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html: refactor the blacklist for the "render and re-parse" test.
R=andybalholm CC=golang-dev, mikesamuel https://golang.org/cl/5331056
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@ -160,14 +160,10 @@ func TestParser(t *testing.T) {
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t.Errorf("%s test #%d %q, got vs want:\n----\n%s----\n%s----", filename, i, text, got, want)
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continue
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}
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// Check that rendering and re-parsing results in an identical tree.
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if filename == "tests1.dat" && (i == 30 || i == 77) {
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// Some tests in tests1.dat have such messed-up markup that a correct parse
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// results in a non-conforming tree (one <a> element nested inside another).
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// Therefore when it is rendered and re-parsed, it isn't the same.
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// So we skip rendering on that test.
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if renderTestBlacklist[text] {
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continue
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}
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// Check that rendering and re-parsing results in an identical tree.
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pr, pw := io.Pipe()
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go func() {
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pw.CloseWithError(Render(pw, doc))
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@ -187,3 +183,15 @@ func TestParser(t *testing.T) {
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}
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}
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}
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// Some test input result in parse trees are not 'well-formed' despite
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// following the HTML5 recovery algorithms. Rendering and re-parsing such a
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// tree will not result in an exact clone of that tree. We blacklist such
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// inputs from the render test.
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var renderTestBlacklist = map[string]bool{
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// The second <a> will be reparented to the first <table>'s parent. This
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// results in an <a> whose parent is an <a>, which is not 'well-formed'.
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`<a><table><td><a><table></table><a></tr><a></table><b>X</b>C<a>Y`: true,
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// The second <a> will be reparented, similar to the case above.
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`<a href="blah">aba<table><a href="foo">br<tr><td></td></tr>x</table>aoe`: true,
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}
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@ -19,17 +19,28 @@ type writer interface {
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// Render renders the parse tree n to the given writer.
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//
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// For 'well-formed' parse trees, calling Parse on the output of Render will
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// result in a clone of the original tree.
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// Rendering is done on a 'best effort' basis: calling Parse on the output of
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// Render will always result in something similar to the original tree, but it
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// is not necessarily an exact clone unless the original tree was 'well-formed'.
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// 'Well-formed' is not easily specified; the HTML5 specification is
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// complicated.
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//
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// 'Well-formed' is not formally specified, but calling Parse on arbitrary
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// input results in a 'well-formed' parse tree if Parse does not return an
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// error. Programmatically constructed trees are typically also 'well-formed',
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// but it is possible to construct a tree that, when rendered and re-parsed,
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// results in a different tree. A simple example is that a solitary text node
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// would become a tree containing <html>, <head> and <body> elements. Another
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// example is that the programmatic equivalent of "a<head>b</head>c" becomes
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// "<html><head><head/><body>abc</body></html>".
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// Calling Parse on arbitrary input typically results in a 'well-formed' parse
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// tree. However, it is possible for Parse to yield a 'badly-formed' parse tree.
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// For example, in a 'well-formed' parse tree, no <a> element is a child of
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// another <a> element: parsing "<a><a>" results in two sibling elements.
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// Similarly, in a 'well-formed' parse tree, no <a> element is a child of a
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// <table> element: parsing "<p><table><a>" results in a <p> with two sibling
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// children; the <a> is reparented to the <table>'s parent. However, calling
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// Parse on "<a><table><a>" does not return an error, but the result has an <a>
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// element with an <a> child, and is therefore not 'well-formed'.
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//
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// Programmatically constructed trees are typically also 'well-formed', but it
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// is possible to construct a tree that looks innocuous but, when rendered and
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// re-parsed, results in a different tree. A simple example is that a solitary
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// text node would become a tree containing <html>, <head> and <body> elements.
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// Another example is that the programmatic equivalent of "a<head>b</head>c"
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// becomes "<html><head><head/><body>abc</body></html>".
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func Render(w io.Writer, n *Node) os.Error {
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if x, ok := w.(writer); ok {
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return render(x, n)
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