true means that a fatal error is returned as
// a List together with all warnings so far. The default behavior is to
// only return the fatal error and discard any warnings that have been
// collected.
FatalWithWarnings bool
l List
done bool
}
// NewCollector returns a new Collector; it uses isFatal to distinguish between
// warnings and fatal errors.
func NewCollector(isFatal func(error) bool) *Collector {
return &Collector{IsFatal: isFatal}
}
// Collect collects a single error (warning or fatal). It returns nil if
// collection can continue (only warnings so far), or otherwise the errors
// collected. Collect mustn't be called after the first fatal error or after
// Done has been called.
func (c *Collector) Collect(err error) error {
if c.done {
panic("warnings.Collector already done")
}
if err == nil {
return nil
}
if c.IsFatal(err) {
c.done = true
c.l.Fatal = err
} else {
c.l.Warnings = append(c.l.Warnings, err)
}
if c.l.Fatal != nil {
return c.erorr()
}
return nil
}
// Done ends collection and returns the collected error(s).
func (c *Collector) Done() error {
c.done = true
return c.erorr()
}
func (c *Collector) erorr() error {
if !c.FatalWithWarnings && c.l.Fatal != nil {
return c.l.Fatal
}
if c.l.Fatal == nil && len(c.l.Warnings) == 0 {
return nil
}
// Note that a single warning is also returned as a List. This is to make it
// easier to determine fatal-ness of the returned error.
return c.l
}
// FatalOnly returns the fatal error, if any, **in an error returned by a
// Collector**. It returns nil if and only if err is nil or err is a List
// with err.Fatal == nil.
func FatalOnly(err error) error {
l, ok := err.(List)
if !ok {
return err
}
return l.Fatal
}
// WarningsOnly returns the warnings **in an error returned by a Collector**.
func WarningsOnly(err error) []error {
l, ok := err.(List)
if !ok {
return nil
}
return l.Warnings
}