protoc-gen-go-micro/vendor/github.com/imdario/mergo
2017-12-19 13:55:52 +01:00
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CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md Update vendors 2017-10-26 19:13:44 +02:00
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map.go Update vendors 2017-10-26 19:13:44 +02:00
merge.go Update vendors 2017-10-26 19:13:44 +02:00
mergo.go Update vendors 2017-10-26 19:13:44 +02:00
README.md Update vendors 2017-10-26 19:13:44 +02:00

Mergo

A helper to merge structs and maps in Golang. Useful for configuration default values, avoiding messy if-statements.

Also a lovely comune (municipality) in the Province of Ancona in the Italian region Marche.

Mergo dall'alto

Status

It is ready for production use. It works fine after extensive use in the wild.

Build Status GoDoc GoCard

Important note

Mergo is intended to assign only zero value fields on destination with source value. Since April 6th it works like this. Before it didn't work properly, causing some random overwrites. After some issues and PRs I found it didn't merge as I designed it. Thanks to imdario/mergo#8 overwriting functions were added and the wrong behavior was clearly detected.

If you were using Mergo before April 6th 2015, please check your project works as intended after updating your local copy with go get -u github.com/imdario/mergo. I apologize for any issue caused by its previous behavior and any future bug that Mergo could cause (I hope it won't!) in existing projects after the change (release 0.2.0).

Mergo in the wild

Installation

go get github.com/imdario/mergo

// use in your .go code
import (
    "github.com/imdario/mergo"
)

Usage

You can only merge same-type structs with exported fields initialized as zero value of their type and same-types maps. Mergo won't merge unexported (private) fields but will do recursively any exported one. Also maps will be merged recursively except for structs inside maps (because they are not addressable using Go reflection).

if err := mergo.Merge(&dst, src); err != nil {
    // ...
}

Also, you can merge overwriting values using MergeWithOverwrite.

if err := mergo.MergeWithOverwrite(&dst, src); err != nil {
    // ...
}

Additionally, you can map a map[string]interface{} to a struct (and otherwise, from struct to map), following the same restrictions as in Merge(). Keys are capitalized to find each corresponding exported field.

if err := mergo.Map(&dst, srcMap); err != nil {
    // ...
}

Warning: if you map a struct to map, it won't do it recursively. Don't expect Mergo to map struct members of your struct as map[string]interface{}. They will be just assigned as values.

More information and examples in godoc documentation.

Nice example

package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"github.com/imdario/mergo"
)

type Foo struct {
	A string
	B int64
}

func main() {
	src := Foo{
		A: "one",
		B: 2,
	}

	dest := Foo{
		A: "two",
	}

	mergo.Merge(&dest, src)

	fmt.Println(dest)
	// Will print
	// {two 2}
}

Note: if test are failing due missing package, please execute:

go get gopkg.in/yaml.v1

Contact me

If I can help you, you have an idea or you are using Mergo in your projects, don't hesitate to drop me a line (or a pull request): @im_dario

About

Written by Dario Castañé.

License

BSD 3-Clause license, as Go language.