diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml')
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/.gitignore | 5 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/.travis.yml | 15 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/COMPATIBLE | 3 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/COPYING | 14 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/Makefile | 19 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/README.md | 218 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/decode.go | 509 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/decode_meta.go | 121 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/doc.go | 27 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/encode.go | 568 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/encoding_types.go | 19 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/encoding_types_1.1.go | 18 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/lex.go | 953 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/parse.go | 592 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/session.vim | 1 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/type_check.go | 91 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/type_fields.go | 242 |
17 files changed, 0 insertions, 3415 deletions
diff --git a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/.gitignore b/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/.gitignore deleted file mode 100644 index 0cd38003..00000000 --- a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/.gitignore +++ /dev/null @@ -1,5 +0,0 @@ -TAGS -tags -.*.swp -tomlcheck/tomlcheck -toml.test diff --git a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/.travis.yml b/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/.travis.yml deleted file mode 100644 index 8b8afc4f..00000000 --- a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/.travis.yml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,15 +0,0 @@ -language: go -go: - - 1.1 - - 1.2 - - 1.3 - - 1.4 - - 1.5 - - 1.6 - - tip -install: - - go install ./... - - go get github.com/BurntSushi/toml-test -script: - - export PATH="$PATH:$HOME/gopath/bin" - - make test diff --git a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/COMPATIBLE b/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/COMPATIBLE deleted file mode 100644 index 6efcfd0c..00000000 --- a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/COMPATIBLE +++ /dev/null @@ -1,3 +0,0 @@ -Compatible with TOML version -[v0.4.0](https://github.com/toml-lang/toml/blob/v0.4.0/versions/en/toml-v0.4.0.md) - diff --git a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/COPYING b/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/COPYING deleted file mode 100644 index 5a8e3325..00000000 --- a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/COPYING +++ /dev/null @@ -1,14 +0,0 @@ - DO WHAT THE FUCK YOU WANT TO PUBLIC LICENSE - Version 2, December 2004 - - Copyright (C) 2004 Sam Hocevar <sam@hocevar.net> - - Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim or modified - copies of this license document, and changing it is allowed as long - as the name is changed. - - DO WHAT THE FUCK YOU WANT TO PUBLIC LICENSE - TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION - - 0. You just DO WHAT THE FUCK YOU WANT TO. - diff --git a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/Makefile b/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/Makefile deleted file mode 100644 index 3600848d..00000000 --- a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/Makefile +++ /dev/null @@ -1,19 +0,0 @@ -install: - go install ./... - -test: install - go test -v - toml-test toml-test-decoder - toml-test -encoder toml-test-encoder - -fmt: - gofmt -w *.go */*.go - colcheck *.go */*.go - -tags: - find ./ -name '*.go' -print0 | xargs -0 gotags > TAGS - -push: - git push origin master - git push github master - diff --git a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/README.md b/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/README.md deleted file mode 100644 index 7c1b37ec..00000000 --- a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/README.md +++ /dev/null @@ -1,218 +0,0 @@ -## TOML parser and encoder for Go with reflection - -TOML stands for Tom's Obvious, Minimal Language. This Go package provides a -reflection interface similar to Go's standard library `json` and `xml` -packages. This package also supports the `encoding.TextUnmarshaler` and -`encoding.TextMarshaler` interfaces so that you can define custom data -representations. (There is an example of this below.) - -Spec: https://github.com/toml-lang/toml - -Compatible with TOML version -[v0.4.0](https://github.com/toml-lang/toml/blob/master/versions/en/toml-v0.4.0.md) - -Documentation: https://godoc.org/github.com/BurntSushi/toml - -Installation: - -```bash -go get github.com/BurntSushi/toml -``` - -Try the toml validator: - -```bash -go get github.com/BurntSushi/toml/cmd/tomlv -tomlv some-toml-file.toml -``` - -[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/BurntSushi/toml.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/BurntSushi/toml) [![GoDoc](https://godoc.org/github.com/BurntSushi/toml?status.svg)](https://godoc.org/github.com/BurntSushi/toml) - -### Testing - -This package passes all tests in -[toml-test](https://github.com/BurntSushi/toml-test) for both the decoder -and the encoder. - -### Examples - -This package works similarly to how the Go standard library handles `XML` -and `JSON`. Namely, data is loaded into Go values via reflection. - -For the simplest example, consider some TOML file as just a list of keys -and values: - -```toml -Age = 25 -Cats = [ "Cauchy", "Plato" ] -Pi = 3.14 -Perfection = [ 6, 28, 496, 8128 ] -DOB = 1987-07-05T05:45:00Z -``` - -Which could be defined in Go as: - -```go -type Config struct { - Age int - Cats []string - Pi float64 - Perfection []int - DOB time.Time // requires `import time` -} -``` - -And then decoded with: - -```go -var conf Config -if _, err := toml.Decode(tomlData, &conf); err != nil { - // handle error -} -``` - -You can also use struct tags if your struct field name doesn't map to a TOML -key value directly: - -```toml -some_key_NAME = "wat" -``` - -```go -type TOML struct { - ObscureKey string `toml:"some_key_NAME"` -} -``` - -### Using the `encoding.TextUnmarshaler` interface - -Here's an example that automatically parses duration strings into -`time.Duration` values: - -```toml -[[song]] -name = "Thunder Road" -duration = "4m49s" - -[[song]] -name = "Stairway to Heaven" -duration = "8m03s" -``` - -Which can be decoded with: - -```go -type song struct { - Name string - Duration duration -} -type songs struct { - Song []song -} -var favorites songs -if _, err := toml.Decode(blob, &favorites); err != nil { - log.Fatal(err) -} - -for _, s := range favorites.Song { - fmt.Printf("%s (%s)\n", s.Name, s.Duration) -} -``` - -And you'll also need a `duration` type that satisfies the -`encoding.TextUnmarshaler` interface: - -```go -type duration struct { - time.Duration -} - -func (d *duration) UnmarshalText(text []byte) error { - var err error - d.Duration, err = time.ParseDuration(string(text)) - return err -} -``` - -### More complex usage - -Here's an example of how to load the example from the official spec page: - -```toml -# This is a TOML document. Boom. - -title = "TOML Example" - -[owner] -name = "Tom Preston-Werner" -organization = "GitHub" -bio = "GitHub Cofounder & CEO\nLikes tater tots and beer." -dob = 1979-05-27T07:32:00Z # First class dates? Why not? - -[database] -server = "192.168.1.1" -ports = [ 8001, 8001, 8002 ] -connection_max = 5000 -enabled = true - -[servers] - - # You can indent as you please. Tabs or spaces. TOML don't care. - [servers.alpha] - ip = "10.0.0.1" - dc = "eqdc10" - - [servers.beta] - ip = "10.0.0.2" - dc = "eqdc10" - -[clients] -data = [ ["gamma", "delta"], [1, 2] ] # just an update to make sure parsers support it - -# Line breaks are OK when inside arrays -hosts = [ - "alpha", - "omega" -] -``` - -And the corresponding Go types are: - -```go -type tomlConfig struct { - Title string - Owner ownerInfo - DB database `toml:"database"` - Servers map[string]server - Clients clients -} - -type ownerInfo struct { - Name string - Org string `toml:"organization"` - Bio string - DOB time.Time -} - -type database struct { - Server string - Ports []int - ConnMax int `toml:"connection_max"` - Enabled bool -} - -type server struct { - IP string - DC string -} - -type clients struct { - Data [][]interface{} - Hosts []string -} -``` - -Note that a case insensitive match will be tried if an exact match can't be -found. - -A working example of the above can be found in `_examples/example.{go,toml}`. diff --git a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/decode.go b/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/decode.go deleted file mode 100644 index b0fd51d5..00000000 --- a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/decode.go +++ /dev/null @@ -1,509 +0,0 @@ -package toml - -import ( - "fmt" - "io" - "io/ioutil" - "math" - "reflect" - "strings" - "time" -) - -func e(format string, args ...interface{}) error { - return fmt.Errorf("toml: "+format, args...) -} - -// Unmarshaler is the interface implemented by objects that can unmarshal a -// TOML description of themselves. -type Unmarshaler interface { - UnmarshalTOML(interface{}) error -} - -// Unmarshal decodes the contents of `p` in TOML format into a pointer `v`. -func Unmarshal(p []byte, v interface{}) error { - _, err := Decode(string(p), v) - return err -} - -// Primitive is a TOML value that hasn't been decoded into a Go value. -// When using the various `Decode*` functions, the type `Primitive` may -// be given to any value, and its decoding will be delayed. -// -// A `Primitive` value can be decoded using the `PrimitiveDecode` function. -// -// The underlying representation of a `Primitive` value is subject to change. -// Do not rely on it. -// -// N.B. Primitive values are still parsed, so using them will only avoid -// the overhead of reflection. They can be useful when you don't know the -// exact type of TOML data until run time. -type Primitive struct { - undecoded interface{} - context Key -} - -// DEPRECATED! -// -// Use MetaData.PrimitiveDecode instead. -func PrimitiveDecode(primValue Primitive, v interface{}) error { - md := MetaData{decoded: make(map[string]bool)} - return md.unify(primValue.undecoded, rvalue(v)) -} - -// PrimitiveDecode is just like the other `Decode*` functions, except it -// decodes a TOML value that has already been parsed. Valid primitive values -// can *only* be obtained from values filled by the decoder functions, -// including this method. (i.e., `v` may contain more `Primitive` -// values.) -// -// Meta data for primitive values is included in the meta data returned by -// the `Decode*` functions with one exception: keys returned by the Undecoded -// method will only reflect keys that were decoded. Namely, any keys hidden -// behind a Primitive will be considered undecoded. Executing this method will -// update the undecoded keys in the meta data. (See the example.) -func (md *MetaData) PrimitiveDecode(primValue Primitive, v interface{}) error { - md.context = primValue.context - defer func() { md.context = nil }() - return md.unify(primValue.undecoded, rvalue(v)) -} - -// Decode will decode the contents of `data` in TOML format into a pointer -// `v`. -// -// TOML hashes correspond to Go structs or maps. (Dealer's choice. They can be -// used interchangeably.) -// -// TOML arrays of tables correspond to either a slice of structs or a slice -// of maps. -// -// TOML datetimes correspond to Go `time.Time` values. -// -// All other TOML types (float, string, int, bool and array) correspond -// to the obvious Go types. -// -// An exception to the above rules is if a type implements the -// encoding.TextUnmarshaler interface. In this case, any primitive TOML value -// (floats, strings, integers, booleans and datetimes) will be converted to -// a byte string and given to the value's UnmarshalText method. See the -// Unmarshaler example for a demonstration with time duration strings. -// -// Key mapping -// -// TOML keys can map to either keys in a Go map or field names in a Go -// struct. The special `toml` struct tag may be used to map TOML keys to -// struct fields that don't match the key name exactly. (See the example.) -// A case insensitive match to struct names will be tried if an exact match -// can't be found. -// -// The mapping between TOML values and Go values is loose. That is, there -// may exist TOML values that cannot be placed into your representation, and -// there may be parts of your representation that do not correspond to -// TOML values. This loose mapping can be made stricter by using the IsDefined -// and/or Undecoded methods on the MetaData returned. -// -// This decoder will not handle cyclic types. If a cyclic type is passed, -// `Decode` will not terminate. -func Decode(data string, v interface{}) (MetaData, error) { - rv := reflect.ValueOf(v) - if rv.Kind() != reflect.Ptr { - return MetaData{}, e("Decode of non-pointer %s", reflect.TypeOf(v)) - } - if rv.IsNil() { - return MetaData{}, e("Decode of nil %s", reflect.TypeOf(v)) - } - p, err := parse(data) - if err != nil { - return MetaData{}, err - } - md := MetaData{ - p.mapping, p.types, p.ordered, - make(map[string]bool, len(p.ordered)), nil, - } - return md, md.unify(p.mapping, indirect(rv)) -} - -// DecodeFile is just like Decode, except it will automatically read the -// contents of the file at `fpath` and decode it for you. -func DecodeFile(fpath string, v interface{}) (MetaData, error) { - bs, err := ioutil.ReadFile(fpath) - if err != nil { - return MetaData{}, err - } - return Decode(string(bs), v) -} - -// DecodeReader is just like Decode, except it will consume all bytes -// from the reader and decode it for you. -func DecodeReader(r io.Reader, v interface{}) (MetaData, error) { - bs, err := ioutil.ReadAll(r) - if err != nil { - return MetaData{}, err - } - return Decode(string(bs), v) -} - -// unify performs a sort of type unification based on the structure of `rv`, -// which is the client representation. -// -// Any type mismatch produces an error. Finding a type that we don't know -// how to handle produces an unsupported type error. -func (md *MetaData) unify(data interface{}, rv reflect.Value) error { - - // Special case. Look for a `Primitive` value. - if rv.Type() == reflect.TypeOf((*Primitive)(nil)).Elem() { - // Save the undecoded data and the key context into the primitive - // value. - context := make(Key, len(md.context)) - copy(context, md.context) - rv.Set(reflect.ValueOf(Primitive{ - undecoded: data, - context: context, - })) - return nil - } - - // Special case. Unmarshaler Interface support. - if rv.CanAddr() { - if v, ok := rv.Addr().Interface().(Unmarshaler); ok { - return v.UnmarshalTOML(data) - } - } - - // Special case. Handle time.Time values specifically. - // TODO: Remove this code when we decide to drop support for Go 1.1. - // This isn't necessary in Go 1.2 because time.Time satisfies the encoding - // interfaces. - if rv.Type().AssignableTo(rvalue(time.Time{}).Type()) { - return md.unifyDatetime(data, rv) - } - - // Special case. Look for a value satisfying the TextUnmarshaler interface. - if v, ok := rv.Interface().(TextUnmarshaler); ok { - return md.unifyText(data, v) - } - // BUG(burntsushi) - // The behavior here is incorrect whenever a Go type satisfies the - // encoding.TextUnmarshaler interface but also corresponds to a TOML - // hash or array. In particular, the unmarshaler should only be applied - // to primitive TOML values. But at this point, it will be applied to - // all kinds of values and produce an incorrect error whenever those values - // are hashes or arrays (including arrays of tables). - - k := rv.Kind() - - // laziness - if k >= reflect.Int && k <= reflect.Uint64 { - return md.unifyInt(data, rv) - } - switch k { - case reflect.Ptr: - elem := reflect.New(rv.Type().Elem()) - err := md.unify(data, reflect.Indirect(elem)) - if err != nil { - return err - } - rv.Set(elem) - return nil - case reflect.Struct: - return md.unifyStruct(data, rv) - case reflect.Map: - return md.unifyMap(data, rv) - case reflect.Array: - return md.unifyArray(data, rv) - case reflect.Slice: - return md.unifySlice(data, rv) - case reflect.String: - return md.unifyString(data, rv) - case reflect.Bool: - return md.unifyBool(data, rv) - case reflect.Interface: - // we only support empty interfaces. - if rv.NumMethod() > 0 { - return e("unsupported type %s", rv.Type()) - } - return md.unifyAnything(data, rv) - case reflect.Float32: - fallthrough - case reflect.Float64: - return md.unifyFloat64(data, rv) - } - return e("unsupported type %s", rv.Kind()) -} - -func (md *MetaData) unifyStruct(mapping interface{}, rv reflect.Value) error { - tmap, ok := mapping.(map[string]interface{}) - if !ok { - if mapping == nil { - return nil - } - return e("type mismatch for %s: expected table but found %T", - rv.Type().String(), mapping) - } - - for key, datum := range tmap { - var f *field - fields := cachedTypeFields(rv.Type()) - for i := range fields { - ff := &fields[i] - if ff.name == key { - f = ff - break - } - if f == nil && strings.EqualFold(ff.name, key) { - f = ff - } - } - if f != nil { - subv := rv - for _, i := range f.index { - subv = indirect(subv.Field(i)) - } - if isUnifiable(subv) { - md.decoded[md.context.add(key).String()] = true - md.context = append(md.context, key) - if err := md.unify(datum, subv); err != nil { - return err - } - md.context = md.context[0 : len(md.context)-1] - } else if f.name != "" { - // Bad user! No soup for you! - return e("cannot write unexported field %s.%s", - rv.Type().String(), f.name) - } - } - } - return nil -} - -func (md *MetaData) unifyMap(mapping interface{}, rv reflect.Value) error { - tmap, ok := mapping.(map[string]interface{}) - if !ok { - if tmap == nil { - return nil - } - return badtype("map", mapping) - } - if rv.IsNil() { - rv.Set(reflect.MakeMap(rv.Type())) - } - for k, v := range tmap { - md.decoded[md.context.add(k).String()] = true - md.context = append(md.context, k) - - rvkey := indirect(reflect.New(rv.Type().Key())) - rvval := reflect.Indirect(reflect.New(rv.Type().Elem())) - if err := md.unify(v, rvval); err != nil { - return err - } - md.context = md.context[0 : len(md.context)-1] - - rvkey.SetString(k) - rv.SetMapIndex(rvkey, rvval) - } - return nil -} - -func (md *MetaData) unifyArray(data interface{}, rv reflect.Value) error { - datav := reflect.ValueOf(data) - if datav.Kind() != reflect.Slice { - if !datav.IsValid() { - return nil - } - return badtype("slice", data) - } - sliceLen := datav.Len() - if sliceLen != rv.Len() { - return e("expected array length %d; got TOML array of length %d", - rv.Len(), sliceLen) - } - return md.unifySliceArray(datav, rv) -} - -func (md *MetaData) unifySlice(data interface{}, rv reflect.Value) error { - datav := reflect.ValueOf(data) - if datav.Kind() != reflect.Slice { - if !datav.IsValid() { - return nil - } - return badtype("slice", data) - } - n := datav.Len() - if rv.IsNil() || rv.Cap() < n { - rv.Set(reflect.MakeSlice(rv.Type(), n, n)) - } - rv.SetLen(n) - return md.unifySliceArray(datav, rv) -} - -func (md *MetaData) unifySliceArray(data, rv reflect.Value) error { - sliceLen := data.Len() - for i := 0; i < sliceLen; i++ { - v := data.Index(i).Interface() - sliceval := indirect(rv.Index(i)) - if err := md.unify(v, sliceval); err != nil { - return err - } - } - return nil -} - -func (md *MetaData) unifyDatetime(data interface{}, rv reflect.Value) error { - if _, ok := data.(time.Time); ok { - rv.Set(reflect.ValueOf(data)) - return nil - } - return badtype("time.Time", data) -} - -func (md *MetaData) unifyString(data interface{}, rv reflect.Value) error { - if s, ok := data.(string); ok { - rv.SetString(s) - return nil - } - return badtype("string", data) -} - -func (md *MetaData) unifyFloat64(data interface{}, rv reflect.Value) error { - if num, ok := data.(float64); ok { - switch rv.Kind() { - case reflect.Float32: - fallthrough - case reflect.Float64: - rv.SetFloat(num) - default: - panic("bug") - } - return nil - } - return badtype("float", data) -} - -func (md *MetaData) unifyInt(data interface{}, rv reflect.Value) error { - if num, ok := data.(int64); ok { - if rv.Kind() >= reflect.Int && rv.Kind() <= reflect.Int64 { - switch rv.Kind() { - case reflect.Int, reflect.Int64: - // No bounds checking necessary. - case reflect.Int8: - if num < math.MinInt8 || num > math.MaxInt8 { - return e("value %d is out of range for int8", num) - } - case reflect.Int16: - if num < math.MinInt16 || num > math.MaxInt16 { - return e("value %d is out of range for int16", num) - } - case reflect.Int32: - if num < math.MinInt32 || num > math.MaxInt32 { - return e("value %d is out of range for int32", num) - } - } - rv.SetInt(num) - } else if rv.Kind() >= reflect.Uint && rv.Kind() <= reflect.Uint64 { - unum := uint64(num) - switch rv.Kind() { - case reflect.Uint, reflect.Uint64: - // No bounds checking necessary. - case reflect.Uint8: - if num < 0 || unum > math.MaxUint8 { - return e("value %d is out of range for uint8", num) - } - case reflect.Uint16: - if num < 0 || unum > math.MaxUint16 { - return e("value %d is out of range for uint16", num) - } - case reflect.Uint32: - if num < 0 || unum > math.MaxUint32 { - return e("value %d is out of range for uint32", num) - } - } - rv.SetUint(unum) - } else { - panic("unreachable") - } - return nil - } - return badtype("integer", data) -} - -func (md *MetaData) unifyBool(data interface{}, rv reflect.Value) error { - if b, ok := data.(bool); ok { - rv.SetBool(b) - return nil - } - return badtype("boolean", data) -} - -func (md *MetaData) unifyAnything(data interface{}, rv reflect.Value) error { - rv.Set(reflect.ValueOf(data)) - return nil -} - -func (md *MetaData) unifyText(data interface{}, v TextUnmarshaler) error { - var s string - switch sdata := data.(type) { - case TextMarshaler: - text, err := sdata.MarshalText() - if err != nil { - return err - } - s = string(text) - case fmt.Stringer: - s = sdata.String() - case string: - s = sdata - case bool: - s = fmt.Sprintf("%v", sdata) - case int64: - s = fmt.Sprintf("%d", sdata) - case float64: - s = fmt.Sprintf("%f", sdata) - default: - return badtype("primitive (string-like)", data) - } - if err := v.UnmarshalText([]byte(s)); err != nil { - return err - } - return nil -} - -// rvalue returns a reflect.Value of `v`. All pointers are resolved. -func rvalue(v interface{}) reflect.Value { - return indirect(reflect.ValueOf(v)) -} - -// indirect returns the value pointed to by a pointer. -// Pointers are followed until the value is not a pointer. -// New values are allocated for each nil pointer. -// -// An exception to this rule is if the value satisfies an interface of -// interest to us (like encoding.TextUnmarshaler). -func indirect(v reflect.Value) reflect.Value { - if v.Kind() != reflect.Ptr { - if v.CanSet() { - pv := v.Addr() - if _, ok := pv.Interface().(TextUnmarshaler); ok { - return pv - } - } - return v - } - if v.IsNil() { - v.Set(reflect.New(v.Type().Elem())) - } - return indirect(reflect.Indirect(v)) -} - -func isUnifiable(rv reflect.Value) bool { - if rv.CanSet() { - return true - } - if _, ok := rv.Interface().(TextUnmarshaler); ok { - return true - } - return false -} - -func badtype(expected string, data interface{}) error { - return e("cannot load TOML value of type %T into a Go %s", data, expected) -} diff --git a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/decode_meta.go b/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/decode_meta.go deleted file mode 100644 index b9914a67..00000000 --- a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/decode_meta.go +++ /dev/null @@ -1,121 +0,0 @@ -package toml - -import "strings" - -// MetaData allows access to meta information about TOML data that may not -// be inferrable via reflection. In particular, whether a key has been defined -// and the TOML type of a key. -type MetaData struct { - mapping map[string]interface{} - types map[string]tomlType - keys []Key - decoded map[string]bool - context Key // Used only during decoding. -} - -// IsDefined returns true if the key given exists in the TOML data. The key -// should be specified hierarchially. e.g., -// -// // access the TOML key 'a.b.c' -// IsDefined("a", "b", "c") -// -// IsDefined will return false if an empty key given. Keys are case sensitive. -func (md *MetaData) IsDefined(key ...string) bool { - if len(key) == 0 { - return false - } - - var hash map[string]interface{} - var ok bool - var hashOrVal interface{} = md.mapping - for _, k := range key { - if hash, ok = hashOrVal.(map[string]interface{}); !ok { - return false - } - if hashOrVal, ok = hash[k]; !ok { - return false - } - } - return true -} - -// Type returns a string representation of the type of the key specified. -// -// Type will return the empty string if given an empty key or a key that -// does not exist. Keys are case sensitive. -func (md *MetaData) Type(key ...string) string { - fullkey := strings.Join(key, ".") - if typ, ok := md.types[fullkey]; ok { - return typ.typeString() - } - return "" -} - -// Key is the type of any TOML key, including key groups. Use (MetaData).Keys -// to get values of this type. -type Key []string - -func (k Key) String() string { - return strings.Join(k, ".") -} - -func (k Key) maybeQuotedAll() string { - var ss []string - for i := range k { - ss = append(ss, k.maybeQuoted(i)) - } - return strings.Join(ss, ".") -} - -func (k Key) maybeQuoted(i int) string { - quote := false - for _, c := range k[i] { - if !isBareKeyChar(c) { - quote = true - break - } - } - if quote { - return "\"" + strings.Replace(k[i], "\"", "\\\"", -1) + "\"" - } - return k[i] -} - -func (k Key) add(piece string) Key { - newKey := make(Key, len(k)+1) - copy(newKey, k) - newKey[len(k)] = piece - return newKey -} - -// Keys returns a slice of every key in the TOML data, including key groups. -// Each key is itself a slice, where the first element is the top of the -// hierarchy and the last is the most specific. -// -// The list will have the same order as the keys appeared in the TOML data. -// -// All keys returned are non-empty. -func (md *MetaData) Keys() []Key { - return md.keys -} - -// Undecoded returns all keys that have not been decoded in the order in which -// they appear in the original TOML document. -// -// This includes keys that haven't been decoded because of a Primitive value. -// Once the Primitive value is decoded, the keys will be considered decoded. -// -// Also note that decoding into an empty interface will result in no decoding, -// and so no keys will be considered decoded. -// -// In this sense, the Undecoded keys correspond to keys in the TOML document -// that do not have a concrete type in your representation. -func (md *MetaData) Undecoded() []Key { - undecoded := make([]Key, 0, len(md.keys)) - for _, key := range md.keys { - if !md.decoded[key.String()] { - undecoded = append(undecoded, key) - } - } - return undecoded -} diff --git a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/doc.go b/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/doc.go deleted file mode 100644 index b371f396..00000000 --- a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/doc.go +++ /dev/null @@ -1,27 +0,0 @@ -/* -Package toml provides facilities for decoding and encoding TOML configuration -files via reflection. There is also support for delaying decoding with -the Primitive type, and querying the set of keys in a TOML document with the -MetaData type. - -The specification implemented: https://github.com/toml-lang/toml - -The sub-command github.com/BurntSushi/toml/cmd/tomlv can be used to verify -whether a file is a valid TOML document. It can also be used to print the -type of each key in a TOML document. - -Testing - -There are two important types of tests used for this package. The first is -contained inside '*_test.go' files and uses the standard Go unit testing -framework. These tests are primarily devoted to holistically testing the -decoder and encoder. - -The second type of testing is used to verify the implementation's adherence -to the TOML specification. These tests have been factored into their own -project: https://github.com/BurntSushi/toml-test - -The reason the tests are in a separate project is so that they can be used by -any implementation of TOML. Namely, it is language agnostic. -*/ -package toml diff --git a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/encode.go b/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/encode.go deleted file mode 100644 index d905c21a..00000000 --- a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/encode.go +++ /dev/null @@ -1,568 +0,0 @@ -package toml - -import ( - "bufio" - "errors" - "fmt" - "io" - "reflect" - "sort" - "strconv" - "strings" - "time" -) - -type tomlEncodeError struct{ error } - -var ( - errArrayMixedElementTypes = errors.New( - "toml: cannot encode array with mixed element types") - errArrayNilElement = errors.New( - "toml: cannot encode array with nil element") - errNonString = errors.New( - "toml: cannot encode a map with non-string key type") - errAnonNonStruct = errors.New( - "toml: cannot encode an anonymous field that is not a struct") - errArrayNoTable = errors.New( - "toml: TOML array element cannot contain a table") - errNoKey = errors.New( - "toml: top-level values must be Go maps or structs") - errAnything = errors.New("") // used in testing -) - -var quotedReplacer = strings.NewReplacer( - "\t", "\\t", - "\n", "\\n", - "\r", "\\r", - "\"", "\\\"", - "\\", "\\\\", -) - -// Encoder controls the encoding of Go values to a TOML document to some -// io.Writer. -// -// The indentation level can be controlled with the Indent field. -type Encoder struct { - // A single indentation level. By default it is two spaces. - Indent string - - // hasWritten is whether we have written any output to w yet. - hasWritten bool - w *bufio.Writer -} - -// NewEncoder returns a TOML encoder that encodes Go values to the io.Writer -// given. By default, a single indentation level is 2 spaces. -func NewEncoder(w io.Writer) *Encoder { - return &Encoder{ - w: bufio.NewWriter(w), - Indent: " ", - } -} - -// Encode writes a TOML representation of the Go value to the underlying -// io.Writer. If the value given cannot be encoded to a valid TOML document, -// then an error is returned. -// -// The mapping between Go values and TOML values should be precisely the same -// as for the Decode* functions. Similarly, the TextMarshaler interface is -// supported by encoding the resulting bytes as strings. (If you want to write -// arbitrary binary data then you will need to use something like base64 since -// TOML does not have any binary types.) -// -// When encoding TOML hashes (i.e., Go maps or structs), keys without any -// sub-hashes are encoded first. -// -// If a Go map is encoded, then its keys are sorted alphabetically for -// deterministic output. More control over this behavior may be provided if -// there is demand for it. -// -// Encoding Go values without a corresponding TOML representation---like map -// types with non-string keys---will cause an error to be returned. Similarly -// for mixed arrays/slices, arrays/slices with nil elements, embedded -// non-struct types and nested slices containing maps or structs. -// (e.g., [][]map[string]string is not allowed but []map[string]string is OK -// and so is []map[string][]string.) -func (enc *Encoder) Encode(v interface{}) error { - rv := eindirect(reflect.ValueOf(v)) - if err := enc.safeEncode(Key([]string{}), rv); err != nil { - return err - } - return enc.w.Flush() -} - -func (enc *Encoder) safeEncode(key Key, rv reflect.Value) (err error) { - defer func() { - if r := recover(); r != nil { - if terr, ok := r.(tomlEncodeError); ok { - err = terr.error - return - } - panic(r) - } - }() - enc.encode(key, rv) - return nil -} - -func (enc *Encoder) encode(key Key, rv reflect.Value) { - // Special case. Time needs to be in ISO8601 format. - // Special case. If we can marshal the type to text, then we used that. - // Basically, this prevents the encoder for handling these types as - // generic structs (or whatever the underlying type of a TextMarshaler is). - switch rv.Interface().(type) { - case time.Time, TextMarshaler: - enc.keyEqElement(key, rv) - return - } - - k := rv.Kind() - switch k { - case reflect.Int, reflect.Int8, reflect.Int16, reflect.Int32, - reflect.Int64, - reflect.Uint, reflect.Uint8, reflect.Uint16, reflect.Uint32, - reflect.Uint64, - reflect.Float32, reflect.Float64, reflect.String, reflect.Bool: - enc.keyEqElement(key, rv) - case reflect.Array, reflect.Slice: - if typeEqual(tomlArrayHash, tomlTypeOfGo(rv)) { - enc.eArrayOfTables(key, rv) - } else { - enc.keyEqElement(key, rv) - } - case reflect.Interface: - if rv.IsNil() { - return - } - enc.encode(key, rv.Elem()) - case reflect.Map: - if rv.IsNil() { - return - } - enc.eTable(key, rv) - case reflect.Ptr: - if rv.IsNil() { - return - } - enc.encode(key, rv.Elem()) - case reflect.Struct: - enc.eTable(key, rv) - default: - panic(e("unsupported type for key '%s': %s", key, k)) - } -} - -// eElement encodes any value that can be an array element (primitives and -// arrays). -func (enc *Encoder) eElement(rv reflect.Value) { - switch v := rv.Interface().(type) { - case time.Time: - // Special case time.Time as a primitive. Has to come before - // TextMarshaler below because time.Time implements - // encoding.TextMarshaler, but we need to always use UTC. - enc.wf(v.UTC().Format("2006-01-02T15:04:05Z")) - return - case TextMarshaler: - // Special case. Use text marshaler if it's available for this value. - if s, err := v.MarshalText(); err != nil { - encPanic(err) - } else { - enc.writeQuoted(string(s)) - } - return - } - switch rv.Kind() { - case reflect.Bool: - enc.wf(strconv.FormatBool(rv.Bool())) - case reflect.Int, reflect.Int8, reflect.Int16, reflect.Int32, - reflect.Int64: - enc.wf(strconv.FormatInt(rv.Int(), 10)) - case reflect.Uint, reflect.Uint8, reflect.Uint16, - reflect.Uint32, reflect.Uint64: - enc.wf(strconv.FormatUint(rv.Uint(), 10)) - case reflect.Float32: - enc.wf(floatAddDecimal(strconv.FormatFloat(rv.Float(), 'f', -1, 32))) - case reflect.Float64: - enc.wf(floatAddDecimal(strconv.FormatFloat(rv.Float(), 'f', -1, 64))) - case reflect.Array, reflect.Slice: - enc.eArrayOrSliceElement(rv) - case reflect.Interface: - enc.eElement(rv.Elem()) - case reflect.String: - enc.writeQuoted(rv.String()) - default: - panic(e("unexpected primitive type: %s", rv.Kind())) - } -} - -// By the TOML spec, all floats must have a decimal with at least one -// number on either side. -func floatAddDecimal(fstr string) string { - if !strings.Contains(fstr, ".") { - return fstr + ".0" - } - return fstr -} - -func (enc *Encoder) writeQuoted(s string) { - enc.wf("\"%s\"", quotedReplacer.Replace(s)) -} - -func (enc *Encoder) eArrayOrSliceElement(rv reflect.Value) { - length := rv.Len() - enc.wf("[") - for i := 0; i < length; i++ { - elem := rv.Index(i) - enc.eElement(elem) - if i != length-1 { - enc.wf(", ") - } - } - enc.wf("]") -} - -func (enc *Encoder) eArrayOfTables(key Key, rv reflect.Value) { - if len(key) == 0 { - encPanic(errNoKey) - } - for i := 0; i < rv.Len(); i++ { - trv := rv.Index(i) - if isNil(trv) { - continue - } - panicIfInvalidKey(key) - enc.newline() - enc.wf("%s[[%s]]", enc.indentStr(key), key.maybeQuotedAll()) - enc.newline() - enc.eMapOrStruct(key, trv) - } -} - -func (enc *Encoder) eTable(key Key, rv reflect.Value) { - panicIfInvalidKey(key) - if len(key) == 1 { - // Output an extra newline between top-level tables. - // (The newline isn't written if nothing else has been written though.) - enc.newline() - } - if len(key) > 0 { - enc.wf("%s[%s]", enc.indentStr(key), key.maybeQuotedAll()) - enc.newline() - } - enc.eMapOrStruct(key, rv) -} - -func (enc *Encoder) eMapOrStruct(key Key, rv reflect.Value) { - switch rv := eindirect(rv); rv.Kind() { - case reflect.Map: - enc.eMap(key, rv) - case reflect.Struct: - enc.eStruct(key, rv) - default: - panic("eTable: unhandled reflect.Value Kind: " + rv.Kind().String()) - } -} - -func (enc *Encoder) eMap(key Key, rv reflect.Value) { - rt := rv.Type() - if rt.Key().Kind() != reflect.String { - encPanic(errNonString) - } - - // Sort keys so that we have deterministic output. And write keys directly - // underneath this key first, before writing sub-structs or sub-maps. - var mapKeysDirect, mapKeysSub []string - for _, mapKey := range rv.MapKeys() { - k := mapKey.String() - if typeIsHash(tomlTypeOfGo(rv.MapIndex(mapKey))) { - mapKeysSub = append(mapKeysSub, k) - } else { - mapKeysDirect = append(mapKeysDirect, k) - } - } - - var writeMapKeys = func(mapKeys []string) { - sort.Strings(mapKeys) - for _, mapKey := range mapKeys { - mrv := rv.MapIndex(reflect.ValueOf(mapKey)) - if isNil(mrv) { - // Don't write anything for nil fields. - continue - } - enc.encode(key.add(mapKey), mrv) - } - } - writeMapKeys(mapKeysDirect) - writeMapKeys(mapKeysSub) -} - -func (enc *Encoder) eStruct(key Key, rv reflect.Value) { - // Write keys for fields directly under this key first, because if we write - // a field that creates a new table, then all keys under it will be in that - // table (not the one we're writing here). - rt := rv.Type() - var fieldsDirect, fieldsSub [][]int - var addFields func(rt reflect.Type, rv reflect.Value, start []int) - addFields = func(rt reflect.Type, rv reflect.Value, start []int) { - for i := 0; i < rt.NumField(); i++ { - f := rt.Field(i) - // skip unexported fields - if f.PkgPath != "" && !f.Anonymous { - continue - } - frv := rv.Field(i) - if f.Anonymous { - t := f.Type - switch t.Kind() { - case reflect.Struct: - // Treat anonymous struct fields with - // tag names as though they are not - // anonymous, like encoding/json does. - if getOptions(f.Tag).name == "" { - addFields(t, frv, f.Index) - continue - } - case reflect.Ptr: - if t.Elem().Kind() == reflect.Struct && - getOptions(f.Tag).name == "" { - if !frv.IsNil() { - addFields(t.Elem(), frv.Elem(), f.Index) - } - continue - } - // Fall through to the normal field encoding logic below - // for non-struct anonymous fields. - } - } - - if typeIsHash(tomlTypeOfGo(frv)) { - fieldsSub = append(fieldsSub, append(start, f.Index...)) - } else { - fieldsDirect = append(fieldsDirect, append(start, f.Index...)) - } - } - } - addFields(rt, rv, nil) - - var writeFields = func(fields [][]int) { - for _, fieldIndex := range fields { - sft := rt.FieldByIndex(fieldIndex) - sf := rv.FieldByIndex(fieldIndex) - if isNil(sf) { - // Don't write anything for nil fields. - continue - } - - opts := getOptions(sft.Tag) - if opts.skip { - continue - } - keyName := sft.Name - if opts.name != "" { - keyName = opts.name - } - if opts.omitempty && isEmpty(sf) { - continue - } - if opts.omitzero && isZero(sf) { - continue - } - - enc.encode(key.add(keyName), sf) - } - } - writeFields(fieldsDirect) - writeFields(fieldsSub) -} - -// tomlTypeName returns the TOML type name of the Go value's type. It is -// used to determine whether the types of array elements are mixed (which is -// forbidden). If the Go value is nil, then it is illegal for it to be an array -// element, and valueIsNil is returned as true. - -// Returns the TOML type of a Go value. The type may be `nil`, which means -// no concrete TOML type could be found. -func tomlTypeOfGo(rv reflect.Value) tomlType { - if isNil(rv) || !rv.IsValid() { - return nil - } - switch rv.Kind() { - case reflect.Bool: - return tomlBool - case reflect.Int, reflect.Int8, reflect.Int16, reflect.Int32, - reflect.Int64, - reflect.Uint, reflect.Uint8, reflect.Uint16, reflect.Uint32, - reflect.Uint64: - return tomlInteger - case reflect.Float32, reflect.Float64: - return tomlFloat - case reflect.Array, reflect.Slice: - if typeEqual(tomlHash, tomlArrayType(rv)) { - return tomlArrayHash - } - return tomlArray - case reflect.Ptr, reflect.Interface: - return tomlTypeOfGo(rv.Elem()) - case reflect.String: - return tomlString - case reflect.Map: - return tomlHash - case reflect.Struct: - switch rv.Interface().(type) { - case time.Time: - return tomlDatetime - case TextMarshaler: - return tomlString - default: - return tomlHash - } - default: - panic("unexpected reflect.Kind: " + rv.Kind().String()) - } -} - -// tomlArrayType returns the element type of a TOML array. The type returned -// may be nil if it cannot be determined (e.g., a nil slice or a zero length -// slize). This function may also panic if it finds a type that cannot be -// expressed in TOML (such as nil elements, heterogeneous arrays or directly -// nested arrays of tables). -func tomlArrayType(rv reflect.Value) tomlType { - if isNil(rv) || !rv.IsValid() || rv.Len() == 0 { - return nil - } - firstType := tomlTypeOfGo(rv.Index(0)) - if firstType == nil { - encPanic(errArrayNilElement) - } - - rvlen := rv.Len() - for i := 1; i < rvlen; i++ { - elem := rv.Index(i) - switch elemType := tomlTypeOfGo(elem); { - case elemType == nil: - encPanic(errArrayNilElement) - case !typeEqual(firstType, elemType): - encPanic(errArrayMixedElementTypes) - } - } - // If we have a nested array, then we must make sure that the nested - // array contains ONLY primitives. - // This checks arbitrarily nested arrays. - if typeEqual(firstType, tomlArray) || typeEqual(firstType, tomlArrayHash) { - nest := tomlArrayType(eindirect(rv.Index(0))) - if typeEqual(nest, tomlHash) || typeEqual(nest, tomlArrayHash) { - encPanic(errArrayNoTable) - } - } - return firstType -} - -type tagOptions struct { - skip bool // "-" - name string - omitempty bool - omitzero bool -} - -func getOptions(tag reflect.StructTag) tagOptions { - t := tag.Get("toml") - if t == "-" { - return tagOptions{skip: true} - } - var opts tagOptions - parts := strings.Split(t, ",") - opts.name = parts[0] - for _, s := range parts[1:] { - switch s { - case "omitempty": - opts.omitempty = true - case "omitzero": - opts.omitzero = true - } - } - return opts -} - -func isZero(rv reflect.Value) bool { - switch rv.Kind() { - case reflect.Int, reflect.Int8, reflect.Int16, reflect.Int32, reflect.Int64: - return rv.Int() == 0 - case reflect.Uint, reflect.Uint8, reflect.Uint16, reflect.Uint32, reflect.Uint64: - return rv.Uint() == 0 - case reflect.Float32, reflect.Float64: - return rv.Float() == 0.0 - } - return false -} - -func isEmpty(rv reflect.Value) bool { - switch rv.Kind() { - case reflect.Array, reflect.Slice, reflect.Map, reflect.String: - return rv.Len() == 0 - case reflect.Bool: - return !rv.Bool() - } - return false -} - -func (enc *Encoder) newline() { - if enc.hasWritten { - enc.wf("\n") - } -} - -func (enc *Encoder) keyEqElement(key Key, val reflect.Value) { - if len(key) == 0 { - encPanic(errNoKey) - } - panicIfInvalidKey(key) - enc.wf("%s%s = ", enc.indentStr(key), key.maybeQuoted(len(key)-1)) - enc.eElement(val) - enc.newline() -} - -func (enc *Encoder) wf(format string, v ...interface{}) { - if _, err := fmt.Fprintf(enc.w, format, v...); err != nil { - encPanic(err) - } - enc.hasWritten = true -} - -func (enc *Encoder) indentStr(key Key) string { - return strings.Repeat(enc.Indent, len(key)-1) -} - -func encPanic(err error) { - panic(tomlEncodeError{err}) -} - -func eindirect(v reflect.Value) reflect.Value { - switch v.Kind() { - case reflect.Ptr, reflect.Interface: - return eindirect(v.Elem()) - default: - return v - } -} - -func isNil(rv reflect.Value) bool { - switch rv.Kind() { - case reflect.Interface, reflect.Map, reflect.Ptr, reflect.Slice: - return rv.IsNil() - default: - return false - } -} - -func panicIfInvalidKey(key Key) { - for _, k := range key { - if len(k) == 0 { - encPanic(e("Key '%s' is not a valid table name. Key names "+ - "cannot be empty.", key.maybeQuotedAll())) - } - } -} - -func isValidKeyName(s string) bool { - return len(s) != 0 -} diff --git a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/encoding_types.go b/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/encoding_types.go deleted file mode 100644 index d36e1dd6..00000000 --- a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/encoding_types.go +++ /dev/null @@ -1,19 +0,0 @@ -// +build go1.2 - -package toml - -// In order to support Go 1.1, we define our own TextMarshaler and -// TextUnmarshaler types. For Go 1.2+, we just alias them with the -// standard library interfaces. - -import ( - "encoding" -) - -// TextMarshaler is a synonym for encoding.TextMarshaler. It is defined here -// so that Go 1.1 can be supported. -type TextMarshaler encoding.TextMarshaler - -// TextUnmarshaler is a synonym for encoding.TextUnmarshaler. It is defined -// here so that Go 1.1 can be supported. -type TextUnmarshaler encoding.TextUnmarshaler diff --git a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/encoding_types_1.1.go b/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/encoding_types_1.1.go deleted file mode 100644 index e8d503d0..00000000 --- a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/encoding_types_1.1.go +++ /dev/null @@ -1,18 +0,0 @@ -// +build !go1.2 - -package toml - -// These interfaces were introduced in Go 1.2, so we add them manually when -// compiling for Go 1.1. - -// TextMarshaler is a synonym for encoding.TextMarshaler. It is defined here -// so that Go 1.1 can be supported. -type TextMarshaler interface { - MarshalText() (text []byte, err error) -} - -// TextUnmarshaler is a synonym for encoding.TextUnmarshaler. It is defined -// here so that Go 1.1 can be supported. -type TextUnmarshaler interface { - UnmarshalText(text []byte) error -} diff --git a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/lex.go b/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/lex.go deleted file mode 100644 index f1f4b2de..00000000 --- a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/lex.go +++ /dev/null @@ -1,953 +0,0 @@ -package toml - -import ( - "fmt" - "strings" - "unicode" - "unicode/utf8" -) - -type itemType int - -const ( - itemError itemType = iota - itemNIL // used in the parser to indicate no type - itemEOF - itemText - itemString - itemRawString - itemMultilineString - itemRawMultilineString - itemBool - itemInteger - itemFloat - itemDatetime - itemArray // the start of an array - itemArrayEnd - itemTableStart - itemTableEnd - itemArrayTableStart - itemArrayTableEnd - itemKeyStart - itemCommentStart - itemInlineTableStart - itemInlineTableEnd -) - -const ( - eof = 0 - comma = ',' - tableStart = '[' - tableEnd = ']' - arrayTableStart = '[' - arrayTableEnd = ']' - tableSep = '.' - keySep = '=' - arrayStart = '[' - arrayEnd = ']' - commentStart = '#' - stringStart = '"' - stringEnd = '"' - rawStringStart = '\'' - rawStringEnd = '\'' - inlineTableStart = '{' - inlineTableEnd = '}' -) - -type stateFn func(lx *lexer) stateFn - -type lexer struct { - input string - start int - pos int - line int - state stateFn - items chan item - - // Allow for backing up up to three runes. - // This is necessary because TOML contains 3-rune tokens (""" and '''). - prevWidths [3]int - nprev int // how many of prevWidths are in use - // If we emit an eof, we can still back up, but it is not OK to call - // next again. - atEOF bool - - // A stack of state functions used to maintain context. - // The idea is to reuse parts of the state machine in various places. - // For example, values can appear at the top level or within arbitrarily - // nested arrays. The last state on the stack is used after a value has - // been lexed. Similarly for comments. - stack []stateFn -} - -type item struct { - typ itemType - val string - line int -} - -func (lx *lexer) nextItem() item { - for { - select { - case item := <-lx.items: - return item - default: - lx.state = lx.state(lx) - } - } -} - -func lex(input string) *lexer { - lx := &lexer{ - input: input, - state: lexTop, - line: 1, - items: make(chan item, 10), - stack: make([]stateFn, 0, 10), - } - return lx -} - -func (lx *lexer) push(state stateFn) { - lx.stack = append(lx.stack, state) -} - -func (lx *lexer) pop() stateFn { - if len(lx.stack) == 0 { - return lx.errorf("BUG in lexer: no states to pop") - } - last := lx.stack[len(lx.stack)-1] - lx.stack = lx.stack[0 : len(lx.stack)-1] - return last -} - -func (lx *lexer) current() string { - return lx.input[lx.start:lx.pos] -} - -func (lx *lexer) emit(typ itemType) { - lx.items <- item{typ, lx.current(), lx.line} - lx.start = lx.pos -} - -func (lx *lexer) emitTrim(typ itemType) { - lx.items <- item{typ, strings.TrimSpace(lx.current()), lx.line} - lx.start = lx.pos -} - -func (lx *lexer) next() (r rune) { - if lx.atEOF { - panic("next called after EOF") - } - if lx.pos >= len(lx.input) { - lx.atEOF = true - return eof - } - - if lx.input[lx.pos] == '\n' { - lx.line++ - } - lx.prevWidths[2] = lx.prevWidths[1] - lx.prevWidths[1] = lx.prevWidths[0] - if lx.nprev < 3 { - lx.nprev++ - } - r, w := utf8.DecodeRuneInString(lx.input[lx.pos:]) - lx.prevWidths[0] = w - lx.pos += w - return r -} - -// ignore skips over the pending input before this point. -func (lx *lexer) ignore() { - lx.start = lx.pos -} - -// backup steps back one rune. Can be called only twice between calls to next. -func (lx *lexer) backup() { - if lx.atEOF { - lx.atEOF = false - return - } - if lx.nprev < 1 { - panic("backed up too far") - } - w := lx.prevWidths[0] - lx.prevWidths[0] = lx.prevWidths[1] - lx.prevWidths[1] = lx.prevWidths[2] - lx.nprev-- - lx.pos -= w - if lx.pos < len(lx.input) && lx.input[lx.pos] == '\n' { - lx.line-- - } -} - -// accept consumes the next rune if it's equal to `valid`. -func (lx *lexer) accept(valid rune) bool { - if lx.next() == valid { - return true - } - lx.backup() - return false -} - -// peek returns but does not consume the next rune in the input. -func (lx *lexer) peek() rune { - r := lx.next() - lx.backup() - return r -} - -// skip ignores all input that matches the given predicate. -func (lx *lexer) skip(pred func(rune) bool) { - for { - r := lx.next() - if pred(r) { - continue - } - lx.backup() - lx.ignore() - return - } -} - -// errorf stops all lexing by emitting an error and returning `nil`. -// Note that any value that is a character is escaped if it's a special -// character (newlines, tabs, etc.). -func (lx *lexer) errorf(format string, values ...interface{}) stateFn { - lx.items <- item{ - itemError, - fmt.Sprintf(format, values...), - lx.line, - } - return nil -} - -// lexTop consumes elements at the top level of TOML data. -func lexTop(lx *lexer) stateFn { - r := lx.next() - if isWhitespace(r) || isNL(r) { - return lexSkip(lx, lexTop) - } - switch r { - case commentStart: - lx.push(lexTop) - return lexCommentStart - case tableStart: - return lexTableStart - case eof: - if lx.pos > lx.start { - return lx.errorf("unexpected EOF") - } - lx.emit(itemEOF) - return nil - } - - // At this point, the only valid item can be a key, so we back up - // and let the key lexer do the rest. - lx.backup() - lx.push(lexTopEnd) - return lexKeyStart -} - -// lexTopEnd is entered whenever a top-level item has been consumed. (A value -// or a table.) It must see only whitespace, and will turn back to lexTop -// upon a newline. If it sees EOF, it will quit the lexer successfully. -func lexTopEnd(lx *lexer) stateFn { - r := lx.next() - switch { - case r == commentStart: - // a comment will read to a newline for us. - lx.push(lexTop) - return lexCommentStart - case isWhitespace(r): - return lexTopEnd - case isNL(r): - lx.ignore() - return lexTop - case r == eof: - lx.emit(itemEOF) - return nil - } - return lx.errorf("expected a top-level item to end with a newline, "+ - "comment, or EOF, but got %q instead", r) -} - -// lexTable lexes the beginning of a table. Namely, it makes sure that -// it starts with a character other than '.' and ']'. -// It assumes that '[' has already been consumed. -// It also handles the case that this is an item in an array of tables. -// e.g., '[[name]]'. -func lexTableStart(lx *lexer) stateFn { - if lx.peek() == arrayTableStart { - lx.next() - lx.emit(itemArrayTableStart) - lx.push(lexArrayTableEnd) - } else { - lx.emit(itemTableStart) - lx.push(lexTableEnd) - } - return lexTableNameStart -} - -func lexTableEnd(lx *lexer) stateFn { - lx.emit(itemTableEnd) - return lexTopEnd -} - -func lexArrayTableEnd(lx *lexer) stateFn { - if r := lx.next(); r != arrayTableEnd { - return lx.errorf("expected end of table array name delimiter %q, "+ - "but got %q instead", arrayTableEnd, r) - } - lx.emit(itemArrayTableEnd) - return lexTopEnd -} - -func lexTableNameStart(lx *lexer) stateFn { - lx.skip(isWhitespace) - switch r := lx.peek(); { - case r == tableEnd || r == eof: - return lx.errorf("unexpected end of table name " + - "(table names cannot be empty)") - case r == tableSep: - return lx.errorf("unexpected table separator " + - "(table names cannot be empty)") - case r == stringStart || r == rawStringStart: - lx.ignore() - lx.push(lexTableNameEnd) - return lexValue // reuse string lexing - default: - return lexBareTableName - } -} - -// lexBareTableName lexes the name of a table. It assumes that at least one -// valid character for the table has already been read. -func lexBareTableName(lx *lexer) stateFn { - r := lx.next() - if isBareKeyChar(r) { - return lexBareTableName - } - lx.backup() - lx.emit(itemText) - return lexTableNameEnd -} - -// lexTableNameEnd reads the end of a piece of a table name, optionally -// consuming whitespace. -func lexTableNameEnd(lx *lexer) stateFn { - lx.skip(isWhitespace) - switch r := lx.next(); { - case isWhitespace(r): - return lexTableNameEnd - case r == tableSep: - lx.ignore() - return lexTableNameStart - case r == tableEnd: - return lx.pop() - default: - return lx.errorf("expected '.' or ']' to end table name, "+ - "but got %q instead", r) - } -} - -// lexKeyStart consumes a key name up until the first non-whitespace character. -// lexKeyStart will ignore whitespace. -func lexKeyStart(lx *lexer) stateFn { - r := lx.peek() - switch { - case r == keySep: - return lx.errorf("unexpected key separator %q", keySep) - case isWhitespace(r) || isNL(r): - lx.next() - return lexSkip(lx, lexKeyStart) - case r == stringStart || r == rawStringStart: - lx.ignore() - lx.emit(itemKeyStart) - lx.push(lexKeyEnd) - return lexValue // reuse string lexing - default: - lx.ignore() - lx.emit(itemKeyStart) - return lexBareKey - } -} - -// lexBareKey consumes the text of a bare key. Assumes that the first character -// (which is not whitespace) has not yet been consumed. -func lexBareKey(lx *lexer) stateFn { - switch r := lx.next(); { - case isBareKeyChar(r): - return lexBareKey - case isWhitespace(r): - lx.backup() - lx.emit(itemText) - return lexKeyEnd - case r == keySep: - lx.backup() - lx.emit(itemText) - return lexKeyEnd - default: - return lx.errorf("bare keys cannot contain %q", r) - } -} - -// lexKeyEnd consumes the end of a key and trims whitespace (up to the key -// separator). -func lexKeyEnd(lx *lexer) stateFn { - switch r := lx.next(); { - case r == keySep: - return lexSkip(lx, lexValue) - case isWhitespace(r): - return lexSkip(lx, lexKeyEnd) - default: - return lx.errorf("expected key separator %q, but got %q instead", - keySep, r) - } -} - -// lexValue starts the consumption of a value anywhere a value is expected. -// lexValue will ignore whitespace. -// After a value is lexed, the last state on the next is popped and returned. -func lexValue(lx *lexer) stateFn { - // We allow whitespace to precede a value, but NOT newlines. - // In array syntax, the array states are responsible for ignoring newlines. - r := lx.next() - switch { - case isWhitespace(r): - return lexSkip(lx, lexValue) - case isDigit(r): - lx.backup() // avoid an extra state and use the same as above - return lexNumberOrDateStart - } - switch r { - case arrayStart: - lx.ignore() - lx.emit(itemArray) - return lexArrayValue - case inlineTableStart: - lx.ignore() - lx.emit(itemInlineTableStart) - return lexInlineTableValue - case stringStart: - if lx.accept(stringStart) { - if lx.accept(stringStart) { - lx.ignore() // Ignore """ - return lexMultilineString - } - lx.backup() - } - lx.ignore() // ignore the '"' - return lexString - case rawStringStart: - if lx.accept(rawStringStart) { - if lx.accept(rawStringStart) { - lx.ignore() // Ignore """ - return lexMultilineRawString - } - lx.backup() - } - lx.ignore() // ignore the "'" - return lexRawString - case '+', '-': - return lexNumberStart - case '.': // special error case, be kind to users - return lx.errorf("floats must start with a digit, not '.'") - } - if unicode.IsLetter(r) { - // Be permissive here; lexBool will give a nice error if the - // user wrote something like - // x = foo - // (i.e. not 'true' or 'false' but is something else word-like.) - lx.backup() - return lexBool - } - return lx.errorf("expected value but found %q instead", r) -} - -// lexArrayValue consumes one value in an array. It assumes that '[' or ',' -// have already been consumed. All whitespace and newlines are ignored. -func lexArrayValue(lx *lexer) stateFn { - r := lx.next() - switch { - case isWhitespace(r) || isNL(r): - return lexSkip(lx, lexArrayValue) - case r == commentStart: - lx.push(lexArrayValue) - return lexCommentStart - case r == comma: - return lx.errorf("unexpected comma") - case r == arrayEnd: - // NOTE(caleb): The spec isn't clear about whether you can have - // a trailing comma or not, so we'll allow it. - return lexArrayEnd - } - - lx.backup() - lx.push(lexArrayValueEnd) - return lexValue -} - -// lexArrayValueEnd consumes everything between the end of an array value and -// the next value (or the end of the array): it ignores whitespace and newlines -// and expects either a ',' or a ']'. -func lexArrayValueEnd(lx *lexer) stateFn { - r := lx.next() - switch { - case isWhitespace(r) || isNL(r): - return lexSkip(lx, lexArrayValueEnd) - case r == commentStart: - lx.push(lexArrayValueEnd) - return lexCommentStart - case r == comma: - lx.ignore() - return lexArrayValue // move on to the next value - case r == arrayEnd: - return lexArrayEnd - } - return lx.errorf( - "expected a comma or array terminator %q, but got %q instead", - arrayEnd, r, - ) -} - -// lexArrayEnd finishes the lexing of an array. -// It assumes that a ']' has just been consumed. -func lexArrayEnd(lx *lexer) stateFn { - lx.ignore() - lx.emit(itemArrayEnd) - return lx.pop() -} - -// lexInlineTableValue consumes one key/value pair in an inline table. -// It assumes that '{' or ',' have already been consumed. Whitespace is ignored. -func lexInlineTableValue(lx *lexer) stateFn { - r := lx.next() - switch { - case isWhitespace(r): - return lexSkip(lx, lexInlineTableValue) - case isNL(r): - return lx.errorf("newlines not allowed within inline tables") - case r == commentStart: - lx.push(lexInlineTableValue) - return lexCommentStart - case r == comma: - return lx.errorf("unexpected comma") - case r == inlineTableEnd: - return lexInlineTableEnd - } - lx.backup() - lx.push(lexInlineTableValueEnd) - return lexKeyStart -} - -// lexInlineTableValueEnd consumes everything between the end of an inline table -// key/value pair and the next pair (or the end of the table): -// it ignores whitespace and expects either a ',' or a '}'. -func lexInlineTableValueEnd(lx *lexer) stateFn { - r := lx.next() - switch { - case isWhitespace(r): - return lexSkip(lx, lexInlineTableValueEnd) - case isNL(r): - return lx.errorf("newlines not allowed within inline tables") - case r == commentStart: - lx.push(lexInlineTableValueEnd) - return lexCommentStart - case r == comma: - lx.ignore() - return lexInlineTableValue - case r == inlineTableEnd: - return lexInlineTableEnd - } - return lx.errorf("expected a comma or an inline table terminator %q, "+ - "but got %q instead", inlineTableEnd, r) -} - -// lexInlineTableEnd finishes the lexing of an inline table. -// It assumes that a '}' has just been consumed. -func lexInlineTableEnd(lx *lexer) stateFn { - lx.ignore() - lx.emit(itemInlineTableEnd) - return lx.pop() -} - -// lexString consumes the inner contents of a string. It assumes that the -// beginning '"' has already been consumed and ignored. -func lexString(lx *lexer) stateFn { - r := lx.next() - switch { - case r == eof: - return lx.errorf("unexpected EOF") - case isNL(r): - return lx.errorf("strings cannot contain newlines") - case r == '\\': - lx.push(lexString) - return lexStringEscape - case r == stringEnd: - lx.backup() - lx.emit(itemString) - lx.next() - lx.ignore() - return lx.pop() - } - return lexString -} - -// lexMultilineString consumes the inner contents of a string. It assumes that -// the beginning '"""' has already been consumed and ignored. -func lexMultilineString(lx *lexer) stateFn { - switch lx.next() { - case eof: - return lx.errorf("unexpected EOF") - case '\\': - return lexMultilineStringEscape - case stringEnd: - if lx.accept(stringEnd) { - if lx.accept(stringEnd) { - lx.backup() - lx.backup() - lx.backup() - lx.emit(itemMultilineString) - lx.next() - lx.next() - lx.next() - lx.ignore() - return lx.pop() - } - lx.backup() - } - } - return lexMultilineString -} - -// lexRawString consumes a raw string. Nothing can be escaped in such a string. -// It assumes that the beginning "'" has already been consumed and ignored. -func lexRawString(lx *lexer) stateFn { - r := lx.next() - switch { - case r == eof: - return lx.errorf("unexpected EOF") - case isNL(r): - return lx.errorf("strings cannot contain newlines") - case r == rawStringEnd: - lx.backup() - lx.emit(itemRawString) - lx.next() - lx.ignore() - return lx.pop() - } - return lexRawString -} - -// lexMultilineRawString consumes a raw string. Nothing can be escaped in such -// a string. It assumes that the beginning "'''" has already been consumed and -// ignored. -func lexMultilineRawString(lx *lexer) stateFn { - switch lx.next() { - case eof: - return lx.errorf("unexpected EOF") - case rawStringEnd: - if lx.accept(rawStringEnd) { - if lx.accept(rawStringEnd) { - lx.backup() - lx.backup() - lx.backup() - lx.emit(itemRawMultilineString) - lx.next() - lx.next() - lx.next() - lx.ignore() - return lx.pop() - } - lx.backup() - } - } - return lexMultilineRawString -} - -// lexMultilineStringEscape consumes an escaped character. It assumes that the -// preceding '\\' has already been consumed. -func lexMultilineStringEscape(lx *lexer) stateFn { - // Handle the special case first: - if isNL(lx.next()) { - return lexMultilineString - } - lx.backup() - lx.push(lexMultilineString) - return lexStringEscape(lx) -} - -func lexStringEscape(lx *lexer) stateFn { - r := lx.next() - switch r { - case 'b': - fallthrough - case 't': - fallthrough - case 'n': - fallthrough - case 'f': - fallthrough - case 'r': - fallthrough - case '"': - fallthrough - case '\\': - return lx.pop() - case 'u': - return lexShortUnicodeEscape - case 'U': - return lexLongUnicodeEscape - } - return lx.errorf("invalid escape character %q; only the following "+ - "escape characters are allowed: "+ - `\b, \t, \n, \f, \r, \", \\, \uXXXX, and \UXXXXXXXX`, r) -} - -func lexShortUnicodeEscape(lx *lexer) stateFn { - var r rune - for i := 0; i < 4; i++ { - r = lx.next() - if !isHexadecimal(r) { - return lx.errorf(`expected four hexadecimal digits after '\u', `+ - "but got %q instead", lx.current()) - } - } - return lx.pop() -} - -func lexLongUnicodeEscape(lx *lexer) stateFn { - var r rune - for i := 0; i < 8; i++ { - r = lx.next() - if !isHexadecimal(r) { - return lx.errorf(`expected eight hexadecimal digits after '\U', `+ - "but got %q instead", lx.current()) - } - } - return lx.pop() -} - -// lexNumberOrDateStart consumes either an integer, a float, or datetime. -func lexNumberOrDateStart(lx *lexer) stateFn { - r := lx.next() - if isDigit(r) { - return lexNumberOrDate - } - switch r { - case '_': - return lexNumber - case 'e', 'E': - return lexFloat - case '.': - return lx.errorf("floats must start with a digit, not '.'") - } - return lx.errorf("expected a digit but got %q", r) -} - -// lexNumberOrDate consumes either an integer, float or datetime. -func lexNumberOrDate(lx *lexer) stateFn { - r := lx.next() - if isDigit(r) { - return lexNumberOrDate - } - switch r { - case '-': - return lexDatetime - case '_': - return lexNumber - case '.', 'e', 'E': - return lexFloat - } - - lx.backup() - lx.emit(itemInteger) - return lx.pop() -} - -// lexDatetime consumes a Datetime, to a first approximation. -// The parser validates that it matches one of the accepted formats. -func lexDatetime(lx *lexer) stateFn { - r := lx.next() - if isDigit(r) { - return lexDatetime - } - switch r { - case '-', 'T', ':', '.', 'Z': - return lexDatetime - } - - lx.backup() - lx.emit(itemDatetime) - return lx.pop() -} - -// lexNumberStart consumes either an integer or a float. It assumes that a sign -// has already been read, but that *no* digits have been consumed. -// lexNumberStart will move to the appropriate integer or float states. -func lexNumberStart(lx *lexer) stateFn { - // We MUST see a digit. Even floats have to start with a digit. - r := lx.next() - if !isDigit(r) { - if r == '.' { - return lx.errorf("floats must start with a digit, not '.'") - } - return lx.errorf("expected a digit but got %q", r) - } - return lexNumber -} - -// lexNumber consumes an integer or a float after seeing the first digit. -func lexNumber(lx *lexer) stateFn { - r := lx.next() - if isDigit(r) { - return lexNumber - } - switch r { - case '_': - return lexNumber - case '.', 'e', 'E': - return lexFloat - } - - lx.backup() - lx.emit(itemInteger) - return lx.pop() -} - -// lexFloat consumes the elements of a float. It allows any sequence of -// float-like characters, so floats emitted by the lexer are only a first -// approximation and must be validated by the parser. -func lexFloat(lx *lexer) stateFn { - r := lx.next() - if isDigit(r) { - return lexFloat - } - switch r { - case '_', '.', '-', '+', 'e', 'E': - return lexFloat - } - - lx.backup() - lx.emit(itemFloat) - return lx.pop() -} - -// lexBool consumes a bool string: 'true' or 'false. -func lexBool(lx *lexer) stateFn { - var rs []rune - for { - r := lx.next() - if r == eof || isWhitespace(r) || isNL(r) { - lx.backup() - break - } - rs = append(rs, r) - } - s := string(rs) - switch s { - case "true", "false": - lx.emit(itemBool) - return lx.pop() - } - return lx.errorf("expected value but found %q instead", s) -} - -// lexCommentStart begins the lexing of a comment. It will emit -// itemCommentStart and consume no characters, passing control to lexComment. -func lexCommentStart(lx *lexer) stateFn { - lx.ignore() - lx.emit(itemCommentStart) - return lexComment -} - -// lexComment lexes an entire comment. It assumes that '#' has been consumed. -// It will consume *up to* the first newline character, and pass control -// back to the last state on the stack. -func lexComment(lx *lexer) stateFn { - r := lx.peek() - if isNL(r) || r == eof { - lx.emit(itemText) - return lx.pop() - } - lx.next() - return lexComment -} - -// lexSkip ignores all slurped input and moves on to the next state. -func lexSkip(lx *lexer, nextState stateFn) stateFn { - return func(lx *lexer) stateFn { - lx.ignore() - return nextState - } -} - -// isWhitespace returns true if `r` is a whitespace character according -// to the spec. -func isWhitespace(r rune) bool { - return r == '\t' || r == ' ' -} - -func isNL(r rune) bool { - return r == '\n' || r == '\r' -} - -func isDigit(r rune) bool { - return r >= '0' && r <= '9' -} - -func isHexadecimal(r rune) bool { - return (r >= '0' && r <= '9') || - (r >= 'a' && r <= 'f') || - (r >= 'A' && r <= 'F') -} - -func isBareKeyChar(r rune) bool { - return (r >= 'A' && r <= 'Z') || - (r >= 'a' && r <= 'z') || - (r >= '0' && r <= '9') || - r == '_' || - r == '-' -} - -func (itype itemType) String() string { - switch itype { - case itemError: - return "Error" - case itemNIL: - return "NIL" - case itemEOF: - return "EOF" - case itemText: - return "Text" - case itemString, itemRawString, itemMultilineString, itemRawMultilineString: - return "String" - case itemBool: - return "Bool" - case itemInteger: - return "Integer" - case itemFloat: - return "Float" - case itemDatetime: - return "DateTime" - case itemTableStart: - return "TableStart" - case itemTableEnd: - return "TableEnd" - case itemKeyStart: - return "KeyStart" - case itemArray: - return "Array" - case itemArrayEnd: - return "ArrayEnd" - case itemCommentStart: - return "CommentStart" - } - panic(fmt.Sprintf("BUG: Unknown type '%d'.", int(itype))) -} - -func (item item) String() string { - return fmt.Sprintf("(%s, %s)", item.typ.String(), item.val) -} diff --git a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/parse.go b/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/parse.go deleted file mode 100644 index 50869ef9..00000000 --- a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/parse.go +++ /dev/null @@ -1,592 +0,0 @@ -package toml - -import ( - "fmt" - "strconv" - "strings" - "time" - "unicode" - "unicode/utf8" -) - -type parser struct { - mapping map[string]interface{} - types map[string]tomlType - lx *lexer - - // A list of keys in the order that they appear in the TOML data. - ordered []Key - - // the full key for the current hash in scope - context Key - - // the base key name for everything except hashes - currentKey string - - // rough approximation of line number - approxLine int - - // A map of 'key.group.names' to whether they were created implicitly. - implicits map[string]bool -} - -type parseError string - -func (pe parseError) Error() string { - return string(pe) -} - -func parse(data string) (p *parser, err error) { - defer func() { - if r := recover(); r != nil { - var ok bool - if err, ok = r.(parseError); ok { - return - } - panic(r) - } - }() - - p = &parser{ - mapping: make(map[string]interface{}), - types: make(map[string]tomlType), - lx: lex(data), - ordered: make([]Key, 0), - implicits: make(map[string]bool), - } - for { - item := p.next() - if item.typ == itemEOF { - break - } - p.topLevel(item) - } - - return p, nil -} - -func (p *parser) panicf(format string, v ...interface{}) { - msg := fmt.Sprintf("Near line %d (last key parsed '%s'): %s", - p.approxLine, p.current(), fmt.Sprintf(format, v...)) - panic(parseError(msg)) -} - -func (p *parser) next() item { - it := p.lx.nextItem() - if it.typ == itemError { - p.panicf("%s", it.val) - } - return it -} - -func (p *parser) bug(format string, v ...interface{}) { - panic(fmt.Sprintf("BUG: "+format+"\n\n", v...)) -} - -func (p *parser) expect(typ itemType) item { - it := p.next() - p.assertEqual(typ, it.typ) - return it -} - -func (p *parser) assertEqual(expected, got itemType) { - if expected != got { - p.bug("Expected '%s' but got '%s'.", expected, got) - } -} - -func (p *parser) topLevel(item item) { - switch item.typ { - case itemCommentStart: - p.approxLine = item.line - p.expect(itemText) - case itemTableStart: - kg := p.next() - p.approxLine = kg.line - - var key Key - for ; kg.typ != itemTableEnd && kg.typ != itemEOF; kg = p.next() { - key = append(key, p.keyString(kg)) - } - p.assertEqual(itemTableEnd, kg.typ) - - p.establishContext(key, false) - p.setType("", tomlHash) - p.ordered = append(p.ordered, key) - case itemArrayTableStart: - kg := p.next() - p.approxLine = kg.line - - var key Key - for ; kg.typ != itemArrayTableEnd && kg.typ != itemEOF; kg = p.next() { - key = append(key, p.keyString(kg)) - } - p.assertEqual(itemArrayTableEnd, kg.typ) - - p.establishContext(key, true) - p.setType("", tomlArrayHash) - p.ordered = append(p.ordered, key) - case itemKeyStart: - kname := p.next() - p.approxLine = kname.line - p.currentKey = p.keyString(kname) - - val, typ := p.value(p.next()) - p.setValue(p.currentKey, val) - p.setType(p.currentKey, typ) - p.ordered = append(p.ordered, p.context.add(p.currentKey)) - p.currentKey = "" - default: - p.bug("Unexpected type at top level: %s", item.typ) - } -} - -// Gets a string for a key (or part of a key in a table name). -func (p *parser) keyString(it item) string { - switch it.typ { - case itemText: - return it.val - case itemString, itemMultilineString, - itemRawString, itemRawMultilineString: - s, _ := p.value(it) - return s.(string) - default: - p.bug("Unexpected key type: %s", it.typ) - panic("unreachable") - } -} - -// value translates an expected value from the lexer into a Go value wrapped -// as an empty interface. -func (p *parser) value(it item) (interface{}, tomlType) { - switch it.typ { - case itemString: - return p.replaceEscapes(it.val), p.typeOfPrimitive(it) - case itemMultilineString: - trimmed := stripFirstNewline(stripEscapedWhitespace(it.val)) - return p.replaceEscapes(trimmed), p.typeOfPrimitive(it) - case itemRawString: - return it.val, p.typeOfPrimitive(it) - case itemRawMultilineString: - return stripFirstNewline(it.val), p.typeOfPrimitive(it) - case itemBool: - switch it.val { - case "true": - return true, p.typeOfPrimitive(it) - case "false": - return false, p.typeOfPrimitive(it) - } - p.bug("Expected boolean value, but got '%s'.", it.val) - case itemInteger: - if !numUnderscoresOK(it.val) { - p.panicf("Invalid integer %q: underscores must be surrounded by digits", - it.val) - } - val := strings.Replace(it.val, "_", "", -1) - num, err := strconv.ParseInt(val, 10, 64) - if err != nil { - // Distinguish integer values. Normally, it'd be a bug if the lexer - // provides an invalid integer, but it's possible that the number is - // out of range of valid values (which the lexer cannot determine). - // So mark the former as a bug but the latter as a legitimate user - // error. - if e, ok := err.(*strconv.NumError); ok && - e.Err == strconv.ErrRange { - - p.panicf("Integer '%s' is out of the range of 64-bit "+ - "signed integers.", it.val) - } else { - p.bug("Expected integer value, but got '%s'.", it.val) - } - } - return num, p.typeOfPrimitive(it) - case itemFloat: - parts := strings.FieldsFunc(it.val, func(r rune) bool { - switch r { - case '.', 'e', 'E': - return true - } - return false - }) - for _, part := range parts { - if !numUnderscoresOK(part) { - p.panicf("Invalid float %q: underscores must be "+ - "surrounded by digits", it.val) - } - } - if !numPeriodsOK(it.val) { - // As a special case, numbers like '123.' or '1.e2', - // which are valid as far as Go/strconv are concerned, - // must be rejected because TOML says that a fractional - // part consists of '.' followed by 1+ digits. - p.panicf("Invalid float %q: '.' must be followed "+ - "by one or more digits", it.val) - } - val := strings.Replace(it.val, "_", "", -1) - num, err := strconv.ParseFloat(val, 64) - if err != nil { - if e, ok := err.(*strconv.NumError); ok && - e.Err == strconv.ErrRange { - - p.panicf("Float '%s' is out of the range of 64-bit "+ - "IEEE-754 floating-point numbers.", it.val) - } else { - p.panicf("Invalid float value: %q", it.val) - } - } - return num, p.typeOfPrimitive(it) - case itemDatetime: - var t time.Time - var ok bool - var err error - for _, format := range []string{ - "2006-01-02T15:04:05Z07:00", - "2006-01-02T15:04:05", - "2006-01-02", - } { - t, err = time.ParseInLocation(format, it.val, time.Local) - if err == nil { - ok = true - break - } - } - if !ok { - p.panicf("Invalid TOML Datetime: %q.", it.val) - } - return t, p.typeOfPrimitive(it) - case itemArray: - array := make([]interface{}, 0) - types := make([]tomlType, 0) - - for it = p.next(); it.typ != itemArrayEnd; it = p.next() { - if it.typ == itemCommentStart { - p.expect(itemText) - continue - } - - val, typ := p.value(it) - array = append(array, val) - types = append(types, typ) - } - return array, p.typeOfArray(types) - case itemInlineTableStart: - var ( - hash = make(map[string]interface{}) - outerContext = p.context - outerKey = p.currentKey - ) - - p.context = append(p.context, p.currentKey) - p.currentKey = "" - for it := p.next(); it.typ != itemInlineTableEnd; it = p.next() { - if it.typ != itemKeyStart { - p.bug("Expected key start but instead found %q, around line %d", - it.val, p.approxLine) - } - if it.typ == itemCommentStart { - p.expect(itemText) - continue - } - - // retrieve key - k := p.next() - p.approxLine = k.line - kname := p.keyString(k) - - // retrieve value - p.currentKey = kname - val, typ := p.value(p.next()) - // make sure we keep metadata up to date - p.setType(kname, typ) - p.ordered = append(p.ordered, p.context.add(p.currentKey)) - hash[kname] = val - } - p.context = outerContext - p.currentKey = outerKey - return hash, tomlHash - } - p.bug("Unexpected value type: %s", it.typ) - panic("unreachable") -} - -// numUnderscoresOK checks whether each underscore in s is surrounded by -// characters that are not underscores. -func numUnderscoresOK(s string) bool { - accept := false - for _, r := range s { - if r == '_' { - if !accept { - return false - } - accept = false - continue - } - accept = true - } - return accept -} - -// numPeriodsOK checks whether every period in s is followed by a digit. -func numPeriodsOK(s string) bool { - period := false - for _, r := range s { - if period && !isDigit(r) { - return false - } - period = r == '.' - } - return !period -} - -// establishContext sets the current context of the parser, -// where the context is either a hash or an array of hashes. Which one is -// set depends on the value of the `array` parameter. -// -// Establishing the context also makes sure that the key isn't a duplicate, and -// will create implicit hashes automatically. -func (p *parser) establishContext(key Key, array bool) { - var ok bool - - // Always start at the top level and drill down for our context. - hashContext := p.mapping - keyContext := make(Key, 0) - - // We only need implicit hashes for key[0:-1] - for _, k := range key[0 : len(key)-1] { - _, ok = hashContext[k] - keyContext = append(keyContext, k) - - // No key? Make an implicit hash and move on. - if !ok { - p.addImplicit(keyContext) - hashContext[k] = make(map[string]interface{}) - } - - // If the hash context is actually an array of tables, then set - // the hash context to the last element in that array. - // - // Otherwise, it better be a table, since this MUST be a key group (by - // virtue of it not being the last element in a key). - switch t := hashContext[k].(type) { - case []map[string]interface{}: - hashContext = t[len(t)-1] - case map[string]interface{}: - hashContext = t - default: - p.panicf("Key '%s' was already created as a hash.", keyContext) - } - } - - p.context = keyContext - if array { - // If this is the first element for this array, then allocate a new - // list of tables for it. - k := key[len(key)-1] - if _, ok := hashContext[k]; !ok { - hashContext[k] = make([]map[string]interface{}, 0, 5) - } - - // Add a new table. But make sure the key hasn't already been used - // for something else. - if hash, ok := hashContext[k].([]map[string]interface{}); ok { - hashContext[k] = append(hash, make(map[string]interface{})) - } else { - p.panicf("Key '%s' was already created and cannot be used as "+ - "an array.", keyContext) - } - } else { - p.setValue(key[len(key)-1], make(map[string]interface{})) - } - p.context = append(p.context, key[len(key)-1]) -} - -// setValue sets the given key to the given value in the current context. -// It will make sure that the key hasn't already been defined, account for -// implicit key groups. -func (p *parser) setValue(key string, value interface{}) { - var tmpHash interface{} - var ok bool - - hash := p.mapping - keyContext := make(Key, 0) - for _, k := range p.context { - keyContext = append(keyContext, k) - if tmpHash, ok = hash[k]; !ok { - p.bug("Context for key '%s' has not been established.", keyContext) - } - switch t := tmpHash.(type) { - case []map[string]interface{}: - // The context is a table of hashes. Pick the most recent table - // defined as the current hash. - hash = t[len(t)-1] - case map[string]interface{}: - hash = t - default: - p.bug("Expected hash to have type 'map[string]interface{}', but "+ - "it has '%T' instead.", tmpHash) - } - } - keyContext = append(keyContext, key) - - if _, ok := hash[key]; ok { - // Typically, if the given key has already been set, then we have - // to raise an error since duplicate keys are disallowed. However, - // it's possible that a key was previously defined implicitly. In this - // case, it is allowed to be redefined concretely. (See the - // `tests/valid/implicit-and-explicit-after.toml` test in `toml-test`.) - // - // But we have to make sure to stop marking it as an implicit. (So that - // another redefinition provokes an error.) - // - // Note that since it has already been defined (as a hash), we don't - // want to overwrite it. So our business is done. - if p.isImplicit(keyContext) { - p.removeImplicit(keyContext) - return - } - - // Otherwise, we have a concrete key trying to override a previous - // key, which is *always* wrong. - p.panicf("Key '%s' has already been defined.", keyContext) - } - hash[key] = value -} - -// setType sets the type of a particular value at a given key. -// It should be called immediately AFTER setValue. -// -// Note that if `key` is empty, then the type given will be applied to the -// current context (which is either a table or an array of tables). -func (p *parser) setType(key string, typ tomlType) { - keyContext := make(Key, 0, len(p.context)+1) - for _, k := range p.context { - keyContext = append(keyContext, k) - } - if len(key) > 0 { // allow type setting for hashes - keyContext = append(keyContext, key) - } - p.types[keyContext.String()] = typ -} - -// addImplicit sets the given Key as having been created implicitly. -func (p *parser) addImplicit(key Key) { - p.implicits[key.String()] = true -} - -// removeImplicit stops tagging the given key as having been implicitly -// created. -func (p *parser) removeImplicit(key Key) { - p.implicits[key.String()] = false -} - -// isImplicit returns true if the key group pointed to by the key was created -// implicitly. -func (p *parser) isImplicit(key Key) bool { - return p.implicits[key.String()] -} - -// current returns the full key name of the current context. -func (p *parser) current() string { - if len(p.currentKey) == 0 { - return p.context.String() - } - if len(p.context) == 0 { - return p.currentKey - } - return fmt.Sprintf("%s.%s", p.context, p.currentKey) -} - -func stripFirstNewline(s string) string { - if len(s) == 0 || s[0] != '\n' { - return s - } - return s[1:] -} - -func stripEscapedWhitespace(s string) string { - esc := strings.Split(s, "\\\n") - if len(esc) > 1 { - for i := 1; i < len(esc); i++ { - esc[i] = strings.TrimLeftFunc(esc[i], unicode.IsSpace) - } - } - return strings.Join(esc, "") -} - -func (p *parser) replaceEscapes(str string) string { - var replaced []rune - s := []byte(str) - r := 0 - for r < len(s) { - if s[r] != '\\' { - c, size := utf8.DecodeRune(s[r:]) - r += size - replaced = append(replaced, c) - continue - } - r += 1 - if r >= len(s) { - p.bug("Escape sequence at end of string.") - return "" - } - switch s[r] { - default: - p.bug("Expected valid escape code after \\, but got %q.", s[r]) - return "" - case 'b': - replaced = append(replaced, rune(0x0008)) - r += 1 - case 't': - replaced = append(replaced, rune(0x0009)) - r += 1 - case 'n': - replaced = append(replaced, rune(0x000A)) - r += 1 - case 'f': - replaced = append(replaced, rune(0x000C)) - r += 1 - case 'r': - replaced = append(replaced, rune(0x000D)) - r += 1 - case '"': - replaced = append(replaced, rune(0x0022)) - r += 1 - case '\\': - replaced = append(replaced, rune(0x005C)) - r += 1 - case 'u': - // At this point, we know we have a Unicode escape of the form - // `uXXXX` at [r, r+5). (Because the lexer guarantees this - // for us.) - escaped := p.asciiEscapeToUnicode(s[r+1 : r+5]) - replaced = append(replaced, escaped) - r += 5 - case 'U': - // At this point, we know we have a Unicode escape of the form - // `uXXXX` at [r, r+9). (Because the lexer guarantees this - // for us.) - escaped := p.asciiEscapeToUnicode(s[r+1 : r+9]) - replaced = append(replaced, escaped) - r += 9 - } - } - return string(replaced) -} - -func (p *parser) asciiEscapeToUnicode(bs []byte) rune { - s := string(bs) - hex, err := strconv.ParseUint(strings.ToLower(s), 16, 32) - if err != nil { - p.bug("Could not parse '%s' as a hexadecimal number, but the "+ - "lexer claims it's OK: %s", s, err) - } - if !utf8.ValidRune(rune(hex)) { - p.panicf("Escaped character '\\u%s' is not valid UTF-8.", s) - } - return rune(hex) -} - -func isStringType(ty itemType) bool { - return ty == itemString || ty == itemMultilineString || - ty == itemRawString || ty == itemRawMultilineString -} diff --git a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/session.vim b/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/session.vim deleted file mode 100644 index 562164be..00000000 --- a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/session.vim +++ /dev/null @@ -1 +0,0 @@ -au BufWritePost *.go silent!make tags > /dev/null 2>&1 diff --git a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/type_check.go b/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/type_check.go deleted file mode 100644 index c73f8afc..00000000 --- a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/type_check.go +++ /dev/null @@ -1,91 +0,0 @@ -package toml - -// tomlType represents any Go type that corresponds to a TOML type. -// While the first draft of the TOML spec has a simplistic type system that -// probably doesn't need this level of sophistication, we seem to be militating -// toward adding real composite types. -type tomlType interface { - typeString() string -} - -// typeEqual accepts any two types and returns true if they are equal. -func typeEqual(t1, t2 tomlType) bool { - if t1 == nil || t2 == nil { - return false - } - return t1.typeString() == t2.typeString() -} - -func typeIsHash(t tomlType) bool { - return typeEqual(t, tomlHash) || typeEqual(t, tomlArrayHash) -} - -type tomlBaseType string - -func (btype tomlBaseType) typeString() string { - return string(btype) -} - -func (btype tomlBaseType) String() string { - return btype.typeString() -} - -var ( - tomlInteger tomlBaseType = "Integer" - tomlFloat tomlBaseType = "Float" - tomlDatetime tomlBaseType = "Datetime" - tomlString tomlBaseType = "String" - tomlBool tomlBaseType = "Bool" - tomlArray tomlBaseType = "Array" - tomlHash tomlBaseType = "Hash" - tomlArrayHash tomlBaseType = "ArrayHash" -) - -// typeOfPrimitive returns a tomlType of any primitive value in TOML. -// Primitive values are: Integer, Float, Datetime, String and Bool. -// -// Passing a lexer item other than the following will cause a BUG message -// to occur: itemString, itemBool, itemInteger, itemFloat, itemDatetime. -func (p *parser) typeOfPrimitive(lexItem item) tomlType { - switch lexItem.typ { - case itemInteger: - return tomlInteger - case itemFloat: - return tomlFloat - case itemDatetime: - return tomlDatetime - case itemString: - return tomlString - case itemMultilineString: - return tomlString - case itemRawString: - return tomlString - case itemRawMultilineString: - return tomlString - case itemBool: - return tomlBool - } - p.bug("Cannot infer primitive type of lex item '%s'.", lexItem) - panic("unreachable") -} - -// typeOfArray returns a tomlType for an array given a list of types of its -// values. -// -// In the current spec, if an array is homogeneous, then its type is always -// "Array". If the array is not homogeneous, an error is generated. -func (p *parser) typeOfArray(types []tomlType) tomlType { - // Empty arrays are cool. - if len(types) == 0 { - return tomlArray - } - - theType := types[0] - for _, t := range types[1:] { - if !typeEqual(theType, t) { - p.panicf("Array contains values of type '%s' and '%s', but "+ - "arrays must be homogeneous.", theType, t) - } - } - return tomlArray -} diff --git a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/type_fields.go b/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/type_fields.go deleted file mode 100644 index 608997c2..00000000 --- a/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml/type_fields.go +++ /dev/null @@ -1,242 +0,0 @@ -package toml - -// Struct field handling is adapted from code in encoding/json: -// -// 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 Go distribution. - -import ( - "reflect" - "sort" - "sync" -) - -// A field represents a single field found in a struct. -type field struct { - name string // the name of the field (`toml` tag included) - tag bool // whether field has a `toml` tag - index []int // represents the depth of an anonymous field - typ reflect.Type // the type of the field -} - -// byName sorts field by name, breaking ties with depth, -// then breaking ties with "name came from toml tag", then -// breaking ties with index sequence. -type byName []field - -func (x byName) Len() int { return len(x) } - -func (x byName) Swap(i, j int) { x[i], x[j] = x[j], x[i] } - -func (x byName) Less(i, j int) bool { - if x[i].name != x[j].name { - return x[i].name < x[j].name - } - if len(x[i].index) != len(x[j].index) { - return len(x[i].index) < len(x[j].index) - } - if x[i].tag != x[j].tag { - return x[i].tag - } - return byIndex(x).Less(i, j) -} - -// byIndex sorts field by index sequence. -type byIndex []field - -func (x byIndex) Len() int { return len(x) } - -func (x byIndex) Swap(i, j int) { x[i], x[j] = x[j], x[i] } - -func (x byIndex) Less(i, j int) bool { - for k, xik := range x[i].index { - if k >= len(x[j].index) { - return false - } - if xik != x[j].index[k] { - return xik < x[j].index[k] - } - } - return len(x[i].index) < len(x[j].index) -} - -// typeFields returns a list of fields that TOML should recognize for the given -// type. The algorithm is breadth-first search over the set of structs to -// include - the top struct and then any reachable anonymous structs. -func typeFields(t reflect.Type) []field { - // Anonymous fields to explore at the current level and the next. - current := []field{} - next := []field{{typ: t}} - - // Count of queued names for current level and the next. - count := map[reflect.Type]int{} - nextCount := map[reflect.Type]int{} - - // Types already visited at an earlier level. - visited := map[reflect.Type]bool{} - - // Fields found. - var fields []field - - for len(next) > 0 { - current, next = next, current[:0] - count, nextCount = nextCount, map[reflect.Type]int{} - - for _, f := range current { - if visited[f.typ] { - continue - } - visited[f.typ] = true - - // Scan f.typ for fields to include. - for i := 0; i < f.typ.NumField(); i++ { - sf := f.typ.Field(i) - if sf.PkgPath != "" && !sf.Anonymous { // unexported - continue - } - opts := getOptions(sf.Tag) - if opts.skip { - continue - } - index := make([]int, len(f.index)+1) - copy(index, f.index) - index[len(f.index)] = i - - ft := sf.Type - if ft.Name() == "" && ft.Kind() == reflect.Ptr { - // Follow pointer. - ft = ft.Elem() - } - - // Record found field and index sequence. - if opts.name != "" || !sf.Anonymous || ft.Kind() != reflect.Struct { - tagged := opts.name != "" - name := opts.name - if name == "" { - name = sf.Name - } - fields = append(fields, field{name, tagged, index, ft}) - if count[f.typ] > 1 { - // If there were multiple instances, add a second, - // so that the annihilation code will see a duplicate. - // It only cares about the distinction between 1 or 2, - // so don't bother generating any more copies. - fields = append(fields, fields[len(fields)-1]) - } - continue - } - - // Record new anonymous struct to explore in next round. - nextCount[ft]++ - if nextCount[ft] == 1 { - f := field{name: ft.Name(), index: index, typ: ft} - next = append(next, f) - } - } - } - } - - sort.Sort(byName(fields)) - - // Delete all fields that are hidden by the Go rules for embedded fields, - // except that fields with TOML tags are promoted. - - // The fields are sorted in primary order of name, secondary order - // of field index length. Loop over names; for each name, delete - // hidden fields by choosing the one dominant field that survives. - out := fields[:0] - for advance, i := 0, 0; i < len(fields); i += advance { - // One iteration per name. - // Find the sequence of fields with the name of this first field. - fi := fields[i] - name := fi.name - for advance = 1; i+advance < len(fields); advance++ { - fj := fields[i+advance] - if fj.name != name { - break - } - } - if advance == 1 { // Only one field with this name - out = append(out, fi) - continue - } - dominant, ok := dominantField(fields[i : i+advance]) - if ok { - out = append(out, dominant) - } - } - - fields = out - sort.Sort(byIndex(fields)) - - return fields -} - -// dominantField looks through the fields, all of which are known to -// have the same name, to find the single field that dominates the -// others using Go's embedding rules, modified by the presence of -// TOML tags. If there are multiple top-level fields, the boolean -// will be false: This condition is an error in Go and we skip all -// the fields. -func dominantField(fields []field) (field, bool) { - // The fields are sorted in increasing index-length order. The winner - // must therefore be one with the shortest index length. Drop all - // longer entries, which is easy: just truncate the slice. - length := len(fields[0].index) - tagged := -1 // Index of first tagged field. - for i, f := range fields { - if len(f.index) > length { - fields = fields[:i] - break - } - if f.tag { - if tagged >= 0 { - // Multiple tagged fields at the same level: conflict. - // Return no field. - return field{}, false - } - tagged = i - } - } - if tagged >= 0 { - return fields[tagged], true - } - // All remaining fields have the same length. If there's more than one, - // we have a conflict (two fields named "X" at the same level) and we - // return no field. - if len(fields) > 1 { - return field{}, false - } - return fields[0], true -} - -var fieldCache struct { - sync.RWMutex - m map[reflect.Type][]field -} - -// cachedTypeFields is like typeFields but uses a cache to avoid repeated work. -func cachedTypeFields(t reflect.Type) []field { - fieldCache.RLock() - f := fieldCache.m[t] - fieldCache.RUnlock() - if f != nil { - return f - } - - // Compute fields without lock. - // Might duplicate effort but won't hold other computations back. - f = typeFields(t) - if f == nil { - f = []field{} - } - - fieldCache.Lock() - if fieldCache.m == nil { - fieldCache.m = map[reflect.Type][]field{} - } - fieldCache.m[t] = f - fieldCache.Unlock() - return f -} |