package cty import ( "fmt" "strings" ) // marker is an internal wrapper type used to add special "marks" to values. // // A "mark" is an annotation that can be used to represent additional // characteristics of values that propagate through operation methods to // result values. However, a marked value cannot be used with integration // methods normally associated with its type, in order to ensure that // calling applications don't inadvertently drop marks as they round-trip // values out of cty and back in again. // // Marked values are created only explicitly by the calling application, so // an application that never marks a value does not need to worry about // encountering marked values. type marker struct { realV interface{} marks ValueMarks } // ValueMarks is a map, representing a set, of "mark" values associated with // a Value. See Value.Mark for more information on the usage of mark values. type ValueMarks map[interface{}]struct{} // NewValueMarks constructs a new ValueMarks set with the given mark values. func NewValueMarks(marks ...interface{}) ValueMarks { if len(marks) == 0 { return nil } ret := make(ValueMarks, len(marks)) for _, v := range marks { ret[v] = struct{}{} } return ret } // Equal returns true if the receiver and the given ValueMarks both contain // the same marks. func (m ValueMarks) Equal(o ValueMarks) bool { if len(m) != len(o) { return false } for v := range m { if _, ok := o[v]; !ok { return false } } return true } func (m ValueMarks) GoString() string { var s strings.Builder s.WriteString("cty.NewValueMarks(") i := 0 for mv := range m { if i != 0 { s.WriteString(", ") } s.WriteString(fmt.Sprintf("%#v", mv)) i++ } s.WriteString(")") return s.String() } // IsMarked returns true if and only if the receiving value carries at least // one mark. A marked value cannot be used directly with integration methods // without explicitly unmarking it (and retrieving the markings) first. func (val Value) IsMarked() bool { _, ok := val.v.(marker) return ok } // HasMark returns true if and only if the receiving value has the given mark. func (val Value) HasMark(mark interface{}) bool { if mr, ok := val.v.(marker); ok { _, ok := mr.marks[mark] return ok } return false } // ContainsMarked returns true if the receiving value or any value within it // is marked. // // This operation is relatively expensive. If you only need a shallow result, // use IsMarked instead. func (val Value) ContainsMarked() bool { ret := false Walk(val, func(_ Path, v Value) (bool, error) { if v.IsMarked() { ret = true return false, nil } return true, nil }) return ret } func (val Value) assertUnmarked() { if val.IsMarked() { panic("value is marked, so must be unmarked first") } } // Marks returns a map (representing a set) of all of the mark values // associated with the receiving value, without changing the marks. Returns nil // if the value is not marked at all. func (val Value) Marks() ValueMarks { if mr, ok := val.v.(marker); ok { // copy so that the caller can't mutate our internals ret := make(ValueMarks, len(mr.marks)) for k, v := range mr.marks { ret[k] = v } return ret } return nil } // HasSameMarks returns true if an only if the receiver and the given other // value have identical marks. func (val Value) HasSameMarks(other Value) bool { vm, vmOK := val.v.(marker) om, omOK := other.v.(marker) if vmOK != omOK { return false } if vmOK { return vm.marks.Equal(om.marks) } return true } // Mark returns a new value that as the same type and underlying value as // the receiver but that also carries the given value as a "mark". // // Marks are used to carry additional application-specific characteristics // associated with values. A marked value can be used with operation methods, // in which case the marks are propagated to the operation results. A marked // value _cannot_ be used with integration methods, so callers of those // must derive an unmarked value using Unmark (and thus explicitly handle // the markings) before calling the integration methods. // // The mark value can be any value that would be valid to use as a map key. // The mark value should be of a named type in order to use the type itself // as a namespace for markings. That type can be unexported if desired, in // order to ensure that the mark can only be handled through the defining // package's own functions. // // An application that never calls this method does not need to worry about // handling marked values. func (val Value) Mark(mark interface{}) Value { var newMarker marker newMarker.realV = val.v if mr, ok := val.v.(marker); ok { // It's already a marker, so we'll retain existing marks. newMarker.marks = make(ValueMarks, len(mr.marks)+1) for k, v := range mr.marks { newMarker.marks[k] = v } } else { // It's not a marker yet, so we're creating the first mark. newMarker.marks = make(ValueMarks, 1) } newMarker.marks[mark] = struct{}{} return Value{ ty: val.ty, v: newMarker, } } // Unmark separates the marks of the receiving value from the value itself, // removing a new unmarked value and a map (representing a set) of the marks. // // If the receiver isn't marked, Unmark returns it verbatim along with a nil // map of marks. func (val Value) Unmark() (Value, ValueMarks) { if !val.IsMarked() { return val, nil } mr := val.v.(marker) marks := val.Marks() // copy so that the caller can't mutate our internals return Value{ ty: val.ty, v: mr.realV, }, marks } // UnmarkDeep is similar to Unmark, but it works with an entire nested structure // rather than just the given value directly. // // The result is guaranteed to contain no nested values that are marked, and // the returned marks set includes the superset of all of the marks encountered // during the operation. func (val Value) UnmarkDeep() (Value, ValueMarks) { marks := make(ValueMarks) ret, _ := Transform(val, func(_ Path, v Value) (Value, error) { unmarkedV, valueMarks := v.Unmark() for m, s := range valueMarks { marks[m] = s } return unmarkedV, nil }) return ret, marks } func (val Value) unmarkForce() Value { unw, _ := val.Unmark() return unw } // WithMarks returns a new value that has the same type and underlying value // as the receiver and also has the marks from the given maps (representing // sets). func (val Value) WithMarks(marks ...ValueMarks) Value { if len(marks) == 0 { return val } ownMarks := val.Marks() markCount := len(ownMarks) for _, s := range marks { markCount += len(s) } if markCount == 0 { return val } newMarks := make(ValueMarks, markCount) for m := range ownMarks { newMarks[m] = struct{}{} } for _, s := range marks { for m := range s { newMarks[m] = struct{}{} } } v := val.v if mr, ok := v.(marker); ok { v = mr.realV } return Value{ ty: val.ty, v: marker{ realV: v, marks: newMarks, }, } } // WithSameMarks returns a new value that has the same type and underlying // value as the receiver and also has the marks from the given source values. // // Use this if you are implementing your own higher-level operations against // cty using the integration methods, to re-introduce the marks from the // source values of the operation. func (val Value) WithSameMarks(srcs ...Value) Value { if len(srcs) == 0 { return val } ownMarks := val.Marks() markCount := len(ownMarks) for _, sv := range srcs { if mr, ok := sv.v.(marker); ok { markCount += len(mr.marks) } } if markCount == 0 { return val } newMarks := make(ValueMarks, markCount) for m := range ownMarks { newMarks[m] = struct{}{} } for _, sv := range srcs { if mr, ok := sv.v.(marker); ok { for m := range mr.marks { newMarks[m] = struct{}{} } } } v := val.v if mr, ok := v.(marker); ok { v = mr.realV } return Value{ ty: val.ty, v: marker{ realV: v, marks: newMarks, }, } }