syncthing/vendor/golang.org/x/text/transform/transform.go
Jakob Borg 65aaa607ab Use Go 1.5 vendoring instead of Godeps
Change made by:

- running "gvt fetch" on each of the packages mentioned in
  Godeps/Godeps.json
- `rm -rf Godeps`
- tweaking the build scripts to not mention Godeps
- tweaking the build scripts to test `./lib/...`, `./cmd/...` explicitly
  (to avoid testing vendor)
- tweaking the build scripts to not juggle GOPATH for Godeps and instead
  set GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT.

This also results in some updated packages at the same time I bet.

Building with Go 1.3 and 1.4 still *works* but won't use our vendored
dependencies - the user needs to have the actual packages in their
GOPATH then, which they'll get with a normal "go get". Building with Go
1.6+ will get our vendored dependencies by default even when not using
our build script, which is nice.

By doing this we gain some freedom in that we can pick and choose
manually what to include in vendor, as it's not based on just dependency
analysis of our own code. This is also a risk as we might pick up
dependencies we are unaware of, as the build may work locally with those
packages present in GOPATH. On the other hand the build server will
detect this as it has no packages in it's GOPATH beyond what is included
in the repo.

Recommended tool to manage dependencies is github.com/FiloSottile/gvt.
2016-03-05 21:21:24 +01:00

631 lines
18 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2013 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 transform provides reader and writer wrappers that transform the
// bytes passing through as well as various transformations. Example
// transformations provided by other packages include normalization and
// conversion between character sets.
package transform // import "golang.org/x/text/transform"
import (
"bytes"
"errors"
"io"
"unicode/utf8"
)
var (
// ErrShortDst means that the destination buffer was too short to
// receive all of the transformed bytes.
ErrShortDst = errors.New("transform: short destination buffer")
// ErrShortSrc means that the source buffer has insufficient data to
// complete the transformation.
ErrShortSrc = errors.New("transform: short source buffer")
// errInconsistentByteCount means that Transform returned success (nil
// error) but also returned nSrc inconsistent with the src argument.
errInconsistentByteCount = errors.New("transform: inconsistent byte count returned")
// errShortInternal means that an internal buffer is not large enough
// to make progress and the Transform operation must be aborted.
errShortInternal = errors.New("transform: short internal buffer")
)
// Transformer transforms bytes.
type Transformer interface {
// Transform writes to dst the transformed bytes read from src, and
// returns the number of dst bytes written and src bytes read. The
// atEOF argument tells whether src represents the last bytes of the
// input.
//
// Callers should always process the nDst bytes produced and account
// for the nSrc bytes consumed before considering the error err.
//
// A nil error means that all of the transformed bytes (whether freshly
// transformed from src or left over from previous Transform calls)
// were written to dst. A nil error can be returned regardless of
// whether atEOF is true. If err is nil then nSrc must equal len(src);
// the converse is not necessarily true.
//
// ErrShortDst means that dst was too short to receive all of the
// transformed bytes. ErrShortSrc means that src had insufficient data
// to complete the transformation. If both conditions apply, then
// either error may be returned. Other than the error conditions listed
// here, implementations are free to report other errors that arise.
Transform(dst, src []byte, atEOF bool) (nDst, nSrc int, err error)
// Reset resets the state and allows a Transformer to be reused.
Reset()
}
// NopResetter can be embedded by implementations of Transformer to add a nop
// Reset method.
type NopResetter struct{}
// Reset implements the Reset method of the Transformer interface.
func (NopResetter) Reset() {}
// Reader wraps another io.Reader by transforming the bytes read.
type Reader struct {
r io.Reader
t Transformer
err error
// dst[dst0:dst1] contains bytes that have been transformed by t but
// not yet copied out via Read.
dst []byte
dst0, dst1 int
// src[src0:src1] contains bytes that have been read from r but not
// yet transformed through t.
src []byte
src0, src1 int
// transformComplete is whether the transformation is complete,
// regardless of whether or not it was successful.
transformComplete bool
}
const defaultBufSize = 4096
// NewReader returns a new Reader that wraps r by transforming the bytes read
// via t. It calls Reset on t.
func NewReader(r io.Reader, t Transformer) *Reader {
t.Reset()
return &Reader{
r: r,
t: t,
dst: make([]byte, defaultBufSize),
src: make([]byte, defaultBufSize),
}
}
// Read implements the io.Reader interface.
func (r *Reader) Read(p []byte) (int, error) {
n, err := 0, error(nil)
for {
// Copy out any transformed bytes and return the final error if we are done.
if r.dst0 != r.dst1 {
n = copy(p, r.dst[r.dst0:r.dst1])
r.dst0 += n
if r.dst0 == r.dst1 && r.transformComplete {
return n, r.err
}
return n, nil
} else if r.transformComplete {
return 0, r.err
}
// Try to transform some source bytes, or to flush the transformer if we
// are out of source bytes. We do this even if r.r.Read returned an error.
// As the io.Reader documentation says, "process the n > 0 bytes returned
// before considering the error".
if r.src0 != r.src1 || r.err != nil {
r.dst0 = 0
r.dst1, n, err = r.t.Transform(r.dst, r.src[r.src0:r.src1], r.err == io.EOF)
r.src0 += n
switch {
case err == nil:
if r.src0 != r.src1 {
r.err = errInconsistentByteCount
}
// The Transform call was successful; we are complete if we
// cannot read more bytes into src.
r.transformComplete = r.err != nil
continue
case err == ErrShortDst && (r.dst1 != 0 || n != 0):
// Make room in dst by copying out, and try again.
continue
case err == ErrShortSrc && r.src1-r.src0 != len(r.src) && r.err == nil:
// Read more bytes into src via the code below, and try again.
default:
r.transformComplete = true
// The reader error (r.err) takes precedence over the
// transformer error (err) unless r.err is nil or io.EOF.
if r.err == nil || r.err == io.EOF {
r.err = err
}
continue
}
}
// Move any untransformed source bytes to the start of the buffer
// and read more bytes.
if r.src0 != 0 {
r.src0, r.src1 = 0, copy(r.src, r.src[r.src0:r.src1])
}
n, r.err = r.r.Read(r.src[r.src1:])
r.src1 += n
}
}
// TODO: implement ReadByte (and ReadRune??).
// Writer wraps another io.Writer by transforming the bytes read.
// The user needs to call Close to flush unwritten bytes that may
// be buffered.
type Writer struct {
w io.Writer
t Transformer
dst []byte
// src[:n] contains bytes that have not yet passed through t.
src []byte
n int
}
// NewWriter returns a new Writer that wraps w by transforming the bytes written
// via t. It calls Reset on t.
func NewWriter(w io.Writer, t Transformer) *Writer {
t.Reset()
return &Writer{
w: w,
t: t,
dst: make([]byte, defaultBufSize),
src: make([]byte, defaultBufSize),
}
}
// Write implements the io.Writer interface. If there are not enough
// bytes available to complete a Transform, the bytes will be buffered
// for the next write. Call Close to convert the remaining bytes.
func (w *Writer) Write(data []byte) (n int, err error) {
src := data
if w.n > 0 {
// Append bytes from data to the last remainder.
// TODO: limit the amount copied on first try.
n = copy(w.src[w.n:], data)
w.n += n
src = w.src[:w.n]
}
for {
nDst, nSrc, err := w.t.Transform(w.dst, src, false)
if _, werr := w.w.Write(w.dst[:nDst]); werr != nil {
return n, werr
}
src = src[nSrc:]
if w.n > 0 && len(src) <= n {
// Enough bytes from w.src have been consumed. We make src point
// to data instead to reduce the copying.
w.n = 0
n -= len(src)
src = data[n:]
if n < len(data) && (err == nil || err == ErrShortSrc) {
continue
}
} else {
n += nSrc
}
switch {
case err == ErrShortDst && (nDst > 0 || nSrc > 0):
case err == ErrShortSrc && len(src) < len(w.src):
m := copy(w.src, src)
// If w.n > 0, bytes from data were already copied to w.src and n
// was already set to the number of bytes consumed.
if w.n == 0 {
n += m
}
w.n = m
return n, nil
case err == nil && w.n > 0:
return n, errInconsistentByteCount
default:
return n, err
}
}
}
// Close implements the io.Closer interface.
func (w *Writer) Close() error {
for src := w.src[:w.n]; len(src) > 0; {
nDst, nSrc, err := w.t.Transform(w.dst, src, true)
if nDst == 0 {
return err
}
if _, werr := w.w.Write(w.dst[:nDst]); werr != nil {
return werr
}
if err != ErrShortDst {
return err
}
src = src[nSrc:]
}
return nil
}
type nop struct{ NopResetter }
func (nop) Transform(dst, src []byte, atEOF bool) (nDst, nSrc int, err error) {
n := copy(dst, src)
if n < len(src) {
err = ErrShortDst
}
return n, n, err
}
type discard struct{ NopResetter }
func (discard) Transform(dst, src []byte, atEOF bool) (nDst, nSrc int, err error) {
return 0, len(src), nil
}
var (
// Discard is a Transformer for which all Transform calls succeed
// by consuming all bytes and writing nothing.
Discard Transformer = discard{}
// Nop is a Transformer that copies src to dst.
Nop Transformer = nop{}
)
// chain is a sequence of links. A chain with N Transformers has N+1 links and
// N+1 buffers. Of those N+1 buffers, the first and last are the src and dst
// buffers given to chain.Transform and the middle N-1 buffers are intermediate
// buffers owned by the chain. The i'th link transforms bytes from the i'th
// buffer chain.link[i].b at read offset chain.link[i].p to the i+1'th buffer
// chain.link[i+1].b at write offset chain.link[i+1].n, for i in [0, N).
type chain struct {
link []link
err error
// errStart is the index at which the error occurred plus 1. Processing
// errStart at this level at the next call to Transform. As long as
// errStart > 0, chain will not consume any more source bytes.
errStart int
}
func (c *chain) fatalError(errIndex int, err error) {
if i := errIndex + 1; i > c.errStart {
c.errStart = i
c.err = err
}
}
type link struct {
t Transformer
// b[p:n] holds the bytes to be transformed by t.
b []byte
p int
n int
}
func (l *link) src() []byte {
return l.b[l.p:l.n]
}
func (l *link) dst() []byte {
return l.b[l.n:]
}
// Chain returns a Transformer that applies t in sequence.
func Chain(t ...Transformer) Transformer {
if len(t) == 0 {
return nop{}
}
c := &chain{link: make([]link, len(t)+1)}
for i, tt := range t {
c.link[i].t = tt
}
// Allocate intermediate buffers.
b := make([][defaultBufSize]byte, len(t)-1)
for i := range b {
c.link[i+1].b = b[i][:]
}
return c
}
// Reset resets the state of Chain. It calls Reset on all the Transformers.
func (c *chain) Reset() {
for i, l := range c.link {
if l.t != nil {
l.t.Reset()
}
c.link[i].p, c.link[i].n = 0, 0
}
}
// Transform applies the transformers of c in sequence.
func (c *chain) Transform(dst, src []byte, atEOF bool) (nDst, nSrc int, err error) {
// Set up src and dst in the chain.
srcL := &c.link[0]
dstL := &c.link[len(c.link)-1]
srcL.b, srcL.p, srcL.n = src, 0, len(src)
dstL.b, dstL.n = dst, 0
var lastFull, needProgress bool // for detecting progress
// i is the index of the next Transformer to apply, for i in [low, high].
// low is the lowest index for which c.link[low] may still produce bytes.
// high is the highest index for which c.link[high] has a Transformer.
// The error returned by Transform determines whether to increase or
// decrease i. We try to completely fill a buffer before converting it.
for low, i, high := c.errStart, c.errStart, len(c.link)-2; low <= i && i <= high; {
in, out := &c.link[i], &c.link[i+1]
nDst, nSrc, err0 := in.t.Transform(out.dst(), in.src(), atEOF && low == i)
out.n += nDst
in.p += nSrc
if i > 0 && in.p == in.n {
in.p, in.n = 0, 0
}
needProgress, lastFull = lastFull, false
switch err0 {
case ErrShortDst:
// Process the destination buffer next. Return if we are already
// at the high index.
if i == high {
return dstL.n, srcL.p, ErrShortDst
}
if out.n != 0 {
i++
// If the Transformer at the next index is not able to process any
// source bytes there is nothing that can be done to make progress
// and the bytes will remain unprocessed. lastFull is used to
// detect this and break out of the loop with a fatal error.
lastFull = true
continue
}
// The destination buffer was too small, but is completely empty.
// Return a fatal error as this transformation can never complete.
c.fatalError(i, errShortInternal)
case ErrShortSrc:
if i == 0 {
// Save ErrShortSrc in err. All other errors take precedence.
err = ErrShortSrc
break
}
// Source bytes were depleted before filling up the destination buffer.
// Verify we made some progress, move the remaining bytes to the errStart
// and try to get more source bytes.
if needProgress && nSrc == 0 || in.n-in.p == len(in.b) {
// There were not enough source bytes to proceed while the source
// buffer cannot hold any more bytes. Return a fatal error as this
// transformation can never complete.
c.fatalError(i, errShortInternal)
break
}
// in.b is an internal buffer and we can make progress.
in.p, in.n = 0, copy(in.b, in.src())
fallthrough
case nil:
// if i == low, we have depleted the bytes at index i or any lower levels.
// In that case we increase low and i. In all other cases we decrease i to
// fetch more bytes before proceeding to the next index.
if i > low {
i--
continue
}
default:
c.fatalError(i, err0)
}
// Exhausted level low or fatal error: increase low and continue
// to process the bytes accepted so far.
i++
low = i
}
// If c.errStart > 0, this means we found a fatal error. We will clear
// all upstream buffers. At this point, no more progress can be made
// downstream, as Transform would have bailed while handling ErrShortDst.
if c.errStart > 0 {
for i := 1; i < c.errStart; i++ {
c.link[i].p, c.link[i].n = 0, 0
}
err, c.errStart, c.err = c.err, 0, nil
}
return dstL.n, srcL.p, err
}
// RemoveFunc returns a Transformer that removes from the input all runes r for
// which f(r) is true. Illegal bytes in the input are replaced by RuneError.
func RemoveFunc(f func(r rune) bool) Transformer {
return removeF(f)
}
type removeF func(r rune) bool
func (removeF) Reset() {}
// Transform implements the Transformer interface.
func (t removeF) Transform(dst, src []byte, atEOF bool) (nDst, nSrc int, err error) {
for r, sz := rune(0), 0; len(src) > 0; src = src[sz:] {
if r = rune(src[0]); r < utf8.RuneSelf {
sz = 1
} else {
r, sz = utf8.DecodeRune(src)
if sz == 1 {
// Invalid rune.
if !atEOF && !utf8.FullRune(src) {
err = ErrShortSrc
break
}
// We replace illegal bytes with RuneError. Not doing so might
// otherwise turn a sequence of invalid UTF-8 into valid UTF-8.
// The resulting byte sequence may subsequently contain runes
// for which t(r) is true that were passed unnoticed.
if !t(r) {
if nDst+3 > len(dst) {
err = ErrShortDst
break
}
nDst += copy(dst[nDst:], "\uFFFD")
}
nSrc++
continue
}
}
if !t(r) {
if nDst+sz > len(dst) {
err = ErrShortDst
break
}
nDst += copy(dst[nDst:], src[:sz])
}
nSrc += sz
}
return
}
// grow returns a new []byte that is longer than b, and copies the first n bytes
// of b to the start of the new slice.
func grow(b []byte, n int) []byte {
m := len(b)
if m <= 256 {
m *= 2
} else {
m += m >> 1
}
buf := make([]byte, m)
copy(buf, b[:n])
return buf
}
const initialBufSize = 128
// String returns a string with the result of converting s[:n] using t, where
// n <= len(s). If err == nil, n will be len(s). It calls Reset on t.
func String(t Transformer, s string) (result string, n int, err error) {
if s == "" {
return "", 0, nil
}
t.Reset()
// Allocate only once. Note that both dst and src escape when passed to
// Transform.
buf := [2 * initialBufSize]byte{}
dst := buf[:initialBufSize:initialBufSize]
src := buf[initialBufSize : 2*initialBufSize]
// Avoid allocation if the transformed string is identical to the original.
// After this loop, pDst will point to the furthest point in s for which it
// could be detected that t gives equal results, src[:nSrc] will
// indicated the last processed chunk of s for which the output is not equal
// and dst[:nDst] will be the transform of this chunk.
var nDst, nSrc int
pDst := 0 // Used as index in both src and dst in this loop.
for {
n := copy(src, s[pDst:])
nDst, nSrc, err = t.Transform(dst, src[:n], pDst+n == len(s))
// Note 1: we will not enter the loop with pDst == len(s) and we will
// not end the loop with it either. So if nSrc is 0, this means there is
// some kind of error from which we cannot recover given the current
// buffer sizes. We will give up in this case.
// Note 2: it is not entirely correct to simply do a bytes.Equal as
// a Transformer may buffer internally. It will work in most cases,
// though, and no harm is done if it doesn't work.
// TODO: let transformers implement an optional Spanner interface, akin
// to norm's QuickSpan. This would even allow us to avoid any allocation.
if nSrc == 0 || !bytes.Equal(dst[:nDst], src[:nSrc]) {
break
}
if pDst += nDst; pDst == len(s) {
return s, pDst, nil
}
}
// Move the bytes seen so far to dst.
pSrc := pDst + nSrc
if pDst+nDst <= initialBufSize {
copy(dst[pDst:], dst[:nDst])
} else {
b := make([]byte, len(s)+nDst-nSrc)
copy(b[pDst:], dst[:nDst])
dst = b
}
copy(dst, s[:pDst])
pDst += nDst
if err != nil && err != ErrShortDst && err != ErrShortSrc {
return string(dst[:pDst]), pSrc, err
}
// Complete the string with the remainder.
for {
n := copy(src, s[pSrc:])
nDst, nSrc, err = t.Transform(dst[pDst:], src[:n], pSrc+n == len(s))
pDst += nDst
pSrc += nSrc
switch err {
case nil:
if pSrc == len(s) {
return string(dst[:pDst]), pSrc, nil
}
case ErrShortDst:
// Do not grow as long as we can make progress. This may avoid
// excessive allocations.
if nDst == 0 {
dst = grow(dst, pDst)
}
case ErrShortSrc:
if nSrc == 0 {
src = grow(src, 0)
}
default:
return string(dst[:pDst]), pSrc, err
}
}
}
// Bytes returns a new byte slice with the result of converting b[:n] using t,
// where n <= len(b). If err == nil, n will be len(b). It calls Reset on t.
func Bytes(t Transformer, b []byte) (result []byte, n int, err error) {
return doAppend(t, 0, make([]byte, len(b)), b)
}
// Append appends the result of converting src[:n] using t to dst, where
// n <= len(src), If err == nil, n will be len(src). It calls Reset on t.
func Append(t Transformer, dst, src []byte) (result []byte, n int, err error) {
if len(dst) == cap(dst) {
n := len(src) + len(dst) // It is okay for this to be 0.
b := make([]byte, n)
dst = b[:copy(b, dst)]
}
return doAppend(t, len(dst), dst[:cap(dst)], src)
}
func doAppend(t Transformer, pDst int, dst, src []byte) (result []byte, n int, err error) {
t.Reset()
pSrc := 0
for {
nDst, nSrc, err := t.Transform(dst[pDst:], src[pSrc:], true)
pDst += nDst
pSrc += nSrc
if err != ErrShortDst {
return dst[:pDst], pSrc, err
}
// Grow the destination buffer, but do not grow as long as we can make
// progress. This may avoid excessive allocations.
if nDst == 0 {
dst = grow(dst, pDst)
}
}
}