1
0
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Merge branch 'master' into 157_remove_bom

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remyabel 2018-08-19 23:29:47 -04:00 committed by GitHub
commit 5c65066cbb
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13 changed files with 3989 additions and 4 deletions

36
Gopkg.lock generated
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@ -170,6 +170,15 @@
version = "v1.2.0"
[[projects]]
digest = "1:0028cb19b2e4c3112225cd871870f2d9cf49b9b4276531f03438a88e94be86fe"
name = "github.com/pmezard/go-difflib"
packages = ["difflib"]
pruneopts = "NUT"
revision = "792786c7400a136282c1664665ae0a8db921c6c2"
version = "v1.0.0"
[[projects]]
digest = "1:d917313f309bda80d27274d53985bc65651f81a5b66b820749ac7f8ef061fd04"
name = "github.com/sergi/go-diff"
packages = ["diffmatchpatch"]
revision = "1744e2970ca51c86172c8190fadad617561ed6e7"
@ -231,6 +240,15 @@
version = "v1.3.0"
[[projects]]
digest = "1:bacb8b590716ab7c33f2277240972c9582d389593ee8d66fc10074e0508b8126"
name = "github.com/stretchr/testify"
packages = ["assert"]
pruneopts = "NUT"
revision = "f35b8ab0b5a2cef36673838d662e249dd9c94686"
version = "v1.2.2"
[[projects]]
digest = "1:cd5ffc5bda4e0296ab3e4de90dbb415259c78e45e7fab13694b14cde8ab74541"
name = "github.com/tcnksm/go-gitconfig"
packages = ["."]
revision = "d154598bacbf4501c095a309753c5d4af66caa81"
@ -369,6 +387,22 @@
[solve-meta]
analyzer-name = "dep"
analyzer-version = 1
inputs-digest = "5f2c359c480939c540907b265eb58d98dd1bb892e44b21e93cba861d79100203"
input-imports = [
"github.com/Sirupsen/logrus",
"github.com/cloudfoundry/jibber_jabber",
"github.com/davecgh/go-spew/spew",
"github.com/fatih/color",
"github.com/golang-collections/collections/stack",
"github.com/jesseduffield/gocui",
"github.com/mgutz/str",
"github.com/nicksnyder/go-i18n/v2/i18n",
"github.com/shibukawa/configdir",
"github.com/spf13/viper",
"github.com/stretchr/testify/assert",
"github.com/tcnksm/go-gitconfig",
"golang.org/x/text/language",
"gopkg.in/src-d/go-git.v4",
"gopkg.in/src-d/go-git.v4/plumbing",
]
solver-name = "gps-cdcl"
solver-version = 1

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@ -23,7 +23,10 @@ func NewLocalizer(log *logrus.Logger) (*Localizer, error) {
// detect the user's language
userLang, err := jibber_jabber.DetectLanguage()
if err != nil {
return nil, err
if err.Error() != "Could not detect Language" {
return nil, err
}
userLang = "C"
}
log.Info("language: " + userLang)

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@ -1,6 +1,86 @@
package utils
import "testing"
import (
"testing"
"github.com/stretchr/testify/assert"
)
func TestSplitLines(t *testing.T) {
type scenario struct {
multilineString string
expected []string
}
scenarios := []scenario{
{
"",
[]string{},
},
{
"\n",
[]string{},
},
{
"hello world !\nhello universe !\n",
[]string{
"hello world !",
"hello universe !",
},
},
}
for _, s := range scenarios {
assert.EqualValues(t, s.expected, SplitLines(s.multilineString))
}
}
func TestWithPadding(t *testing.T) {
type scenario struct {
str string
padding int
expected string
}
scenarios := []scenario{
{
"hello world !",
1,
"hello world !",
},
{
"hello world !",
14,
"hello world ! ",
},
}
for _, s := range scenarios {
assert.EqualValues(t, s.expected, WithPadding(s.str, s.padding))
}
}
func TestTrimTrailingNewline(t *testing.T) {
type scenario struct {
str string
expected string
}
scenarios := []scenario{
{
"hello world !\n",
"hello world !",
},
{
"hello world !",
"hello world !",
},
}
for _, s := range scenarios {
assert.EqualValues(t, s.expected, TrimTrailingNewline(s.str))
}
}
var testCases = []struct {
Input []byte
@ -30,5 +110,4 @@ func TestNormalizeLinefeeds(t *testing.T) {
if input != expected {
t.Error("Expected " + expected + ", got " + input)
}
}
}

27
vendor/github.com/pmezard/go-difflib/LICENSE generated vendored Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,27 @@
Copyright (c) 2013, Patrick Mezard
All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
met:
Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
The names of its contributors may not be used to endorse or promote
products derived from this software without specific prior written
permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS
IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR
PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING
NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS
SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

772
vendor/github.com/pmezard/go-difflib/difflib/difflib.go generated vendored Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,772 @@
// Package difflib is a partial port of Python difflib module.
//
// It provides tools to compare sequences of strings and generate textual diffs.
//
// The following class and functions have been ported:
//
// - SequenceMatcher
//
// - unified_diff
//
// - context_diff
//
// Getting unified diffs was the main goal of the port. Keep in mind this code
// is mostly suitable to output text differences in a human friendly way, there
// are no guarantees generated diffs are consumable by patch(1).
package difflib
import (
"bufio"
"bytes"
"fmt"
"io"
"strings"
)
func min(a, b int) int {
if a < b {
return a
}
return b
}
func max(a, b int) int {
if a > b {
return a
}
return b
}
func calculateRatio(matches, length int) float64 {
if length > 0 {
return 2.0 * float64(matches) / float64(length)
}
return 1.0
}
type Match struct {
A int
B int
Size int
}
type OpCode struct {
Tag byte
I1 int
I2 int
J1 int
J2 int
}
// SequenceMatcher compares sequence of strings. The basic
// algorithm predates, and is a little fancier than, an algorithm
// published in the late 1980's by Ratcliff and Obershelp under the
// hyperbolic name "gestalt pattern matching". The basic idea is to find
// the longest contiguous matching subsequence that contains no "junk"
// elements (R-O doesn't address junk). The same idea is then applied
// recursively to the pieces of the sequences to the left and to the right
// of the matching subsequence. This does not yield minimal edit
// sequences, but does tend to yield matches that "look right" to people.
//
// SequenceMatcher tries to compute a "human-friendly diff" between two
// sequences. Unlike e.g. UNIX(tm) diff, the fundamental notion is the
// longest *contiguous* & junk-free matching subsequence. That's what
// catches peoples' eyes. The Windows(tm) windiff has another interesting
// notion, pairing up elements that appear uniquely in each sequence.
// That, and the method here, appear to yield more intuitive difference
// reports than does diff. This method appears to be the least vulnerable
// to synching up on blocks of "junk lines", though (like blank lines in
// ordinary text files, or maybe "<P>" lines in HTML files). That may be
// because this is the only method of the 3 that has a *concept* of
// "junk" <wink>.
//
// Timing: Basic R-O is cubic time worst case and quadratic time expected
// case. SequenceMatcher is quadratic time for the worst case and has
// expected-case behavior dependent in a complicated way on how many
// elements the sequences have in common; best case time is linear.
type SequenceMatcher struct {
a []string
b []string
b2j map[string][]int
IsJunk func(string) bool
autoJunk bool
bJunk map[string]struct{}
matchingBlocks []Match
fullBCount map[string]int
bPopular map[string]struct{}
opCodes []OpCode
}
func NewMatcher(a, b []string) *SequenceMatcher {
m := SequenceMatcher{autoJunk: true}
m.SetSeqs(a, b)
return &m
}
func NewMatcherWithJunk(a, b []string, autoJunk bool,
isJunk func(string) bool) *SequenceMatcher {
m := SequenceMatcher{IsJunk: isJunk, autoJunk: autoJunk}
m.SetSeqs(a, b)
return &m
}
// Set two sequences to be compared.
func (m *SequenceMatcher) SetSeqs(a, b []string) {
m.SetSeq1(a)
m.SetSeq2(b)
}
// Set the first sequence to be compared. The second sequence to be compared is
// not changed.
//
// SequenceMatcher computes and caches detailed information about the second
// sequence, so if you want to compare one sequence S against many sequences,
// use .SetSeq2(s) once and call .SetSeq1(x) repeatedly for each of the other
// sequences.
//
// See also SetSeqs() and SetSeq2().
func (m *SequenceMatcher) SetSeq1(a []string) {
if &a == &m.a {
return
}
m.a = a
m.matchingBlocks = nil
m.opCodes = nil
}
// Set the second sequence to be compared. The first sequence to be compared is
// not changed.
func (m *SequenceMatcher) SetSeq2(b []string) {
if &b == &m.b {
return
}
m.b = b
m.matchingBlocks = nil
m.opCodes = nil
m.fullBCount = nil
m.chainB()
}
func (m *SequenceMatcher) chainB() {
// Populate line -> index mapping
b2j := map[string][]int{}
for i, s := range m.b {
indices := b2j[s]
indices = append(indices, i)
b2j[s] = indices
}
// Purge junk elements
m.bJunk = map[string]struct{}{}
if m.IsJunk != nil {
junk := m.bJunk
for s, _ := range b2j {
if m.IsJunk(s) {
junk[s] = struct{}{}
}
}
for s, _ := range junk {
delete(b2j, s)
}
}
// Purge remaining popular elements
popular := map[string]struct{}{}
n := len(m.b)
if m.autoJunk && n >= 200 {
ntest := n/100 + 1
for s, indices := range b2j {
if len(indices) > ntest {
popular[s] = struct{}{}
}
}
for s, _ := range popular {
delete(b2j, s)
}
}
m.bPopular = popular
m.b2j = b2j
}
func (m *SequenceMatcher) isBJunk(s string) bool {
_, ok := m.bJunk[s]
return ok
}
// Find longest matching block in a[alo:ahi] and b[blo:bhi].
//
// If IsJunk is not defined:
//
// Return (i,j,k) such that a[i:i+k] is equal to b[j:j+k], where
// alo <= i <= i+k <= ahi
// blo <= j <= j+k <= bhi
// and for all (i',j',k') meeting those conditions,
// k >= k'
// i <= i'
// and if i == i', j <= j'
//
// In other words, of all maximal matching blocks, return one that
// starts earliest in a, and of all those maximal matching blocks that
// start earliest in a, return the one that starts earliest in b.
//
// If IsJunk is defined, first the longest matching block is
// determined as above, but with the additional restriction that no
// junk element appears in the block. Then that block is extended as
// far as possible by matching (only) junk elements on both sides. So
// the resulting block never matches on junk except as identical junk
// happens to be adjacent to an "interesting" match.
//
// If no blocks match, return (alo, blo, 0).
func (m *SequenceMatcher) findLongestMatch(alo, ahi, blo, bhi int) Match {
// CAUTION: stripping common prefix or suffix would be incorrect.
// E.g.,
// ab
// acab
// Longest matching block is "ab", but if common prefix is
// stripped, it's "a" (tied with "b"). UNIX(tm) diff does so
// strip, so ends up claiming that ab is changed to acab by
// inserting "ca" in the middle. That's minimal but unintuitive:
// "it's obvious" that someone inserted "ac" at the front.
// Windiff ends up at the same place as diff, but by pairing up
// the unique 'b's and then matching the first two 'a's.
besti, bestj, bestsize := alo, blo, 0
// find longest junk-free match
// during an iteration of the loop, j2len[j] = length of longest
// junk-free match ending with a[i-1] and b[j]
j2len := map[int]int{}
for i := alo; i != ahi; i++ {
// look at all instances of a[i] in b; note that because
// b2j has no junk keys, the loop is skipped if a[i] is junk
newj2len := map[int]int{}
for _, j := range m.b2j[m.a[i]] {
// a[i] matches b[j]
if j < blo {
continue
}
if j >= bhi {
break
}
k := j2len[j-1] + 1
newj2len[j] = k
if k > bestsize {
besti, bestj, bestsize = i-k+1, j-k+1, k
}
}
j2len = newj2len
}
// Extend the best by non-junk elements on each end. In particular,
// "popular" non-junk elements aren't in b2j, which greatly speeds
// the inner loop above, but also means "the best" match so far
// doesn't contain any junk *or* popular non-junk elements.
for besti > alo && bestj > blo && !m.isBJunk(m.b[bestj-1]) &&
m.a[besti-1] == m.b[bestj-1] {
besti, bestj, bestsize = besti-1, bestj-1, bestsize+1
}
for besti+bestsize < ahi && bestj+bestsize < bhi &&
!m.isBJunk(m.b[bestj+bestsize]) &&
m.a[besti+bestsize] == m.b[bestj+bestsize] {
bestsize += 1
}
// Now that we have a wholly interesting match (albeit possibly
// empty!), we may as well suck up the matching junk on each
// side of it too. Can't think of a good reason not to, and it
// saves post-processing the (possibly considerable) expense of
// figuring out what to do with it. In the case of an empty
// interesting match, this is clearly the right thing to do,
// because no other kind of match is possible in the regions.
for besti > alo && bestj > blo && m.isBJunk(m.b[bestj-1]) &&
m.a[besti-1] == m.b[bestj-1] {
besti, bestj, bestsize = besti-1, bestj-1, bestsize+1
}
for besti+bestsize < ahi && bestj+bestsize < bhi &&
m.isBJunk(m.b[bestj+bestsize]) &&
m.a[besti+bestsize] == m.b[bestj+bestsize] {
bestsize += 1
}
return Match{A: besti, B: bestj, Size: bestsize}
}
// Return list of triples describing matching subsequences.
//
// Each triple is of the form (i, j, n), and means that
// a[i:i+n] == b[j:j+n]. The triples are monotonically increasing in
// i and in j. It's also guaranteed that if (i, j, n) and (i', j', n') are
// adjacent triples in the list, and the second is not the last triple in the
// list, then i+n != i' or j+n != j'. IOW, adjacent triples never describe
// adjacent equal blocks.
//
// The last triple is a dummy, (len(a), len(b), 0), and is the only
// triple with n==0.
func (m *SequenceMatcher) GetMatchingBlocks() []Match {
if m.matchingBlocks != nil {
return m.matchingBlocks
}
var matchBlocks func(alo, ahi, blo, bhi int, matched []Match) []Match
matchBlocks = func(alo, ahi, blo, bhi int, matched []Match) []Match {
match := m.findLongestMatch(alo, ahi, blo, bhi)
i, j, k := match.A, match.B, match.Size
if match.Size > 0 {
if alo < i && blo < j {
matched = matchBlocks(alo, i, blo, j, matched)
}
matched = append(matched, match)
if i+k < ahi && j+k < bhi {
matched = matchBlocks(i+k, ahi, j+k, bhi, matched)
}
}
return matched
}
matched := matchBlocks(0, len(m.a), 0, len(m.b), nil)
// It's possible that we have adjacent equal blocks in the
// matching_blocks list now.
nonAdjacent := []Match{}
i1, j1, k1 := 0, 0, 0
for _, b := range matched {
// Is this block adjacent to i1, j1, k1?
i2, j2, k2 := b.A, b.B, b.Size
if i1+k1 == i2 && j1+k1 == j2 {
// Yes, so collapse them -- this just increases the length of
// the first block by the length of the second, and the first
// block so lengthened remains the block to compare against.
k1 += k2
} else {
// Not adjacent. Remember the first block (k1==0 means it's
// the dummy we started with), and make the second block the
// new block to compare against.
if k1 > 0 {
nonAdjacent = append(nonAdjacent, Match{i1, j1, k1})
}
i1, j1, k1 = i2, j2, k2
}
}
if k1 > 0 {
nonAdjacent = append(nonAdjacent, Match{i1, j1, k1})
}
nonAdjacent = append(nonAdjacent, Match{len(m.a), len(m.b), 0})
m.matchingBlocks = nonAdjacent
return m.matchingBlocks
}
// Return list of 5-tuples describing how to turn a into b.
//
// Each tuple is of the form (tag, i1, i2, j1, j2). The first tuple
// has i1 == j1 == 0, and remaining tuples have i1 == the i2 from the
// tuple preceding it, and likewise for j1 == the previous j2.
//
// The tags are characters, with these meanings:
//
// 'r' (replace): a[i1:i2] should be replaced by b[j1:j2]
//
// 'd' (delete): a[i1:i2] should be deleted, j1==j2 in this case.
//
// 'i' (insert): b[j1:j2] should be inserted at a[i1:i1], i1==i2 in this case.
//
// 'e' (equal): a[i1:i2] == b[j1:j2]
func (m *SequenceMatcher) GetOpCodes() []OpCode {
if m.opCodes != nil {
return m.opCodes
}
i, j := 0, 0
matching := m.GetMatchingBlocks()
opCodes := make([]OpCode, 0, len(matching))
for _, m := range matching {
// invariant: we've pumped out correct diffs to change
// a[:i] into b[:j], and the next matching block is
// a[ai:ai+size] == b[bj:bj+size]. So we need to pump
// out a diff to change a[i:ai] into b[j:bj], pump out
// the matching block, and move (i,j) beyond the match
ai, bj, size := m.A, m.B, m.Size
tag := byte(0)
if i < ai && j < bj {
tag = 'r'
} else if i < ai {
tag = 'd'
} else if j < bj {
tag = 'i'
}
if tag > 0 {
opCodes = append(opCodes, OpCode{tag, i, ai, j, bj})
}
i, j = ai+size, bj+size
// the list of matching blocks is terminated by a
// sentinel with size 0
if size > 0 {
opCodes = append(opCodes, OpCode{'e', ai, i, bj, j})
}
}
m.opCodes = opCodes
return m.opCodes
}
// Isolate change clusters by eliminating ranges with no changes.
//
// Return a generator of groups with up to n lines of context.
// Each group is in the same format as returned by GetOpCodes().
func (m *SequenceMatcher) GetGroupedOpCodes(n int) [][]OpCode {
if n < 0 {
n = 3
}
codes := m.GetOpCodes()
if len(codes) == 0 {
codes = []OpCode{OpCode{'e', 0, 1, 0, 1}}
}
// Fixup leading and trailing groups if they show no changes.
if codes[0].Tag == 'e' {
c := codes[0]
i1, i2, j1, j2 := c.I1, c.I2, c.J1, c.J2
codes[0] = OpCode{c.Tag, max(i1, i2-n), i2, max(j1, j2-n), j2}
}
if codes[len(codes)-1].Tag == 'e' {
c := codes[len(codes)-1]
i1, i2, j1, j2 := c.I1, c.I2, c.J1, c.J2
codes[len(codes)-1] = OpCode{c.Tag, i1, min(i2, i1+n), j1, min(j2, j1+n)}
}
nn := n + n
groups := [][]OpCode{}
group := []OpCode{}
for _, c := range codes {
i1, i2, j1, j2 := c.I1, c.I2, c.J1, c.J2
// End the current group and start a new one whenever
// there is a large range with no changes.
if c.Tag == 'e' && i2-i1 > nn {
group = append(group, OpCode{c.Tag, i1, min(i2, i1+n),
j1, min(j2, j1+n)})
groups = append(groups, group)
group = []OpCode{}
i1, j1 = max(i1, i2-n), max(j1, j2-n)
}
group = append(group, OpCode{c.Tag, i1, i2, j1, j2})
}
if len(group) > 0 && !(len(group) == 1 && group[0].Tag == 'e') {
groups = append(groups, group)
}
return groups
}
// Return a measure of the sequences' similarity (float in [0,1]).
//
// Where T is the total number of elements in both sequences, and
// M is the number of matches, this is 2.0*M / T.
// Note that this is 1 if the sequences are identical, and 0 if
// they have nothing in common.
//
// .Ratio() is expensive to compute if you haven't already computed
// .GetMatchingBlocks() or .GetOpCodes(), in which case you may
// want to try .QuickRatio() or .RealQuickRation() first to get an
// upper bound.
func (m *SequenceMatcher) Ratio() float64 {
matches := 0
for _, m := range m.GetMatchingBlocks() {
matches += m.Size
}
return calculateRatio(matches, len(m.a)+len(m.b))
}
// Return an upper bound on ratio() relatively quickly.
//
// This isn't defined beyond that it is an upper bound on .Ratio(), and
// is faster to compute.
func (m *SequenceMatcher) QuickRatio() float64 {
// viewing a and b as multisets, set matches to the cardinality
// of their intersection; this counts the number of matches
// without regard to order, so is clearly an upper bound
if m.fullBCount == nil {
m.fullBCount = map[string]int{}
for _, s := range m.b {
m.fullBCount[s] = m.fullBCount[s] + 1
}
}
// avail[x] is the number of times x appears in 'b' less the
// number of times we've seen it in 'a' so far ... kinda
avail := map[string]int{}
matches := 0
for _, s := range m.a {
n, ok := avail[s]
if !ok {
n = m.fullBCount[s]
}
avail[s] = n - 1
if n > 0 {
matches += 1
}
}
return calculateRatio(matches, len(m.a)+len(m.b))
}
// Return an upper bound on ratio() very quickly.
//
// This isn't defined beyond that it is an upper bound on .Ratio(), and
// is faster to compute than either .Ratio() or .QuickRatio().
func (m *SequenceMatcher) RealQuickRatio() float64 {
la, lb := len(m.a), len(m.b)
return calculateRatio(min(la, lb), la+lb)
}
// Convert range to the "ed" format
func formatRangeUnified(start, stop int) string {
// Per the diff spec at http://www.unix.org/single_unix_specification/
beginning := start + 1 // lines start numbering with one
length := stop - start
if length == 1 {
return fmt.Sprintf("%d", beginning)
}
if length == 0 {
beginning -= 1 // empty ranges begin at line just before the range
}
return fmt.Sprintf("%d,%d", beginning, length)
}
// Unified diff parameters
type UnifiedDiff struct {
A []string // First sequence lines
FromFile string // First file name
FromDate string // First file time
B []string // Second sequence lines
ToFile string // Second file name
ToDate string // Second file time
Eol string // Headers end of line, defaults to LF
Context int // Number of context lines
}
// Compare two sequences of lines; generate the delta as a unified diff.
//
// Unified diffs are a compact way of showing line changes and a few
// lines of context. The number of context lines is set by 'n' which
// defaults to three.
//
// By default, the diff control lines (those with ---, +++, or @@) are
// created with a trailing newline. This is helpful so that inputs
// created from file.readlines() result in diffs that are suitable for
// file.writelines() since both the inputs and outputs have trailing
// newlines.
//
// For inputs that do not have trailing newlines, set the lineterm
// argument to "" so that the output will be uniformly newline free.
//
// The unidiff format normally has a header for filenames and modification
// times. Any or all of these may be specified using strings for
// 'fromfile', 'tofile', 'fromfiledate', and 'tofiledate'.
// The modification times are normally expressed in the ISO 8601 format.
func WriteUnifiedDiff(writer io.Writer, diff UnifiedDiff) error {
buf := bufio.NewWriter(writer)
defer buf.Flush()
wf := func(format string, args ...interface{}) error {
_, err := buf.WriteString(fmt.Sprintf(format, args...))
return err
}
ws := func(s string) error {
_, err := buf.WriteString(s)
return err
}
if len(diff.Eol) == 0 {
diff.Eol = "\n"
}
started := false
m := NewMatcher(diff.A, diff.B)
for _, g := range m.GetGroupedOpCodes(diff.Context) {
if !started {
started = true
fromDate := ""
if len(diff.FromDate) > 0 {
fromDate = "\t" + diff.FromDate
}
toDate := ""
if len(diff.ToDate) > 0 {
toDate = "\t" + diff.ToDate
}
if diff.FromFile != "" || diff.ToFile != "" {
err := wf("--- %s%s%s", diff.FromFile, fromDate, diff.Eol)
if err != nil {
return err
}
err = wf("+++ %s%s%s", diff.ToFile, toDate, diff.Eol)
if err != nil {
return err
}
}
}
first, last := g[0], g[len(g)-1]
range1 := formatRangeUnified(first.I1, last.I2)
range2 := formatRangeUnified(first.J1, last.J2)
if err := wf("@@ -%s +%s @@%s", range1, range2, diff.Eol); err != nil {
return err
}
for _, c := range g {
i1, i2, j1, j2 := c.I1, c.I2, c.J1, c.J2
if c.Tag == 'e' {
for _, line := range diff.A[i1:i2] {
if err := ws(" " + line); err != nil {
return err
}
}
continue
}
if c.Tag == 'r' || c.Tag == 'd' {
for _, line := range diff.A[i1:i2] {
if err := ws("-" + line); err != nil {
return err
}
}
}
if c.Tag == 'r' || c.Tag == 'i' {
for _, line := range diff.B[j1:j2] {
if err := ws("+" + line); err != nil {
return err
}
}
}
}
}
return nil
}
// Like WriteUnifiedDiff but returns the diff a string.
func GetUnifiedDiffString(diff UnifiedDiff) (string, error) {
w := &bytes.Buffer{}
err := WriteUnifiedDiff(w, diff)
return string(w.Bytes()), err
}
// Convert range to the "ed" format.
func formatRangeContext(start, stop int) string {
// Per the diff spec at http://www.unix.org/single_unix_specification/
beginning := start + 1 // lines start numbering with one
length := stop - start
if length == 0 {
beginning -= 1 // empty ranges begin at line just before the range
}
if length <= 1 {
return fmt.Sprintf("%d", beginning)
}
return fmt.Sprintf("%d,%d", beginning, beginning+length-1)
}
type ContextDiff UnifiedDiff
// Compare two sequences of lines; generate the delta as a context diff.
//
// Context diffs are a compact way of showing line changes and a few
// lines of context. The number of context lines is set by diff.Context
// which defaults to three.
//
// By default, the diff control lines (those with *** or ---) are
// created with a trailing newline.
//
// For inputs that do not have trailing newlines, set the diff.Eol
// argument to "" so that the output will be uniformly newline free.
//
// The context diff format normally has a header for filenames and
// modification times. Any or all of these may be specified using
// strings for diff.FromFile, diff.ToFile, diff.FromDate, diff.ToDate.
// The modification times are normally expressed in the ISO 8601 format.
// If not specified, the strings default to blanks.
func WriteContextDiff(writer io.Writer, diff ContextDiff) error {
buf := bufio.NewWriter(writer)
defer buf.Flush()
var diffErr error
wf := func(format string, args ...interface{}) {
_, err := buf.WriteString(fmt.Sprintf(format, args...))
if diffErr == nil && err != nil {
diffErr = err
}
}
ws := func(s string) {
_, err := buf.WriteString(s)
if diffErr == nil && err != nil {
diffErr = err
}
}
if len(diff.Eol) == 0 {
diff.Eol = "\n"
}
prefix := map[byte]string{
'i': "+ ",
'd': "- ",
'r': "! ",
'e': " ",
}
started := false
m := NewMatcher(diff.A, diff.B)
for _, g := range m.GetGroupedOpCodes(diff.Context) {
if !started {
started = true
fromDate := ""
if len(diff.FromDate) > 0 {
fromDate = "\t" + diff.FromDate
}
toDate := ""
if len(diff.ToDate) > 0 {
toDate = "\t" + diff.ToDate
}
if diff.FromFile != "" || diff.ToFile != "" {
wf("*** %s%s%s", diff.FromFile, fromDate, diff.Eol)
wf("--- %s%s%s", diff.ToFile, toDate, diff.Eol)
}
}
first, last := g[0], g[len(g)-1]
ws("***************" + diff.Eol)
range1 := formatRangeContext(first.I1, last.I2)
wf("*** %s ****%s", range1, diff.Eol)
for _, c := range g {
if c.Tag == 'r' || c.Tag == 'd' {
for _, cc := range g {
if cc.Tag == 'i' {
continue
}
for _, line := range diff.A[cc.I1:cc.I2] {
ws(prefix[cc.Tag] + line)
}
}
break
}
}
range2 := formatRangeContext(first.J1, last.J2)
wf("--- %s ----%s", range2, diff.Eol)
for _, c := range g {
if c.Tag == 'r' || c.Tag == 'i' {
for _, cc := range g {
if cc.Tag == 'd' {
continue
}
for _, line := range diff.B[cc.J1:cc.J2] {
ws(prefix[cc.Tag] + line)
}
}
break
}
}
}
return diffErr
}
// Like WriteContextDiff but returns the diff a string.
func GetContextDiffString(diff ContextDiff) (string, error) {
w := &bytes.Buffer{}
err := WriteContextDiff(w, diff)
return string(w.Bytes()), err
}
// Split a string on "\n" while preserving them. The output can be used
// as input for UnifiedDiff and ContextDiff structures.
func SplitLines(s string) []string {
lines := strings.SplitAfter(s, "\n")
lines[len(lines)-1] += "\n"
return lines
}

22
vendor/github.com/stretchr/testify/LICENSE generated vendored Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,22 @@
Copyright (c) 2012 - 2013 Mat Ryer and Tyler Bunnell
Please consider promoting this project if you find it useful.
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person
obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation
files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction,
including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge,
publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software,
and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so,
subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included
in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES
OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.
IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM,
DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT
OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE
OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

View File

@ -0,0 +1,484 @@
/*
* CODE GENERATED AUTOMATICALLY WITH github.com/stretchr/testify/_codegen
* THIS FILE MUST NOT BE EDITED BY HAND
*/
package assert
import (
http "net/http"
url "net/url"
time "time"
)
// Conditionf uses a Comparison to assert a complex condition.
func Conditionf(t TestingT, comp Comparison, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Condition(t, comp, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// Containsf asserts that the specified string, list(array, slice...) or map contains the
// specified substring or element.
//
// assert.Containsf(t, "Hello World", "World", "error message %s", "formatted")
// assert.Containsf(t, ["Hello", "World"], "World", "error message %s", "formatted")
// assert.Containsf(t, {"Hello": "World"}, "Hello", "error message %s", "formatted")
func Containsf(t TestingT, s interface{}, contains interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Contains(t, s, contains, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// DirExistsf checks whether a directory exists in the given path. It also fails if the path is a file rather a directory or there is an error checking whether it exists.
func DirExistsf(t TestingT, path string, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return DirExists(t, path, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// ElementsMatchf asserts that the specified listA(array, slice...) is equal to specified
// listB(array, slice...) ignoring the order of the elements. If there are duplicate elements,
// the number of appearances of each of them in both lists should match.
//
// assert.ElementsMatchf(t, [1, 3, 2, 3], [1, 3, 3, 2], "error message %s", "formatted")
func ElementsMatchf(t TestingT, listA interface{}, listB interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return ElementsMatch(t, listA, listB, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// Emptyf asserts that the specified object is empty. I.e. nil, "", false, 0 or either
// a slice or a channel with len == 0.
//
// assert.Emptyf(t, obj, "error message %s", "formatted")
func Emptyf(t TestingT, object interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Empty(t, object, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// Equalf asserts that two objects are equal.
//
// assert.Equalf(t, 123, 123, "error message %s", "formatted")
//
// Pointer variable equality is determined based on the equality of the
// referenced values (as opposed to the memory addresses). Function equality
// cannot be determined and will always fail.
func Equalf(t TestingT, expected interface{}, actual interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Equal(t, expected, actual, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// EqualErrorf asserts that a function returned an error (i.e. not `nil`)
// and that it is equal to the provided error.
//
// actualObj, err := SomeFunction()
// assert.EqualErrorf(t, err, expectedErrorString, "error message %s", "formatted")
func EqualErrorf(t TestingT, theError error, errString string, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return EqualError(t, theError, errString, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// EqualValuesf asserts that two objects are equal or convertable to the same types
// and equal.
//
// assert.EqualValuesf(t, uint32(123, "error message %s", "formatted"), int32(123))
func EqualValuesf(t TestingT, expected interface{}, actual interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return EqualValues(t, expected, actual, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// Errorf asserts that a function returned an error (i.e. not `nil`).
//
// actualObj, err := SomeFunction()
// if assert.Errorf(t, err, "error message %s", "formatted") {
// assert.Equal(t, expectedErrorf, err)
// }
func Errorf(t TestingT, err error, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Error(t, err, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// Exactlyf asserts that two objects are equal in value and type.
//
// assert.Exactlyf(t, int32(123, "error message %s", "formatted"), int64(123))
func Exactlyf(t TestingT, expected interface{}, actual interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Exactly(t, expected, actual, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// Failf reports a failure through
func Failf(t TestingT, failureMessage string, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Fail(t, failureMessage, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// FailNowf fails test
func FailNowf(t TestingT, failureMessage string, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return FailNow(t, failureMessage, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// Falsef asserts that the specified value is false.
//
// assert.Falsef(t, myBool, "error message %s", "formatted")
func Falsef(t TestingT, value bool, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return False(t, value, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// FileExistsf checks whether a file exists in the given path. It also fails if the path points to a directory or there is an error when trying to check the file.
func FileExistsf(t TestingT, path string, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return FileExists(t, path, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// HTTPBodyContainsf asserts that a specified handler returns a
// body that contains a string.
//
// assert.HTTPBodyContainsf(t, myHandler, "GET", "www.google.com", nil, "I'm Feeling Lucky", "error message %s", "formatted")
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false).
func HTTPBodyContainsf(t TestingT, handler http.HandlerFunc, method string, url string, values url.Values, str interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return HTTPBodyContains(t, handler, method, url, values, str, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// HTTPBodyNotContainsf asserts that a specified handler returns a
// body that does not contain a string.
//
// assert.HTTPBodyNotContainsf(t, myHandler, "GET", "www.google.com", nil, "I'm Feeling Lucky", "error message %s", "formatted")
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false).
func HTTPBodyNotContainsf(t TestingT, handler http.HandlerFunc, method string, url string, values url.Values, str interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return HTTPBodyNotContains(t, handler, method, url, values, str, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// HTTPErrorf asserts that a specified handler returns an error status code.
//
// assert.HTTPErrorf(t, myHandler, "POST", "/a/b/c", url.Values{"a": []string{"b", "c"}}
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true, "error message %s", "formatted") or not (false).
func HTTPErrorf(t TestingT, handler http.HandlerFunc, method string, url string, values url.Values, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return HTTPError(t, handler, method, url, values, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// HTTPRedirectf asserts that a specified handler returns a redirect status code.
//
// assert.HTTPRedirectf(t, myHandler, "GET", "/a/b/c", url.Values{"a": []string{"b", "c"}}
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true, "error message %s", "formatted") or not (false).
func HTTPRedirectf(t TestingT, handler http.HandlerFunc, method string, url string, values url.Values, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return HTTPRedirect(t, handler, method, url, values, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// HTTPSuccessf asserts that a specified handler returns a success status code.
//
// assert.HTTPSuccessf(t, myHandler, "POST", "http://www.google.com", nil, "error message %s", "formatted")
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false).
func HTTPSuccessf(t TestingT, handler http.HandlerFunc, method string, url string, values url.Values, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return HTTPSuccess(t, handler, method, url, values, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// Implementsf asserts that an object is implemented by the specified interface.
//
// assert.Implementsf(t, (*MyInterface, "error message %s", "formatted")(nil), new(MyObject))
func Implementsf(t TestingT, interfaceObject interface{}, object interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Implements(t, interfaceObject, object, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// InDeltaf asserts that the two numerals are within delta of each other.
//
// assert.InDeltaf(t, math.Pi, (22 / 7.0, "error message %s", "formatted"), 0.01)
func InDeltaf(t TestingT, expected interface{}, actual interface{}, delta float64, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return InDelta(t, expected, actual, delta, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// InDeltaMapValuesf is the same as InDelta, but it compares all values between two maps. Both maps must have exactly the same keys.
func InDeltaMapValuesf(t TestingT, expected interface{}, actual interface{}, delta float64, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return InDeltaMapValues(t, expected, actual, delta, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// InDeltaSlicef is the same as InDelta, except it compares two slices.
func InDeltaSlicef(t TestingT, expected interface{}, actual interface{}, delta float64, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return InDeltaSlice(t, expected, actual, delta, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// InEpsilonf asserts that expected and actual have a relative error less than epsilon
func InEpsilonf(t TestingT, expected interface{}, actual interface{}, epsilon float64, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return InEpsilon(t, expected, actual, epsilon, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// InEpsilonSlicef is the same as InEpsilon, except it compares each value from two slices.
func InEpsilonSlicef(t TestingT, expected interface{}, actual interface{}, epsilon float64, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return InEpsilonSlice(t, expected, actual, epsilon, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// IsTypef asserts that the specified objects are of the same type.
func IsTypef(t TestingT, expectedType interface{}, object interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return IsType(t, expectedType, object, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// JSONEqf asserts that two JSON strings are equivalent.
//
// assert.JSONEqf(t, `{"hello": "world", "foo": "bar"}`, `{"foo": "bar", "hello": "world"}`, "error message %s", "formatted")
func JSONEqf(t TestingT, expected string, actual string, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return JSONEq(t, expected, actual, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// Lenf asserts that the specified object has specific length.
// Lenf also fails if the object has a type that len() not accept.
//
// assert.Lenf(t, mySlice, 3, "error message %s", "formatted")
func Lenf(t TestingT, object interface{}, length int, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Len(t, object, length, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// Nilf asserts that the specified object is nil.
//
// assert.Nilf(t, err, "error message %s", "formatted")
func Nilf(t TestingT, object interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Nil(t, object, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// NoErrorf asserts that a function returned no error (i.e. `nil`).
//
// actualObj, err := SomeFunction()
// if assert.NoErrorf(t, err, "error message %s", "formatted") {
// assert.Equal(t, expectedObj, actualObj)
// }
func NoErrorf(t TestingT, err error, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NoError(t, err, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// NotContainsf asserts that the specified string, list(array, slice...) or map does NOT contain the
// specified substring or element.
//
// assert.NotContainsf(t, "Hello World", "Earth", "error message %s", "formatted")
// assert.NotContainsf(t, ["Hello", "World"], "Earth", "error message %s", "formatted")
// assert.NotContainsf(t, {"Hello": "World"}, "Earth", "error message %s", "formatted")
func NotContainsf(t TestingT, s interface{}, contains interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotContains(t, s, contains, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// NotEmptyf asserts that the specified object is NOT empty. I.e. not nil, "", false, 0 or either
// a slice or a channel with len == 0.
//
// if assert.NotEmptyf(t, obj, "error message %s", "formatted") {
// assert.Equal(t, "two", obj[1])
// }
func NotEmptyf(t TestingT, object interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotEmpty(t, object, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// NotEqualf asserts that the specified values are NOT equal.
//
// assert.NotEqualf(t, obj1, obj2, "error message %s", "formatted")
//
// Pointer variable equality is determined based on the equality of the
// referenced values (as opposed to the memory addresses).
func NotEqualf(t TestingT, expected interface{}, actual interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotEqual(t, expected, actual, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// NotNilf asserts that the specified object is not nil.
//
// assert.NotNilf(t, err, "error message %s", "formatted")
func NotNilf(t TestingT, object interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotNil(t, object, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// NotPanicsf asserts that the code inside the specified PanicTestFunc does NOT panic.
//
// assert.NotPanicsf(t, func(){ RemainCalm() }, "error message %s", "formatted")
func NotPanicsf(t TestingT, f PanicTestFunc, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotPanics(t, f, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// NotRegexpf asserts that a specified regexp does not match a string.
//
// assert.NotRegexpf(t, regexp.MustCompile("starts", "error message %s", "formatted"), "it's starting")
// assert.NotRegexpf(t, "^start", "it's not starting", "error message %s", "formatted")
func NotRegexpf(t TestingT, rx interface{}, str interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotRegexp(t, rx, str, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// NotSubsetf asserts that the specified list(array, slice...) contains not all
// elements given in the specified subset(array, slice...).
//
// assert.NotSubsetf(t, [1, 3, 4], [1, 2], "But [1, 3, 4] does not contain [1, 2]", "error message %s", "formatted")
func NotSubsetf(t TestingT, list interface{}, subset interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotSubset(t, list, subset, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// NotZerof asserts that i is not the zero value for its type.
func NotZerof(t TestingT, i interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotZero(t, i, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// Panicsf asserts that the code inside the specified PanicTestFunc panics.
//
// assert.Panicsf(t, func(){ GoCrazy() }, "error message %s", "formatted")
func Panicsf(t TestingT, f PanicTestFunc, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Panics(t, f, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// PanicsWithValuef asserts that the code inside the specified PanicTestFunc panics, and that
// the recovered panic value equals the expected panic value.
//
// assert.PanicsWithValuef(t, "crazy error", func(){ GoCrazy() }, "error message %s", "formatted")
func PanicsWithValuef(t TestingT, expected interface{}, f PanicTestFunc, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return PanicsWithValue(t, expected, f, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// Regexpf asserts that a specified regexp matches a string.
//
// assert.Regexpf(t, regexp.MustCompile("start", "error message %s", "formatted"), "it's starting")
// assert.Regexpf(t, "start...$", "it's not starting", "error message %s", "formatted")
func Regexpf(t TestingT, rx interface{}, str interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Regexp(t, rx, str, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// Subsetf asserts that the specified list(array, slice...) contains all
// elements given in the specified subset(array, slice...).
//
// assert.Subsetf(t, [1, 2, 3], [1, 2], "But [1, 2, 3] does contain [1, 2]", "error message %s", "formatted")
func Subsetf(t TestingT, list interface{}, subset interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Subset(t, list, subset, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// Truef asserts that the specified value is true.
//
// assert.Truef(t, myBool, "error message %s", "formatted")
func Truef(t TestingT, value bool, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return True(t, value, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// WithinDurationf asserts that the two times are within duration delta of each other.
//
// assert.WithinDurationf(t, time.Now(), time.Now(), 10*time.Second, "error message %s", "formatted")
func WithinDurationf(t TestingT, expected time.Time, actual time.Time, delta time.Duration, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return WithinDuration(t, expected, actual, delta, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}
// Zerof asserts that i is the zero value for its type.
func Zerof(t TestingT, i interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Zero(t, i, append([]interface{}{msg}, args...)...)
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,956 @@
/*
* CODE GENERATED AUTOMATICALLY WITH github.com/stretchr/testify/_codegen
* THIS FILE MUST NOT BE EDITED BY HAND
*/
package assert
import (
http "net/http"
url "net/url"
time "time"
)
// Condition uses a Comparison to assert a complex condition.
func (a *Assertions) Condition(comp Comparison, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Condition(a.t, comp, msgAndArgs...)
}
// Conditionf uses a Comparison to assert a complex condition.
func (a *Assertions) Conditionf(comp Comparison, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Conditionf(a.t, comp, msg, args...)
}
// Contains asserts that the specified string, list(array, slice...) or map contains the
// specified substring or element.
//
// a.Contains("Hello World", "World")
// a.Contains(["Hello", "World"], "World")
// a.Contains({"Hello": "World"}, "Hello")
func (a *Assertions) Contains(s interface{}, contains interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Contains(a.t, s, contains, msgAndArgs...)
}
// Containsf asserts that the specified string, list(array, slice...) or map contains the
// specified substring or element.
//
// a.Containsf("Hello World", "World", "error message %s", "formatted")
// a.Containsf(["Hello", "World"], "World", "error message %s", "formatted")
// a.Containsf({"Hello": "World"}, "Hello", "error message %s", "formatted")
func (a *Assertions) Containsf(s interface{}, contains interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Containsf(a.t, s, contains, msg, args...)
}
// DirExists checks whether a directory exists in the given path. It also fails if the path is a file rather a directory or there is an error checking whether it exists.
func (a *Assertions) DirExists(path string, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return DirExists(a.t, path, msgAndArgs...)
}
// DirExistsf checks whether a directory exists in the given path. It also fails if the path is a file rather a directory or there is an error checking whether it exists.
func (a *Assertions) DirExistsf(path string, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return DirExistsf(a.t, path, msg, args...)
}
// ElementsMatch asserts that the specified listA(array, slice...) is equal to specified
// listB(array, slice...) ignoring the order of the elements. If there are duplicate elements,
// the number of appearances of each of them in both lists should match.
//
// a.ElementsMatch([1, 3, 2, 3], [1, 3, 3, 2])
func (a *Assertions) ElementsMatch(listA interface{}, listB interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return ElementsMatch(a.t, listA, listB, msgAndArgs...)
}
// ElementsMatchf asserts that the specified listA(array, slice...) is equal to specified
// listB(array, slice...) ignoring the order of the elements. If there are duplicate elements,
// the number of appearances of each of them in both lists should match.
//
// a.ElementsMatchf([1, 3, 2, 3], [1, 3, 3, 2], "error message %s", "formatted")
func (a *Assertions) ElementsMatchf(listA interface{}, listB interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return ElementsMatchf(a.t, listA, listB, msg, args...)
}
// Empty asserts that the specified object is empty. I.e. nil, "", false, 0 or either
// a slice or a channel with len == 0.
//
// a.Empty(obj)
func (a *Assertions) Empty(object interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Empty(a.t, object, msgAndArgs...)
}
// Emptyf asserts that the specified object is empty. I.e. nil, "", false, 0 or either
// a slice or a channel with len == 0.
//
// a.Emptyf(obj, "error message %s", "formatted")
func (a *Assertions) Emptyf(object interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Emptyf(a.t, object, msg, args...)
}
// Equal asserts that two objects are equal.
//
// a.Equal(123, 123)
//
// Pointer variable equality is determined based on the equality of the
// referenced values (as opposed to the memory addresses). Function equality
// cannot be determined and will always fail.
func (a *Assertions) Equal(expected interface{}, actual interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Equal(a.t, expected, actual, msgAndArgs...)
}
// EqualError asserts that a function returned an error (i.e. not `nil`)
// and that it is equal to the provided error.
//
// actualObj, err := SomeFunction()
// a.EqualError(err, expectedErrorString)
func (a *Assertions) EqualError(theError error, errString string, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return EqualError(a.t, theError, errString, msgAndArgs...)
}
// EqualErrorf asserts that a function returned an error (i.e. not `nil`)
// and that it is equal to the provided error.
//
// actualObj, err := SomeFunction()
// a.EqualErrorf(err, expectedErrorString, "error message %s", "formatted")
func (a *Assertions) EqualErrorf(theError error, errString string, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return EqualErrorf(a.t, theError, errString, msg, args...)
}
// EqualValues asserts that two objects are equal or convertable to the same types
// and equal.
//
// a.EqualValues(uint32(123), int32(123))
func (a *Assertions) EqualValues(expected interface{}, actual interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return EqualValues(a.t, expected, actual, msgAndArgs...)
}
// EqualValuesf asserts that two objects are equal or convertable to the same types
// and equal.
//
// a.EqualValuesf(uint32(123, "error message %s", "formatted"), int32(123))
func (a *Assertions) EqualValuesf(expected interface{}, actual interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return EqualValuesf(a.t, expected, actual, msg, args...)
}
// Equalf asserts that two objects are equal.
//
// a.Equalf(123, 123, "error message %s", "formatted")
//
// Pointer variable equality is determined based on the equality of the
// referenced values (as opposed to the memory addresses). Function equality
// cannot be determined and will always fail.
func (a *Assertions) Equalf(expected interface{}, actual interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Equalf(a.t, expected, actual, msg, args...)
}
// Error asserts that a function returned an error (i.e. not `nil`).
//
// actualObj, err := SomeFunction()
// if a.Error(err) {
// assert.Equal(t, expectedError, err)
// }
func (a *Assertions) Error(err error, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Error(a.t, err, msgAndArgs...)
}
// Errorf asserts that a function returned an error (i.e. not `nil`).
//
// actualObj, err := SomeFunction()
// if a.Errorf(err, "error message %s", "formatted") {
// assert.Equal(t, expectedErrorf, err)
// }
func (a *Assertions) Errorf(err error, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Errorf(a.t, err, msg, args...)
}
// Exactly asserts that two objects are equal in value and type.
//
// a.Exactly(int32(123), int64(123))
func (a *Assertions) Exactly(expected interface{}, actual interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Exactly(a.t, expected, actual, msgAndArgs...)
}
// Exactlyf asserts that two objects are equal in value and type.
//
// a.Exactlyf(int32(123, "error message %s", "formatted"), int64(123))
func (a *Assertions) Exactlyf(expected interface{}, actual interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Exactlyf(a.t, expected, actual, msg, args...)
}
// Fail reports a failure through
func (a *Assertions) Fail(failureMessage string, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Fail(a.t, failureMessage, msgAndArgs...)
}
// FailNow fails test
func (a *Assertions) FailNow(failureMessage string, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return FailNow(a.t, failureMessage, msgAndArgs...)
}
// FailNowf fails test
func (a *Assertions) FailNowf(failureMessage string, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return FailNowf(a.t, failureMessage, msg, args...)
}
// Failf reports a failure through
func (a *Assertions) Failf(failureMessage string, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Failf(a.t, failureMessage, msg, args...)
}
// False asserts that the specified value is false.
//
// a.False(myBool)
func (a *Assertions) False(value bool, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return False(a.t, value, msgAndArgs...)
}
// Falsef asserts that the specified value is false.
//
// a.Falsef(myBool, "error message %s", "formatted")
func (a *Assertions) Falsef(value bool, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Falsef(a.t, value, msg, args...)
}
// FileExists checks whether a file exists in the given path. It also fails if the path points to a directory or there is an error when trying to check the file.
func (a *Assertions) FileExists(path string, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return FileExists(a.t, path, msgAndArgs...)
}
// FileExistsf checks whether a file exists in the given path. It also fails if the path points to a directory or there is an error when trying to check the file.
func (a *Assertions) FileExistsf(path string, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return FileExistsf(a.t, path, msg, args...)
}
// HTTPBodyContains asserts that a specified handler returns a
// body that contains a string.
//
// a.HTTPBodyContains(myHandler, "GET", "www.google.com", nil, "I'm Feeling Lucky")
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false).
func (a *Assertions) HTTPBodyContains(handler http.HandlerFunc, method string, url string, values url.Values, str interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return HTTPBodyContains(a.t, handler, method, url, values, str, msgAndArgs...)
}
// HTTPBodyContainsf asserts that a specified handler returns a
// body that contains a string.
//
// a.HTTPBodyContainsf(myHandler, "GET", "www.google.com", nil, "I'm Feeling Lucky", "error message %s", "formatted")
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false).
func (a *Assertions) HTTPBodyContainsf(handler http.HandlerFunc, method string, url string, values url.Values, str interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return HTTPBodyContainsf(a.t, handler, method, url, values, str, msg, args...)
}
// HTTPBodyNotContains asserts that a specified handler returns a
// body that does not contain a string.
//
// a.HTTPBodyNotContains(myHandler, "GET", "www.google.com", nil, "I'm Feeling Lucky")
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false).
func (a *Assertions) HTTPBodyNotContains(handler http.HandlerFunc, method string, url string, values url.Values, str interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return HTTPBodyNotContains(a.t, handler, method, url, values, str, msgAndArgs...)
}
// HTTPBodyNotContainsf asserts that a specified handler returns a
// body that does not contain a string.
//
// a.HTTPBodyNotContainsf(myHandler, "GET", "www.google.com", nil, "I'm Feeling Lucky", "error message %s", "formatted")
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false).
func (a *Assertions) HTTPBodyNotContainsf(handler http.HandlerFunc, method string, url string, values url.Values, str interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return HTTPBodyNotContainsf(a.t, handler, method, url, values, str, msg, args...)
}
// HTTPError asserts that a specified handler returns an error status code.
//
// a.HTTPError(myHandler, "POST", "/a/b/c", url.Values{"a": []string{"b", "c"}}
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false).
func (a *Assertions) HTTPError(handler http.HandlerFunc, method string, url string, values url.Values, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return HTTPError(a.t, handler, method, url, values, msgAndArgs...)
}
// HTTPErrorf asserts that a specified handler returns an error status code.
//
// a.HTTPErrorf(myHandler, "POST", "/a/b/c", url.Values{"a": []string{"b", "c"}}
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true, "error message %s", "formatted") or not (false).
func (a *Assertions) HTTPErrorf(handler http.HandlerFunc, method string, url string, values url.Values, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return HTTPErrorf(a.t, handler, method, url, values, msg, args...)
}
// HTTPRedirect asserts that a specified handler returns a redirect status code.
//
// a.HTTPRedirect(myHandler, "GET", "/a/b/c", url.Values{"a": []string{"b", "c"}}
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false).
func (a *Assertions) HTTPRedirect(handler http.HandlerFunc, method string, url string, values url.Values, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return HTTPRedirect(a.t, handler, method, url, values, msgAndArgs...)
}
// HTTPRedirectf asserts that a specified handler returns a redirect status code.
//
// a.HTTPRedirectf(myHandler, "GET", "/a/b/c", url.Values{"a": []string{"b", "c"}}
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true, "error message %s", "formatted") or not (false).
func (a *Assertions) HTTPRedirectf(handler http.HandlerFunc, method string, url string, values url.Values, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return HTTPRedirectf(a.t, handler, method, url, values, msg, args...)
}
// HTTPSuccess asserts that a specified handler returns a success status code.
//
// a.HTTPSuccess(myHandler, "POST", "http://www.google.com", nil)
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false).
func (a *Assertions) HTTPSuccess(handler http.HandlerFunc, method string, url string, values url.Values, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return HTTPSuccess(a.t, handler, method, url, values, msgAndArgs...)
}
// HTTPSuccessf asserts that a specified handler returns a success status code.
//
// a.HTTPSuccessf(myHandler, "POST", "http://www.google.com", nil, "error message %s", "formatted")
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false).
func (a *Assertions) HTTPSuccessf(handler http.HandlerFunc, method string, url string, values url.Values, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return HTTPSuccessf(a.t, handler, method, url, values, msg, args...)
}
// Implements asserts that an object is implemented by the specified interface.
//
// a.Implements((*MyInterface)(nil), new(MyObject))
func (a *Assertions) Implements(interfaceObject interface{}, object interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Implements(a.t, interfaceObject, object, msgAndArgs...)
}
// Implementsf asserts that an object is implemented by the specified interface.
//
// a.Implementsf((*MyInterface, "error message %s", "formatted")(nil), new(MyObject))
func (a *Assertions) Implementsf(interfaceObject interface{}, object interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Implementsf(a.t, interfaceObject, object, msg, args...)
}
// InDelta asserts that the two numerals are within delta of each other.
//
// a.InDelta(math.Pi, (22 / 7.0), 0.01)
func (a *Assertions) InDelta(expected interface{}, actual interface{}, delta float64, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return InDelta(a.t, expected, actual, delta, msgAndArgs...)
}
// InDeltaMapValues is the same as InDelta, but it compares all values between two maps. Both maps must have exactly the same keys.
func (a *Assertions) InDeltaMapValues(expected interface{}, actual interface{}, delta float64, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return InDeltaMapValues(a.t, expected, actual, delta, msgAndArgs...)
}
// InDeltaMapValuesf is the same as InDelta, but it compares all values between two maps. Both maps must have exactly the same keys.
func (a *Assertions) InDeltaMapValuesf(expected interface{}, actual interface{}, delta float64, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return InDeltaMapValuesf(a.t, expected, actual, delta, msg, args...)
}
// InDeltaSlice is the same as InDelta, except it compares two slices.
func (a *Assertions) InDeltaSlice(expected interface{}, actual interface{}, delta float64, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return InDeltaSlice(a.t, expected, actual, delta, msgAndArgs...)
}
// InDeltaSlicef is the same as InDelta, except it compares two slices.
func (a *Assertions) InDeltaSlicef(expected interface{}, actual interface{}, delta float64, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return InDeltaSlicef(a.t, expected, actual, delta, msg, args...)
}
// InDeltaf asserts that the two numerals are within delta of each other.
//
// a.InDeltaf(math.Pi, (22 / 7.0, "error message %s", "formatted"), 0.01)
func (a *Assertions) InDeltaf(expected interface{}, actual interface{}, delta float64, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return InDeltaf(a.t, expected, actual, delta, msg, args...)
}
// InEpsilon asserts that expected and actual have a relative error less than epsilon
func (a *Assertions) InEpsilon(expected interface{}, actual interface{}, epsilon float64, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return InEpsilon(a.t, expected, actual, epsilon, msgAndArgs...)
}
// InEpsilonSlice is the same as InEpsilon, except it compares each value from two slices.
func (a *Assertions) InEpsilonSlice(expected interface{}, actual interface{}, epsilon float64, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return InEpsilonSlice(a.t, expected, actual, epsilon, msgAndArgs...)
}
// InEpsilonSlicef is the same as InEpsilon, except it compares each value from two slices.
func (a *Assertions) InEpsilonSlicef(expected interface{}, actual interface{}, epsilon float64, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return InEpsilonSlicef(a.t, expected, actual, epsilon, msg, args...)
}
// InEpsilonf asserts that expected and actual have a relative error less than epsilon
func (a *Assertions) InEpsilonf(expected interface{}, actual interface{}, epsilon float64, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return InEpsilonf(a.t, expected, actual, epsilon, msg, args...)
}
// IsType asserts that the specified objects are of the same type.
func (a *Assertions) IsType(expectedType interface{}, object interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return IsType(a.t, expectedType, object, msgAndArgs...)
}
// IsTypef asserts that the specified objects are of the same type.
func (a *Assertions) IsTypef(expectedType interface{}, object interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return IsTypef(a.t, expectedType, object, msg, args...)
}
// JSONEq asserts that two JSON strings are equivalent.
//
// a.JSONEq(`{"hello": "world", "foo": "bar"}`, `{"foo": "bar", "hello": "world"}`)
func (a *Assertions) JSONEq(expected string, actual string, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return JSONEq(a.t, expected, actual, msgAndArgs...)
}
// JSONEqf asserts that two JSON strings are equivalent.
//
// a.JSONEqf(`{"hello": "world", "foo": "bar"}`, `{"foo": "bar", "hello": "world"}`, "error message %s", "formatted")
func (a *Assertions) JSONEqf(expected string, actual string, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return JSONEqf(a.t, expected, actual, msg, args...)
}
// Len asserts that the specified object has specific length.
// Len also fails if the object has a type that len() not accept.
//
// a.Len(mySlice, 3)
func (a *Assertions) Len(object interface{}, length int, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Len(a.t, object, length, msgAndArgs...)
}
// Lenf asserts that the specified object has specific length.
// Lenf also fails if the object has a type that len() not accept.
//
// a.Lenf(mySlice, 3, "error message %s", "formatted")
func (a *Assertions) Lenf(object interface{}, length int, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Lenf(a.t, object, length, msg, args...)
}
// Nil asserts that the specified object is nil.
//
// a.Nil(err)
func (a *Assertions) Nil(object interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Nil(a.t, object, msgAndArgs...)
}
// Nilf asserts that the specified object is nil.
//
// a.Nilf(err, "error message %s", "formatted")
func (a *Assertions) Nilf(object interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Nilf(a.t, object, msg, args...)
}
// NoError asserts that a function returned no error (i.e. `nil`).
//
// actualObj, err := SomeFunction()
// if a.NoError(err) {
// assert.Equal(t, expectedObj, actualObj)
// }
func (a *Assertions) NoError(err error, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NoError(a.t, err, msgAndArgs...)
}
// NoErrorf asserts that a function returned no error (i.e. `nil`).
//
// actualObj, err := SomeFunction()
// if a.NoErrorf(err, "error message %s", "formatted") {
// assert.Equal(t, expectedObj, actualObj)
// }
func (a *Assertions) NoErrorf(err error, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NoErrorf(a.t, err, msg, args...)
}
// NotContains asserts that the specified string, list(array, slice...) or map does NOT contain the
// specified substring or element.
//
// a.NotContains("Hello World", "Earth")
// a.NotContains(["Hello", "World"], "Earth")
// a.NotContains({"Hello": "World"}, "Earth")
func (a *Assertions) NotContains(s interface{}, contains interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotContains(a.t, s, contains, msgAndArgs...)
}
// NotContainsf asserts that the specified string, list(array, slice...) or map does NOT contain the
// specified substring or element.
//
// a.NotContainsf("Hello World", "Earth", "error message %s", "formatted")
// a.NotContainsf(["Hello", "World"], "Earth", "error message %s", "formatted")
// a.NotContainsf({"Hello": "World"}, "Earth", "error message %s", "formatted")
func (a *Assertions) NotContainsf(s interface{}, contains interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotContainsf(a.t, s, contains, msg, args...)
}
// NotEmpty asserts that the specified object is NOT empty. I.e. not nil, "", false, 0 or either
// a slice or a channel with len == 0.
//
// if a.NotEmpty(obj) {
// assert.Equal(t, "two", obj[1])
// }
func (a *Assertions) NotEmpty(object interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotEmpty(a.t, object, msgAndArgs...)
}
// NotEmptyf asserts that the specified object is NOT empty. I.e. not nil, "", false, 0 or either
// a slice or a channel with len == 0.
//
// if a.NotEmptyf(obj, "error message %s", "formatted") {
// assert.Equal(t, "two", obj[1])
// }
func (a *Assertions) NotEmptyf(object interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotEmptyf(a.t, object, msg, args...)
}
// NotEqual asserts that the specified values are NOT equal.
//
// a.NotEqual(obj1, obj2)
//
// Pointer variable equality is determined based on the equality of the
// referenced values (as opposed to the memory addresses).
func (a *Assertions) NotEqual(expected interface{}, actual interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotEqual(a.t, expected, actual, msgAndArgs...)
}
// NotEqualf asserts that the specified values are NOT equal.
//
// a.NotEqualf(obj1, obj2, "error message %s", "formatted")
//
// Pointer variable equality is determined based on the equality of the
// referenced values (as opposed to the memory addresses).
func (a *Assertions) NotEqualf(expected interface{}, actual interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotEqualf(a.t, expected, actual, msg, args...)
}
// NotNil asserts that the specified object is not nil.
//
// a.NotNil(err)
func (a *Assertions) NotNil(object interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotNil(a.t, object, msgAndArgs...)
}
// NotNilf asserts that the specified object is not nil.
//
// a.NotNilf(err, "error message %s", "formatted")
func (a *Assertions) NotNilf(object interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotNilf(a.t, object, msg, args...)
}
// NotPanics asserts that the code inside the specified PanicTestFunc does NOT panic.
//
// a.NotPanics(func(){ RemainCalm() })
func (a *Assertions) NotPanics(f PanicTestFunc, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotPanics(a.t, f, msgAndArgs...)
}
// NotPanicsf asserts that the code inside the specified PanicTestFunc does NOT panic.
//
// a.NotPanicsf(func(){ RemainCalm() }, "error message %s", "formatted")
func (a *Assertions) NotPanicsf(f PanicTestFunc, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotPanicsf(a.t, f, msg, args...)
}
// NotRegexp asserts that a specified regexp does not match a string.
//
// a.NotRegexp(regexp.MustCompile("starts"), "it's starting")
// a.NotRegexp("^start", "it's not starting")
func (a *Assertions) NotRegexp(rx interface{}, str interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotRegexp(a.t, rx, str, msgAndArgs...)
}
// NotRegexpf asserts that a specified regexp does not match a string.
//
// a.NotRegexpf(regexp.MustCompile("starts", "error message %s", "formatted"), "it's starting")
// a.NotRegexpf("^start", "it's not starting", "error message %s", "formatted")
func (a *Assertions) NotRegexpf(rx interface{}, str interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotRegexpf(a.t, rx, str, msg, args...)
}
// NotSubset asserts that the specified list(array, slice...) contains not all
// elements given in the specified subset(array, slice...).
//
// a.NotSubset([1, 3, 4], [1, 2], "But [1, 3, 4] does not contain [1, 2]")
func (a *Assertions) NotSubset(list interface{}, subset interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotSubset(a.t, list, subset, msgAndArgs...)
}
// NotSubsetf asserts that the specified list(array, slice...) contains not all
// elements given in the specified subset(array, slice...).
//
// a.NotSubsetf([1, 3, 4], [1, 2], "But [1, 3, 4] does not contain [1, 2]", "error message %s", "formatted")
func (a *Assertions) NotSubsetf(list interface{}, subset interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotSubsetf(a.t, list, subset, msg, args...)
}
// NotZero asserts that i is not the zero value for its type.
func (a *Assertions) NotZero(i interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotZero(a.t, i, msgAndArgs...)
}
// NotZerof asserts that i is not the zero value for its type.
func (a *Assertions) NotZerof(i interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return NotZerof(a.t, i, msg, args...)
}
// Panics asserts that the code inside the specified PanicTestFunc panics.
//
// a.Panics(func(){ GoCrazy() })
func (a *Assertions) Panics(f PanicTestFunc, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Panics(a.t, f, msgAndArgs...)
}
// PanicsWithValue asserts that the code inside the specified PanicTestFunc panics, and that
// the recovered panic value equals the expected panic value.
//
// a.PanicsWithValue("crazy error", func(){ GoCrazy() })
func (a *Assertions) PanicsWithValue(expected interface{}, f PanicTestFunc, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return PanicsWithValue(a.t, expected, f, msgAndArgs...)
}
// PanicsWithValuef asserts that the code inside the specified PanicTestFunc panics, and that
// the recovered panic value equals the expected panic value.
//
// a.PanicsWithValuef("crazy error", func(){ GoCrazy() }, "error message %s", "formatted")
func (a *Assertions) PanicsWithValuef(expected interface{}, f PanicTestFunc, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return PanicsWithValuef(a.t, expected, f, msg, args...)
}
// Panicsf asserts that the code inside the specified PanicTestFunc panics.
//
// a.Panicsf(func(){ GoCrazy() }, "error message %s", "formatted")
func (a *Assertions) Panicsf(f PanicTestFunc, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Panicsf(a.t, f, msg, args...)
}
// Regexp asserts that a specified regexp matches a string.
//
// a.Regexp(regexp.MustCompile("start"), "it's starting")
// a.Regexp("start...$", "it's not starting")
func (a *Assertions) Regexp(rx interface{}, str interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Regexp(a.t, rx, str, msgAndArgs...)
}
// Regexpf asserts that a specified regexp matches a string.
//
// a.Regexpf(regexp.MustCompile("start", "error message %s", "formatted"), "it's starting")
// a.Regexpf("start...$", "it's not starting", "error message %s", "formatted")
func (a *Assertions) Regexpf(rx interface{}, str interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Regexpf(a.t, rx, str, msg, args...)
}
// Subset asserts that the specified list(array, slice...) contains all
// elements given in the specified subset(array, slice...).
//
// a.Subset([1, 2, 3], [1, 2], "But [1, 2, 3] does contain [1, 2]")
func (a *Assertions) Subset(list interface{}, subset interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Subset(a.t, list, subset, msgAndArgs...)
}
// Subsetf asserts that the specified list(array, slice...) contains all
// elements given in the specified subset(array, slice...).
//
// a.Subsetf([1, 2, 3], [1, 2], "But [1, 2, 3] does contain [1, 2]", "error message %s", "formatted")
func (a *Assertions) Subsetf(list interface{}, subset interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Subsetf(a.t, list, subset, msg, args...)
}
// True asserts that the specified value is true.
//
// a.True(myBool)
func (a *Assertions) True(value bool, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return True(a.t, value, msgAndArgs...)
}
// Truef asserts that the specified value is true.
//
// a.Truef(myBool, "error message %s", "formatted")
func (a *Assertions) Truef(value bool, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Truef(a.t, value, msg, args...)
}
// WithinDuration asserts that the two times are within duration delta of each other.
//
// a.WithinDuration(time.Now(), time.Now(), 10*time.Second)
func (a *Assertions) WithinDuration(expected time.Time, actual time.Time, delta time.Duration, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return WithinDuration(a.t, expected, actual, delta, msgAndArgs...)
}
// WithinDurationf asserts that the two times are within duration delta of each other.
//
// a.WithinDurationf(time.Now(), time.Now(), 10*time.Second, "error message %s", "formatted")
func (a *Assertions) WithinDurationf(expected time.Time, actual time.Time, delta time.Duration, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return WithinDurationf(a.t, expected, actual, delta, msg, args...)
}
// Zero asserts that i is the zero value for its type.
func (a *Assertions) Zero(i interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Zero(a.t, i, msgAndArgs...)
}
// Zerof asserts that i is the zero value for its type.
func (a *Assertions) Zerof(i interface{}, msg string, args ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := a.t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
return Zerof(a.t, i, msg, args...)
}

1394
vendor/github.com/stretchr/testify/assert/assertions.go generated vendored Normal file

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vendor/github.com/stretchr/testify/assert/doc.go generated vendored Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,45 @@
// Package assert provides a set of comprehensive testing tools for use with the normal Go testing system.
//
// Example Usage
//
// The following is a complete example using assert in a standard test function:
// import (
// "testing"
// "github.com/stretchr/testify/assert"
// )
//
// func TestSomething(t *testing.T) {
//
// var a string = "Hello"
// var b string = "Hello"
//
// assert.Equal(t, a, b, "The two words should be the same.")
//
// }
//
// if you assert many times, use the format below:
//
// import (
// "testing"
// "github.com/stretchr/testify/assert"
// )
//
// func TestSomething(t *testing.T) {
// assert := assert.New(t)
//
// var a string = "Hello"
// var b string = "Hello"
//
// assert.Equal(a, b, "The two words should be the same.")
// }
//
// Assertions
//
// Assertions allow you to easily write test code, and are global funcs in the `assert` package.
// All assertion functions take, as the first argument, the `*testing.T` object provided by the
// testing framework. This allows the assertion funcs to write the failings and other details to
// the correct place.
//
// Every assertion function also takes an optional string message as the final argument,
// allowing custom error messages to be appended to the message the assertion method outputs.
package assert

10
vendor/github.com/stretchr/testify/assert/errors.go generated vendored Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
package assert
import (
"errors"
)
// AnError is an error instance useful for testing. If the code does not care
// about error specifics, and only needs to return the error for example, this
// error should be used to make the test code more readable.
var AnError = errors.New("assert.AnError general error for testing")

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@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
package assert
// Assertions provides assertion methods around the
// TestingT interface.
type Assertions struct {
t TestingT
}
// New makes a new Assertions object for the specified TestingT.
func New(t TestingT) *Assertions {
return &Assertions{
t: t,
}
}
//go:generate go run ../_codegen/main.go -output-package=assert -template=assertion_forward.go.tmpl -include-format-funcs

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@ -0,0 +1,143 @@
package assert
import (
"fmt"
"net/http"
"net/http/httptest"
"net/url"
"strings"
)
// httpCode is a helper that returns HTTP code of the response. It returns -1 and
// an error if building a new request fails.
func httpCode(handler http.HandlerFunc, method, url string, values url.Values) (int, error) {
w := httptest.NewRecorder()
req, err := http.NewRequest(method, url, nil)
if err != nil {
return -1, err
}
req.URL.RawQuery = values.Encode()
handler(w, req)
return w.Code, nil
}
// HTTPSuccess asserts that a specified handler returns a success status code.
//
// assert.HTTPSuccess(t, myHandler, "POST", "http://www.google.com", nil)
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false).
func HTTPSuccess(t TestingT, handler http.HandlerFunc, method, url string, values url.Values, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
code, err := httpCode(handler, method, url, values)
if err != nil {
Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Failed to build test request, got error: %s", err))
return false
}
isSuccessCode := code >= http.StatusOK && code <= http.StatusPartialContent
if !isSuccessCode {
Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Expected HTTP success status code for %q but received %d", url+"?"+values.Encode(), code))
}
return isSuccessCode
}
// HTTPRedirect asserts that a specified handler returns a redirect status code.
//
// assert.HTTPRedirect(t, myHandler, "GET", "/a/b/c", url.Values{"a": []string{"b", "c"}}
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false).
func HTTPRedirect(t TestingT, handler http.HandlerFunc, method, url string, values url.Values, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
code, err := httpCode(handler, method, url, values)
if err != nil {
Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Failed to build test request, got error: %s", err))
return false
}
isRedirectCode := code >= http.StatusMultipleChoices && code <= http.StatusTemporaryRedirect
if !isRedirectCode {
Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Expected HTTP redirect status code for %q but received %d", url+"?"+values.Encode(), code))
}
return isRedirectCode
}
// HTTPError asserts that a specified handler returns an error status code.
//
// assert.HTTPError(t, myHandler, "POST", "/a/b/c", url.Values{"a": []string{"b", "c"}}
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false).
func HTTPError(t TestingT, handler http.HandlerFunc, method, url string, values url.Values, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
code, err := httpCode(handler, method, url, values)
if err != nil {
Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Failed to build test request, got error: %s", err))
return false
}
isErrorCode := code >= http.StatusBadRequest
if !isErrorCode {
Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Expected HTTP error status code for %q but received %d", url+"?"+values.Encode(), code))
}
return isErrorCode
}
// HTTPBody is a helper that returns HTTP body of the response. It returns
// empty string if building a new request fails.
func HTTPBody(handler http.HandlerFunc, method, url string, values url.Values) string {
w := httptest.NewRecorder()
req, err := http.NewRequest(method, url+"?"+values.Encode(), nil)
if err != nil {
return ""
}
handler(w, req)
return w.Body.String()
}
// HTTPBodyContains asserts that a specified handler returns a
// body that contains a string.
//
// assert.HTTPBodyContains(t, myHandler, "GET", "www.google.com", nil, "I'm Feeling Lucky")
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false).
func HTTPBodyContains(t TestingT, handler http.HandlerFunc, method, url string, values url.Values, str interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
body := HTTPBody(handler, method, url, values)
contains := strings.Contains(body, fmt.Sprint(str))
if !contains {
Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Expected response body for \"%s\" to contain \"%s\" but found \"%s\"", url+"?"+values.Encode(), str, body))
}
return contains
}
// HTTPBodyNotContains asserts that a specified handler returns a
// body that does not contain a string.
//
// assert.HTTPBodyNotContains(t, myHandler, "GET", "www.google.com", nil, "I'm Feeling Lucky")
//
// Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false).
func HTTPBodyNotContains(t TestingT, handler http.HandlerFunc, method, url string, values url.Values, str interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool {
if h, ok := t.(tHelper); ok {
h.Helper()
}
body := HTTPBody(handler, method, url, values)
contains := strings.Contains(body, fmt.Sprint(str))
if contains {
Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Expected response body for \"%s\" to NOT contain \"%s\" but found \"%s\"", url+"?"+values.Encode(), str, body))
}
return !contains
}