terraform-provider-google/vendor/github.com/hashicorp/go-version/constraint.go
Paddy 961c878e0d Switch to using Go modules. (#2679)
Switch to using Go modules.

This migrates our vendor.json to use Go 1.11's modules system, and
replaces the vendor folder with the output of go mod vendor.

The vendored code should remain basically the same; I believe some
tree shaking of packages and support scripts/licenses/READMEs/etc.
happened.

This also fixes Travis and our Makefile to no longer use govendor.
2018-12-20 17:22:22 -08:00

205 lines
5.0 KiB
Go

package version
import (
"fmt"
"reflect"
"regexp"
"strings"
)
// Constraint represents a single constraint for a version, such as
// ">= 1.0".
type Constraint struct {
f constraintFunc
check *Version
original string
}
// Constraints is a slice of constraints. We make a custom type so that
// we can add methods to it.
type Constraints []*Constraint
type constraintFunc func(v, c *Version) bool
var constraintOperators map[string]constraintFunc
var constraintRegexp *regexp.Regexp
func init() {
constraintOperators = map[string]constraintFunc{
"": constraintEqual,
"=": constraintEqual,
"!=": constraintNotEqual,
">": constraintGreaterThan,
"<": constraintLessThan,
">=": constraintGreaterThanEqual,
"<=": constraintLessThanEqual,
"~>": constraintPessimistic,
}
ops := make([]string, 0, len(constraintOperators))
for k := range constraintOperators {
ops = append(ops, regexp.QuoteMeta(k))
}
constraintRegexp = regexp.MustCompile(fmt.Sprintf(
`^\s*(%s)\s*(%s)\s*$`,
strings.Join(ops, "|"),
VersionRegexpRaw))
}
// NewConstraint will parse one or more constraints from the given
// constraint string. The string must be a comma-separated list of
// constraints.
func NewConstraint(v string) (Constraints, error) {
vs := strings.Split(v, ",")
result := make([]*Constraint, len(vs))
for i, single := range vs {
c, err := parseSingle(single)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
result[i] = c
}
return Constraints(result), nil
}
// Check tests if a version satisfies all the constraints.
func (cs Constraints) Check(v *Version) bool {
for _, c := range cs {
if !c.Check(v) {
return false
}
}
return true
}
// Returns the string format of the constraints
func (cs Constraints) String() string {
csStr := make([]string, len(cs))
for i, c := range cs {
csStr[i] = c.String()
}
return strings.Join(csStr, ",")
}
// Check tests if a constraint is validated by the given version.
func (c *Constraint) Check(v *Version) bool {
return c.f(v, c.check)
}
func (c *Constraint) String() string {
return c.original
}
func parseSingle(v string) (*Constraint, error) {
matches := constraintRegexp.FindStringSubmatch(v)
if matches == nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("Malformed constraint: %s", v)
}
check, err := NewVersion(matches[2])
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &Constraint{
f: constraintOperators[matches[1]],
check: check,
original: v,
}, nil
}
func prereleaseCheck(v, c *Version) bool {
switch vPre, cPre := v.Prerelease() != "", c.Prerelease() != ""; {
case cPre && vPre:
// A constraint with a pre-release can only match a pre-release version
// with the same base segments.
return reflect.DeepEqual(c.Segments64(), v.Segments64())
case !cPre && vPre:
// A constraint without a pre-release can only match a version without a
// pre-release.
return false
case cPre && !vPre:
// OK, except with the pessimistic operator
case !cPre && !vPre:
// OK
}
return true
}
//-------------------------------------------------------------------
// Constraint functions
//-------------------------------------------------------------------
func constraintEqual(v, c *Version) bool {
return v.Equal(c)
}
func constraintNotEqual(v, c *Version) bool {
return !v.Equal(c)
}
func constraintGreaterThan(v, c *Version) bool {
return prereleaseCheck(v, c) && v.Compare(c) == 1
}
func constraintLessThan(v, c *Version) bool {
return prereleaseCheck(v, c) && v.Compare(c) == -1
}
func constraintGreaterThanEqual(v, c *Version) bool {
return prereleaseCheck(v, c) && v.Compare(c) >= 0
}
func constraintLessThanEqual(v, c *Version) bool {
return prereleaseCheck(v, c) && v.Compare(c) <= 0
}
func constraintPessimistic(v, c *Version) bool {
// Using a pessimistic constraint with a pre-release, restricts versions to pre-releases
if !prereleaseCheck(v, c) || (c.Prerelease() != "" && v.Prerelease() == "") {
return false
}
// If the version being checked is naturally less than the constraint, then there
// is no way for the version to be valid against the constraint
if v.LessThan(c) {
return false
}
// We'll use this more than once, so grab the length now so it's a little cleaner
// to write the later checks
cs := len(c.segments)
// If the version being checked has less specificity than the constraint, then there
// is no way for the version to be valid against the constraint
if cs > len(v.segments) {
return false
}
// Check the segments in the constraint against those in the version. If the version
// being checked, at any point, does not have the same values in each index of the
// constraints segments, then it cannot be valid against the constraint.
for i := 0; i < c.si-1; i++ {
if v.segments[i] != c.segments[i] {
return false
}
}
// Check the last part of the segment in the constraint. If the version segment at
// this index is less than the constraints segment at this index, then it cannot
// be valid against the constraint
if c.segments[cs-1] > v.segments[cs-1] {
return false
}
// If nothing has rejected the version by now, it's valid
return true
}