mirror of
https://github.com/DNSCrypt/dnscrypt-proxy.git
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Upgrade quic-go to v0.36.1
quic-go has made breaking changes since v0.35.0, includes implementing `CloseIdleConnections`. Now, the local listener UDPConn are reused, and don't pile up. But, 1 instance (IPv4/IPv6) persists for each connected server.
This commit is contained in:
parent
16b2c84147
commit
89ccc59f0e
112 changed files with 5632 additions and 2620 deletions
764
vendor/golang.org/x/tools/go/types/objectpath/objectpath.go
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764
vendor/golang.org/x/tools/go/types/objectpath/objectpath.go
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// Copyright 2018 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
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// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
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// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
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// Package objectpath defines a naming scheme for types.Objects
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// (that is, named entities in Go programs) relative to their enclosing
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// package.
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//
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// Type-checker objects are canonical, so they are usually identified by
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// their address in memory (a pointer), but a pointer has meaning only
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// within one address space. By contrast, objectpath names allow the
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// identity of an object to be sent from one program to another,
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// establishing a correspondence between types.Object variables that are
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// distinct but logically equivalent.
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//
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// A single object may have multiple paths. In this example,
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//
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// type A struct{ X int }
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// type B A
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//
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// the field X has two paths due to its membership of both A and B.
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// The For(obj) function always returns one of these paths, arbitrarily
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// but consistently.
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package objectpath
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import (
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"fmt"
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"go/types"
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"sort"
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"strconv"
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"strings"
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"golang.org/x/tools/internal/typeparams"
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_ "unsafe" // for go:linkname
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)
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// A Path is an opaque name that identifies a types.Object
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// relative to its package. Conceptually, the name consists of a
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// sequence of destructuring operations applied to the package scope
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// to obtain the original object.
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// The name does not include the package itself.
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type Path string
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// Encoding
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//
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// An object path is a textual and (with training) human-readable encoding
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// of a sequence of destructuring operators, starting from a types.Package.
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// The sequences represent a path through the package/object/type graph.
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// We classify these operators by their type:
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//
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// PO package->object Package.Scope.Lookup
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// OT object->type Object.Type
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// TT type->type Type.{Elem,Key,Params,Results,Underlying} [EKPRU]
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// TO type->object Type.{At,Field,Method,Obj} [AFMO]
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//
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// All valid paths start with a package and end at an object
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// and thus may be defined by the regular language:
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//
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// objectpath = PO (OT TT* TO)*
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//
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// The concrete encoding follows directly:
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// - The only PO operator is Package.Scope.Lookup, which requires an identifier.
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// - The only OT operator is Object.Type,
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// which we encode as '.' because dot cannot appear in an identifier.
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// - The TT operators are encoded as [EKPRUTC];
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// one of these (TypeParam) requires an integer operand,
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// which is encoded as a string of decimal digits.
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// - The TO operators are encoded as [AFMO];
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// three of these (At,Field,Method) require an integer operand,
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// which is encoded as a string of decimal digits.
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// These indices are stable across different representations
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// of the same package, even source and export data.
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// The indices used are implementation specific and may not correspond to
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// the argument to the go/types function.
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//
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// In the example below,
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//
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// package p
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//
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// type T interface {
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// f() (a string, b struct{ X int })
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// }
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//
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// field X has the path "T.UM0.RA1.F0",
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// representing the following sequence of operations:
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//
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// p.Lookup("T") T
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// .Type().Underlying().Method(0). f
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// .Type().Results().At(1) b
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// .Type().Field(0) X
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//
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// The encoding is not maximally compact---every R or P is
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// followed by an A, for example---but this simplifies the
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// encoder and decoder.
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const (
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// object->type operators
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opType = '.' // .Type() (Object)
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// type->type operators
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opElem = 'E' // .Elem() (Pointer, Slice, Array, Chan, Map)
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opKey = 'K' // .Key() (Map)
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opParams = 'P' // .Params() (Signature)
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opResults = 'R' // .Results() (Signature)
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opUnderlying = 'U' // .Underlying() (Named)
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opTypeParam = 'T' // .TypeParams.At(i) (Named, Signature)
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opConstraint = 'C' // .Constraint() (TypeParam)
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// type->object operators
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opAt = 'A' // .At(i) (Tuple)
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opField = 'F' // .Field(i) (Struct)
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opMethod = 'M' // .Method(i) (Named or Interface; not Struct: "promoted" names are ignored)
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opObj = 'O' // .Obj() (Named, TypeParam)
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)
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// For is equivalent to new(Encoder).For(obj).
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//
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// It may be more efficient to reuse a single Encoder across several calls.
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func For(obj types.Object) (Path, error) {
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return new(Encoder).For(obj)
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}
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// An Encoder amortizes the cost of encoding the paths of multiple objects.
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// The zero value of an Encoder is ready to use.
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type Encoder struct {
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scopeNamesMemo map[*types.Scope][]string // memoization of Scope.Names()
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namedMethodsMemo map[*types.Named][]*types.Func // memoization of namedMethods()
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}
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// For returns the path to an object relative to its package,
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// or an error if the object is not accessible from the package's Scope.
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//
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// The For function guarantees to return a path only for the following objects:
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// - package-level types
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// - exported package-level non-types
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// - methods
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// - parameter and result variables
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// - struct fields
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// These objects are sufficient to define the API of their package.
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// The objects described by a package's export data are drawn from this set.
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//
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// For does not return a path for predeclared names, imported package
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// names, local names, and unexported package-level names (except
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// types).
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//
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// Example: given this definition,
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//
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// package p
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//
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// type T interface {
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// f() (a string, b struct{ X int })
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// }
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//
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// For(X) would return a path that denotes the following sequence of operations:
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//
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// p.Scope().Lookup("T") (TypeName T)
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// .Type().Underlying().Method(0). (method Func f)
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// .Type().Results().At(1) (field Var b)
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// .Type().Field(0) (field Var X)
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//
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// where p is the package (*types.Package) to which X belongs.
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func (enc *Encoder) For(obj types.Object) (Path, error) {
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pkg := obj.Pkg()
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// This table lists the cases of interest.
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//
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// Object Action
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// ------ ------
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// nil reject
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// builtin reject
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// pkgname reject
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// label reject
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// var
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// package-level accept
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// func param/result accept
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// local reject
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// struct field accept
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// const
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// package-level accept
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// local reject
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// func
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// package-level accept
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// init functions reject
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// concrete method accept
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// interface method accept
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// type
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// package-level accept
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// local reject
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//
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// The only accessible package-level objects are members of pkg itself.
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//
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// The cases are handled in four steps:
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//
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// 1. reject nil and builtin
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// 2. accept package-level objects
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// 3. reject obviously invalid objects
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// 4. search the API for the path to the param/result/field/method.
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// 1. reference to nil or builtin?
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if pkg == nil {
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return "", fmt.Errorf("predeclared %s has no path", obj)
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}
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scope := pkg.Scope()
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// 2. package-level object?
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if scope.Lookup(obj.Name()) == obj {
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// Only exported objects (and non-exported types) have a path.
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// Non-exported types may be referenced by other objects.
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if _, ok := obj.(*types.TypeName); !ok && !obj.Exported() {
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return "", fmt.Errorf("no path for non-exported %v", obj)
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}
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return Path(obj.Name()), nil
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}
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// 3. Not a package-level object.
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// Reject obviously non-viable cases.
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switch obj := obj.(type) {
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case *types.TypeName:
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if _, ok := obj.Type().(*typeparams.TypeParam); !ok {
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// With the exception of type parameters, only package-level type names
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// have a path.
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return "", fmt.Errorf("no path for %v", obj)
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}
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case *types.Const, // Only package-level constants have a path.
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*types.Label, // Labels are function-local.
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*types.PkgName: // PkgNames are file-local.
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return "", fmt.Errorf("no path for %v", obj)
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case *types.Var:
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// Could be:
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// - a field (obj.IsField())
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// - a func parameter or result
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// - a local var.
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// Sadly there is no way to distinguish
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// a param/result from a local
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// so we must proceed to the find.
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case *types.Func:
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// A func, if not package-level, must be a method.
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if recv := obj.Type().(*types.Signature).Recv(); recv == nil {
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return "", fmt.Errorf("func is not a method: %v", obj)
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}
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if path, ok := enc.concreteMethod(obj); ok {
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// Fast path for concrete methods that avoids looping over scope.
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return path, nil
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}
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default:
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panic(obj)
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}
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// 4. Search the API for the path to the var (field/param/result) or method.
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// First inspect package-level named types.
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// In the presence of path aliases, these give
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// the best paths because non-types may
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// refer to types, but not the reverse.
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empty := make([]byte, 0, 48) // initial space
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names := enc.scopeNames(scope)
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for _, name := range names {
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o := scope.Lookup(name)
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tname, ok := o.(*types.TypeName)
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if !ok {
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continue // handle non-types in second pass
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}
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path := append(empty, name...)
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path = append(path, opType)
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T := o.Type()
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if tname.IsAlias() {
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// type alias
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if r := find(obj, T, path, nil); r != nil {
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return Path(r), nil
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}
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} else {
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if named, _ := T.(*types.Named); named != nil {
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if r := findTypeParam(obj, typeparams.ForNamed(named), path, nil); r != nil {
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// generic named type
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return Path(r), nil
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}
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}
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// defined (named) type
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if r := find(obj, T.Underlying(), append(path, opUnderlying), nil); r != nil {
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return Path(r), nil
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}
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}
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}
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// Then inspect everything else:
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// non-types, and declared methods of defined types.
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for _, name := range names {
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o := scope.Lookup(name)
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path := append(empty, name...)
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if _, ok := o.(*types.TypeName); !ok {
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if o.Exported() {
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// exported non-type (const, var, func)
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if r := find(obj, o.Type(), append(path, opType), nil); r != nil {
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return Path(r), nil
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}
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}
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continue
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}
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// Inspect declared methods of defined types.
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if T, ok := o.Type().(*types.Named); ok {
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path = append(path, opType)
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// Note that method index here is always with respect
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// to canonical ordering of methods, regardless of how
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// they appear in the underlying type.
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for i, m := range enc.namedMethods(T) {
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path2 := appendOpArg(path, opMethod, i)
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if m == obj {
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return Path(path2), nil // found declared method
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}
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if r := find(obj, m.Type(), append(path2, opType), nil); r != nil {
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return Path(r), nil
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}
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}
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}
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}
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return "", fmt.Errorf("can't find path for %v in %s", obj, pkg.Path())
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}
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func appendOpArg(path []byte, op byte, arg int) []byte {
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path = append(path, op)
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path = strconv.AppendInt(path, int64(arg), 10)
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return path
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}
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// concreteMethod returns the path for meth, which must have a non-nil receiver.
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// The second return value indicates success and may be false if the method is
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// an interface method or if it is an instantiated method.
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//
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// This function is just an optimization that avoids the general scope walking
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// approach. You are expected to fall back to the general approach if this
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// function fails.
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func (enc *Encoder) concreteMethod(meth *types.Func) (Path, bool) {
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// Concrete methods can only be declared on package-scoped named types. For
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// that reason we can skip the expensive walk over the package scope: the
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// path will always be package -> named type -> method. We can trivially get
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// the type name from the receiver, and only have to look over the type's
|
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// methods to find the method index.
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//
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// Methods on generic types require special consideration, however. Consider
|
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// the following package:
|
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//
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// L1: type S[T any] struct{}
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// L2: func (recv S[A]) Foo() { recv.Bar() }
|
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// L3: func (recv S[B]) Bar() { }
|
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// L4: type Alias = S[int]
|
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// L5: func _[T any]() { var s S[int]; s.Foo() }
|
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//
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// The receivers of methods on generic types are instantiations. L2 and L3
|
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// instantiate S with the type-parameters A and B, which are scoped to the
|
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// respective methods. L4 and L5 each instantiate S with int. Each of these
|
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// instantiations has its own method set, full of methods (and thus objects)
|
||||
// with receivers whose types are the respective instantiations. In other
|
||||
// words, we have
|
||||
//
|
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// S[A].Foo, S[A].Bar
|
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// S[B].Foo, S[B].Bar
|
||||
// S[int].Foo, S[int].Bar
|
||||
//
|
||||
// We may thus be trying to produce object paths for any of these objects.
|
||||
//
|
||||
// S[A].Foo and S[B].Bar are the origin methods, and their paths are S.Foo
|
||||
// and S.Bar, which are the paths that this function naturally produces.
|
||||
//
|
||||
// S[A].Bar, S[B].Foo, and both methods on S[int] are instantiations that
|
||||
// don't correspond to the origin methods. For S[int], this is significant.
|
||||
// The most precise object path for S[int].Foo, for example, is Alias.Foo,
|
||||
// not S.Foo. Our function, however, would produce S.Foo, which would
|
||||
// resolve to a different object.
|
||||
//
|
||||
// For S[A].Bar and S[B].Foo it could be argued that S.Bar and S.Foo are
|
||||
// still the correct paths, since only the origin methods have meaningful
|
||||
// paths. But this is likely only true for trivial cases and has edge cases.
|
||||
// Since this function is only an optimization, we err on the side of giving
|
||||
// up, deferring to the slower but definitely correct algorithm. Most users
|
||||
// of objectpath will only be giving us origin methods, anyway, as referring
|
||||
// to instantiated methods is usually not useful.
|
||||
|
||||
if typeparams.OriginMethod(meth) != meth {
|
||||
return "", false
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
recvT := meth.Type().(*types.Signature).Recv().Type()
|
||||
if ptr, ok := recvT.(*types.Pointer); ok {
|
||||
recvT = ptr.Elem()
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
named, ok := recvT.(*types.Named)
|
||||
if !ok {
|
||||
return "", false
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
if types.IsInterface(named) {
|
||||
// Named interfaces don't have to be package-scoped
|
||||
//
|
||||
// TODO(dominikh): opt: if scope.Lookup(name) == named, then we can apply this optimization to interface
|
||||
// methods, too, I think.
|
||||
return "", false
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
// Preallocate space for the name, opType, opMethod, and some digits.
|
||||
name := named.Obj().Name()
|
||||
path := make([]byte, 0, len(name)+8)
|
||||
path = append(path, name...)
|
||||
path = append(path, opType)
|
||||
for i, m := range enc.namedMethods(named) {
|
||||
if m == meth {
|
||||
path = appendOpArg(path, opMethod, i)
|
||||
return Path(path), true
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
// Due to golang/go#59944, go/types fails to associate the receiver with
|
||||
// certain methods on cgo types.
|
||||
//
|
||||
// TODO(rfindley): replace this panic once golang/go#59944 is fixed in all Go
|
||||
// versions gopls supports.
|
||||
return "", false
|
||||
// panic(fmt.Sprintf("couldn't find method %s on type %s; methods: %#v", meth, named, enc.namedMethods(named)))
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
// find finds obj within type T, returning the path to it, or nil if not found.
|
||||
//
|
||||
// The seen map is used to short circuit cycles through type parameters. If
|
||||
// nil, it will be allocated as necessary.
|
||||
func find(obj types.Object, T types.Type, path []byte, seen map[*types.TypeName]bool) []byte {
|
||||
switch T := T.(type) {
|
||||
case *types.Basic, *types.Named:
|
||||
// Named types belonging to pkg were handled already,
|
||||
// so T must belong to another package. No path.
|
||||
return nil
|
||||
case *types.Pointer:
|
||||
return find(obj, T.Elem(), append(path, opElem), seen)
|
||||
case *types.Slice:
|
||||
return find(obj, T.Elem(), append(path, opElem), seen)
|
||||
case *types.Array:
|
||||
return find(obj, T.Elem(), append(path, opElem), seen)
|
||||
case *types.Chan:
|
||||
return find(obj, T.Elem(), append(path, opElem), seen)
|
||||
case *types.Map:
|
||||
if r := find(obj, T.Key(), append(path, opKey), seen); r != nil {
|
||||
return r
|
||||
}
|
||||
return find(obj, T.Elem(), append(path, opElem), seen)
|
||||
case *types.Signature:
|
||||
if r := findTypeParam(obj, typeparams.ForSignature(T), path, seen); r != nil {
|
||||
return r
|
||||
}
|
||||
if r := find(obj, T.Params(), append(path, opParams), seen); r != nil {
|
||||
return r
|
||||
}
|
||||
return find(obj, T.Results(), append(path, opResults), seen)
|
||||
case *types.Struct:
|
||||
for i := 0; i < T.NumFields(); i++ {
|
||||
fld := T.Field(i)
|
||||
path2 := appendOpArg(path, opField, i)
|
||||
if fld == obj {
|
||||
return path2 // found field var
|
||||
}
|
||||
if r := find(obj, fld.Type(), append(path2, opType), seen); r != nil {
|
||||
return r
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
return nil
|
||||
case *types.Tuple:
|
||||
for i := 0; i < T.Len(); i++ {
|
||||
v := T.At(i)
|
||||
path2 := appendOpArg(path, opAt, i)
|
||||
if v == obj {
|
||||
return path2 // found param/result var
|
||||
}
|
||||
if r := find(obj, v.Type(), append(path2, opType), seen); r != nil {
|
||||
return r
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
return nil
|
||||
case *types.Interface:
|
||||
for i := 0; i < T.NumMethods(); i++ {
|
||||
m := T.Method(i)
|
||||
path2 := appendOpArg(path, opMethod, i)
|
||||
if m == obj {
|
||||
return path2 // found interface method
|
||||
}
|
||||
if r := find(obj, m.Type(), append(path2, opType), seen); r != nil {
|
||||
return r
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
return nil
|
||||
case *typeparams.TypeParam:
|
||||
name := T.Obj()
|
||||
if name == obj {
|
||||
return append(path, opObj)
|
||||
}
|
||||
if seen[name] {
|
||||
return nil
|
||||
}
|
||||
if seen == nil {
|
||||
seen = make(map[*types.TypeName]bool)
|
||||
}
|
||||
seen[name] = true
|
||||
if r := find(obj, T.Constraint(), append(path, opConstraint), seen); r != nil {
|
||||
return r
|
||||
}
|
||||
return nil
|
||||
}
|
||||
panic(T)
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
func findTypeParam(obj types.Object, list *typeparams.TypeParamList, path []byte, seen map[*types.TypeName]bool) []byte {
|
||||
for i := 0; i < list.Len(); i++ {
|
||||
tparam := list.At(i)
|
||||
path2 := appendOpArg(path, opTypeParam, i)
|
||||
if r := find(obj, tparam, path2, seen); r != nil {
|
||||
return r
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
return nil
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
// Object returns the object denoted by path p within the package pkg.
|
||||
func Object(pkg *types.Package, p Path) (types.Object, error) {
|
||||
if p == "" {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("empty path")
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
pathstr := string(p)
|
||||
var pkgobj, suffix string
|
||||
if dot := strings.IndexByte(pathstr, opType); dot < 0 {
|
||||
pkgobj = pathstr
|
||||
} else {
|
||||
pkgobj = pathstr[:dot]
|
||||
suffix = pathstr[dot:] // suffix starts with "."
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
obj := pkg.Scope().Lookup(pkgobj)
|
||||
if obj == nil {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("package %s does not contain %q", pkg.Path(), pkgobj)
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
// abstraction of *types.{Pointer,Slice,Array,Chan,Map}
|
||||
type hasElem interface {
|
||||
Elem() types.Type
|
||||
}
|
||||
// abstraction of *types.{Named,Signature}
|
||||
type hasTypeParams interface {
|
||||
TypeParams() *typeparams.TypeParamList
|
||||
}
|
||||
// abstraction of *types.{Named,TypeParam}
|
||||
type hasObj interface {
|
||||
Obj() *types.TypeName
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
// The loop state is the pair (t, obj),
|
||||
// exactly one of which is non-nil, initially obj.
|
||||
// All suffixes start with '.' (the only object->type operation),
|
||||
// followed by optional type->type operations,
|
||||
// then a type->object operation.
|
||||
// The cycle then repeats.
|
||||
var t types.Type
|
||||
for suffix != "" {
|
||||
code := suffix[0]
|
||||
suffix = suffix[1:]
|
||||
|
||||
// Codes [AFM] have an integer operand.
|
||||
var index int
|
||||
switch code {
|
||||
case opAt, opField, opMethod, opTypeParam:
|
||||
rest := strings.TrimLeft(suffix, "0123456789")
|
||||
numerals := suffix[:len(suffix)-len(rest)]
|
||||
suffix = rest
|
||||
i, err := strconv.Atoi(numerals)
|
||||
if err != nil {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("invalid path: bad numeric operand %q for code %q", numerals, code)
|
||||
}
|
||||
index = int(i)
|
||||
case opObj:
|
||||
// no operand
|
||||
default:
|
||||
// The suffix must end with a type->object operation.
|
||||
if suffix == "" {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("invalid path: ends with %q, want [AFMO]", code)
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
if code == opType {
|
||||
if t != nil {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("invalid path: unexpected %q in type context", opType)
|
||||
}
|
||||
t = obj.Type()
|
||||
obj = nil
|
||||
continue
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
if t == nil {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("invalid path: code %q in object context", code)
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
// Inv: t != nil, obj == nil
|
||||
|
||||
switch code {
|
||||
case opElem:
|
||||
hasElem, ok := t.(hasElem) // Pointer, Slice, Array, Chan, Map
|
||||
if !ok {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("cannot apply %q to %s (got %T, want pointer, slice, array, chan or map)", code, t, t)
|
||||
}
|
||||
t = hasElem.Elem()
|
||||
|
||||
case opKey:
|
||||
mapType, ok := t.(*types.Map)
|
||||
if !ok {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("cannot apply %q to %s (got %T, want map)", code, t, t)
|
||||
}
|
||||
t = mapType.Key()
|
||||
|
||||
case opParams:
|
||||
sig, ok := t.(*types.Signature)
|
||||
if !ok {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("cannot apply %q to %s (got %T, want signature)", code, t, t)
|
||||
}
|
||||
t = sig.Params()
|
||||
|
||||
case opResults:
|
||||
sig, ok := t.(*types.Signature)
|
||||
if !ok {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("cannot apply %q to %s (got %T, want signature)", code, t, t)
|
||||
}
|
||||
t = sig.Results()
|
||||
|
||||
case opUnderlying:
|
||||
named, ok := t.(*types.Named)
|
||||
if !ok {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("cannot apply %q to %s (got %T, want named)", code, t, t)
|
||||
}
|
||||
t = named.Underlying()
|
||||
|
||||
case opTypeParam:
|
||||
hasTypeParams, ok := t.(hasTypeParams) // Named, Signature
|
||||
if !ok {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("cannot apply %q to %s (got %T, want named or signature)", code, t, t)
|
||||
}
|
||||
tparams := hasTypeParams.TypeParams()
|
||||
if n := tparams.Len(); index >= n {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("tuple index %d out of range [0-%d)", index, n)
|
||||
}
|
||||
t = tparams.At(index)
|
||||
|
||||
case opConstraint:
|
||||
tparam, ok := t.(*typeparams.TypeParam)
|
||||
if !ok {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("cannot apply %q to %s (got %T, want type parameter)", code, t, t)
|
||||
}
|
||||
t = tparam.Constraint()
|
||||
|
||||
case opAt:
|
||||
tuple, ok := t.(*types.Tuple)
|
||||
if !ok {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("cannot apply %q to %s (got %T, want tuple)", code, t, t)
|
||||
}
|
||||
if n := tuple.Len(); index >= n {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("tuple index %d out of range [0-%d)", index, n)
|
||||
}
|
||||
obj = tuple.At(index)
|
||||
t = nil
|
||||
|
||||
case opField:
|
||||
structType, ok := t.(*types.Struct)
|
||||
if !ok {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("cannot apply %q to %s (got %T, want struct)", code, t, t)
|
||||
}
|
||||
if n := structType.NumFields(); index >= n {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("field index %d out of range [0-%d)", index, n)
|
||||
}
|
||||
obj = structType.Field(index)
|
||||
t = nil
|
||||
|
||||
case opMethod:
|
||||
switch t := t.(type) {
|
||||
case *types.Interface:
|
||||
if index >= t.NumMethods() {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("method index %d out of range [0-%d)", index, t.NumMethods())
|
||||
}
|
||||
obj = t.Method(index) // Id-ordered
|
||||
|
||||
case *types.Named:
|
||||
methods := namedMethods(t) // (unmemoized)
|
||||
if index >= len(methods) {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("method index %d out of range [0-%d)", index, len(methods))
|
||||
}
|
||||
obj = methods[index] // Id-ordered
|
||||
|
||||
default:
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("cannot apply %q to %s (got %T, want interface or named)", code, t, t)
|
||||
}
|
||||
t = nil
|
||||
|
||||
case opObj:
|
||||
hasObj, ok := t.(hasObj)
|
||||
if !ok {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("cannot apply %q to %s (got %T, want named or type param)", code, t, t)
|
||||
}
|
||||
obj = hasObj.Obj()
|
||||
t = nil
|
||||
|
||||
default:
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("invalid path: unknown code %q", code)
|
||||
}
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
if obj.Pkg() != pkg {
|
||||
return nil, fmt.Errorf("path denotes %s, which belongs to a different package", obj)
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
return obj, nil // success
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
// namedMethods returns the methods of a Named type in ascending Id order.
|
||||
func namedMethods(named *types.Named) []*types.Func {
|
||||
methods := make([]*types.Func, named.NumMethods())
|
||||
for i := range methods {
|
||||
methods[i] = named.Method(i)
|
||||
}
|
||||
sort.Slice(methods, func(i, j int) bool {
|
||||
return methods[i].Id() < methods[j].Id()
|
||||
})
|
||||
return methods
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
// namedMethods is a memoization of the namedMethods function. Callers must not modify the result.
|
||||
func (enc *Encoder) namedMethods(named *types.Named) []*types.Func {
|
||||
m := enc.namedMethodsMemo
|
||||
if m == nil {
|
||||
m = make(map[*types.Named][]*types.Func)
|
||||
enc.namedMethodsMemo = m
|
||||
}
|
||||
methods, ok := m[named]
|
||||
if !ok {
|
||||
methods = namedMethods(named) // allocates and sorts
|
||||
m[named] = methods
|
||||
}
|
||||
return methods
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
// scopeNames is a memoization of scope.Names. Callers must not modify the result.
|
||||
func (enc *Encoder) scopeNames(scope *types.Scope) []string {
|
||||
m := enc.scopeNamesMemo
|
||||
if m == nil {
|
||||
m = make(map[*types.Scope][]string)
|
||||
enc.scopeNamesMemo = m
|
||||
}
|
||||
names, ok := m[scope]
|
||||
if !ok {
|
||||
names = scope.Names() // allocates and sorts
|
||||
m[scope] = names
|
||||
}
|
||||
return names
|
||||
}
|
Loading…
Add table
Add a link
Reference in a new issue