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gitea/modules/util/util.go

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2017-01-25 03:43:02 +01:00
// Copyright 2017 The Gitea Authors. All rights reserved.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
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package util
import (
"bytes"
"crypto/rand"
"fmt"
"math/big"
"strconv"
"strings"
"code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/optional"
"golang.org/x/text/cases"
"golang.org/x/text/language"
)
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// OptionalBool a boolean that can be "null"
type OptionalBool byte
const (
// OptionalBoolNone a "null" boolean value
OptionalBoolNone OptionalBool = iota
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// OptionalBoolTrue a "true" boolean value
OptionalBoolTrue
// OptionalBoolFalse a "false" boolean value
OptionalBoolFalse
)
// IsTrue return true if equal to OptionalBoolTrue
func (o OptionalBool) IsTrue() bool {
return o == OptionalBoolTrue
}
// IsFalse return true if equal to OptionalBoolFalse
func (o OptionalBool) IsFalse() bool {
return o == OptionalBoolFalse
}
// IsNone return true if equal to OptionalBoolNone
func (o OptionalBool) IsNone() bool {
return o == OptionalBoolNone
}
// ToGeneric converts OptionalBool to optional.Option[bool]
func (o OptionalBool) ToGeneric() optional.Option[bool] {
if o.IsNone() {
return optional.None[bool]()
}
return optional.Some[bool](o.IsTrue())
}
// OptionalBoolFromGeneric converts optional.Option[bool] to OptionalBool
func OptionalBoolFromGeneric(o optional.Option[bool]) OptionalBool {
if o.Has() {
return OptionalBoolOf(o.Value())
}
return OptionalBoolNone
}
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// OptionalBoolOf get the corresponding OptionalBool of a bool
func OptionalBoolOf(b bool) OptionalBool {
if b {
return OptionalBoolTrue
}
return OptionalBoolFalse
}
// OptionalBoolParse get the corresponding optional.Option[bool] of a string using strconv.ParseBool
func OptionalBoolParse(s string) optional.Option[bool] {
v, e := strconv.ParseBool(s)
if e != nil {
return optional.None[bool]()
}
return optional.Some(v)
}
// IsEmptyString checks if the provided string is empty
func IsEmptyString(s string) bool {
return len(strings.TrimSpace(s)) == 0
}
// NormalizeEOL will convert Windows (CRLF) and Mac (CR) EOLs to UNIX (LF)
func NormalizeEOL(input []byte) []byte {
var right, left, pos int
if right = bytes.IndexByte(input, '\r'); right == -1 {
return input
}
length := len(input)
tmp := make([]byte, length)
// We know that left < length because otherwise right would be -1 from IndexByte.
copy(tmp[pos:pos+right], input[left:left+right])
pos += right
tmp[pos] = '\n'
left += right + 1
pos++
for left < length {
if input[left] == '\n' {
left++
}
right = bytes.IndexByte(input[left:], '\r')
if right == -1 {
copy(tmp[pos:], input[left:])
pos += length - left
break
}
copy(tmp[pos:pos+right], input[left:left+right])
pos += right
tmp[pos] = '\n'
left += right + 1
pos++
}
return tmp[:pos]
}
// CryptoRandomInt returns a crypto random integer between 0 and limit, inclusive
func CryptoRandomInt(limit int64) (int64, error) {
rInt, err := rand.Int(rand.Reader, big.NewInt(limit))
if err != nil {
return 0, err
}
return rInt.Int64(), nil
}
const alphanumericalChars = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ0123456789"
// CryptoRandomString generates a crypto random alphanumerical string, each byte is generated by [0,61] range
func CryptoRandomString(length int64) (string, error) {
buf := make([]byte, length)
limit := int64(len(alphanumericalChars))
for i := range buf {
num, err := CryptoRandomInt(limit)
if err != nil {
return "", err
}
buf[i] = alphanumericalChars[num]
}
return string(buf), nil
}
// CryptoRandomBytes generates `length` crypto bytes
// This differs from CryptoRandomString, as each byte in CryptoRandomString is generated by [0,61] range
// This function generates totally random bytes, each byte is generated by [0,255] range
func CryptoRandomBytes(length int64) ([]byte, error) {
buf := make([]byte, length)
_, err := rand.Read(buf)
return buf, err
}
// ToUpperASCII returns s with all ASCII letters mapped to their upper case.
func ToUpperASCII(s string) string {
b := []byte(s)
for i, c := range b {
if 'a' <= c && c <= 'z' {
b[i] -= 'a' - 'A'
}
}
return string(b)
}
// ToTitleCase returns s with all english words capitalized
func ToTitleCase(s string) string {
// `cases.Title` is not thread-safe, do not use global shared variable for it
return cases.Title(language.English).String(s)
}
// ToTitleCaseNoLower returns s with all english words capitalized without lower-casing
func ToTitleCaseNoLower(s string) string {
// `cases.Title` is not thread-safe, do not use global shared variable for it
return cases.Title(language.English, cases.NoLower).String(s)
}
// ToInt64 transform a given int into int64.
func ToInt64(number any) (int64, error) {
var value int64
switch v := number.(type) {
case int:
value = int64(v)
case int8:
value = int64(v)
case int16:
value = int64(v)
case int32:
value = int64(v)
case int64:
value = v
Use a general Eval function for expressions in templates. (#23927) One of the proposals in #23328 This PR introduces a simple expression calculator (templates/eval/eval.go), it can do basic expression calculations. Many untested template helper functions like `Mul` `Add` can be replaced by this new approach. Then these `Add` / `Mul` / `percentage` / `Subtract` / `DiffStatsWidth` could all use this `Eval`. And it provides enhancements for Golang templates, and improves readability. Some examples: ---- * Before: `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}` * After: `{{Eval $glyph.Row "*" 12 "+" 12}}` ---- * Before: `{{if lt (Add $i 1) (len $.Topics)}}` * After: `{{if Eval $i "+" 1 "<" (len $.Topics)}}` ## FAQ ### Why not use an existing expression package? We need a highly customized expression engine: * do the calculation on the fly, without pre-compiling * deal with int/int64/float64 types, to make the result could be used in Golang template. * make the syntax could be used in the Golang template directly * do not introduce too much complex or strange syntax, we just need a simple calculator. * it needs to strictly follow Golang template's behavior, for example, Golang template treats all non-zero values as truth, but many 3rd packages don't do so. ### What's the benefit? * Developers don't need to add more `Add`/`Mul`/`Sub`-like functions, they were getting more and more. Now, only one `Eval` is enough for all cases. * The new code reads better than old `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}`, the old one isn't familiar to most procedural programming developers (eg, the Golang expression syntax). * The `Eval` is fully covered by tests, many old `Add`/`Mul`-like functions were never tested. ### The performance? It doesn't use `reflect`, it doesn't need to parse or compile when used in Golang template, the performance is as fast as native Go template. ### Is it too complex? Could it be unstable? The expression calculator program is a common homework for computer science students, and it's widely used as a teaching and practicing purpose for developers. The algorithm is pretty well-known. The behavior can be clearly defined, it is stable.
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case uint:
value = int64(v)
case uint8:
value = int64(v)
case uint16:
value = int64(v)
case uint32:
value = int64(v)
case uint64:
value = int64(v)
Use a general Eval function for expressions in templates. (#23927) One of the proposals in #23328 This PR introduces a simple expression calculator (templates/eval/eval.go), it can do basic expression calculations. Many untested template helper functions like `Mul` `Add` can be replaced by this new approach. Then these `Add` / `Mul` / `percentage` / `Subtract` / `DiffStatsWidth` could all use this `Eval`. And it provides enhancements for Golang templates, and improves readability. Some examples: ---- * Before: `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}` * After: `{{Eval $glyph.Row "*" 12 "+" 12}}` ---- * Before: `{{if lt (Add $i 1) (len $.Topics)}}` * After: `{{if Eval $i "+" 1 "<" (len $.Topics)}}` ## FAQ ### Why not use an existing expression package? We need a highly customized expression engine: * do the calculation on the fly, without pre-compiling * deal with int/int64/float64 types, to make the result could be used in Golang template. * make the syntax could be used in the Golang template directly * do not introduce too much complex or strange syntax, we just need a simple calculator. * it needs to strictly follow Golang template's behavior, for example, Golang template treats all non-zero values as truth, but many 3rd packages don't do so. ### What's the benefit? * Developers don't need to add more `Add`/`Mul`/`Sub`-like functions, they were getting more and more. Now, only one `Eval` is enough for all cases. * The new code reads better than old `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}`, the old one isn't familiar to most procedural programming developers (eg, the Golang expression syntax). * The `Eval` is fully covered by tests, many old `Add`/`Mul`-like functions were never tested. ### The performance? It doesn't use `reflect`, it doesn't need to parse or compile when used in Golang template, the performance is as fast as native Go template. ### Is it too complex? Could it be unstable? The expression calculator program is a common homework for computer science students, and it's widely used as a teaching and practicing purpose for developers. The algorithm is pretty well-known. The behavior can be clearly defined, it is stable.
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case float32:
value = int64(v)
case float64:
value = int64(v)
case string:
var err error
if value, err = strconv.ParseInt(v, 10, 64); err != nil {
Use a general Eval function for expressions in templates. (#23927) One of the proposals in #23328 This PR introduces a simple expression calculator (templates/eval/eval.go), it can do basic expression calculations. Many untested template helper functions like `Mul` `Add` can be replaced by this new approach. Then these `Add` / `Mul` / `percentage` / `Subtract` / `DiffStatsWidth` could all use this `Eval`. And it provides enhancements for Golang templates, and improves readability. Some examples: ---- * Before: `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}` * After: `{{Eval $glyph.Row "*" 12 "+" 12}}` ---- * Before: `{{if lt (Add $i 1) (len $.Topics)}}` * After: `{{if Eval $i "+" 1 "<" (len $.Topics)}}` ## FAQ ### Why not use an existing expression package? We need a highly customized expression engine: * do the calculation on the fly, without pre-compiling * deal with int/int64/float64 types, to make the result could be used in Golang template. * make the syntax could be used in the Golang template directly * do not introduce too much complex or strange syntax, we just need a simple calculator. * it needs to strictly follow Golang template's behavior, for example, Golang template treats all non-zero values as truth, but many 3rd packages don't do so. ### What's the benefit? * Developers don't need to add more `Add`/`Mul`/`Sub`-like functions, they were getting more and more. Now, only one `Eval` is enough for all cases. * The new code reads better than old `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}`, the old one isn't familiar to most procedural programming developers (eg, the Golang expression syntax). * The `Eval` is fully covered by tests, many old `Add`/`Mul`-like functions were never tested. ### The performance? It doesn't use `reflect`, it doesn't need to parse or compile when used in Golang template, the performance is as fast as native Go template. ### Is it too complex? Could it be unstable? The expression calculator program is a common homework for computer science students, and it's widely used as a teaching and practicing purpose for developers. The algorithm is pretty well-known. The behavior can be clearly defined, it is stable.
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return 0, err
}
default:
return 0, fmt.Errorf("unable to convert %v to int64", number)
}
return value, nil
}
// ToFloat64 transform a given int into float64.
func ToFloat64(number any) (float64, error) {
Use a general Eval function for expressions in templates. (#23927) One of the proposals in #23328 This PR introduces a simple expression calculator (templates/eval/eval.go), it can do basic expression calculations. Many untested template helper functions like `Mul` `Add` can be replaced by this new approach. Then these `Add` / `Mul` / `percentage` / `Subtract` / `DiffStatsWidth` could all use this `Eval`. And it provides enhancements for Golang templates, and improves readability. Some examples: ---- * Before: `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}` * After: `{{Eval $glyph.Row "*" 12 "+" 12}}` ---- * Before: `{{if lt (Add $i 1) (len $.Topics)}}` * After: `{{if Eval $i "+" 1 "<" (len $.Topics)}}` ## FAQ ### Why not use an existing expression package? We need a highly customized expression engine: * do the calculation on the fly, without pre-compiling * deal with int/int64/float64 types, to make the result could be used in Golang template. * make the syntax could be used in the Golang template directly * do not introduce too much complex or strange syntax, we just need a simple calculator. * it needs to strictly follow Golang template's behavior, for example, Golang template treats all non-zero values as truth, but many 3rd packages don't do so. ### What's the benefit? * Developers don't need to add more `Add`/`Mul`/`Sub`-like functions, they were getting more and more. Now, only one `Eval` is enough for all cases. * The new code reads better than old `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}`, the old one isn't familiar to most procedural programming developers (eg, the Golang expression syntax). * The `Eval` is fully covered by tests, many old `Add`/`Mul`-like functions were never tested. ### The performance? It doesn't use `reflect`, it doesn't need to parse or compile when used in Golang template, the performance is as fast as native Go template. ### Is it too complex? Could it be unstable? The expression calculator program is a common homework for computer science students, and it's widely used as a teaching and practicing purpose for developers. The algorithm is pretty well-known. The behavior can be clearly defined, it is stable.
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var value float64
switch v := number.(type) {
case int:
value = float64(v)
case int8:
value = float64(v)
case int16:
value = float64(v)
case int32:
value = float64(v)
case int64:
value = float64(v)
case uint:
value = float64(v)
case uint8:
value = float64(v)
case uint16:
value = float64(v)
case uint32:
value = float64(v)
case uint64:
value = float64(v)
case float32:
value = float64(v)
case float64:
value = v
case string:
var err error
if value, err = strconv.ParseFloat(v, 64); err != nil {
return 0, err
}
default:
Use a general Eval function for expressions in templates. (#23927) One of the proposals in #23328 This PR introduces a simple expression calculator (templates/eval/eval.go), it can do basic expression calculations. Many untested template helper functions like `Mul` `Add` can be replaced by this new approach. Then these `Add` / `Mul` / `percentage` / `Subtract` / `DiffStatsWidth` could all use this `Eval`. And it provides enhancements for Golang templates, and improves readability. Some examples: ---- * Before: `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}` * After: `{{Eval $glyph.Row "*" 12 "+" 12}}` ---- * Before: `{{if lt (Add $i 1) (len $.Topics)}}` * After: `{{if Eval $i "+" 1 "<" (len $.Topics)}}` ## FAQ ### Why not use an existing expression package? We need a highly customized expression engine: * do the calculation on the fly, without pre-compiling * deal with int/int64/float64 types, to make the result could be used in Golang template. * make the syntax could be used in the Golang template directly * do not introduce too much complex or strange syntax, we just need a simple calculator. * it needs to strictly follow Golang template's behavior, for example, Golang template treats all non-zero values as truth, but many 3rd packages don't do so. ### What's the benefit? * Developers don't need to add more `Add`/`Mul`/`Sub`-like functions, they were getting more and more. Now, only one `Eval` is enough for all cases. * The new code reads better than old `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}`, the old one isn't familiar to most procedural programming developers (eg, the Golang expression syntax). * The `Eval` is fully covered by tests, many old `Add`/`Mul`-like functions were never tested. ### The performance? It doesn't use `reflect`, it doesn't need to parse or compile when used in Golang template, the performance is as fast as native Go template. ### Is it too complex? Could it be unstable? The expression calculator program is a common homework for computer science students, and it's widely used as a teaching and practicing purpose for developers. The algorithm is pretty well-known. The behavior can be clearly defined, it is stable.
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return 0, fmt.Errorf("unable to convert %v to float64", number)
}
Use a general Eval function for expressions in templates. (#23927) One of the proposals in #23328 This PR introduces a simple expression calculator (templates/eval/eval.go), it can do basic expression calculations. Many untested template helper functions like `Mul` `Add` can be replaced by this new approach. Then these `Add` / `Mul` / `percentage` / `Subtract` / `DiffStatsWidth` could all use this `Eval`. And it provides enhancements for Golang templates, and improves readability. Some examples: ---- * Before: `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}` * After: `{{Eval $glyph.Row "*" 12 "+" 12}}` ---- * Before: `{{if lt (Add $i 1) (len $.Topics)}}` * After: `{{if Eval $i "+" 1 "<" (len $.Topics)}}` ## FAQ ### Why not use an existing expression package? We need a highly customized expression engine: * do the calculation on the fly, without pre-compiling * deal with int/int64/float64 types, to make the result could be used in Golang template. * make the syntax could be used in the Golang template directly * do not introduce too much complex or strange syntax, we just need a simple calculator. * it needs to strictly follow Golang template's behavior, for example, Golang template treats all non-zero values as truth, but many 3rd packages don't do so. ### What's the benefit? * Developers don't need to add more `Add`/`Mul`/`Sub`-like functions, they were getting more and more. Now, only one `Eval` is enough for all cases. * The new code reads better than old `{{Add (Mul $glyph.Row 12) 12}}`, the old one isn't familiar to most procedural programming developers (eg, the Golang expression syntax). * The `Eval` is fully covered by tests, many old `Add`/`Mul`-like functions were never tested. ### The performance? It doesn't use `reflect`, it doesn't need to parse or compile when used in Golang template, the performance is as fast as native Go template. ### Is it too complex? Could it be unstable? The expression calculator program is a common homework for computer science students, and it's widely used as a teaching and practicing purpose for developers. The algorithm is pretty well-known. The behavior can be clearly defined, it is stable.
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return value, nil
}
// ToPointer returns the pointer of a copy of any given value
func ToPointer[T any](val T) *T {
return &val
}