From a031b83a09a8628435317a03f199cdc18b78262f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Matthew Heon Date: Wed, 1 Nov 2017 11:24:59 -0400 Subject: Initial checkin from CRI-O repo Signed-off-by: Matthew Heon --- vendor/github.com/hashicorp/errwrap/errwrap.go | 169 +++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 169 insertions(+) create mode 100644 vendor/github.com/hashicorp/errwrap/errwrap.go (limited to 'vendor/github.com/hashicorp/errwrap/errwrap.go') diff --git a/vendor/github.com/hashicorp/errwrap/errwrap.go b/vendor/github.com/hashicorp/errwrap/errwrap.go new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a733bef18 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/hashicorp/errwrap/errwrap.go @@ -0,0 +1,169 @@ +// Package errwrap implements methods to formalize error wrapping in Go. +// +// All of the top-level functions that take an `error` are built to be able +// to take any error, not just wrapped errors. This allows you to use errwrap +// without having to type-check and type-cast everywhere. +package errwrap + +import ( + "errors" + "reflect" + "strings" +) + +// WalkFunc is the callback called for Walk. +type WalkFunc func(error) + +// Wrapper is an interface that can be implemented by custom types to +// have all the Contains, Get, etc. functions in errwrap work. +// +// When Walk reaches a Wrapper, it will call the callback for every +// wrapped error in addition to the wrapper itself. Since all the top-level +// functions in errwrap use Walk, this means that all those functions work +// with your custom type. +type Wrapper interface { + WrappedErrors() []error +} + +// Wrap defines that outer wraps inner, returning an error type that +// can be cleanly used with the other methods in this package, such as +// Contains, GetAll, etc. +// +// This function won't modify the error message at all (the outer message +// will be used). +func Wrap(outer, inner error) error { + return &wrappedError{ + Outer: outer, + Inner: inner, + } +} + +// Wrapf wraps an error with a formatting message. This is similar to using +// `fmt.Errorf` to wrap an error. If you're using `fmt.Errorf` to wrap +// errors, you should replace it with this. +// +// format is the format of the error message. The string '{{err}}' will +// be replaced with the original error message. +func Wrapf(format string, err error) error { + outerMsg := "" + if err != nil { + outerMsg = err.Error() + } + + outer := errors.New(strings.Replace( + format, "{{err}}", outerMsg, -1)) + + return Wrap(outer, err) +} + +// Contains checks if the given error contains an error with the +// message msg. If err is not a wrapped error, this will always return +// false unless the error itself happens to match this msg. +func Contains(err error, msg string) bool { + return len(GetAll(err, msg)) > 0 +} + +// ContainsType checks if the given error contains an error with +// the same concrete type as v. If err is not a wrapped error, this will +// check the err itself. +func ContainsType(err error, v interface{}) bool { + return len(GetAllType(err, v)) > 0 +} + +// Get is the same as GetAll but returns the deepest matching error. +func Get(err error, msg string) error { + es := GetAll(err, msg) + if len(es) > 0 { + return es[len(es)-1] + } + + return nil +} + +// GetType is the same as GetAllType but returns the deepest matching error. +func GetType(err error, v interface{}) error { + es := GetAllType(err, v) + if len(es) > 0 { + return es[len(es)-1] + } + + return nil +} + +// GetAll gets all the errors that might be wrapped in err with the +// given message. The order of the errors is such that the outermost +// matching error (the most recent wrap) is index zero, and so on. +func GetAll(err error, msg string) []error { + var result []error + + Walk(err, func(err error) { + if err.Error() == msg { + result = append(result, err) + } + }) + + return result +} + +// GetAllType gets all the errors that are the same type as v. +// +// The order of the return value is the same as described in GetAll. +func GetAllType(err error, v interface{}) []error { + var result []error + + var search string + if v != nil { + search = reflect.TypeOf(v).String() + } + Walk(err, func(err error) { + var needle string + if err != nil { + needle = reflect.TypeOf(err).String() + } + + if needle == search { + result = append(result, err) + } + }) + + return result +} + +// Walk walks all the wrapped errors in err and calls the callback. If +// err isn't a wrapped error, this will be called once for err. If err +// is a wrapped error, the callback will be called for both the wrapper +// that implements error as well as the wrapped error itself. +func Walk(err error, cb WalkFunc) { + if err == nil { + return + } + + switch e := err.(type) { + case *wrappedError: + cb(e.Outer) + Walk(e.Inner, cb) + case Wrapper: + cb(err) + + for _, err := range e.WrappedErrors() { + Walk(err, cb) + } + default: + cb(err) + } +} + +// wrappedError is an implementation of error that has both the +// outer and inner errors. +type wrappedError struct { + Outer error + Inner error +} + +func (w *wrappedError) Error() string { + return w.Outer.Error() +} + +func (w *wrappedError) WrappedErrors() []error { + return []error{w.Outer, w.Inner} +} -- cgit v1.2.3-54-g00ecf