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Diffstat (limited to 'vendor/golang.org/x/net/context/context.go')
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/golang.org/x/net/context/context.go | 156 |
1 files changed, 156 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/vendor/golang.org/x/net/context/context.go b/vendor/golang.org/x/net/context/context.go new file mode 100644 index 00000000..f143ed6a --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/golang.org/x/net/context/context.go @@ -0,0 +1,156 @@ +// Copyright 2014 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. +// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style +// license that can be found in the LICENSE file. + +// Package context defines the Context type, which carries deadlines, +// cancelation signals, and other request-scoped values across API boundaries +// and between processes. +// +// Incoming requests to a server should create a Context, and outgoing calls to +// servers should accept a Context. The chain of function calls between must +// propagate the Context, optionally replacing it with a modified copy created +// using WithDeadline, WithTimeout, WithCancel, or WithValue. +// +// Programs that use Contexts should follow these rules to keep interfaces +// consistent across packages and enable static analysis tools to check context +// propagation: +// +// Do not store Contexts inside a struct type; instead, pass a Context +// explicitly to each function that needs it. The Context should be the first +// parameter, typically named ctx: +// +// func DoSomething(ctx context.Context, arg Arg) error { +// // ... use ctx ... +// } +// +// Do not pass a nil Context, even if a function permits it. Pass context.TODO +// if you are unsure about which Context to use. +// +// Use context Values only for request-scoped data that transits processes and +// APIs, not for passing optional parameters to functions. +// +// The same Context may be passed to functions running in different goroutines; +// Contexts are safe for simultaneous use by multiple goroutines. +// +// See http://blog.golang.org/context for example code for a server that uses +// Contexts. +package context // import "golang.org/x/net/context" + +import "time" + +// A Context carries a deadline, a cancelation signal, and other values across +// API boundaries. +// +// Context's methods may be called by multiple goroutines simultaneously. +type Context interface { + // Deadline returns the time when work done on behalf of this context + // should be canceled. Deadline returns ok==false when no deadline is + // set. Successive calls to Deadline return the same results. + Deadline() (deadline time.Time, ok bool) + + // Done returns a channel that's closed when work done on behalf of this + // context should be canceled. Done may return nil if this context can + // never be canceled. Successive calls to Done return the same value. + // + // WithCancel arranges for Done to be closed when cancel is called; + // WithDeadline arranges for Done to be closed when the deadline + // expires; WithTimeout arranges for Done to be closed when the timeout + // elapses. + // + // Done is provided for use in select statements: + // + // // Stream generates values with DoSomething and sends them to out + // // until DoSomething returns an error or ctx.Done is closed. + // func Stream(ctx context.Context, out chan<- Value) error { + // for { + // v, err := DoSomething(ctx) + // if err != nil { + // return err + // } + // select { + // case <-ctx.Done(): + // return ctx.Err() + // case out <- v: + // } + // } + // } + // + // See http://blog.golang.org/pipelines for more examples of how to use + // a Done channel for cancelation. + Done() <-chan struct{} + + // Err returns a non-nil error value after Done is closed. Err returns + // Canceled if the context was canceled or DeadlineExceeded if the + // context's deadline passed. No other values for Err are defined. + // After Done is closed, successive calls to Err return the same value. + Err() error + + // Value returns the value associated with this context for key, or nil + // if no value is associated with key. Successive calls to Value with + // the same key returns the same result. + // + // Use context values only for request-scoped data that transits + // processes and API boundaries, not for passing optional parameters to + // functions. + // + // A key identifies a specific value in a Context. Functions that wish + // to store values in Context typically allocate a key in a global + // variable then use that key as the argument to context.WithValue and + // Context.Value. A key can be any type that supports equality; + // packages should define keys as an unexported type to avoid + // collisions. + // + // Packages that define a Context key should provide type-safe accessors + // for the values stores using that key: + // + // // Package user defines a User type that's stored in Contexts. + // package user + // + // import "golang.org/x/net/context" + // + // // User is the type of value stored in the Contexts. + // type User struct {...} + // + // // key is an unexported type for keys defined in this package. + // // This prevents collisions with keys defined in other packages. + // type key int + // + // // userKey is the key for user.User values in Contexts. It is + // // unexported; clients use user.NewContext and user.FromContext + // // instead of using this key directly. + // var userKey key = 0 + // + // // NewContext returns a new Context that carries value u. + // func NewContext(ctx context.Context, u *User) context.Context { + // return context.WithValue(ctx, userKey, u) + // } + // + // // FromContext returns the User value stored in ctx, if any. + // func FromContext(ctx context.Context) (*User, bool) { + // u, ok := ctx.Value(userKey).(*User) + // return u, ok + // } + Value(key interface{}) interface{} +} + +// Background returns a non-nil, empty Context. It is never canceled, has no +// values, and has no deadline. It is typically used by the main function, +// initialization, and tests, and as the top-level Context for incoming +// requests. +func Background() Context { + return background +} + +// TODO returns a non-nil, empty Context. Code should use context.TODO when +// it's unclear which Context to use or it is not yet available (because the +// surrounding function has not yet been extended to accept a Context +// parameter). TODO is recognized by static analysis tools that determine +// whether Contexts are propagated correctly in a program. +func TODO() Context { + return todo +} + +// A CancelFunc tells an operation to abandon its work. +// A CancelFunc does not wait for the work to stop. +// After the first call, subsequent calls to a CancelFunc do nothing. +type CancelFunc func() |