mirror of
https://github.com/golang/go
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9ac8e33b36
We now rank printf operand candidates according to the corresponding formatting verb. We follow what fmt allows for the most part, but I omitted some things because they are uncommon and would result in many false positives, or didn't seem worth it to support: - We don't prefer fmt.Stringer or error types for "%x" or "%X". - We don't prefer pointers for any verbs except "%p". - We don't prefer recursive application of verbs (e.g. we won't prefer []string for "%s"). I decided against sharing code with the printf analyzer. It was tangled somewhat with go/analysis, and I needed only a very small subset of the format parsing. I tweaked candidate type evaluation to accommodate the printf hints. We now skip expected type of "interface{}" when matching candidate types because it matches everything and would always supersede the coarser object kind checks. Fixes golang/go#40485. Change-Id: I6440702e33d5ec85d701f8be65453044b5dab746 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/tools/+/246699 Run-TryBot: Muir Manders <muir@mnd.rs> TryBot-Result: Gobot Gobot <gobot@golang.org> Reviewed-by: Robert Findley <rfindley@google.com>
173 lines
4.3 KiB
Go
173 lines
4.3 KiB
Go
// Copyright 2020 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
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// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
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// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
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package source
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import (
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"go/ast"
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"go/constant"
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"go/types"
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"strconv"
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"strings"
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"unicode/utf8"
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)
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// printfArgKind returns the expected objKind when completing a
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// printf-like operand. call is the printf-like function call, and
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// argIdx is the index of call.Args being completed.
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func printfArgKind(info *types.Info, call *ast.CallExpr, argIdx int) objKind {
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// Printf-like function name must end in "f".
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fn := exprObj(info, call.Fun)
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if fn == nil || !strings.HasSuffix(fn.Name(), "f") {
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return kindAny
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}
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sig, _ := fn.Type().(*types.Signature)
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if sig == nil {
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return kindAny
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}
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// Must be variadic and take at least two params.
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numParams := sig.Params().Len()
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if !sig.Variadic() || numParams < 2 || argIdx < numParams-1 {
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return kindAny
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}
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// Param preceding variadic args must be a (format) string.
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if !types.Identical(sig.Params().At(numParams-2).Type(), types.Typ[types.String]) {
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return kindAny
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}
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// Format string must be a constant.
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strArg := info.Types[call.Args[numParams-2]].Value
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if strArg == nil || strArg.Kind() != constant.String {
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return kindAny
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}
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return formatOperandKind(constant.StringVal(strArg), argIdx-(numParams-1)+1)
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}
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// formatOperandKind returns the objKind corresponding to format's
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// operandIdx'th operand.
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func formatOperandKind(format string, operandIdx int) objKind {
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var (
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prevOperandIdx int
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kind = kindAny
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)
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for {
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i := strings.Index(format, "%")
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if i == -1 {
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break
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}
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var operands []formatOperand
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format, operands = parsePrintfVerb(format[i+1:], prevOperandIdx)
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// Check if any this verb's operands correspond to our target
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// operandIdx.
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for _, v := range operands {
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if v.idx == operandIdx {
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if kind == kindAny {
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kind = v.kind
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} else if v.kind != kindAny {
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// If mulitple verbs refer to the same operand, take the
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// intersection of their kinds.
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kind &= v.kind
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}
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}
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prevOperandIdx = v.idx
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}
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}
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return kind
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}
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type formatOperand struct {
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// idx is the one-based printf operand index.
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idx int
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// kind is a mask of expected kinds of objects for this operand.
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kind objKind
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}
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// parsePrintfVerb parses the leading printf verb in f. The opening
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// "%" must already be trimmed from f. prevIdx is the previous
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// operand's index, or zero if this is the first verb. The format
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// string is returned with the leading verb removed. Multiple operands
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// can be returned in the case of dynamic widths such as "%*.*f".
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func parsePrintfVerb(f string, prevIdx int) (string, []formatOperand) {
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var verbs []formatOperand
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addVerb := func(k objKind) {
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verbs = append(verbs, formatOperand{
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idx: prevIdx + 1,
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kind: k,
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})
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prevIdx++
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}
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for len(f) > 0 {
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// Trim first rune off of f so we are guaranteed to make progress.
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r, l := utf8.DecodeRuneInString(f)
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f = f[l:]
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// We care about three things:
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// 1. The verb, which maps directly to object kind.
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// 2. Explicit operand indices like "%[2]s".
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// 3. Dynamic widths using "*".
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switch r {
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case '%':
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return f, nil
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case '*':
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addVerb(kindInt)
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continue
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case '[':
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// Parse operand index as in "%[2]s".
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i := strings.Index(f, "]")
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if i == -1 {
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return f, nil
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}
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idx, err := strconv.Atoi(f[:i])
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f = f[i+1:]
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if err != nil {
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return f, nil
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}
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prevIdx = idx - 1
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continue
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case 'v', 'T':
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addVerb(kindAny)
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case 't':
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addVerb(kindBool)
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case 'c', 'd', 'o', 'O', 'U':
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addVerb(kindInt)
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case 'e', 'E', 'f', 'F', 'g', 'G':
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addVerb(kindFloat | kindComplex)
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case 'b':
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addVerb(kindInt | kindFloat | kindComplex | kindBytes)
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case 'q', 's':
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addVerb(kindString | kindBytes | kindStringer | kindError)
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case 'x', 'X':
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// Omit kindStringer and kindError though technically allowed.
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addVerb(kindString | kindBytes | kindInt | kindFloat | kindComplex)
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case 'p':
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addVerb(kindPtr | kindSlice)
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case 'w':
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addVerb(kindError)
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case '+', '-', '#', ' ', '.', '0', '1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8', '9':
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// Flag or numeric width/precicision value.
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continue
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default:
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// Assume unrecognized rune is a custom fmt.Formatter verb.
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addVerb(kindAny)
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}
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if len(verbs) > 0 {
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break
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}
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}
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return f, verbs
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}
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