go-libvirt-plain/internal/lvgen/generate.go
Yuriy Taraday 16e61b53a7 Remove unused parts of ProcMeta
Also replace if-else if chain with switch and fix error strings.
2018-03-01 20:22:28 +04:00

819 lines
26 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2017 The go-libvirt Authors.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
package lvgen
import (
"fmt"
"go/ast"
"io"
"os"
"strconv"
"strings"
"text/template"
"unicode"
"unicode/utf8"
"golang.org/x/tools/go/loader"
)
// If you're making changes to the generator, or troubleshooting the generated
// code, the docs for sunrpc and xdr (the line encoding) are helpful:
// https://docs.oracle.com/cd/E26502_01/html/E35597/
// ConstItem stores an const's symbol and value from the parser. This struct is
// also used for enums.
type ConstItem struct {
Name string
LVName string
Val string
}
// Generator holds all the information parsed out of the protocol file.
type Generator struct {
// Enums holds the enum declarations. The type of enums is always int32.
Enums []Decl
// EnumVals holds the list of enum values found by the parser. In sunrpc as
// in go, these are not separately namespaced.
EnumVals []ConstItem
// Consts holds all the const items found by the parser.
Consts []ConstItem
// Structs holds a list of all the structs found by the parser
Structs []Structure
// StructMap is a map of the structs we find for quick searching.
StructMap map[string]int
// Typedefs holds all the type definitions from 'typedef ...' lines.
Typedefs []Typedef
// Unions holds all the discriminated unions.
Unions []Union
// UnionMap is a map of the unions we find for quick searching.
UnionMap map[string]int
// Procs holds all the discovered libvirt procedures.
Procs []Proc
}
// Gen accumulates items as the parser runs, and is then used to produce the
// output.
var Gen Generator
// CurrentEnumVal is the auto-incrementing value assigned to enums that aren't
// explicitly given a value.
var CurrentEnumVal int64
// goEquivTypes maps the basic types defined in the rpc spec to their golang
// equivalents.
var goEquivTypes = map[string]string{
// Some of the identifiers in the rpc specification are reserved words or
// pre-existing types in go. This renames them to something safe.
"type": "lvtype",
"error": "lverror",
"nil": "lvnil",
// The libvirt spec uses this NonnullString type, which is a string with a
// specified maximum length. This makes the go code more confusing, and
// we're not enforcing the limit anyway, so collapse it here. This also
// requires us to ditch the typedef that would otherwise be generated.
"NonnullString": "string",
// TODO: Get rid of these. They're only needed because we lose information
// that the parser has (the parser knows it has emitted a go type), and then
// we capitalize types to make them public.
"Int": "int",
"Uint": "uint",
"Int8": "int8",
"Uint8": "uint8",
"Int16": "int16",
"Uint16": "uint16",
"Int32": "int32",
"Uint32": "uint32",
"Int64": "int64",
"Uint64": "uint64",
"Float32": "float32",
"Float64": "float64",
"Bool": "bool",
"Byte": "byte",
}
// These defines are from libvirt-common.h. They should be fetched from there,
// but for now they're hardcoded here. (These are the discriminant values for
// TypedParams.)
var lvTypedParams = map[string]uint32{
"VIR_TYPED_PARAM_INT": 1,
"VIR_TYPED_PARAM_UINT": 2,
"VIR_TYPED_PARAM_LLONG": 3,
"VIR_TYPED_PARAM_ULLONG": 4,
"VIR_TYPED_PARAM_DOUBLE": 5,
"VIR_TYPED_PARAM_BOOLEAN": 6,
"VIR_TYPED_PARAM_STRING": 7,
}
// Decl records a declaration, like 'int x' or 'remote_nonnull_string str'
type Decl struct {
Name, LVName, Type string
}
// NewDecl returns a new declaration struct.
func NewDecl(identifier, itype string) *Decl {
goidentifier := identifierTransform(identifier)
itype = typeTransform(itype)
return &Decl{Name: goidentifier, LVName: identifier, Type: itype}
}
// Structure records the name and members of a struct definition.
type Structure struct {
Name string
LVName string
Members []Decl
}
// Typedef holds the name and underlying type for a typedef.
type Typedef struct {
Decl
}
// Union holds a "discriminated union", which consists of a discriminant, which
// tells you what kind of thing you're looking at, and a number of encodings.
type Union struct {
Name string
DiscriminantType string
Cases []Case
}
// Case holds a single case of a discriminated union.
type Case struct {
CaseName string
DiscriminantVal string
Decl
}
// Proc holds information about a libvirt procedure the parser has found.
type Proc struct {
Num int64 // The libvirt procedure number.
Name string // The name of the go func.
LVName string // The name of the libvirt proc this wraps.
Args []Decl // The contents of the args struct for this procedure.
Ret []Decl // The contents of the ret struct for this procedure.
ArgsStruct string // The name of the args struct for this procedure.
RetStruct string // The name of the ret struct for this procedure.
ReadStreamIdx int // The index of read stream in function argument list
WriteStreamIdx int // The index of read stream in function argument list
}
// ProcMeta holds information from annotations attached to a libvirt procedure
type ProcMeta struct {
ReadStream int
WriteStream int
}
type structStack []*Structure
// CurrentStruct will point to a struct record if we're in a struct declaration.
// When the parser adds a declaration, it will be added to the open struct if
// there is one.
var CurrentStruct structStack
// Since it's possible to have an embedded struct definition, this implements
// a stack to keep track of the current structure.
func (s *structStack) empty() bool {
return len(*s) == 0
}
func (s *structStack) push(st *Structure) {
*s = append(*s, st)
}
func (s *structStack) pop() *Structure {
if s.empty() {
return nil
}
st := (*s)[len(*s)-1]
*s = (*s)[:len(*s)-1]
return st
}
func (s *structStack) peek() *Structure {
if s.empty() {
return nil
}
return (*s)[len(*s)-1]
}
// CurrentTypedef will point to a typedef record if we're parsing one. Typedefs
// can define a struct or union type, but the preferred for is struct xxx{...},
// so we may never see the typedef form in practice.
var CurrentTypedef *Typedef
// CurrentUnion holds the current discriminated union record.
var CurrentUnion *Union
// CurrentCase holds the current case record while the parser is in a union and
// a case statement.
var CurrentCase *Case
// Generate will output go bindings for libvirt. The lvPath parameter should be
// the path to the root of the libvirt source directory to use for the
// generation.
func Generate(proto io.Reader) error {
Gen.StructMap = make(map[string]int)
Gen.UnionMap = make(map[string]int)
lexer, err := NewLexer(proto)
if err != nil {
return err
}
go lexer.Run()
parser := yyNewParser()
yyErrorVerbose = true
// Turn this on if you're debugging.
// yyDebug = 3
rv := parser.Parse(lexer)
if rv != 0 {
return fmt.Errorf("failed to parse libvirt protocol: %v", rv)
}
// When parsing is done, we can link the procedures we've found to their
// argument types.
procLink()
// Generate and write the output.
constFile, err := os.Create("../constants/constants.gen.go")
if err != nil {
return err
}
defer constFile.Close()
procFile, err := os.Create("../../libvirt.gen.go")
if err != nil {
return err
}
defer procFile.Close()
err = genGo(constFile, procFile)
return err
}
// genGo is called when the parsing is done; it generates the golang output
// files using templates.
func genGo(constFile, procFile io.Writer) error {
t, err := template.ParseFiles("constants.tmpl")
if err != nil {
return err
}
if err = t.Execute(constFile, Gen); err != nil {
return err
}
t, err = template.ParseFiles("procedures.tmpl")
if err != nil {
return err
}
return t.Execute(procFile, Gen)
}
// constNameTransform changes an upcased, snake-style name like
// REMOTE_PROTOCOL_VERSION to a comfortable Go name like ProtocolVersion. It
// also tries to upcase abbreviations so a name like DOMAIN_GET_XML becomes
// DomainGetXML, not DomainGetXml.
func constNameTransform(name string) string {
decamelize := strings.ContainsRune(name, '_')
nn := strings.TrimPrefix(name, "REMOTE_")
if decamelize {
nn = fromSnakeToCamel(nn)
}
nn = fixAbbrevs(nn)
return nn
}
func identifierTransform(name string) string {
decamelize := strings.ContainsRune(name, '_')
nn := strings.TrimPrefix(name, "remote_")
if decamelize {
nn = fromSnakeToCamel(nn)
} else {
nn = publicize(nn)
}
nn = fixAbbrevs(nn)
nn = checkIdentifier(nn)
// Many types in libvirt are prefixed with "Nonnull" to distinguish them
// from optional values. We add "Opt" to optional values and strip "Nonnull"
// because this makes the go code clearer.
nn = strings.TrimPrefix(nn, "Nonnull")
return nn
}
func typeTransform(name string) string {
nn := strings.TrimLeft(name, "*[]")
diff := len(name) - len(nn)
nn = identifierTransform(nn)
return name[0:diff] + nn
}
func publicize(name string) string {
if len(name) <= 0 {
return name
}
r, n := utf8.DecodeRuneInString(name)
name = string(unicode.ToUpper(r)) + name[n:]
return name
}
// fromSnakeToCamel transmutes a snake-cased string to a camel-cased one. All
// runes that follow an underscore are up-cased, and the underscores themselves
// are omitted.
//
// ex: "PROC_DOMAIN_GET_METADATA" -> "ProcDomainGetMetadata"
func fromSnakeToCamel(s string) string {
buf := make([]rune, 0, len(s))
// Start rune will be upper case - we generate all public symbols.
hump := true
for _, r := range s {
if r == '_' {
hump = true
} else {
var transform func(rune) rune
if hump == true {
transform = unicode.ToUpper
} else {
transform = unicode.ToLower
}
buf = append(buf, transform(r))
hump = false
}
}
return string(buf)
}
// abbrevs is a list of abbreviations which should be all upper-case in a name.
// (This is really just to keep the go linters happy and to produce names that
// are intuitive to a go developer.)
var abbrevs = []string{"Xml", "Io", "Uuid", "Cpu", "Id", "Ip"}
// fixAbbrevs up-cases all instances of anything in the 'abbrevs' array. This
// would be a simple matter, but we don't want to upcase an abbreviation if it's
// actually part of a larger word, so it's not so simple.
func fixAbbrevs(s string) string {
for _, a := range abbrevs {
for loc := 0; ; {
loc = strings.Index(s[loc:], a)
if loc == -1 {
break
}
r := 'A'
if len(a) < len(s[loc:]) {
r, _ = utf8.DecodeRune([]byte(s[loc+len(a):]))
}
if unicode.IsLower(r) == false {
s = s[:loc] + strings.Replace(s[loc:], a, strings.ToUpper(a), 1)
}
loc++
}
}
return s
}
// procLink associates a libvirt procedure with the types that are its arguments
// and return values, filling out those fields in the procedure struct. These
// types are extracted by iterating through the argument and return structures
// defined in the protocol file. If one or both of these structs is not defined
// then either the args or return values are empty.
func procLink() {
flagTypes := mapFlagTypes()
for ix, proc := range Gen.Procs {
argsName := proc.Name + "Args"
retName := proc.Name + "Ret"
argsIx, hasArgs := Gen.StructMap[argsName]
retIx, hasRet := Gen.StructMap[retName]
if hasArgs {
argsStruct := Gen.Structs[argsIx]
Gen.Procs[ix].ArgsStruct = argsStruct.Name
changeFlagType(proc.Name, &argsStruct, flagTypes)
Gen.Procs[ix].Args = argsStruct.Members
}
if hasRet {
retStruct := Gen.Structs[retIx]
Gen.Procs[ix].RetStruct = retStruct.Name
Gen.Procs[ix].Ret = retStruct.Members
}
}
}
// mapFlagTypes builds a map of the C types which appear to correspond to the
// various flags fields in libvirt calls. Determining whether a type actually
// corresponds to a set of flags is done by pattern matching the type name;
// libvirt isn't completely consistent about the names of flag types, but they
// all seem to have one of three suffixes, so that's what we look for here.
//
// This code uses the loader package to load the constants file generated by
// c-for-go, which runs against libvirt's C sources. This file is generated by
// 'go generate ./...' prior to the lvgen/ generator being run.
func mapFlagTypes() map[string]ast.Expr {
pconf := loader.Config{}
f, err := pconf.ParseFile("../../const.gen.go", nil)
if err != nil {
panic(fmt.Sprintln("failed to read constants file: ", err))
}
pconf.CreateFromFiles("const", f)
prog, err := pconf.Load()
if err != nil {
panic(fmt.Sprintln("failed to load package: ", err))
}
cpkg := prog.Package("const")
tmap := make(map[string]ast.Expr)
ast.Inspect(cpkg.Files[0], func(n ast.Node) bool {
switch t := n.(type) {
case *ast.TypeSpec:
// There isn't a single name pattern that covers all of the flag
// types, so we'll collect all the types that map to int32 here.
if fmt.Sprintf("%s", t.Type) == "int32" {
tmap[t.Name.String()] = t.Type
}
}
return true
})
return tmap
}
// Many libvirt calls use flags whose values come from a set of definitions
// whose name we can't predict. So this map exists to do the translation for us.
// The only way to remove this fragile map would be to use the comments from the
// .c files in libvirt, which contain doxygen-style parameter comments that
// specify the valid value types for flags.
var flagMap = map[string]string{
"ConnectOpen": "ConnectFlags",
"DomainAddIothread": "DomainModificationImpact",
"DomainCoreDumpWithFormat": "DomainCoreDumpFlags",
"DomainCreateXML": "DomainCreateFlags",
"DomainCreateWithFiles": "DomainCreateFlags",
"DomainCreateXMLWithFiles": "DomainCreateFlags",
"DomainDefineXMLFlags": "DomainDefineFlags",
"DomainDelIothread": "DomainModificationImpact",
"DomainDestroyFlags": "DomainDestroyFlagsValues",
"DomainGetCPUStats": "TypedParameterFlags",
"DomainGetEmulatorPinInfo": "DomainModificationImpact",
"DomainGetInterfaceParameters": "DomainModificationImpact",
"DomainGetIothreadInfo": "DomainModificationImpact",
"DomainGetMetadata": "DomainModificationImpact",
"DomainGetPerfEvents": "DomainModificationImpact",
"DomainGetXMLDesc": "DomainXMLFlags",
"DomainManagedSaveDefineXML": "DomainSaveRestoreFlags",
"DomainManagedSaveGetXMLDesc": "DomainXMLFlags",
"DomainMemoryPeek": "DomainMemoryFlags",
"DomainMigratePerform3Params": "DomainMigrateFlags",
"DomainOpenChannel": "DomainChannelFlags",
"DomainOpenGraphicsFd": "DomainOpenGraphicsFlags",
"DomainPinEmulator": "DomainModificationImpact",
"DomainPinIothread": "DomainModificationImpact",
"DomainSetLifecycleAction": "DomainModificationImpact",
"DomainSetMemoryStatsPeriod": "DomainMemoryModFlags",
"DomainSetMetadata": "DomainModificationImpact",
"DomainSetPerfEvents": "DomainModificationImpact",
"DomainSetVcpu": "DomainModificationImpact",
"DomainShutdownFlags": "DomainShutdownFlagValues",
"DomainUndefineFlags": "DomainUndefineFlagsValues",
"DomainUpdateDeviceFlags": "DomainDeviceModifyFlags",
"StoragePoolCreateXML": "StoragePoolCreateFlags",
"StoragePoolGetXMLDesc": "StorageXMLFlags",
"StorageVolCreateXML": "StorageVolCreateFlags",
"StorageVolCreateXMLFrom": "StorageVolCreateFlags",
}
// findFlagType attempts to find a real type for the flags passed to a given
// libvirt routine.
func findFlagType(procName string, flagTypes map[string]ast.Expr) (string, bool) {
flagName, ok := flagMap[procName]
if ok {
// Verify the mapped name exists
if _, ok = flagTypes[flagName]; ok == false {
// If one of the manual flag mappings is wrong, complain but
// continue. This happens with older versions of libvirt.
fmt.Printf("manual flag type %v for %v not found, continuing", flagName, procName)
return "", false
}
return flagName, true
}
// Not in the manual map, so do a search using the 3 patterns libvirt uses.
tnames := [...]string{procName + "Flags", procName + "FlagValues", procName + "FlagsValues"}
for _, n := range tnames {
if _, ok := flagTypes[n]; ok == true {
return n, true
}
}
return "", false
}
// changeFlagType looks up the go type for a libvirt call's flags field. In C
// these flags are all uint32, and you have to consult the documentation to
// determine what the valid set of flags is for a given libvirt call. For Go
// we're attempting to do better by specifying an actual type so that the
// possible values are easier to determine. This is a heuristic, however, based
// on naming patterns in the libvirt code. To do better we would need to look at
// the doxygen-style comments in the libvirt sources.
//
// Failing to find a flags type isn't a fatal error, it just means that we'll
// leave the flags with a type of uint32.
func changeFlagType(procName string, s *Structure, flagTypes map[string]ast.Expr) {
for ix, d := range s.Members {
if d.Name == "Flags" {
tname, found := findFlagType(procName, flagTypes)
if found {
s.Members[ix].Type = tname
} else {
// If you're adding procedures to to the manual map, you may
// want to uncomment this to see what flag types are not found.
// fmt.Println("flags type for", procName, "not found")
}
}
}
}
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Routines called by the parser's actions.
//---------------------------------------------------------------------------
// StartEnum is called when the parser has found a valid enum.
func StartEnum(name string) {
// Enums are always signed 32-bit integers.
goname := identifierTransform(name)
Gen.Enums = append(Gen.Enums, Decl{goname, name, "int32"})
// Set the automatic value var to -1; it will be incremented before being
// assigned to an enum value.
CurrentEnumVal = -1
}
// AddEnumVal will add a new enum value to the list.
func AddEnumVal(name, val string) error {
ev, err := parseNumber(val)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("invalid enum value %v = %v", name, val)
}
return addEnumVal(name, ev, nil)
}
// AddEnumValMeta will add a new enum value with attached metadata to the list.
func AddEnumValMeta(name, val, meta string) error {
ev, err := parseNumber(val)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("invalid enum value %v = %v", name, val)
}
metaObj, err := parseMeta(meta)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("invalid metadata for enum value %v: %v", name, err)
}
return addEnumVal(name, ev, metaObj)
}
// AddEnumAutoVal adds an enum to the list, using the automatically-incremented
// value. This is called when the parser finds an enum definition without an
// explicit value.
func AddEnumAutoVal(name string) error {
CurrentEnumVal++
return addEnumVal(name, CurrentEnumVal, nil)
}
func addEnumVal(name string, val int64, meta *ProcMeta) error {
goname := constNameTransform(name)
Gen.EnumVals = append(Gen.EnumVals, ConstItem{goname, name, fmt.Sprintf("%d", val)})
CurrentEnumVal = val
addProc(goname, name, val, meta)
return nil
}
// AddConst adds a new constant to the parser's list.
func AddConst(name, val string) error {
_, err := parseNumber(val)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("invalid const value %v = %v", name, val)
}
goname := constNameTransform(name)
Gen.Consts = append(Gen.Consts, ConstItem{goname, name, val})
return nil
}
// addProc checks an enum value to see if it's a procedure number. If so, we
// add the procedure to our list for later generation.
func addProc(goname, lvname string, val int64, meta *ProcMeta) {
if !strings.HasPrefix(goname, "Proc") {
return
}
goname = goname[4:]
proc := &Proc{Num: val, Name: goname, LVName: lvname, ReadStreamIdx: -1, WriteStreamIdx: -1}
if meta != nil {
proc.ReadStreamIdx = meta.ReadStream
proc.WriteStreamIdx = meta.WriteStream
}
Gen.Procs = append(Gen.Procs, *proc)
}
// parseNumber makes sure that a parsed numerical value can be parsed to a 64-
// bit integer.
func parseNumber(val string) (int64, error) {
base := 10
if strings.HasPrefix(val, "0x") {
base = 16
val = val[2:]
}
n, err := strconv.ParseInt(val, base, 64)
return n, err
}
// parseMeta parses procedure metadata to simple string mapping
func parseMeta(meta string) (*ProcMeta, error) {
res := &ProcMeta{
ReadStream: -1,
WriteStream: -1,
}
for _, line := range strings.Split(meta, "\n") {
atInd := strings.Index(line, "@")
if atInd == -1 {
// Should be only first and last line of comment
continue
}
spl := strings.SplitN(line[atInd+1:], ":", 2)
if len(spl) != 2 {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("invalid annotation: %s", meta)
}
spl[1] = strings.Trim(spl[1], " ")
switch spl[0] {
case "readstream":
var err error
res.ReadStream, err = strconv.Atoi(spl[1])
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("invalid value for readstream: %s", spl[1])
}
case "writestream":
var err error
res.WriteStream, err = strconv.Atoi(spl[1])
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("invalid value for writestream: %s", spl[1])
}
}
}
return res, nil
}
// StartStruct is called from the parser when a struct definition is found, but
// before the member declarations are processed.
func StartStruct(name string) {
goname := identifierTransform(name)
CurrentStruct.push(&Structure{Name: goname, LVName: name})
}
// AddStruct is called when the parser has finished parsing a struct. It adds
// the now-complete struct definition to the generator's list.
func AddStruct() {
st := *CurrentStruct.pop()
Gen.StructMap[st.Name] = len(Gen.Structs)
Gen.Structs = append(Gen.Structs, st)
}
// StartTypedef is called when the parser finds a typedef.
func StartTypedef() {
CurrentTypedef = &Typedef{}
}
// StartUnion is called by the parser when it finds a union declaraion.
func StartUnion(name string) {
name = identifierTransform(name)
CurrentUnion = &Union{Name: name}
}
// AddUnion is called by the parser when it has finished processing a union
// type. It adds the union to the generator's list and clears the CurrentUnion
// pointer. We handle unions by declaring an interface for the union type, and
// adding methods to each of the cases so that they satisfy the interface.
func AddUnion() {
Gen.UnionMap[CurrentUnion.Name] = len(Gen.Unions)
Gen.Unions = append(Gen.Unions, *CurrentUnion)
CurrentUnion = nil
}
// StartCase is called when the parser finds a case statement within a union.
func StartCase(dvalue string) {
// In libvirt, the discriminant values are all C pre- processor definitions.
// Since we don't run the C pre-processor on the protocol file, they're
// still just names when we get them - we don't actually have their integer
// values. We'll use the strings to build the type names, although this is
// brittle, because we're defining a type for each of the case values, and
// that type needs a name.
caseName := dvalue
if ix := strings.LastIndexByte(caseName, '_'); ix != -1 {
caseName = caseName[ix+1:]
}
caseName = fromSnakeToCamel(caseName)
dv, ok := lvTypedParams[dvalue]
if ok {
dvalue = strconv.FormatUint(uint64(dv), 10)
}
CurrentCase = &Case{CaseName: caseName, DiscriminantVal: dvalue}
}
// AddCase is called when the parser finishes parsing a case.
func AddCase() {
CurrentUnion.Cases = append(CurrentUnion.Cases, *CurrentCase)
CurrentCase = nil
}
// AddDeclaration is called by the parser when it find a declaration (int x).
// The declaration will be added to any open container (such as a struct, if the
// parser is working through a struct definition.)
func AddDeclaration(identifier, itype string) {
addDecl(NewDecl(identifier, itype))
}
// addDecl adds a declaration to the current container.
func addDecl(decl *Decl) {
if !CurrentStruct.empty() {
st := CurrentStruct.peek()
st.Members = append(st.Members, *decl)
} else if CurrentTypedef != nil {
CurrentTypedef.Name = decl.Name
CurrentTypedef.LVName = decl.LVName
CurrentTypedef.Type = decl.Type
if CurrentTypedef.Name != "string" {
// Omit recursive typedefs. These happen because we're massaging
// some of the type names.
Gen.Typedefs = append(Gen.Typedefs, *CurrentTypedef)
}
CurrentTypedef = nil
} else if CurrentCase != nil {
CurrentCase.Name = decl.Name
CurrentCase.Type = decl.Type
} else if CurrentUnion != nil {
CurrentUnion.DiscriminantType = decl.Type
}
}
// AddFixedArray is called by the parser to add a fixed-length array to the
// current container (struct, union, etc). Fixed-length arrays are not length-
// prefixed.
func AddFixedArray(identifier, itype, len string) {
atype := fmt.Sprintf("[%v]%v", len, itype)
addDecl(NewDecl(identifier, atype))
}
// AddVariableArray is called by the parser to add a variable-length array.
// Variable-length arrays are prefixed with a 32-bit unsigned length, and may
// also have a maximum length specified.
func AddVariableArray(identifier, itype, len string) {
// This code ignores the length restriction (array<MAXLEN>), so as of now we
// can't check to make sure that we're not exceeding that restriction when
// we fill in message buffers. That may not matter, if libvirt's checking is
// careful enough.
atype := "[]" + itype
// Handle strings specially. In the rpcgen definition a string is specified
// as a variable-length array, either with or without a max length. We want
// these to be go strings, so we'll just remove the array specifier.
if itype == "string" {
atype = itype
}
addDecl(NewDecl(identifier, atype))
}
// AddOptValue is called by the parser to add an optional value. These are
// declared in the protocol definition file using a syntax that looks like a
// pointer declaration, but are actually represented by a variable-sized array
// with a maximum size of 1.
func AddOptValue(identifier, itype string) {
atype := "[]" + itype
decl := NewDecl(identifier, atype)
newType := "Opt" + decl.Name
goEquivTypes[decl.Name] = newType
decl.Name = newType
addDecl(decl)
}
// checkIdentifier determines whether an identifier is in our translation list.
// If so it returns the translated name. This is used to massage the type names
// we're emitting.
func checkIdentifier(i string) string {
nn, reserved := goEquivTypes[i]
if reserved {
return nn
}
return i
}
// GetUnion returns the type information for a union. If the provided type name
// isn't a union, this will return a zero-value Union type.
func (decl *Decl) GetUnion() Union {
ix, ok := Gen.UnionMap[decl.Type]
if ok {
return Gen.Unions[ix]
}
return Union{}
}