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Diffstat (limited to 'vendor/github.com/davecgh/go-spew/spew/config.go')
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/davecgh/go-spew/spew/config.go | 306 |
1 files changed, 306 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/vendor/github.com/davecgh/go-spew/spew/config.go b/vendor/github.com/davecgh/go-spew/spew/config.go new file mode 100644 index 00000000..2e3d22f3 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/davecgh/go-spew/spew/config.go @@ -0,0 +1,306 @@ +/* + * Copyright (c) 2013-2016 Dave Collins <dave@davec.name> + * + * Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any + * purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above + * copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies. + * + * THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES + * WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF + * MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR + * ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES + * WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN + * ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF + * OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. + */ + +package spew + +import ( + "bytes" + "fmt" + "io" + "os" +) + +// ConfigState houses the configuration options used by spew to format and +// display values. There is a global instance, Config, that is used to control +// all top-level Formatter and Dump functionality. Each ConfigState instance +// provides methods equivalent to the top-level functions. +// +// The zero value for ConfigState provides no indentation. You would typically +// want to set it to a space or a tab. +// +// Alternatively, you can use NewDefaultConfig to get a ConfigState instance +// with default settings. See the documentation of NewDefaultConfig for default +// values. +type ConfigState struct { + // Indent specifies the string to use for each indentation level. The + // global config instance that all top-level functions use set this to a + // single space by default. If you would like more indentation, you might + // set this to a tab with "\t" or perhaps two spaces with " ". + Indent string + + // MaxDepth controls the maximum number of levels to descend into nested + // data structures. The default, 0, means there is no limit. + // + // NOTE: Circular data structures are properly detected, so it is not + // necessary to set this value unless you specifically want to limit deeply + // nested data structures. + MaxDepth int + + // DisableMethods specifies whether or not error and Stringer interfaces are + // invoked for types that implement them. + DisableMethods bool + + // DisablePointerMethods specifies whether or not to check for and invoke + // error and Stringer interfaces on types which only accept a pointer + // receiver when the current type is not a pointer. + // + // NOTE: This might be an unsafe action since calling one of these methods + // with a pointer receiver could technically mutate the value, however, + // in practice, types which choose to satisify an error or Stringer + // interface with a pointer receiver should not be mutating their state + // inside these interface methods. As a result, this option relies on + // access to the unsafe package, so it will not have any effect when + // running in environments without access to the unsafe package such as + // Google App Engine or with the "safe" build tag specified. + DisablePointerMethods bool + + // DisablePointerAddresses specifies whether to disable the printing of + // pointer addresses. This is useful when diffing data structures in tests. + DisablePointerAddresses bool + + // DisableCapacities specifies whether to disable the printing of capacities + // for arrays, slices, maps and channels. This is useful when diffing + // data structures in tests. + DisableCapacities bool + + // ContinueOnMethod specifies whether or not recursion should continue once + // a custom error or Stringer interface is invoked. The default, false, + // means it will print the results of invoking the custom error or Stringer + // interface and return immediately instead of continuing to recurse into + // the internals of the data type. + // + // NOTE: This flag does not have any effect if method invocation is disabled + // via the DisableMethods or DisablePointerMethods options. + ContinueOnMethod bool + + // SortKeys specifies map keys should be sorted before being printed. Use + // this to have a more deterministic, diffable output. Note that only + // native types (bool, int, uint, floats, uintptr and string) and types + // that support the error or Stringer interfaces (if methods are + // enabled) are supported, with other types sorted according to the + // reflect.Value.String() output which guarantees display stability. + SortKeys bool + + // SpewKeys specifies that, as a last resort attempt, map keys should + // be spewed to strings and sorted by those strings. This is only + // considered if SortKeys is true. + SpewKeys bool +} + +// Config is the active configuration of the top-level functions. +// The configuration can be changed by modifying the contents of spew.Config. +var Config = ConfigState{Indent: " "} + +// Errorf is a wrapper for fmt.Errorf that treats each argument as if it were +// passed with a Formatter interface returned by c.NewFormatter. It returns +// the formatted string as a value that satisfies error. See NewFormatter +// for formatting details. +// +// This function is shorthand for the following syntax: +// +// fmt.Errorf(format, c.NewFormatter(a), c.NewFormatter(b)) +func (c *ConfigState) Errorf(format string, a ...interface{}) (err error) { + return fmt.Errorf(format, c.convertArgs(a)...) +} + +// Fprint is a wrapper for fmt.Fprint that treats each argument as if it were +// passed with a Formatter interface returned by c.NewFormatter. It returns +// the number of bytes written and any write error encountered. See +// NewFormatter for formatting details. +// +// This function is shorthand for the following syntax: +// +// fmt.Fprint(w, c.NewFormatter(a), c.NewFormatter(b)) +func (c *ConfigState) Fprint(w io.Writer, a ...interface{}) (n int, err error) { + return fmt.Fprint(w, c.convertArgs(a)...) +} + +// Fprintf is a wrapper for fmt.Fprintf that treats each argument as if it were +// passed with a Formatter interface returned by c.NewFormatter. It returns +// the number of bytes written and any write error encountered. See +// NewFormatter for formatting details. +// +// This function is shorthand for the following syntax: +// +// fmt.Fprintf(w, format, c.NewFormatter(a), c.NewFormatter(b)) +func (c *ConfigState) Fprintf(w io.Writer, format string, a ...interface{}) (n int, err error) { + return fmt.Fprintf(w, format, c.convertArgs(a)...) +} + +// Fprintln is a wrapper for fmt.Fprintln that treats each argument as if it +// passed with a Formatter interface returned by c.NewFormatter. See +// NewFormatter for formatting details. +// +// This function is shorthand for the following syntax: +// +// fmt.Fprintln(w, c.NewFormatter(a), c.NewFormatter(b)) +func (c *ConfigState) Fprintln(w io.Writer, a ...interface{}) (n int, err error) { + return fmt.Fprintln(w, c.convertArgs(a)...) +} + +// Print is a wrapper for fmt.Print that treats each argument as if it were +// passed with a Formatter interface returned by c.NewFormatter. It returns +// the number of bytes written and any write error encountered. See +// NewFormatter for formatting details. +// +// This function is shorthand for the following syntax: +// +// fmt.Print(c.NewFormatter(a), c.NewFormatter(b)) +func (c *ConfigState) Print(a ...interface{}) (n int, err error) { + return fmt.Print(c.convertArgs(a)...) +} + +// Printf is a wrapper for fmt.Printf that treats each argument as if it were +// passed with a Formatter interface returned by c.NewFormatter. It returns +// the number of bytes written and any write error encountered. See +// NewFormatter for formatting details. +// +// This function is shorthand for the following syntax: +// +// fmt.Printf(format, c.NewFormatter(a), c.NewFormatter(b)) +func (c *ConfigState) Printf(format string, a ...interface{}) (n int, err error) { + return fmt.Printf(format, c.convertArgs(a)...) +} + +// Println is a wrapper for fmt.Println that treats each argument as if it were +// passed with a Formatter interface returned by c.NewFormatter. It returns +// the number of bytes written and any write error encountered. See +// NewFormatter for formatting details. +// +// This function is shorthand for the following syntax: +// +// fmt.Println(c.NewFormatter(a), c.NewFormatter(b)) +func (c *ConfigState) Println(a ...interface{}) (n int, err error) { + return fmt.Println(c.convertArgs(a)...) +} + +// Sprint is a wrapper for fmt.Sprint that treats each argument as if it were +// passed with a Formatter interface returned by c.NewFormatter. It returns +// the resulting string. See NewFormatter for formatting details. +// +// This function is shorthand for the following syntax: +// +// fmt.Sprint(c.NewFormatter(a), c.NewFormatter(b)) +func (c *ConfigState) Sprint(a ...interface{}) string { + return fmt.Sprint(c.convertArgs(a)...) +} + +// Sprintf is a wrapper for fmt.Sprintf that treats each argument as if it were +// passed with a Formatter interface returned by c.NewFormatter. It returns +// the resulting string. See NewFormatter for formatting details. +// +// This function is shorthand for the following syntax: +// +// fmt.Sprintf(format, c.NewFormatter(a), c.NewFormatter(b)) +func (c *ConfigState) Sprintf(format string, a ...interface{}) string { + return fmt.Sprintf(format, c.convertArgs(a)...) +} + +// Sprintln is a wrapper for fmt.Sprintln that treats each argument as if it +// were passed with a Formatter interface returned by c.NewFormatter. It +// returns the resulting string. See NewFormatter for formatting details. +// +// This function is shorthand for the following syntax: +// +// fmt.Sprintln(c.NewFormatter(a), c.NewFormatter(b)) +func (c *ConfigState) Sprintln(a ...interface{}) string { + return fmt.Sprintln(c.convertArgs(a)...) +} + +/* +NewFormatter returns a custom formatter that satisfies the fmt.Formatter +interface. As a result, it integrates cleanly with standard fmt package +printing functions. The formatter is useful for inline printing of smaller data +types similar to the standard %v format specifier. + +The custom formatter only responds to the %v (most compact), %+v (adds pointer +addresses), %#v (adds types), and %#+v (adds types and pointer addresses) verb +combinations. Any other verbs such as %x and %q will be sent to the the +standard fmt package for formatting. In addition, the custom formatter ignores +the width and precision arguments (however they will still work on the format +specifiers not handled by the custom formatter). + +Typically this function shouldn't be called directly. It is much easier to make +use of the custom formatter by calling one of the convenience functions such as +c.Printf, c.Println, or c.Printf. +*/ +func (c *ConfigState) NewFormatter(v interface{}) fmt.Formatter { + return newFormatter(c, v) +} + +// Fdump formats and displays the passed arguments to io.Writer w. It formats +// exactly the same as Dump. +func (c *ConfigState) Fdump(w io.Writer, a ...interface{}) { + fdump(c, w, a...) +} + +/* +Dump displays the passed parameters to standard out with newlines, customizable +indentation, and additional debug information such as complete types and all +pointer addresses used to indirect to the final value. It provides the +following features over the built-in printing facilities provided by the fmt +package: + + * Pointers are dereferenced and followed + * Circular data structures are detected and handled properly + * Custom Stringer/error interfaces are optionally invoked, including + on unexported types + * Custom types which only implement the Stringer/error interfaces via + a pointer receiver are optionally invoked when passing non-pointer + variables + * Byte arrays and slices are dumped like the hexdump -C command which + includes offsets, byte values in hex, and ASCII output + +The configuration options are controlled by modifying the public members +of c. See ConfigState for options documentation. + +See Fdump if you would prefer dumping to an arbitrary io.Writer or Sdump to +get the formatted result as a string. +*/ +func (c *ConfigState) Dump(a ...interface{}) { + fdump(c, os.Stdout, a...) +} + +// Sdump returns a string with the passed arguments formatted exactly the same +// as Dump. +func (c *ConfigState) Sdump(a ...interface{}) string { + var buf bytes.Buffer + fdump(c, &buf, a...) + return buf.String() +} + +// convertArgs accepts a slice of arguments and returns a slice of the same +// length with each argument converted to a spew Formatter interface using +// the ConfigState associated with s. +func (c *ConfigState) convertArgs(args []interface{}) (formatters []interface{}) { + formatters = make([]interface{}, len(args)) + for index, arg := range args { + formatters[index] = newFormatter(c, arg) + } + return formatters +} + +// NewDefaultConfig returns a ConfigState with the following default settings. +// +// Indent: " " +// MaxDepth: 0 +// DisableMethods: false +// DisablePointerMethods: false +// ContinueOnMethod: false +// SortKeys: false +func NewDefaultConfig() *ConfigState { + return &ConfigState{Indent: " "} +} |