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clair/vendor/github.com/google/cayley/graph/iterator.go

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// Copyright 2014 The Cayley Authors. All rights reserved.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
package graph
// Define the general iterator interface.
import (
"fmt"
"strings"
"sync"
"github.com/barakmich/glog"
"github.com/google/cayley/quad"
)
type Tagger struct {
tags []string
fixedTags map[string]Value
}
// TODO(barakmich): Linkage is general enough that there are places we take
//the combined arguments `quad.Direction, graph.Value` that it may be worth
//converting these into Linkages. If nothing else, future indexed iterators may
//benefit from the shared representation
// Linkage is a union type representing a set of values established for a given
// quad direction.
type Linkage struct {
Dir quad.Direction
Value Value
}
// TODO(barakmich): Helper functions as needed, eg, ValuesForDirection(quad.Direction) []Value
// Add a tag to the iterator.
func (t *Tagger) Add(tag string) {
t.tags = append(t.tags, tag)
}
func (t *Tagger) AddFixed(tag string, value Value) {
if t.fixedTags == nil {
t.fixedTags = make(map[string]Value)
}
t.fixedTags[tag] = value
}
// Tags returns the tags held in the tagger. The returned value must not be mutated.
func (t *Tagger) Tags() []string {
return t.tags
}
// Fixed returns the fixed tags held in the tagger. The returned value must not be mutated.
func (t *Tagger) Fixed() map[string]Value {
return t.fixedTags
}
func (t *Tagger) CopyFrom(src Iterator) {
t.CopyFromTagger(src.Tagger())
}
func (t *Tagger) CopyFromTagger(st *Tagger) {
t.tags = append(t.tags, st.tags...)
if t.fixedTags == nil {
t.fixedTags = make(map[string]Value, len(st.fixedTags))
}
for k, v := range st.fixedTags {
t.fixedTags[k] = v
}
}
type Iterator interface {
Tagger() *Tagger
// Fills a tag-to-result-value map.
TagResults(map[string]Value)
// Returns the current result.
Result() Value
// These methods are the heart and soul of the iterator, as they constitute
// the iteration interface.
//
// To get the full results of iteration, do the following:
//
// for graph.Next(it) {
// val := it.Result()
// ... do things with val.
// for it.NextPath() {
// ... find other paths to iterate
// }
// }
//
// All of them should set iterator.Last to be the last returned value, to
// make results work.
//
// NextPath() advances iterators that may have more than one valid result,
// from the bottom up.
NextPath() bool
// Contains returns whether the value is within the set held by the iterator.
Contains(Value) bool
// Err returns any error that was encountered by the Iterator.
Err() error
// Start iteration from the beginning
Reset()
// Create a new iterator just like this one
Clone() Iterator
// These methods relate to choosing the right iterator, or optimizing an
// iterator tree
//
// Stats() returns the relative costs of calling the iteration methods for
// this iterator, as well as the size. Roughly, it will take NextCost * Size
// "cost units" to get everything out of the iterator. This is a wibbly-wobbly
// thing, and not exact, but a useful heuristic.
Stats() IteratorStats
// Helpful accessor for the number of things in the iterator. The first return
// value is the size, and the second return value is whether that number is exact,
// or a conservative estimate.
Size() (int64, bool)
// Returns a string relating to what the function of the iterator is. By
// knowing the names of the iterators, we can devise optimization strategies.
Type() Type
// Optimizes an iterator. Can replace the iterator, or merely move things
// around internally. if it chooses to replace it with a better iterator,
// returns (the new iterator, true), if not, it returns (self, false).
Optimize() (Iterator, bool)
// Return a slice of the subiterators for this iterator.
SubIterators() []Iterator
// Return a string representation of the iterator.
Describe() Description
// Close the iterator and do internal cleanup.
Close() error
// UID returns the unique identifier of the iterator.
UID() uint64
}
type Description struct {
UID uint64 `json:",omitempty"`
Name string `json:",omitempty"`
Type Type `json:",omitempty"`
Tags []string `json:",omitempty"`
Size int64 `json:",omitempty"`
Direction quad.Direction `json:",omitempty"`
Iterator *Description `json:",omitempty"`
Iterators []Description `json:",omitempty"`
}
// ApplyMorphism is a curried function that can generates a new iterator based on some prior iterator.
type ApplyMorphism func(QuadStore, Iterator) Iterator
type Nexter interface {
// Next advances the iterator to the next value, which will then be available through
// the Result method. It returns false if no further advancement is possible, or if an
// error was encountered during iteration. Err should be consulted to distinguish
// between the two cases.
Next() bool
Iterator
}
// Next is a convenience function that conditionally calls the Next method
// of an Iterator if it is a Nexter. If the Iterator is not a Nexter, Next
// returns false.
func Next(it Iterator) bool {
if n, ok := it.(Nexter); ok {
return n.Next()
}
glog.Errorln("Nexting an un-nextable iterator")
return false
}
// Height is a convienence function to measure the height of an iterator tree.
func Height(it Iterator, until Type) int {
if it.Type() == until {
return 1
}
subs := it.SubIterators()
maxDepth := 0
for _, sub := range subs {
h := Height(sub, until)
if h > maxDepth {
maxDepth = h
}
}
return maxDepth + 1
}
// FixedIterator wraps iterators that are modifiable by addition of fixed value sets.
type FixedIterator interface {
Iterator
Add(Value)
}
type IteratorStats struct {
ContainsCost int64
NextCost int64
Size int64
Next int64
Contains int64
ContainsNext int64
}
// Type enumerates the set of Iterator types.
type Type int
// These are the iterator types, defined as constants
const (
Invalid Type = iota
All
And
Or
HasA
LinksTo
Comparison
Null
Fixed
Not
Optional
Materialize
Unique
)
var (
// We use a sync.Mutex rather than an RWMutex since the client packages keep
// the Type that was returned, so the only possibility for contention is at
// initialization.
lock sync.Mutex
// These strings must be kept in order consistent with the Type const block above.
types = []string{
"invalid",
"all",
"and",
"or",
"hasa",
"linksto",
"comparison",
"null",
"fixed",
"not",
"optional",
"materialize",
"unique",
}
)
// RegisterIterator adds a new iterator type to the set of acceptable types, returning
// the registered Type.
// Calls to Register are idempotent and must be made prior to use of the iterator.
// The conventional approach for use is to include a call to Register in a package
// init() function, saving the Type to a private package var.
func RegisterIterator(name string) Type {
lock.Lock()
defer lock.Unlock()
for i, t := range types {
if t == name {
return Type(i)
}
}
types = append(types, name)
return Type(len(types) - 1)
}
// String returns a string representation of the Type.
func (t Type) String() string {
if t < 0 || int(t) >= len(types) {
return "illegal-type"
}
return types[t]
}
func (t *Type) MarshalText() (text []byte, err error) {
if *t < 0 || int(*t) >= len(types) {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("graph: illegal iterator type: %d", *t)
}
return []byte(types[*t]), nil
}
func (t *Type) UnmarshalText(text []byte) error {
s := string(text)
for i, c := range types[1:] {
if c == s {
*t = Type(i + 1)
return nil
}
}
return fmt.Errorf("graph: unknown iterator label: %q", text)
}
type StatsContainer struct {
UID uint64
Type Type
IteratorStats
SubIts []StatsContainer
}
func DumpStats(it Iterator) StatsContainer {
var out StatsContainer
out.IteratorStats = it.Stats()
out.Type = it.Type()
out.UID = it.UID()
for _, sub := range it.SubIterators() {
out.SubIts = append(out.SubIts, DumpStats(sub))
}
return out
}
// Utility logging functions for when an iterator gets called Next upon, or Contains upon, as
// well as what they return. Highly useful for tracing the execution path of a query.
func ContainsLogIn(it Iterator, val Value) {
if glog.V(4) {
glog.V(4).Infof("%s %d CHECK CONTAINS %v", strings.ToUpper(it.Type().String()), it.UID(), val)
}
}
func ContainsLogOut(it Iterator, val Value, good bool) bool {
if glog.V(4) {
if good {
glog.V(4).Infof("%s %d CHECK CONTAINS %v GOOD", strings.ToUpper(it.Type().String()), it.UID(), val)
} else {
glog.V(4).Infof("%s %d CHECK CONTAINS %v BAD", strings.ToUpper(it.Type().String()), it.UID(), val)
}
}
return good
}
func NextLogIn(it Iterator) {
if glog.V(4) {
glog.V(4).Infof("%s %d NEXT", strings.ToUpper(it.Type().String()), it.UID())
}
}
func NextLogOut(it Iterator, val Value, ok bool) bool {
if glog.V(4) {
if ok {
glog.V(4).Infof("%s %d NEXT IS %v", strings.ToUpper(it.Type().String()), it.UID(), val)
} else {
glog.V(4).Infof("%s %d NEXT DONE", strings.ToUpper(it.Type().String()), it.UID())
}
}
return ok
}