mirror of
https://github.com/vbatts/go-mtree.git
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91d7ec8c89
govis is a reimplementation of vis(3) and unvis(3) specifically made to be unicode aware. It was specifically rewritten to replace cvis and the other go vis reimplementation we have in go-mtree. Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai <asarai@suse.de>
177 lines
4.9 KiB
Go
177 lines
4.9 KiB
Go
/*
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* govis: unicode aware vis(3) encoding implementation
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* Copyright (C) 2017 SUSE LLC.
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*
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* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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* You may obtain a copy of the License at
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*
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* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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*
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* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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* limitations under the License.
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*/
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package govis
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import (
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"fmt"
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"unicode"
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)
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func isunsafe(ch rune) bool {
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return ch == '\b' || ch == '\007' || ch == '\r'
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}
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func isglob(ch rune) bool {
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return ch == '*' || ch == '?' || ch == '[' || ch == '#'
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}
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// ishttp is defined by RFC 1808.
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func ishttp(ch rune) bool {
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// RFC1808 does not really consider characters outside of ASCII, so just to
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// be safe always treat characters outside the ASCII character set as "not
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// HTTP".
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if ch > unicode.MaxASCII {
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return false
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}
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return unicode.IsDigit(ch) || unicode.IsLetter(ch) ||
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// Safe characters.
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ch == '$' || ch == '-' || ch == '_' || ch == '.' || ch == '+' ||
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// Extra characters.
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ch == '!' || ch == '*' || ch == '\'' || ch == '(' ||
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ch == ')' || ch == ','
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}
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func isgraph(ch rune) bool {
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return unicode.IsGraphic(ch) && !unicode.IsSpace(ch) && ch <= unicode.MaxASCII
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}
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// vis converts a single *byte* into its encoding. While Go supports the
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// concept of runes (and thus native utf-8 parsing), in order to make sure that
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// the bit-stream will be completely maintained through an Unvis(Vis(...))
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// round-trip. The downside is that Vis() will never output unicode -- but on
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// the plus side this is actually a benefit on the encoding side (it will
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// always work with the simple unvis(3) implementation). It also means that we
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// don't have to worry about different multi-byte encodings.
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func vis(b byte, flag VisFlag) (string, error) {
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// Treat the single-byte character as a rune.
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ch := rune(b)
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// XXX: This is quite a horrible thing to support.
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if flag&VisHTTPStyle == VisHTTPStyle {
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if !ishttp(ch) {
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return "%" + fmt.Sprintf("%.2X", ch), nil
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}
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}
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// Figure out if the character doesn't need to be encoded. Effectively, we
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// encode most "normal" (graphical) characters as themselves unless we have
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// been specifically asked not to. Note though that we *ALWAYS* encode
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// everything outside ASCII.
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// TODO: Switch this to much more logical code.
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if ch > unicode.MaxASCII {
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/* ... */
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} else if flag&VisGlob == VisGlob && isglob(ch) {
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/* ... */
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} else if isgraph(ch) ||
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(flag&VisSpace != VisSpace && ch == ' ') ||
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(flag&VisTab != VisTab && ch == '\t') ||
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(flag&VisNewline != VisNewline && ch == '\n') ||
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(flag&VisSafe != 0 && isunsafe(ch)) {
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encoded := string(ch)
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if ch == '\\' && flag&VisNoSlash == 0 {
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encoded += "\\"
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}
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return encoded, nil
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}
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// Try to use C-style escapes first.
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if flag&VisCStyle == VisCStyle {
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switch ch {
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case ' ':
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return "\\s", nil
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case '\n':
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return "\\n", nil
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case '\r':
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return "\\r", nil
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case '\b':
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return "\\b", nil
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case '\a':
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return "\\a", nil
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case '\v':
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return "\\v", nil
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case '\t':
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return "\\t", nil
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case '\f':
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return "\\f", nil
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case '\x00':
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// Output octal just to be safe.
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return "\\000", nil
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}
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}
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// For graphical characters we generate octal output (and also if it's
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// being forced by the caller's flags). Also spaces should always be
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// encoded as octal.
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if flag&VisOctal == VisOctal || isgraph(ch) || ch&0x7f == ' ' {
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// Always output three-character octal just to be safe.
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return fmt.Sprintf("\\%.3o", ch), nil
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}
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// Now we have to output meta or ctrl escapes. As far as I can tell, this
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// is not actually defined by any standard -- so this logic is basically
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// copied from the original vis(3) implementation. Hopefully nobody
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// actually relies on this (octal and hex are better).
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encoded := ""
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if flag&VisNoSlash == 0 {
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encoded += "\\"
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}
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// Meta characters have 0x80 set, but are otherwise identical to control
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// characters.
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if b&0x80 != 0 {
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b &= 0x7f
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encoded += "M"
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}
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if unicode.IsControl(rune(b)) {
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encoded += "^"
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if b == 0x7f {
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encoded += "?"
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} else {
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encoded += fmt.Sprintf("%c", b+'@')
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}
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} else {
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encoded += fmt.Sprintf("-%c", b)
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}
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return encoded, nil
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}
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// Vis encodes the provided string to a BSD-compatible encoding using BSD's
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// vis() flags. However, it will correctly handle multi-byte encoding (which is
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// not done properly by BSD's vis implementation).
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func Vis(src string, flag VisFlag) (string, error) {
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if flag&visMask != flag {
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return "", fmt.Errorf("vis: flag %q contains unknown or unsupported flags", flag)
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}
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output := ""
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for _, ch := range []byte(src) {
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encodedCh, err := vis(ch, flag)
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if err != nil {
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return "", err
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}
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output += encodedCh
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}
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return output, nil
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}
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