From 921818bca208f0c70e85ec670074cb3905cbbc82 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Niall Sheridan Date: Sat, 27 Aug 2016 01:32:30 +0100 Subject: Update dependencies --- vendor/github.com/pelletier/go-toml/doc.go | 250 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 250 insertions(+) create mode 100644 vendor/github.com/pelletier/go-toml/doc.go (limited to 'vendor/github.com/pelletier/go-toml/doc.go') diff --git a/vendor/github.com/pelletier/go-toml/doc.go b/vendor/github.com/pelletier/go-toml/doc.go new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c8c9add --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/pelletier/go-toml/doc.go @@ -0,0 +1,250 @@ +// Package toml is a TOML markup language parser. +// +// This version supports the specification as described in +// https://github.com/toml-lang/toml/blob/master/versions/en/toml-v0.4.0.md +// +// TOML Parsing +// +// TOML data may be parsed in two ways: by file, or by string. +// +// // load TOML data by filename +// tree, err := toml.LoadFile("filename.toml") +// +// // load TOML data stored in a string +// tree, err := toml.Load(stringContainingTomlData) +// +// Either way, the result is a TomlTree object that can be used to navigate the +// structure and data within the original document. +// +// +// Getting data from the TomlTree +// +// After parsing TOML data with Load() or LoadFile(), use the Has() and Get() +// methods on the returned TomlTree, to find your way through the document data. +// +// if tree.Has('foo') { +// fmt.Prinln("foo is: %v", tree.Get('foo')) +// } +// +// Working with Paths +// +// Go-toml has support for basic dot-separated key paths on the Has(), Get(), Set() +// and GetDefault() methods. These are the same kind of key paths used within the +// TOML specification for struct tames. +// +// // looks for a key named 'baz', within struct 'bar', within struct 'foo' +// tree.Has("foo.bar.baz") +// +// // returns the key at this path, if it is there +// tree.Get("foo.bar.baz") +// +// TOML allows keys to contain '.', which can cause this syntax to be problematic +// for some documents. In such cases, use the GetPath(), HasPath(), and SetPath(), +// methods to explicitly define the path. This form is also faster, since +// it avoids having to parse the passed key for '.' delimiters. +// +// // looks for a key named 'baz', within struct 'bar', within struct 'foo' +// tree.HasPath(string{}{"foo","bar","baz"}) +// +// // returns the key at this path, if it is there +// tree.GetPath(string{}{"foo","bar","baz"}) +// +// Note that this is distinct from the heavyweight query syntax supported by +// TomlTree.Query() and the Query() struct (see below). +// +// Position Support +// +// Each element within the TomlTree is stored with position metadata, which is +// invaluable for providing semantic feedback to a user. This helps in +// situations where the TOML file parses correctly, but contains data that is +// not correct for the application. In such cases, an error message can be +// generated that indicates the problem line and column number in the source +// TOML document. +// +// // load TOML data +// tree, _ := toml.Load("filename.toml") +// +// // get an entry and report an error if it's the wrong type +// element := tree.Get("foo") +// if value, ok := element.(int64); !ok { +// return fmt.Errorf("%v: Element 'foo' must be an integer", tree.GetPosition("foo")) +// } +// +// // report an error if an expected element is missing +// if !tree.Has("bar") { +// return fmt.Errorf("%v: Expected 'bar' element", tree.GetPosition("")) +// } +// +// Query Support +// +// The TOML query path implementation is based loosely on the JSONPath specification: +// http://goessner.net/articles/JsonPath/ +// +// The idea behind a query path is to allow quick access to any element, or set +// of elements within TOML document, with a single expression. +// +// result, err := tree.Query("$.foo.bar.baz") +// +// This is roughly equivalent to: +// +// next := tree.Get("foo") +// if next != nil { +// next = next.Get("bar") +// if next != nil { +// next = next.Get("baz") +// } +// } +// result := next +// +// err is nil if any parsing exception occurs. +// +// If no node in the tree matches the query, result will simply contain an empty list of +// items. +// +// As illustrated above, the query path is much more efficient, especially since +// the structure of the TOML file can vary. Rather than making assumptions about +// a document's structure, a query allows the programmer to make structured +// requests into the document, and get zero or more values as a result. +// +// The syntax of a query begins with a root token, followed by any number +// sub-expressions: +// +// $ +// Root of the TOML tree. This must always come first. +// .name +// Selects child of this node, where 'name' is a TOML key +// name. +// ['name'] +// Selects child of this node, where 'name' is a string +// containing a TOML key name. +// [index] +// Selcts child array element at 'index'. +// ..expr +// Recursively selects all children, filtered by an a union, +// index, or slice expression. +// ..* +// Recursive selection of all nodes at this point in the +// tree. +// .* +// Selects all children of the current node. +// [expr,expr] +// Union operator - a logical 'or' grouping of two or more +// sub-expressions: index, key name, or filter. +// [start:end:step] +// Slice operator - selects array elements from start to +// end-1, at the given step. All three arguments are +// optional. +// [?(filter)] +// Named filter expression - the function 'filter' is +// used to filter children at this node. +// +// Query Indexes And Slices +// +// Index expressions perform no bounds checking, and will contribute no +// values to the result set if the provided index or index range is invalid. +// Negative indexes represent values from the end of the array, counting backwards. +// +// // select the last index of the array named 'foo' +// tree.Query("$.foo[-1]") +// +// Slice expressions are supported, by using ':' to separate a start/end index pair. +// +// // select up to the first five elements in the array +// tree.Query("$.foo[0:5]") +// +// Slice expressions also allow negative indexes for the start and stop +// arguments. +// +// // select all array elements. +// tree.Query("$.foo[0:-1]") +// +// Slice expressions may have an optional stride/step parameter: +// +// // select every other element +// tree.Query("$.foo[0:-1:2]") +// +// Slice start and end parameters are also optional: +// +// // these are all equivalent and select all the values in the array +// tree.Query("$.foo[:]") +// tree.Query("$.foo[0:]") +// tree.Query("$.foo[:-1]") +// tree.Query("$.foo[0:-1:]") +// tree.Query("$.foo[::1]") +// tree.Query("$.foo[0::1]") +// tree.Query("$.foo[:-1:1]") +// tree.Query("$.foo[0:-1:1]") +// +// Query Filters +// +// Query filters are used within a Union [,] or single Filter [] expression. +// A filter only allows nodes that qualify through to the next expression, +// and/or into the result set. +// +// // returns children of foo that are permitted by the 'bar' filter. +// tree.Query("$.foo[?(bar)]") +// +// There are several filters provided with the library: +// +// tree +// Allows nodes of type TomlTree. +// int +// Allows nodes of type int64. +// float +// Allows nodes of type float64. +// string +// Allows nodes of type string. +// time +// Allows nodes of type time.Time. +// bool +// Allows nodes of type bool. +// +// Query Results +// +// An executed query returns a QueryResult object. This contains the nodes +// in the TOML tree that qualify the query expression. Position information +// is also available for each value in the set. +// +// // display the results of a query +// results := tree.Query("$.foo.bar.baz") +// for idx, value := results.Values() { +// fmt.Println("%v: %v", results.Positions()[idx], value) +// } +// +// Compiled Queries +// +// Queries may be executed directly on a TomlTree object, or compiled ahead +// of time and executed discretely. The former is more convienent, but has the +// penalty of having to recompile the query expression each time. +// +// // basic query +// results := tree.Query("$.foo.bar.baz") +// +// // compiled query +// query := toml.CompileQuery("$.foo.bar.baz") +// results := query.Execute(tree) +// +// // run the compiled query again on a different tree +// moreResults := query.Execute(anotherTree) +// +// User Defined Query Filters +// +// Filter expressions may also be user defined by using the SetFilter() +// function on the Query object. The function must return true/false, which +// signifies if the passed node is kept or discarded, respectively. +// +// // create a query that references a user-defined filter +// query, _ := CompileQuery("$[?(bazOnly)]") +// +// // define the filter, and assign it to the query +// query.SetFilter("bazOnly", func(node interface{}) bool{ +// if tree, ok := node.(*TomlTree); ok { +// return tree.Has("baz") +// } +// return false // reject all other node types +// }) +// +// // run the query +// query.Execute(tree) +// +package toml -- cgit v1.2.3