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/gopkg.in/mgo.v2/internal/json/encode.go | 1256 ++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 1256 insertions(+) create mode 100644 vendor/gopkg.in/mgo.v2/internal/json/encode.go (limited to 'vendor/gopkg.in/mgo.v2/internal/json/encode.go') diff --git a/vendor/gopkg.in/mgo.v2/internal/json/encode.go b/vendor/gopkg.in/mgo.v2/internal/json/encode.go new file mode 100644 index 0000000..67a0f00 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/gopkg.in/mgo.v2/internal/json/encode.go @@ -0,0 +1,1256 @@ +// Copyright 2010 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. +// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style +// license that can be found in the LICENSE file. + +// Package json implements encoding and decoding of JSON as defined in +// RFC 4627. The mapping between JSON and Go values is described +// in the documentation for the Marshal and Unmarshal functions. +// +// See "JSON and Go" for an introduction to this package: +// https://golang.org/doc/articles/json_and_go.html +package json + +import ( + "bytes" + "encoding" + "encoding/base64" + "fmt" + "math" + "reflect" + "runtime" + "sort" + "strconv" + "strings" + "sync" + "unicode" + "unicode/utf8" +) + +// Marshal returns the JSON encoding of v. +// +// Marshal traverses the value v recursively. +// If an encountered value implements the Marshaler interface +// and is not a nil pointer, Marshal calls its MarshalJSON method +// to produce JSON. If no MarshalJSON method is present but the +// value implements encoding.TextMarshaler instead, Marshal calls +// its MarshalText method. +// The nil pointer exception is not strictly necessary +// but mimics a similar, necessary exception in the behavior of +// UnmarshalJSON. +// +// Otherwise, Marshal uses the following type-dependent default encodings: +// +// Boolean values encode as JSON booleans. +// +// Floating point, integer, and Number values encode as JSON numbers. +// +// String values encode as JSON strings coerced to valid UTF-8, +// replacing invalid bytes with the Unicode replacement rune. +// The angle brackets "<" and ">" are escaped to "\u003c" and "\u003e" +// to keep some browsers from misinterpreting JSON output as HTML. +// Ampersand "&" is also escaped to "\u0026" for the same reason. +// This escaping can be disabled using an Encoder with DisableHTMLEscaping. +// +// Array and slice values encode as JSON arrays, except that +// []byte encodes as a base64-encoded string, and a nil slice +// encodes as the null JSON value. +// +// Struct values encode as JSON objects. Each exported struct field +// becomes a member of the object unless +// - the field's tag is "-", or +// - the field is empty and its tag specifies the "omitempty" option. +// The empty values are false, 0, any +// nil pointer or interface value, and any array, slice, map, or string of +// length zero. The object's default key string is the struct field name +// but can be specified in the struct field's tag value. The "json" key in +// the struct field's tag value is the key name, followed by an optional comma +// and options. Examples: +// +// // Field is ignored by this package. +// Field int `json:"-"` +// +// // Field appears in JSON as key "myName". +// Field int `json:"myName"` +// +// // Field appears in JSON as key "myName" and +// // the field is omitted from the object if its value is empty, +// // as defined above. +// Field int `json:"myName,omitempty"` +// +// // Field appears in JSON as key "Field" (the default), but +// // the field is skipped if empty. +// // Note the leading comma. +// Field int `json:",omitempty"` +// +// The "string" option signals that a field is stored as JSON inside a +// JSON-encoded string. It applies only to fields of string, floating point, +// integer, or boolean types. This extra level of encoding is sometimes used +// when communicating with JavaScript programs: +// +// Int64String int64 `json:",string"` +// +// The key name will be used if it's a non-empty string consisting of +// only Unicode letters, digits, dollar signs, percent signs, hyphens, +// underscores and slashes. +// +// Anonymous struct fields are usually marshaled as if their inner exported fields +// were fields in the outer struct, subject to the usual Go visibility rules amended +// as described in the next paragraph. +// An anonymous struct field with a name given in its JSON tag is treated as +// having that name, rather than being anonymous. +// An anonymous struct field of interface type is treated the same as having +// that type as its name, rather than being anonymous. +// +// The Go visibility rules for struct fields are amended for JSON when +// deciding which field to marshal or unmarshal. If there are +// multiple fields at the same level, and that level is the least +// nested (and would therefore be the nesting level selected by the +// usual Go rules), the following extra rules apply: +// +// 1) Of those fields, if any are JSON-tagged, only tagged fields are considered, +// even if there are multiple untagged fields that would otherwise conflict. +// 2) If there is exactly one field (tagged or not according to the first rule), that is selected. +// 3) Otherwise there are multiple fields, and all are ignored; no error occurs. +// +// Handling of anonymous struct fields is new in Go 1.1. +// Prior to Go 1.1, anonymous struct fields were ignored. To force ignoring of +// an anonymous struct field in both current and earlier versions, give the field +// a JSON tag of "-". +// +// Map values encode as JSON objects. The map's key type must either be a string +// or implement encoding.TextMarshaler. The map keys are used as JSON object +// keys, subject to the UTF-8 coercion described for string values above. +// +// Pointer values encode as the value pointed to. +// A nil pointer encodes as the null JSON value. +// +// Interface values encode as the value contained in the interface. +// A nil interface value encodes as the null JSON value. +// +// Channel, complex, and function values cannot be encoded in JSON. +// Attempting to encode such a value causes Marshal to return +// an UnsupportedTypeError. +// +// JSON cannot represent cyclic data structures and Marshal does not +// handle them. Passing cyclic structures to Marshal will result in +// an infinite recursion. +// +func Marshal(v interface{}) ([]byte, error) { + e := &encodeState{} + err := e.marshal(v, encOpts{escapeHTML: true}) + if err != nil { + return nil, err + } + return e.Bytes(), nil +} + +// MarshalIndent is like Marshal but applies Indent to format the output. +func MarshalIndent(v interface{}, prefix, indent string) ([]byte, error) { + b, err := Marshal(v) + if err != nil { + return nil, err + } + var buf bytes.Buffer + err = Indent(&buf, b, prefix, indent) + if err != nil { + return nil, err + } + return buf.Bytes(), nil +} + +// HTMLEscape appends to dst the JSON-encoded src with <, >, &, U+2028 and U+2029 +// characters inside string literals changed to \u003c, \u003e, \u0026, \u2028, \u2029 +// so that the JSON will be safe to embed inside HTML