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forgejo/vendor/github.com/jbenet/go-context/io/ctxio.go
Lauris BH 08bf443016 Implement git refs API for listing references (branches, tags and other) (#5354)
* Inital routes to git refs api

* Git refs API implementation

* Update swagger

* Fix copyright

* Make swagger happy add basic test

* Fix test

* Fix test again :)
2018-11-27 16:52:20 -05:00

120 lines
3.1 KiB
Go
Vendored

// Package ctxio provides io.Reader and io.Writer wrappers that
// respect context.Contexts. Use these at the interface between
// your context code and your io.
//
// WARNING: read the code. see how writes and reads will continue
// until you cancel the io. Maybe this package should provide
// versions of io.ReadCloser and io.WriteCloser that automatically
// call .Close when the context expires. But for now -- since in my
// use cases I have long-lived connections with ephemeral io wrappers
// -- this has yet to be a need.
package ctxio
import (
"io"
context "golang.org/x/net/context"
)
type ioret struct {
n int
err error
}
type Writer interface {
io.Writer
}
type ctxWriter struct {
w io.Writer
ctx context.Context
}
// NewWriter wraps a writer to make it respect given Context.
// If there is a blocking write, the returned Writer will return
// whenever the context is cancelled (the return values are n=0
// and err=ctx.Err().)
//
// Note well: this wrapper DOES NOT ACTUALLY cancel the underlying
// write-- there is no way to do that with the standard go io
// interface. So the read and write _will_ happen or hang. So, use
// this sparingly, make sure to cancel the read or write as necesary
// (e.g. closing a connection whose context is up, etc.)
//
// Furthermore, in order to protect your memory from being read
// _after_ you've cancelled the context, this io.Writer will
// first make a **copy** of the buffer.
func NewWriter(ctx context.Context, w io.Writer) *ctxWriter {
if ctx == nil {
ctx = context.Background()
}
return &ctxWriter{ctx: ctx, w: w}
}
func (w *ctxWriter) Write(buf []byte) (int, error) {
buf2 := make([]byte, len(buf))
copy(buf2, buf)
c := make(chan ioret, 1)
go func() {
n, err := w.w.Write(buf2)
c <- ioret{n, err}
close(c)
}()
select {
case r := <-c:
return r.n, r.err
case <-w.ctx.Done():
return 0, w.ctx.Err()
}
}
type Reader interface {
io.Reader
}
type ctxReader struct {
r io.Reader
ctx context.Context
}
// NewReader wraps a reader to make it respect given Context.
// If there is a blocking read, the returned Reader will return
// whenever the context is cancelled (the return values are n=0
// and err=ctx.Err().)
//
// Note well: this wrapper DOES NOT ACTUALLY cancel the underlying
// write-- there is no way to do that with the standard go io
// interface. So the read and write _will_ happen or hang. So, use
// this sparingly, make sure to cancel the read or write as necesary
// (e.g. closing a connection whose context is up, etc.)
//
// Furthermore, in order to protect your memory from being read
// _before_ you've cancelled the context, this io.Reader will
// allocate a buffer of the same size, and **copy** into the client's
// if the read succeeds in time.
func NewReader(ctx context.Context, r io.Reader) *ctxReader {
return &ctxReader{ctx: ctx, r: r}
}
func (r *ctxReader) Read(buf []byte) (int, error) {
buf2 := make([]byte, len(buf))
c := make(chan ioret, 1)
go func() {
n, err := r.r.Read(buf2)
c <- ioret{n, err}
close(c)
}()
select {
case ret := <-c:
copy(buf, buf2)
return ret.n, ret.err
case <-r.ctx.Done():
return 0, r.ctx.Err()
}
}