Files
mgmt/lang/lexparse.go
James Shubin 07f542b4d7 legal: Happy 2019 everyone...
Done with:

ack '2018+' -l | xargs sed -i -e 's/2018+/2019+/g'

Checked manually with:

git add -p

Hello to future James from 2020, and Happy Hacking!
2019-03-24 15:08:50 -04:00

379 lines
13 KiB
Go

// Mgmt
// Copyright (C) 2013-2019+ James Shubin and the project contributors
// Written by James Shubin <james@shubin.ca> and the project contributors
//
// This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
// it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
// the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
// (at your option) any later version.
//
// This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
// but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
// MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
// GNU General Public License for more details.
//
// You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
// along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
package lang // TODO: move this into a sub package of lang/$name?
import (
"bufio"
"fmt"
"io"
"net/url"
"path"
"sort"
"strings"
"github.com/purpleidea/mgmt/engine"
"github.com/purpleidea/mgmt/lang/interfaces"
"github.com/purpleidea/mgmt/util"
"github.com/purpleidea/mgmt/util/errwrap"
)
const (
// ModuleMagicPrefix is the prefix which, if found as a prefix to the
// last token in an import path, will be removed silently if there are
// remaining characters following the name. If this is the empty string
// then it will be ignored.
ModuleMagicPrefix = "mgmt-"
// CoreDir is the directory prefix where core bindata mcl code is added.
CoreDir = "core/"
)
// These constants represent the different possible lexer/parser errors.
const (
ErrLexerUnrecognized = interfaces.Error("unrecognized")
ErrLexerStringBadEscaping = interfaces.Error("string: bad escaping")
ErrLexerIntegerOverflow = interfaces.Error("integer: overflow")
ErrLexerFloatOverflow = interfaces.Error("float: overflow")
ErrParseError = interfaces.Error("parser")
ErrParseSetType = interfaces.Error("can't set return type in parser")
ErrParseResFieldInvalid = interfaces.Error("can't use unknown resource field")
ErrParseAdditionalEquals = interfaces.Error(errstrParseAdditionalEquals)
ErrParseExpectingComma = interfaces.Error(errstrParseExpectingComma)
)
// LexParseErr is a permanent failure error to notify about borkage.
type LexParseErr struct {
Err interfaces.Error
Str string
Row int // this is zero-indexed (the first line is 0)
Col int // this is zero-indexed (the first char is 0)
// Filename is the file that this error occurred in. If this is unknown,
// then it will be empty. This is not set when run by the basic LexParse
// function.
Filename string
}
// Error displays this error with all the relevant state information.
func (e *LexParseErr) Error() string {
return fmt.Sprintf("%s: `%s` @%d:%d", e.Err, e.Str, e.Row+1, e.Col+1)
}
// lexParseAST is a struct which we pass into the lexer/parser so that we have a
// location to store the AST to avoid having to use a global variable.
type lexParseAST struct {
ast interfaces.Stmt
row int
col int
lexerErr error // from lexer
parseErr error // from Error(e string)
}
// LexParse runs the lexer/parser machinery and returns the AST.
func LexParse(input io.Reader) (interfaces.Stmt, error) {
lp := &lexParseAST{}
// parseResult is a seemingly unused field in the Lexer struct for us...
lexer := NewLexerWithInit(input, func(y *Lexer) { y.parseResult = lp })
yyParse(lexer) // writes the result to lp.ast
var err error
if e := lp.parseErr; e != nil {
err = e
}
if e := lp.lexerErr; e != nil {
err = e
}
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return lp.ast, nil
}
// LexParseWithOffsets takes an io.Reader input and a list of corresponding
// offsets and runs LexParse on them. The input to this function is most
// commonly the output from DirectoryReader which returns a single io.Reader and
// the offsets map. It usually produces the combined io.Reader from an
// io.MultiReader grouper. If the offsets map is nil or empty, then it simply
// redirects directly to LexParse. This differs because when it errors it will
// also report the corresponding file the error occurred in based on some offset
// math. The offsets are in units of file size (bytes) and not length (lines).
// TODO: Due to an implementation difficulty, offsets are currently in length!
// NOTE: This was used for an older deprecated form of lex/parse file combining.
func LexParseWithOffsets(input io.Reader, offsets map[uint64]string) (interfaces.Stmt, error) {
if offsets == nil || len(offsets) == 0 {
return LexParse(input) // special case, no named offsets...
}
stmt, err := LexParse(input)
if err == nil { // handle the success case first because it ends faster
return stmt, nil
}
e, ok := err.(*LexParseErr)
if !ok {
return nil, err // unexpected error format
}
// rebuild the error so it contains the right filename index, etc...
uints := []uint64{}
for i := range offsets {
uints = append(uints, i)
}
sort.Sort(util.UInt64Slice(uints))
if i := uints[0]; i != 0 { // first offset is supposed to be zero
return nil, fmt.Errorf("unexpected first offset of %d", i)
}
// TODO: switch this to an offset in bytes instead of lines
// TODO: we'll also need a way to convert that into the new row number!
row := uint64(e.Row)
var i uint64 // initial condition
filename := offsets[0] // (assumption)
for _, i = range uints {
if row <= i {
break
}
// if we fall off the end of the loop, the last file is correct
filename = offsets[i]
}
return nil, &LexParseErr{
Err: e.Err, // same
Str: e.Str, // same
Row: int(i - row), // computed offset
Col: e.Col, // same
Filename: filename, // actual filename
}
}
// DirectoryReader takes a filesystem and an absolute directory path, and it
// returns a combined reader into that directory, and an offset map of the file
// contents. This is used to build a reader from a directory containing language
// source files, and as a result, this will skip over files that don't have the
// correct extension. The offsets are in units of file size (bytes) and not
// length (lines).
// TODO: Due to an implementation difficulty, offsets are currently in length!
// NOTE: This was used for an older deprecated form of lex/parse file combining.
func DirectoryReader(fs engine.Fs, dir string) (io.Reader, map[uint64]string, error) {
fis, err := fs.ReadDir(dir) // ([]os.FileInfo, error)
if err != nil {
return nil, nil, errwrap.Wrapf(err, "can't stat directory contents `%s`", dir)
}
var offset uint64
offsets := make(map[uint64]string) // cumulative offset to abs. filename
readers := []io.Reader{}
for _, fi := range fis {
if fi.IsDir() {
continue // skip directories
}
name := path.Join(dir, fi.Name()) // relative path made absolute
if !strings.HasSuffix(name, interfaces.DotFileNameExtension) {
continue
}
f, err := fs.Open(name) // opens read-only
if err != nil {
return nil, nil, errwrap.Wrapf(err, "can't open file `%s`", name)
}
defer f.Close()
//stat, err := f.Stat() // (os.FileInfo, error)
//if err != nil {
// return nil, nil, errwrap.Wrapf(err, "can't stat file `%s`", name)
//}
offsets[offset] = name // save cumulative offset (starts at 0)
//offset += uint64(stat.Size()) // the earlier stat causes file download
// TODO: store the offset in size instead of length! we're using
// length at the moment since it is not clear how easy it is for
// the lexer/parser to return the byte offset as well as line no
// NOTE: in addition, this scanning is not the fastest for perf!
scanner := bufio.NewScanner(f)
lines := 0
for scanner.Scan() { // each line
lines++
}
if err := scanner.Err(); err != nil {
return nil, nil, errwrap.Wrapf(err, "can't scan file `%s`", name)
}
offset += uint64(lines)
if start, err := f.Seek(0, io.SeekStart); err != nil { // reset
return nil, nil, errwrap.Wrapf(err, "can't reset file `%s`", name)
} else if start != 0 { // we should be at the start (0)
return nil, nil, fmt.Errorf("reset of file `%s` was %d", name, start)
}
readers = append(readers, f)
}
if len(offsets) == 0 {
// TODO: this condition should be validated during the deploy...
return nil, nil, fmt.Errorf("no files in main directory")
}
if len(offsets) == 1 { // no need for a multi reader
return readers[0], offsets, nil
}
return io.MultiReader(readers...), offsets, nil
}
// ParseImportName parses an import name and returns the default namespace name
// that should be used with it. For example, if the import name was:
// "git://example.com/purpleidea/Module-Name", this might return an alias of
// "module_name". It also returns a bunch of other data about the parsed import.
// TODO: check for invalid or unwanted special characters
func ParseImportName(name string) (*interfaces.ImportData, error) {
magicPrefix := ModuleMagicPrefix
if name == "" {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("empty name")
}
if strings.HasPrefix(name, "/") {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("absolute paths are not allowed")
}
u, err := url.Parse(name)
if err != nil {
return nil, errwrap.Wrapf(err, "name is not a valid url")
}
if u.Path == "" {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("empty path")
}
p := u.Path
// catch bad paths like: git:////home/james/ (note the quad slash!)
// don't penalize if we have a dir with a trailing slash at the end
if s := path.Clean(u.Path); u.Path != s && u.Path != s+"/" {
// TODO: are there any cases where this is not what we want?
return nil, fmt.Errorf("dirty path, cleaned it's: `%s`", s)
}
for strings.HasSuffix(p, "/") { // remove trailing slashes
p = p[:len(p)-len("/")]
}
split := strings.Split(p, "/") // take last chunk if slash separated
s := split[0]
if len(split) > 1 {
s = split[len(split)-1] // pick last chunk
}
// TODO: should we treat a special name: "purpleidea/mgmt-foo" as "foo"?
if magicPrefix != "" && strings.HasPrefix(s, magicPrefix) && len(s) > len(magicPrefix) {
s = s[len(magicPrefix):]
}
s = strings.Replace(s, "-", "_", -1) // XXX: allow underscores in IDENTIFIER
if strings.HasPrefix(s, "_") || strings.HasSuffix(s, "_") {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("name can't begin or end with dash or underscore")
}
alias := strings.ToLower(s)
// if this is a local import, it's a straight directory path
// if it's an fqdn import, it should contain a metadata file
// if there's no protocol prefix, then this must be a local path
isLocal := u.Scheme == ""
// if it has a trailing slash or .mcl extension it's not a system import
isSystem := isLocal && !strings.HasSuffix(u.Path, "/") && !strings.HasSuffix(u.Path, interfaces.DotFileNameExtension)
// is it a local file?
isFile := !isSystem && isLocal && strings.HasSuffix(u.Path, interfaces.DotFileNameExtension)
xpath := u.Path // magic path
if isSystem {
xpath = ""
}
if !isLocal {
host := u.Host // host or host:port
split := strings.Split(host, ":")
if l := len(split); l == 1 || l == 2 {
host = split[0]
} else {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("incorrect number of colons (%d) in hostname", l)
}
xpath = path.Join(host, xpath)
}
if !isLocal && !strings.HasSuffix(xpath, "/") {
xpath = xpath + "/"
}
// we're a git repo with a local path instead of an fqdn over http!
// this still counts as isLocal == false, since it's still a remote
if u.Host == "" && strings.HasPrefix(u.Path, "/") {
xpath = strings.TrimPrefix(xpath, "/") // make it a relative dir
}
if strings.HasPrefix(xpath, "/") { // safety check (programming error?)
return nil, fmt.Errorf("can't parse strange import")
}
// build a url to clone from if we're not local...
// TODO: consider adding some logic that is similar to the logic in:
// https://github.com/golang/go/blob/054640b54df68789d9df0e50575d21d9dbffe99f/src/cmd/go/internal/get/vcs.go#L972
// so that we can more correctly figure out the correct url to clone...
xurl := ""
if !isLocal {
u.Fragment = ""
// TODO: maybe look for ?sha1=... or ?tag=... to pick a real ref
u.RawQuery = ""
u.ForceQuery = false
xurl = u.String()
}
// if u.Path is local file like: foo/server.mcl alias should be "server"
// we should trim the alias to remove the .mcl (the dir is already gone)
if isFile && strings.HasSuffix(alias, interfaces.DotFileNameExtension) {
alias = strings.TrimSuffix(alias, interfaces.DotFileNameExtension)
}
return &interfaces.ImportData{
Name: name, // save the original value here
Alias: alias,
IsSystem: isSystem,
IsLocal: isLocal,
IsFile: isFile,
Path: xpath,
URL: xurl,
}, nil
}
// CollectFiles collects all the files used in the AST. You will see more files
// based on how many compiling steps have run. In general, this is useful for
// collecting all the files needed to store in our file system for a deploy.
func CollectFiles(ast interfaces.Stmt) ([]string, error) {
// collect the list of files
fileList := []string{}
fn := func(node interfaces.Node) error {
// redundant check for example purposes
stmt, ok := node.(interfaces.Stmt)
if !ok {
return nil
}
prog, ok := stmt.(*StmtProg)
if !ok {
return nil
}
// collect into global
fileList = append(fileList, prog.importFiles...)
return nil
}
if err := ast.Apply(fn); err != nil {
return nil, errwrap.Wrapf(err, "can't retrieve paths")
}
return fileList, nil
}