From 5a1fd7daddbb07b93e3611d023ea48e1991fc0c6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "dependabot[bot]" <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Fri, 28 Jan 2022 23:48:40 +0100 Subject: Bump github.com/SevereCloud/vksdk/v2 from 2.11.0 to 2.13.0 (#1698) Bumps [github.com/SevereCloud/vksdk/v2](https://github.com/SevereCloud/vksdk) from 2.11.0 to 2.13.0. - [Release notes](https://github.com/SevereCloud/vksdk/releases) - [Commits](https://github.com/SevereCloud/vksdk/compare/v2.11.0...v2.13.0) --- updated-dependencies: - dependency-name: github.com/SevereCloud/vksdk/v2 dependency-type: direct:production update-type: version-update:semver-minor ... Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com> --- .../klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/LICENSE | 27 ++ .../klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/decode.go | 264 +++++++++++++++++++ .../compress/internal/snapref/decode_other.go | 113 ++++++++ .../klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/encode.go | 289 +++++++++++++++++++++ .../compress/internal/snapref/encode_other.go | 236 +++++++++++++++++ .../klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/snappy.go | 98 +++++++ 6 files changed, 1027 insertions(+) create mode 100644 vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/LICENSE create mode 100644 vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/decode.go create mode 100644 vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/decode_other.go create mode 100644 vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/encode.go create mode 100644 vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/encode_other.go create mode 100644 vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/snappy.go (limited to 'vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref') diff --git a/vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/LICENSE b/vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/LICENSE new file mode 100644 index 00000000..6050c10f --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/LICENSE @@ -0,0 +1,27 @@ +Copyright (c) 2011 The Snappy-Go Authors. All rights reserved. + +Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without +modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are +met: + + * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright +notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. + * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above +copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer +in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the +distribution. + * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its +contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from +this software without specific prior written permission. + +THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS +"AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT +LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR +A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT +OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, +SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT +LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, +DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY +THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT +(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE +OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. diff --git a/vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/decode.go b/vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/decode.go new file mode 100644 index 00000000..40796a49 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/decode.go @@ -0,0 +1,264 @@ +// Copyright 2011 The Snappy-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 snapref + +import ( + "encoding/binary" + "errors" + "io" +) + +var ( + // ErrCorrupt reports that the input is invalid. + ErrCorrupt = errors.New("snappy: corrupt input") + // ErrTooLarge reports that the uncompressed length is too large. + ErrTooLarge = errors.New("snappy: decoded block is too large") + // ErrUnsupported reports that the input isn't supported. + ErrUnsupported = errors.New("snappy: unsupported input") + + errUnsupportedLiteralLength = errors.New("snappy: unsupported literal length") +) + +// DecodedLen returns the length of the decoded block. +func DecodedLen(src []byte) (int, error) { + v, _, err := decodedLen(src) + return v, err +} + +// decodedLen returns the length of the decoded block and the number of bytes +// that the length header occupied. +func decodedLen(src []byte) (blockLen, headerLen int, err error) { + v, n := binary.Uvarint(src) + if n <= 0 || v > 0xffffffff { + return 0, 0, ErrCorrupt + } + + const wordSize = 32 << (^uint(0) >> 32 & 1) + if wordSize == 32 && v > 0x7fffffff { + return 0, 0, ErrTooLarge + } + return int(v), n, nil +} + +const ( + decodeErrCodeCorrupt = 1 + decodeErrCodeUnsupportedLiteralLength = 2 +) + +// Decode returns the decoded form of src. The returned slice may be a sub- +// slice of dst if dst was large enough to hold the entire decoded block. +// Otherwise, a newly allocated slice will be returned. +// +// The dst and src must not overlap. It is valid to pass a nil dst. +// +// Decode handles the Snappy block format, not the Snappy stream format. +func Decode(dst, src []byte) ([]byte, error) { + dLen, s, err := decodedLen(src) + if err != nil { + return nil, err + } + if dLen <= len(dst) { + dst = dst[:dLen] + } else { + dst = make([]byte, dLen) + } + switch decode(dst, src[s:]) { + case 0: + return dst, nil + case decodeErrCodeUnsupportedLiteralLength: + return nil, errUnsupportedLiteralLength + } + return nil, ErrCorrupt +} + +// NewReader returns a new Reader that decompresses from r, using the framing +// format described at +// https://github.com/google/snappy/blob/master/framing_format.txt +func NewReader(r io.Reader) *Reader { + return &Reader{ + r: r, + decoded: make([]byte, maxBlockSize), + buf: make([]byte, maxEncodedLenOfMaxBlockSize+checksumSize), + } +} + +// Reader is an io.Reader that can read Snappy-compressed bytes. +// +// Reader handles the Snappy stream format, not the Snappy block format. +type Reader struct { + r io.Reader + err error + decoded []byte + buf []byte + // decoded[i:j] contains decoded bytes that have not yet been passed on. + i, j int + readHeader bool +} + +// Reset discards any buffered data, resets all state, and switches the Snappy +// reader to read from r. This permits reusing a Reader rather than allocating +// a new one. +func (r *Reader) Reset(reader io.Reader) { + r.r = reader + r.err = nil + r.i = 0 + r.j = 0 + r.readHeader = false +} + +func (r *Reader) readFull(p []byte, allowEOF bool) (ok bool) { + if _, r.err = io.ReadFull(r.r, p); r.err != nil { + if r.err == io.ErrUnexpectedEOF || (r.err == io.EOF && !allowEOF) { + r.err = ErrCorrupt + } + return false + } + return true +} + +func (r *Reader) fill() error { + for r.i >= r.j { + if !r.readFull(r.buf[:4], true) { + return r.err + } + chunkType := r.buf[0] + if !r.readHeader { + if chunkType != chunkTypeStreamIdentifier { + r.err = ErrCorrupt + return r.err + } + r.readHeader = true + } + chunkLen := int(r.buf[1]) | int(r.buf[2])<<8 | int(r.buf[3])<<16 + if chunkLen > len(r.buf) { + r.err = ErrUnsupported + return r.err + } + + // The chunk types are specified at + // https://github.com/google/snappy/blob/master/framing_format.txt + switch chunkType { + case chunkTypeCompressedData: + // Section 4.2. Compressed data (chunk type 0x00). + if chunkLen < checksumSize { + r.err = ErrCorrupt + return r.err + } + buf := r.buf[:chunkLen] + if !r.readFull(buf, false) { + return r.err + } + checksum := uint32(buf[0]) | uint32(buf[1])<<8 | uint32(buf[2])<<16 | uint32(buf[3])<<24 + buf = buf[checksumSize:] + + n, err := DecodedLen(buf) + if err != nil { + r.err = err + return r.err + } + if n > len(r.decoded) { + r.err = ErrCorrupt + return r.err + } + if _, err := Decode(r.decoded, buf); err != nil { + r.err = err + return r.err + } + if crc(r.decoded[:n]) != checksum { + r.err = ErrCorrupt + return r.err + } + r.i, r.j = 0, n + continue + + case chunkTypeUncompressedData: + // Section 4.3. Uncompressed data (chunk type 0x01). + if chunkLen < checksumSize { + r.err = ErrCorrupt + return r.err + } + buf := r.buf[:checksumSize] + if !r.readFull(buf, false) { + return r.err + } + checksum := uint32(buf[0]) | uint32(buf[1])<<8 | uint32(buf[2])<<16 | uint32(buf[3])<<24 + // Read directly into r.decoded instead of via r.buf. + n := chunkLen - checksumSize + if n > len(r.decoded) { + r.err = ErrCorrupt + return r.err + } + if !r.readFull(r.decoded[:n], false) { + return r.err + } + if crc(r.decoded[:n]) != checksum { + r.err = ErrCorrupt + return r.err + } + r.i, r.j = 0, n + continue + + case chunkTypeStreamIdentifier: + // Section 4.1. Stream identifier (chunk type 0xff). + if chunkLen != len(magicBody) { + r.err = ErrCorrupt + return r.err + } + if !r.readFull(r.buf[:len(magicBody)], false) { + return r.err + } + for i := 0; i < len(magicBody); i++ { + if r.buf[i] != magicBody[i] { + r.err = ErrCorrupt + return r.err + } + } + continue + } + + if chunkType <= 0x7f { + // Section 4.5. Reserved unskippable chunks (chunk types 0x02-0x7f). + r.err = ErrUnsupported + return r.err + } + // Section 4.4 Padding (chunk type 0xfe). + // Section 4.6. Reserved skippable chunks (chunk types 0x80-0xfd). + if !r.readFull(r.buf[:chunkLen], false) { + return r.err + } + } + + return nil +} + +// Read satisfies the io.Reader interface. +func (r *Reader) Read(p []byte) (int, error) { + if r.err != nil { + return 0, r.err + } + + if err := r.fill(); err != nil { + return 0, err + } + + n := copy(p, r.decoded[r.i:r.j]) + r.i += n + return n, nil +} + +// ReadByte satisfies the io.ByteReader interface. +func (r *Reader) ReadByte() (byte, error) { + if r.err != nil { + return 0, r.err + } + + if err := r.fill(); err != nil { + return 0, err + } + + c := r.decoded[r.i] + r.i++ + return c, nil +} diff --git a/vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/decode_other.go b/vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/decode_other.go new file mode 100644 index 00000000..77395a6b --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/decode_other.go @@ -0,0 +1,113 @@ +// Copyright 2016 The Snappy-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 snapref + +// decode writes the decoding of src to dst. It assumes that the varint-encoded +// length of the decompressed bytes has already been read, and that len(dst) +// equals that length. +// +// It returns 0 on success or a decodeErrCodeXxx error code on failure. +func decode(dst, src []byte) int { + var d, s, offset, length int + for s < len(src) { + switch src[s] & 0x03 { + case tagLiteral: + x := uint32(src[s] >> 2) + switch { + case x < 60: + s++ + case x == 60: + s += 2 + if uint(s) > uint(len(src)) { // The uint conversions catch overflow from the previous line. + return decodeErrCodeCorrupt + } + x = uint32(src[s-1]) + case x == 61: + s += 3 + if uint(s) > uint(len(src)) { // The uint conversions catch overflow from the previous line. + return decodeErrCodeCorrupt + } + x = uint32(src[s-2]) | uint32(src[s-1])<<8 + case x == 62: + s += 4 + if uint(s) > uint(len(src)) { // The uint conversions catch overflow from the previous line. + return decodeErrCodeCorrupt + } + x = uint32(src[s-3]) | uint32(src[s-2])<<8 | uint32(src[s-1])<<16 + case x == 63: + s += 5 + if uint(s) > uint(len(src)) { // The uint conversions catch overflow from the previous line. + return decodeErrCodeCorrupt + } + x = uint32(src[s-4]) | uint32(src[s-3])<<8 | uint32(src[s-2])<<16 | uint32(src[s-1])<<24 + } + length = int(x) + 1 + if length <= 0 { + return decodeErrCodeUnsupportedLiteralLength + } + if length > len(dst)-d || length > len(src)-s { + return decodeErrCodeCorrupt + } + copy(dst[d:], src[s:s+length]) + d += length + s += length + continue + + case tagCopy1: + s += 2 + if uint(s) > uint(len(src)) { // The uint conversions catch overflow from the previous line. + return decodeErrCodeCorrupt + } + length = 4 + int(src[s-2])>>2&0x7 + offset = int(uint32(src[s-2])&0xe0<<3 | uint32(src[s-1])) + + case tagCopy2: + s += 3 + if uint(s) > uint(len(src)) { // The uint conversions catch overflow from the previous line. + return decodeErrCodeCorrupt + } + length = 1 + int(src[s-3])>>2 + offset = int(uint32(src[s-2]) | uint32(src[s-1])<<8) + + case tagCopy4: + s += 5 + if uint(s) > uint(len(src)) { // The uint conversions catch overflow from the previous line. + return decodeErrCodeCorrupt + } + length = 1 + int(src[s-5])>>2 + offset = int(uint32(src[s-4]) | uint32(src[s-3])<<8 | uint32(src[s-2])<<16 | uint32(src[s-1])<<24) + } + + if offset <= 0 || d < offset || length > len(dst)-d { + return decodeErrCodeCorrupt + } + // Copy from an earlier sub-slice of dst to a later sub-slice. + // If no overlap, use the built-in copy: + if offset >= length { + copy(dst[d:d+length], dst[d-offset:]) + d += length + continue + } + + // Unlike the built-in copy function, this byte-by-byte copy always runs + // forwards, even if the slices overlap. Conceptually, this is: + // + // d += forwardCopy(dst[d:d+length], dst[d-offset:]) + // + // We align the slices into a and b and show the compiler they are the same size. + // This allows the loop to run without bounds checks. + a := dst[d : d+length] + b := dst[d-offset:] + b = b[:len(a)] + for i := range a { + a[i] = b[i] + } + d += length + } + if d != len(dst) { + return decodeErrCodeCorrupt + } + return 0 +} diff --git a/vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/encode.go b/vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/encode.go new file mode 100644 index 00000000..13c6040a --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/encode.go @@ -0,0 +1,289 @@ +// Copyright 2011 The Snappy-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 snapref + +import ( + "encoding/binary" + "errors" + "io" +) + +// Encode returns the encoded form of src. The returned slice may be a sub- +// slice of dst if dst was large enough to hold the entire encoded block. +// Otherwise, a newly allocated slice will be returned. +// +// The dst and src must not overlap. It is valid to pass a nil dst. +// +// Encode handles the Snappy block format, not the Snappy stream format. +func Encode(dst, src []byte) []byte { + if n := MaxEncodedLen(len(src)); n < 0 { + panic(ErrTooLarge) + } else if len(dst) < n { + dst = make([]byte, n) + } + + // The block starts with the varint-encoded length of the decompressed bytes. + d := binary.PutUvarint(dst, uint64(len(src))) + + for len(src) > 0 { + p := src + src = nil + if len(p) > maxBlockSize { + p, src = p[:maxBlockSize], p[maxBlockSize:] + } + if len(p) < minNonLiteralBlockSize { + d += emitLiteral(dst[d:], p) + } else { + d += encodeBlock(dst[d:], p) + } + } + return dst[:d] +} + +// inputMargin is the minimum number of extra input bytes to keep, inside +// encodeBlock's inner loop. On some architectures, this margin lets us +// implement a fast path for emitLiteral, where the copy of short (<= 16 byte) +// literals can be implemented as a single load to and store from a 16-byte +// register. That literal's actual length can be as short as 1 byte, so this +// can copy up to 15 bytes too much, but that's OK as subsequent iterations of +// the encoding loop will fix up the copy overrun, and this inputMargin ensures +// that we don't overrun the dst and src buffers. +const inputMargin = 16 - 1 + +// minNonLiteralBlockSize is the minimum size of the input to encodeBlock that +// could be encoded with a copy tag. This is the minimum with respect to the +// algorithm used by encodeBlock, not a minimum enforced by the file format. +// +// The encoded output must start with at least a 1 byte literal, as there are +// no previous bytes to copy. A minimal (1 byte) copy after that, generated +// from an emitCopy call in encodeBlock's main loop, would require at least +// another inputMargin bytes, for the reason above: we want any emitLiteral +// calls inside encodeBlock's main loop to use the fast path if possible, which +// requires being able to overrun by inputMargin bytes. Thus, +// minNonLiteralBlockSize equals 1 + 1 + inputMargin. +// +// The C++ code doesn't use this exact threshold, but it could, as discussed at +// https://groups.google.com/d/topic/snappy-compression/oGbhsdIJSJ8/discussion +// The difference between Go (2+inputMargin) and C++ (inputMargin) is purely an +// optimization. It should not affect the encoded form. This is tested by +// TestSameEncodingAsCppShortCopies. +const minNonLiteralBlockSize = 1 + 1 + inputMargin + +// MaxEncodedLen returns the maximum length of a snappy block, given its +// uncompressed length. +// +// It will return a negative value if srcLen is too large to encode. +func MaxEncodedLen(srcLen int) int { + n := uint64(srcLen) + if n > 0xffffffff { + return -1 + } + // Compressed data can be defined as: + // compressed := item* literal* + // item := literal* copy + // + // The trailing literal sequence has a space blowup of at most 62/60 + // since a literal of length 60 needs one tag byte + one extra byte + // for length information. + // + // Item blowup is trickier to measure. Suppose the "copy" op copies + // 4 bytes of data. Because of a special check in the encoding code, + // we produce a 4-byte copy only if the offset is < 65536. Therefore + // the copy op takes 3 bytes to encode, and this type of item leads + // to at most the 62/60 blowup for representing literals. + // + // Suppose the "copy" op copies 5 bytes of data. If the offset is big + // enough, it will take 5 bytes to encode the copy op. Therefore the + // worst case here is a one-byte literal followed by a five-byte copy. + // That is, 6 bytes of input turn into 7 bytes of "compressed" data. + // + // This last factor dominates the blowup, so the final estimate is: + n = 32 + n + n/6 + if n > 0xffffffff { + return -1 + } + return int(n) +} + +var errClosed = errors.New("snappy: Writer is closed") + +// NewWriter returns a new Writer that compresses to w. +// +// The Writer returned does not buffer writes. There is no need to Flush or +// Close such a Writer. +// +// Deprecated: the Writer returned is not suitable for many small writes, only +// for few large writes. Use NewBufferedWriter instead, which is efficient +// regardless of the frequency and shape of the writes, and remember to Close +// that Writer when done. +func NewWriter(w io.Writer) *Writer { + return &Writer{ + w: w, + obuf: make([]byte, obufLen), + } +} + +// NewBufferedWriter returns a new Writer that compresses to w, using the +// framing format described at +// https://github.com/google/snappy/blob/master/framing_format.txt +// +// The Writer returned buffers writes. Users must call Close to guarantee all +// data has been forwarded to the underlying io.Writer. They may also call +// Flush zero or more times before calling Close. +func NewBufferedWriter(w io.Writer) *Writer { + return &Writer{ + w: w, + ibuf: make([]byte, 0, maxBlockSize), + obuf: make([]byte, obufLen), + } +} + +// Writer is an io.Writer that can write Snappy-compressed bytes. +// +// Writer handles the Snappy stream format, not the Snappy block format. +type Writer struct { + w io.Writer + err error + + // ibuf is a buffer for the incoming (uncompressed) bytes. + // + // Its use is optional. For backwards compatibility, Writers created by the + // NewWriter function have ibuf == nil, do not buffer incoming bytes, and + // therefore do not need to be Flush'ed or Close'd. + ibuf []byte + + // obuf is a buffer for the outgoing (compressed) bytes. + obuf []byte + + // wroteStreamHeader is whether we have written the stream header. + wroteStreamHeader bool +} + +// Reset discards the writer's state and switches the Snappy writer to write to +// w. This permits reusing a Writer rather than allocating a new one. +func (w *Writer) Reset(writer io.Writer) { + w.w = writer + w.err = nil + if w.ibuf != nil { + w.ibuf = w.ibuf[:0] + } + w.wroteStreamHeader = false +} + +// Write satisfies the io.Writer interface. +func (w *Writer) Write(p []byte) (nRet int, errRet error) { + if w.ibuf == nil { + // Do not buffer incoming bytes. This does not perform or compress well + // if the caller of Writer.Write writes many small slices. This + // behavior is therefore deprecated, but still supported for backwards + // compatibility with code that doesn't explicitly Flush or Close. + return w.write(p) + } + + // The remainder of this method is based on bufio.Writer.Write from the + // standard library. + + for len(p) > (cap(w.ibuf)-len(w.ibuf)) && w.err == nil { + var n int + if len(w.ibuf) == 0 { + // Large write, empty buffer. + // Write directly from p to avoid copy. + n, _ = w.write(p) + } else { + n = copy(w.ibuf[len(w.ibuf):cap(w.ibuf)], p) + w.ibuf = w.ibuf[:len(w.ibuf)+n] + w.Flush() + } + nRet += n + p = p[n:] + } + if w.err != nil { + return nRet, w.err + } + n := copy(w.ibuf[len(w.ibuf):cap(w.ibuf)], p) + w.ibuf = w.ibuf[:len(w.ibuf)+n] + nRet += n + return nRet, nil +} + +func (w *Writer) write(p []byte) (nRet int, errRet error) { + if w.err != nil { + return 0, w.err + } + for len(p) > 0 { + obufStart := len(magicChunk) + if !w.wroteStreamHeader { + w.wroteStreamHeader = true + copy(w.obuf, magicChunk) + obufStart = 0 + } + + var uncompressed []byte + if len(p) > maxBlockSize { + uncompressed, p = p[:maxBlockSize], p[maxBlockSize:] + } else { + uncompressed, p = p, nil + } + checksum := crc(uncompressed) + + // Compress the buffer, discarding the result if the improvement + // isn't at least 12.5%. + compressed := Encode(w.obuf[obufHeaderLen:], uncompressed) + chunkType := uint8(chunkTypeCompressedData) + chunkLen := 4 + len(compressed) + obufEnd := obufHeaderLen + len(compressed) + if len(compressed) >= len(uncompressed)-len(uncompressed)/8 { + chunkType = chunkTypeUncompressedData + chunkLen = 4 + len(uncompressed) + obufEnd = obufHeaderLen + } + + // Fill in the per-chunk header that comes before the body. + w.obuf[len(magicChunk)+0] = chunkType + w.obuf[len(magicChunk)+1] = uint8(chunkLen >> 0) + w.obuf[len(magicChunk)+2] = uint8(chunkLen >> 8) + w.obuf[len(magicChunk)+3] = uint8(chunkLen >> 16) + w.obuf[len(magicChunk)+4] = uint8(checksum >> 0) + w.obuf[len(magicChunk)+5] = uint8(checksum >> 8) + w.obuf[len(magicChunk)+6] = uint8(checksum >> 16) + w.obuf[len(magicChunk)+7] = uint8(checksum >> 24) + + if _, err := w.w.Write(w.obuf[obufStart:obufEnd]); err != nil { + w.err = err + return nRet, err + } + if chunkType == chunkTypeUncompressedData { + if _, err := w.w.Write(uncompressed); err != nil { + w.err = err + return nRet, err + } + } + nRet += len(uncompressed) + } + return nRet, nil +} + +// Flush flushes the Writer to its underlying io.Writer. +func (w *Writer) Flush() error { + if w.err != nil { + return w.err + } + if len(w.ibuf) == 0 { + return nil + } + w.write(w.ibuf) + w.ibuf = w.ibuf[:0] + return w.err +} + +// Close calls Flush and then closes the Writer. +func (w *Writer) Close() error { + w.Flush() + ret := w.err + if w.err == nil { + w.err = errClosed + } + return ret +} diff --git a/vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/encode_other.go b/vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/encode_other.go new file mode 100644 index 00000000..511bba65 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/encode_other.go @@ -0,0 +1,236 @@ +// Copyright 2016 The Snappy-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 snapref + +func load32(b []byte, i int) uint32 { + b = b[i : i+4 : len(b)] // Help the compiler eliminate bounds checks on the next line. + return uint32(b[0]) | uint32(b[1])<<8 | uint32(b[2])<<16 | uint32(b[3])<<24 +} + +func load64(b []byte, i int) uint64 { + b = b[i : i+8 : len(b)] // Help the compiler eliminate bounds checks on the next line. + return uint64(b[0]) | uint64(b[1])<<8 | uint64(b[2])<<16 | uint64(b[3])<<24 | + uint64(b[4])<<32 | uint64(b[5])<<40 | uint64(b[6])<<48 | uint64(b[7])<<56 +} + +// emitLiteral writes a literal chunk and returns the number of bytes written. +// +// It assumes that: +// dst is long enough to hold the encoded bytes +// 1 <= len(lit) && len(lit) <= 65536 +func emitLiteral(dst, lit []byte) int { + i, n := 0, uint(len(lit)-1) + switch { + case n < 60: + dst[0] = uint8(n)<<2 | tagLiteral + i = 1 + case n < 1<<8: + dst[0] = 60<<2 | tagLiteral + dst[1] = uint8(n) + i = 2 + default: + dst[0] = 61<<2 | tagLiteral + dst[1] = uint8(n) + dst[2] = uint8(n >> 8) + i = 3 + } + return i + copy(dst[i:], lit) +} + +// emitCopy writes a copy chunk and returns the number of bytes written. +// +// It assumes that: +// dst is long enough to hold the encoded bytes +// 1 <= offset && offset <= 65535 +// 4 <= length && length <= 65535 +func emitCopy(dst []byte, offset, length int) int { + i := 0 + // The maximum length for a single tagCopy1 or tagCopy2 op is 64 bytes. The + // threshold for this loop is a little higher (at 68 = 64 + 4), and the + // length emitted down below is is a little lower (at 60 = 64 - 4), because + // it's shorter to encode a length 67 copy as a length 60 tagCopy2 followed + // by a length 7 tagCopy1 (which encodes as 3+2 bytes) than to encode it as + // a length 64 tagCopy2 followed by a length 3 tagCopy2 (which encodes as + // 3+3 bytes). The magic 4 in the 64±4 is because the minimum length for a + // tagCopy1 op is 4 bytes, which is why a length 3 copy has to be an + // encodes-as-3-bytes tagCopy2 instead of an encodes-as-2-bytes tagCopy1. + for length >= 68 { + // Emit a length 64 copy, encoded as 3 bytes. + dst[i+0] = 63<<2 | tagCopy2 + dst[i+1] = uint8(offset) + dst[i+2] = uint8(offset >> 8) + i += 3 + length -= 64 + } + if length > 64 { + // Emit a length 60 copy, encoded as 3 bytes. + dst[i+0] = 59<<2 | tagCopy2 + dst[i+1] = uint8(offset) + dst[i+2] = uint8(offset >> 8) + i += 3 + length -= 60 + } + if length >= 12 || offset >= 2048 { + // Emit the remaining copy, encoded as 3 bytes. + dst[i+0] = uint8(length-1)<<2 | tagCopy2 + dst[i+1] = uint8(offset) + dst[i+2] = uint8(offset >> 8) + return i + 3 + } + // Emit the remaining copy, encoded as 2 bytes. + dst[i+0] = uint8(offset>>8)<<5 | uint8(length-4)<<2 | tagCopy1 + dst[i+1] = uint8(offset) + return i + 2 +} + +// extendMatch returns the largest k such that k <= len(src) and that +// src[i:i+k-j] and src[j:k] have the same contents. +// +// It assumes that: +// 0 <= i && i < j && j <= len(src) +func extendMatch(src []byte, i, j int) int { + for ; j < len(src) && src[i] == src[j]; i, j = i+1, j+1 { + } + return j +} + +func hash(u, shift uint32) uint32 { + return (u * 0x1e35a7bd) >> shift +} + +// encodeBlock encodes a non-empty src to a guaranteed-large-enough dst. It +// assumes that the varint-encoded length of the decompressed bytes has already +// been written. +// +// It also assumes that: +// len(dst) >= MaxEncodedLen(len(src)) && +// minNonLiteralBlockSize <= len(src) && len(src) <= maxBlockSize +func encodeBlock(dst, src []byte) (d int) { + // Initialize the hash table. Its size ranges from 1<<8 to 1<<14 inclusive. + // The table element type is uint16, as s < sLimit and sLimit < len(src) + // and len(src) <= maxBlockSize and maxBlockSize == 65536. + const ( + maxTableSize = 1 << 14 + // tableMask is redundant, but helps the compiler eliminate bounds + // checks. + tableMask = maxTableSize - 1 + ) + shift := uint32(32 - 8) + for tableSize := 1 << 8; tableSize < maxTableSize && tableSize < len(src); tableSize *= 2 { + shift-- + } + // In Go, all array elements are zero-initialized, so there is no advantage + // to a smaller tableSize per se. However, it matches the C++ algorithm, + // and in the asm versions of this code, we can get away with zeroing only + // the first tableSize elements. + var table [maxTableSize]uint16 + + // sLimit is when to stop looking for offset/length copies. The inputMargin + // lets us use a fast path for emitLiteral in the main loop, while we are + // looking for copies. + sLimit := len(src) - inputMargin + + // nextEmit is where in src the next emitLiteral should start from. + nextEmit := 0 + + // The encoded form must start with a literal, as there are no previous + // bytes to copy, so we start looking for hash matches at s == 1. + s := 1 + nextHash := hash(load32(src, s), shift) + + for { + // Copied from the C++ snappy implementation: + // + // Heuristic match skipping: If 32 bytes are scanned with no matches + // found, start looking only at every other byte. If 32 more bytes are + // scanned (or skipped), look at every third byte, etc.. When a match + // is found, immediately go back to looking at every byte. This is a + // small loss (~5% performance, ~0.1% density) for compressible data + // due to more bookkeeping, but for non-compressible data (such as + // JPEG) it's a huge win since the compressor quickly "realizes" the + // data is incompressible and doesn't bother looking for matches + // everywhere. + // + // The "skip" variable keeps track of how many bytes there are since + // the last match; dividing it by 32 (ie. right-shifting by five) gives + // the number of bytes to move ahead for each iteration. + skip := 32 + + nextS := s + candidate := 0 + for { + s = nextS + bytesBetweenHashLookups := skip >> 5 + nextS = s + bytesBetweenHashLookups + skip += bytesBetweenHashLookups + if nextS > sLimit { + goto emitRemainder + } + candidate = int(table[nextHash&tableMask]) + table[nextHash&tableMask] = uint16(s) + nextHash = hash(load32(src, nextS), shift) + if load32(src, s) == load32(src, candidate) { + break + } + } + + // A 4-byte match has been found. We'll later see if more than 4 bytes + // match. But, prior to the match, src[nextEmit:s] are unmatched. Emit + // them as literal bytes. + d += emitLiteral(dst[d:], src[nextEmit:s]) + + // Call emitCopy, and then see if another emitCopy could be our next + // move. Repeat until we find no match for the input immediately after + // what was consumed by the last emitCopy call. + // + // If we exit this loop normally then we need to call emitLiteral next, + // though we don't yet know how big the literal will be. We handle that + // by proceeding to the next iteration of the main loop. We also can + // exit this loop via goto if we get close to exhausting the input. + for { + // Invariant: we have a 4-byte match at s, and no need to emit any + // literal bytes prior to s. + base := s + + // Extend the 4-byte match as long as possible. + // + // This is an inlined version of: + // s = extendMatch(src, candidate+4, s+4) + s += 4 + for i := candidate + 4; s < len(src) && src[i] == src[s]; i, s = i+1, s+1 { + } + + d += emitCopy(dst[d:], base-candidate, s-base) + nextEmit = s + if s >= sLimit { + goto emitRemainder + } + + // We could immediately start working at s now, but to improve + // compression we first update the hash table at s-1 and at s. If + // another emitCopy is not our next move, also calculate nextHash + // at s+1. At least on GOARCH=amd64, these three hash calculations + // are faster as one load64 call (with some shifts) instead of + // three load32 calls. + x := load64(src, s-1) + prevHash := hash(uint32(x>>0), shift) + table[prevHash&tableMask] = uint16(s - 1) + currHash := hash(uint32(x>>8), shift) + candidate = int(table[currHash&tableMask]) + table[currHash&tableMask] = uint16(s) + if uint32(x>>8) != load32(src, candidate) { + nextHash = hash(uint32(x>>16), shift) + s++ + break + } + } + } + +emitRemainder: + if nextEmit < len(src) { + d += emitLiteral(dst[d:], src[nextEmit:]) + } + return d +} diff --git a/vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/snappy.go b/vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/snappy.go new file mode 100644 index 00000000..34d01f4a --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/klauspost/compress/internal/snapref/snappy.go @@ -0,0 +1,98 @@ +// Copyright 2011 The Snappy-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 snapref implements the Snappy compression format. It aims for very +// high speeds and reasonable compression. +// +// There are actually two Snappy formats: block and stream. They are related, +// but different: trying to decompress block-compressed data as a Snappy stream +// will fail, and vice versa. The block format is the Decode and Encode +// functions and the stream format is the Reader and Writer types. +// +// The block format, the more common case, is used when the complete size (the +// number of bytes) of the original data is known upfront, at the time +// compression starts. The stream format, also known as the framing format, is +// for when that isn't always true. +// +// The canonical, C++ implementation is at https://github.com/google/snappy and +// it only implements the block format. +package snapref + +import ( + "hash/crc32" +) + +/* +Each encoded block begins with the varint-encoded length of the decoded data, +followed by a sequence of chunks. Chunks begin and end on byte boundaries. The +first byte of each chunk is broken into its 2 least and 6 most significant bits +called l and m: l ranges in [0, 4) and m ranges in [0, 64). l is the chunk tag. +Zero means a literal tag. All other values mean a copy tag. + +For literal tags: + - If m < 60, the next 1 + m bytes are literal bytes. + - Otherwise, let n be the little-endian unsigned integer denoted by the next + m - 59 bytes. The next 1 + n bytes after that are literal bytes. + +For copy tags, length bytes are copied from offset bytes ago, in the style of +Lempel-Ziv compression algorithms. In particular: + - For l == 1, the offset ranges in [0, 1<<11) and the length in [4, 12). + The length is 4 + the low 3 bits of m. The high 3 bits of m form bits 8-10 + of the offset. The next byte is bits 0-7 of the offset. + - For l == 2, the offset ranges in [0, 1<<16) and the length in [1, 65). + The length is 1 + m. The offset is the little-endian unsigned integer + denoted by the next 2 bytes. + - For l == 3, this tag is a legacy format that is no longer issued by most + encoders. Nonetheless, the offset ranges in [0, 1<<32) and the length in + [1, 65). The length is 1 + m. The offset is the little-endian unsigned + integer denoted by the next 4 bytes. +*/ +const ( + tagLiteral = 0x00 + tagCopy1 = 0x01 + tagCopy2 = 0x02 + tagCopy4 = 0x03 +) + +const ( + checksumSize = 4 + chunkHeaderSize = 4 + magicChunk = "\xff\x06\x00\x00" + magicBody + magicBody = "sNaPpY" + + // maxBlockSize is the maximum size of the input to encodeBlock. It is not + // part of the wire format per se, but some parts of the encoder assume + // that an offset fits into a uint16. + // + // Also, for the framing format (Writer type instead of Encode function), + // https://github.com/google/snappy/blob/master/framing_format.txt says + // that "the uncompressed data in a chunk must be no longer than 65536 + // bytes". + maxBlockSize = 65536 + + // maxEncodedLenOfMaxBlockSize equals MaxEncodedLen(maxBlockSize), but is + // hard coded to be a const instead of a variable, so that obufLen can also + // be a const. Their equivalence is confirmed by + // TestMaxEncodedLenOfMaxBlockSize. + maxEncodedLenOfMaxBlockSize = 76490 + + obufHeaderLen = len(magicChunk) + checksumSize + chunkHeaderSize + obufLen = obufHeaderLen + maxEncodedLenOfMaxBlockSize +) + +const ( + chunkTypeCompressedData = 0x00 + chunkTypeUncompressedData = 0x01 + chunkTypePadding = 0xfe + chunkTypeStreamIdentifier = 0xff +) + +var crcTable = crc32.MakeTable(crc32.Castagnoli) + +// crc implements the checksum specified in section 3 of +// https://github.com/google/snappy/blob/master/framing_format.txt +func crc(b []byte) uint32 { + c := crc32.Update(0, crcTable, b) + return uint32(c>>15|c<<17) + 0xa282ead8 +} -- cgit v1.2.3