syncthing/vendor/github.com/golang/snappy/encode.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

404 lines
12 KiB
Go

// 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 snappy
import (
"encoding/binary"
"errors"
"io"
)
// maxOffset limits how far copy back-references can go, the same as the C++
// code.
const maxOffset = 1 << 15
// emitLiteral writes a literal chunk and returns the number of bytes written.
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
case n < 1<<16:
dst[0] = 61<<2 | tagLiteral
dst[1] = uint8(n)
dst[2] = uint8(n >> 8)
i = 3
case n < 1<<24:
dst[0] = 62<<2 | tagLiteral
dst[1] = uint8(n)
dst[2] = uint8(n >> 8)
dst[3] = uint8(n >> 16)
i = 4
case int64(n) < 1<<32:
dst[0] = 63<<2 | tagLiteral
dst[1] = uint8(n)
dst[2] = uint8(n >> 8)
dst[3] = uint8(n >> 16)
dst[4] = uint8(n >> 24)
i = 5
default:
panic("snappy: source buffer is too long")
}
if copy(dst[i:], lit) != len(lit) {
panic("snappy: destination buffer is too short")
}
return i + len(lit)
}
// emitCopy writes a copy chunk and returns the number of bytes written.
func emitCopy(dst []byte, offset, length int32) int {
i := 0
for length > 0 {
x := length - 4
if 0 <= x && x < 1<<3 && offset < 1<<11 {
dst[i+0] = uint8(offset>>8)&0x07<<5 | uint8(x)<<2 | tagCopy1
dst[i+1] = uint8(offset)
i += 2
break
}
x = length
if x > 1<<6 {
x = 1 << 6
}
dst[i+0] = uint8(x-1)<<2 | tagCopy2
dst[i+1] = uint8(offset)
dst[i+2] = uint8(offset >> 8)
i += 3
length -= x
}
return i
}
// 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.
//
// It is valid to pass a nil dst.
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:]
}
d += encodeBlock(dst[d:], p)
}
return dst[:d]
}
// 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)) &&
// 0 < len(src) && len(src) <= maxBlockSize
func encodeBlock(dst, src []byte) (d int) {
// Return early if src is short.
if len(src) <= 4 {
return emitLiteral(dst, src)
}
// Initialize the hash table. Its size ranges from 1<<8 to 1<<14 inclusive.
const maxTableSize = 1 << 14
shift, tableSize := uint(32-8), 1<<8
for tableSize < maxTableSize && tableSize < len(src) {
shift--
tableSize *= 2
}
var table [maxTableSize]int32
// Iterate over the source bytes.
var (
s int32 // The iterator position.
t int32 // The last position with the same hash as s.
lit int32 // The start position of any pending literal bytes.
// 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, 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 uint32 = 32
)
for uint32(s+3) < uint32(len(src)) { // The uint32 conversions catch overflow from the +3.
// Update the hash table.
b0, b1, b2, b3 := src[s], src[s+1], src[s+2], src[s+3]
h := uint32(b0) | uint32(b1)<<8 | uint32(b2)<<16 | uint32(b3)<<24
p := &table[(h*0x1e35a7bd)>>shift]
// We need to to store values in [-1, inf) in table. To save
// some initialization time, (re)use the table's zero value
// and shift the values against this zero: add 1 on writes,
// subtract 1 on reads.
t, *p = *p-1, s+1
// If t is invalid or src[s:s+4] differs from src[t:t+4], accumulate a literal byte.
if t < 0 || s-t >= maxOffset || b0 != src[t] || b1 != src[t+1] || b2 != src[t+2] || b3 != src[t+3] {
s += int32(skip >> 5)
skip++
continue
}
skip = 32
// Otherwise, we have a match. First, emit any pending literal bytes.
if lit != s {
d += emitLiteral(dst[d:], src[lit:s])
}
// Extend the match to be as long as possible.
s0 := s
s, t = s+4, t+4
for int(s) < len(src) && src[s] == src[t] {
s++
t++
}
// Emit the copied bytes.
d += emitCopy(dst[d:], s-t, s-s0)
lit = s
}
// Emit any final pending literal bytes and return.
if int(lit) != len(src) {
d += emitLiteral(dst[d:], src[lit:])
}
return d
}
// 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 than can write Snappy-compressed bytes.
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
}