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// Copyright 2017, The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
// Package cmpopts provides common options for the cmp package.
package cmpopts
import (
"errors"
"fmt"
"math"
"reflect"
"time"
"github.com/google/go-cmp/cmp"
)
func equateAlways(_, _ interface{}) bool { return true }
// EquateEmpty returns a [cmp.Comparer] option that determines all maps and slices
// with a length of zero to be equal, regardless of whether they are nil.
//
// EquateEmpty can be used in conjunction with [SortSlices] and [SortMaps].
func EquateEmpty() cmp.Option {
return cmp.FilterValues(isEmpty, cmp.Comparer(equateAlways))
}
func isEmpty(x, y interface{}) bool {
vx, vy := reflect.ValueOf(x), reflect.ValueOf(y)
return (x != nil && y != nil && vx.Type() == vy.Type()) &&
(vx.Kind() == reflect.Slice || vx.Kind() == reflect.Map) &&
(vx.Len() == 0 && vy.Len() == 0)
}
// EquateApprox returns a [cmp.Comparer] option that determines float32 or float64
// values to be equal if they are within a relative fraction or absolute margin.
// This option is not used when either x or y is NaN or infinite.
//
// The fraction determines that the difference of two values must be within the
// smaller fraction of the two values, while the margin determines that the two
// values must be within some absolute margin.
// To express only a fraction or only a margin, use 0 for the other parameter.
// The fraction and margin must be non-negative.
//
// The mathematical expression used is equivalent to:
//
// |x-y| ≤ max(fraction*min(|x|, |y|), margin)
//
// EquateApprox can be used in conjunction with [EquateNaNs].
func EquateApprox(fraction, margin float64) cmp.Option {
if margin < 0 || fraction < 0 || math.IsNaN(margin) || math.IsNaN(fraction) {
panic("margin or fraction must be a non-negative number")
}
a := approximator{fraction, margin}
return cmp.Options{
cmp.FilterValues(areRealF64s, cmp.Comparer(a.compareF64)),
cmp.FilterValues(areRealF32s, cmp.Comparer(a.compareF32)),
}
}
type approximator struct{ frac, marg float64 }
func areRealF64s(x, y float64) bool {
return !math.IsNaN(x) && !math.IsNaN(y) && !math.IsInf(x, 0) && !math.IsInf(y, 0)
}
func areRealF32s(x, y float32) bool {
return areRealF64s(float64(x), float64(y))
}
func (a approximator) compareF64(x, y float64) bool {
relMarg := a.frac * math.Min(math.Abs(x), math.Abs(y))
return math.Abs(x-y) <= math.Max(a.marg, relMarg)
}
func (a approximator) compareF32(x, y float32) bool {
return a.compareF64(float64(x), float64(y))
}
// EquateNaNs returns a [cmp.Comparer] option that determines float32 and float64
// NaN values to be equal.
//
// EquateNaNs can be used in conjunction with [EquateApprox].
func EquateNaNs() cmp.Option {
return cmp.Options{
cmp.FilterValues(areNaNsF64s, cmp.Comparer(equateAlways)),
cmp.FilterValues(areNaNsF32s, cmp.Comparer(equateAlways)),
}
}
func areNaNsF64s(x, y float64) bool {
return math.IsNaN(x) && math.IsNaN(y)
}
func areNaNsF32s(x, y float32) bool {
return areNaNsF64s(float64(x), float64(y))
}
// EquateApproxTime returns a [cmp.Comparer] option that determines two non-zero
// [time.Time] values to be equal if they are within some margin of one another.
// If both times have a monotonic clock reading, then the monotonic time
// difference will be used. The margin must be non-negative.
func EquateApproxTime(margin time.Duration) cmp.Option {
if margin < 0 {
panic("margin must be a non-negative number")
}
a := timeApproximator{margin}
return cmp.FilterValues(areNonZeroTimes, cmp.Comparer(a.compare))
}
func areNonZeroTimes(x, y time.Time) bool {
return !x.IsZero() && !y.IsZero()
}
type timeApproximator struct {
margin time.Duration
}
func (a timeApproximator) compare(x, y time.Time) bool {
// Avoid subtracting times to avoid overflow when the
// difference is larger than the largest representable duration.
if x.After(y) {
// Ensure x is always before y
x, y = y, x
}
// We're within the margin if x+margin >= y.
// Note: time.Time doesn't have AfterOrEqual method hence the negation.
return !x.Add(a.margin).Before(y)
}
// AnyError is an error that matches any non-nil error.
var AnyError anyError
type anyError struct{}
func (anyError) Error() string { return "any error" }
func (anyError) Is(err error) bool { return err != nil }
// EquateErrors returns a [cmp.Comparer] option that determines errors to be equal
// if [errors.Is] reports them to match. The [AnyError] error can be used to
// match any non-nil error.
func EquateErrors() cmp.Option {
return cmp.FilterValues(areConcreteErrors, cmp.Comparer(compareErrors))
}
// areConcreteErrors reports whether x and y are types that implement error.
// The input types are deliberately of the interface{} type rather than the
// error type so that we can handle situations where the current type is an
// interface{}, but the underlying concrete types both happen to implement
// the error interface.
func areConcreteErrors(x, y interface{}) bool {
_, ok1 := x.(error)
_, ok2 := y.(error)
return ok1 && ok2
}
func compareErrors(x, y interface{}) bool {
xe := x.(error)
ye := y.(error)
return errors.Is(xe, ye) || errors.Is(ye, xe)
}
// EquateComparable returns a [cmp.Option] that determines equality
// of comparable types by directly comparing them using the == operator in Go.
// The types to compare are specified by passing a value of that type.
// This option should only be used on types that are documented as being
// safe for direct == comparison. For example, [net/netip.Addr] is documented
// as being semantically safe to use with ==, while [time.Time] is documented
// to discourage the use of == on time values.
func EquateComparable(typs ...interface{}) cmp.Option {
types := make(typesFilter)
for _, typ := range typs {
switch t := reflect.TypeOf(typ); {
case !t.Comparable():
panic(fmt.Sprintf("%T is not a comparable Go type", typ))
case types[t]:
panic(fmt.Sprintf("%T is already specified", typ))
default:
types[t] = true
}
}
return cmp.FilterPath(types.filter, cmp.Comparer(equateAny))
}
type typesFilter map[reflect.Type]bool
func (tf typesFilter) filter(p cmp.Path) bool { return tf[p.Last().Type()] }
func equateAny(x, y interface{}) bool { return x == y }
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