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207 lines
5.2 KiB
207 lines
5.2 KiB
6 years ago
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package sockaddr
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import (
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"encoding/json"
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"fmt"
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"strings"
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)
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type SockAddrType int
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type AttrName string
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const (
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TypeUnknown SockAddrType = 0x0
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TypeUnix = 0x1
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TypeIPv4 = 0x2
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TypeIPv6 = 0x4
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// TypeIP is the union of TypeIPv4 and TypeIPv6
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TypeIP = 0x6
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)
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type SockAddr interface {
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// CmpRFC returns 0 if SockAddr exactly matches one of the matched RFC
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// networks, -1 if the receiver is contained within the RFC network, or
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// 1 if the address is not contained within the RFC.
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CmpRFC(rfcNum uint, sa SockAddr) int
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// Contains returns true if the SockAddr arg is contained within the
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// receiver
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Contains(SockAddr) bool
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// Equal allows for the comparison of two SockAddrs
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Equal(SockAddr) bool
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DialPacketArgs() (string, string)
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DialStreamArgs() (string, string)
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ListenPacketArgs() (string, string)
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ListenStreamArgs() (string, string)
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// String returns the string representation of SockAddr
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String() string
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// Type returns the SockAddrType
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Type() SockAddrType
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}
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// sockAddrAttrMap is a map of the SockAddr type-specific attributes.
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var sockAddrAttrMap map[AttrName]func(SockAddr) string
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var sockAddrAttrs []AttrName
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func init() {
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sockAddrInit()
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}
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// New creates a new SockAddr from the string. The order in which New()
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// attempts to construct a SockAddr is: IPv4Addr, IPv6Addr, SockAddrUnix.
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//
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// NOTE: New() relies on the heuristic wherein if the path begins with either a
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// '.' or '/' character before creating a new UnixSock. For UNIX sockets that
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// are absolute paths or are nested within a sub-directory, this works as
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// expected, however if the UNIX socket is contained in the current working
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// directory, this will fail unless the path begins with "./"
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// (e.g. "./my-local-socket"). Calls directly to NewUnixSock() do not suffer
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// this limitation. Invalid IP addresses such as "256.0.0.0/-1" will run afoul
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// of this heuristic and be assumed to be a valid UNIX socket path (which they
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// are, but it is probably not what you want and you won't realize it until you
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// stat(2) the file system to discover it doesn't exist).
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func NewSockAddr(s string) (SockAddr, error) {
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ipv4Addr, err := NewIPv4Addr(s)
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if err == nil {
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return ipv4Addr, nil
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}
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ipv6Addr, err := NewIPv6Addr(s)
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if err == nil {
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return ipv6Addr, nil
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}
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// Check to make sure the string begins with either a '.' or '/', or
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// contains a '/'.
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if len(s) > 1 && (strings.IndexAny(s[0:1], "./") != -1 || strings.IndexByte(s, '/') != -1) {
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unixSock, err := NewUnixSock(s)
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if err == nil {
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return unixSock, nil
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}
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}
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return nil, fmt.Errorf("Unable to convert %q to an IPv4 or IPv6 address, or a UNIX Socket", s)
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}
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// ToIPAddr returns an IPAddr type or nil if the type conversion fails.
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func ToIPAddr(sa SockAddr) *IPAddr {
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ipa, ok := sa.(IPAddr)
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if !ok {
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return nil
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}
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return &ipa
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}
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// ToIPv4Addr returns an IPv4Addr type or nil if the type conversion fails.
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func ToIPv4Addr(sa SockAddr) *IPv4Addr {
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switch v := sa.(type) {
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case IPv4Addr:
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return &v
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default:
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return nil
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}
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}
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// ToIPv6Addr returns an IPv6Addr type or nil if the type conversion fails.
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func ToIPv6Addr(sa SockAddr) *IPv6Addr {
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switch v := sa.(type) {
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case IPv6Addr:
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return &v
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default:
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return nil
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}
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}
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// ToUnixSock returns a UnixSock type or nil if the type conversion fails.
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func ToUnixSock(sa SockAddr) *UnixSock {
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switch v := sa.(type) {
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case UnixSock:
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return &v
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default:
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return nil
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}
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}
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// SockAddrAttr returns a string representation of an attribute for the given
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// SockAddr.
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func SockAddrAttr(sa SockAddr, selector AttrName) string {
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fn, found := sockAddrAttrMap[selector]
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if !found {
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return ""
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}
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return fn(sa)
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}
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// String() for SockAddrType returns a string representation of the
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// SockAddrType (e.g. "IPv4", "IPv6", "UNIX", "IP", or "unknown").
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func (sat SockAddrType) String() string {
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switch sat {
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case TypeIPv4:
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return "IPv4"
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case TypeIPv6:
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return "IPv6"
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// There is no concrete "IP" type. Leaving here as a reminder.
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// case TypeIP:
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// return "IP"
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case TypeUnix:
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return "UNIX"
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default:
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panic("unsupported type")
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}
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}
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// sockAddrInit is called once at init()
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func sockAddrInit() {
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sockAddrAttrs = []AttrName{
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"type", // type should be first
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"string",
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}
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sockAddrAttrMap = map[AttrName]func(sa SockAddr) string{
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"string": func(sa SockAddr) string {
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return sa.String()
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},
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"type": func(sa SockAddr) string {
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return sa.Type().String()
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},
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}
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}
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// UnixSockAttrs returns a list of attributes supported by the UnixSock type
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func SockAddrAttrs() []AttrName {
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return sockAddrAttrs
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}
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// Although this is pretty trivial to do in a program, having the logic here is
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// useful all around. Note that this marshals into a *string* -- the underlying
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// string representation of the sockaddr. If you then unmarshal into this type
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// in Go, all will work as expected, but externally you can take what comes out
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// and use the string value directly.
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type SockAddrMarshaler struct {
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SockAddr
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}
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func (s *SockAddrMarshaler) MarshalJSON() ([]byte, error) {
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return json.Marshal(s.SockAddr.String())
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}
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func (s *SockAddrMarshaler) UnmarshalJSON(in []byte) error {
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var str string
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err := json.Unmarshal(in, &str)
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if err != nil {
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return err
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}
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sa, err := NewSockAddr(str)
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if err != nil {
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return err
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}
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s.SockAddr = sa
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return nil
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}
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