| // Copyright 2009 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 gob |
| |
| import ( |
| "bufio" |
| "errors" |
| "io" |
| "reflect" |
| "sync" |
| ) |
| |
| // tooBig provides a sanity check for sizes; used in several places. Upper limit |
| // of is 1GB on 32-bit systems, 8GB on 64-bit, allowing room to grow a little |
| // without overflow. |
| const tooBig = (1 << 30) << (^uint(0) >> 62) |
| |
| // A Decoder manages the receipt of type and data information read from the |
| // remote side of a connection. |
| // |
| // The Decoder does only basic sanity checking on decoded input sizes, |
| // and its limits are not configurable. Take caution when decoding gob data |
| // from untrusted sources. |
| type Decoder struct { |
| mutex sync.Mutex // each item must be received atomically |
| r io.Reader // source of the data |
| buf decBuffer // buffer for more efficient i/o from r |
| wireType map[typeId]*wireType // map from remote ID to local description |
| decoderCache map[reflect.Type]map[typeId]**decEngine // cache of compiled engines |
| ignorerCache map[typeId]**decEngine // ditto for ignored objects |
| freeList *decoderState // list of free decoderStates; avoids reallocation |
| countBuf []byte // used for decoding integers while parsing messages |
| err error |
| } |
| |
| // NewDecoder returns a new decoder that reads from the io.Reader. |
| // If r does not also implement io.ByteReader, it will be wrapped in a |
| // bufio.Reader. |
| func NewDecoder(r io.Reader) *Decoder { |
| dec := new(Decoder) |
| // We use the ability to read bytes as a plausible surrogate for buffering. |
| if _, ok := r.(io.ByteReader); !ok { |
| r = bufio.NewReader(r) |
| } |
| dec.r = r |
| dec.wireType = make(map[typeId]*wireType) |
| dec.decoderCache = make(map[reflect.Type]map[typeId]**decEngine) |
| dec.ignorerCache = make(map[typeId]**decEngine) |
| dec.countBuf = make([]byte, 9) // counts may be uint64s (unlikely!), require 9 bytes |
| |
| return dec |
| } |
| |
| // recvType loads the definition of a type. |
| func (dec *Decoder) recvType(id typeId) { |
| // Have we already seen this type? That's an error |
| if id < firstUserId || dec.wireType[id] != nil { |
| dec.err = errors.New("gob: duplicate type received") |
| return |
| } |
| |
| // Type: |
| wire := new(wireType) |
| dec.decodeValue(tWireType, reflect.ValueOf(wire)) |
| if dec.err != nil { |
| return |
| } |
| // Remember we've seen this type. |
| dec.wireType[id] = wire |
| } |
| |
| var errBadCount = errors.New("invalid message length") |
| |
| // recvMessage reads the next count-delimited item from the input. It is the converse |
| // of Encoder.writeMessage. It returns false on EOF or other error reading the message. |
| func (dec *Decoder) recvMessage() bool { |
| // Read a count. |
| nbytes, _, err := decodeUintReader(dec.r, dec.countBuf) |
| if err != nil { |
| dec.err = err |
| return false |
| } |
| if nbytes >= tooBig { |
| dec.err = errBadCount |
| return false |
| } |
| dec.readMessage(int(nbytes)) |
| return dec.err == nil |
| } |
| |
| // readMessage reads the next nbytes bytes from the input. |
| func (dec *Decoder) readMessage(nbytes int) { |
| if dec.buf.Len() != 0 { |
| // The buffer should always be empty now. |
| panic("non-empty decoder buffer") |
| } |
| // Read the data |
| dec.buf.Size(nbytes) |
| _, dec.err = io.ReadFull(dec.r, dec.buf.Bytes()) |
| if dec.err == io.EOF { |
| dec.err = io.ErrUnexpectedEOF |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // toInt turns an encoded uint64 into an int, according to the marshaling rules. |
| func toInt(x uint64) int64 { |
| i := int64(x >> 1) |
| if x&1 != 0 { |
| i = ^i |
| } |
| return i |
| } |
| |
| func (dec *Decoder) nextInt() int64 { |
| n, _, err := decodeUintReader(&dec.buf, dec.countBuf) |
| if err != nil { |
| dec.err = err |
| } |
| return toInt(n) |
| } |
| |
| func (dec *Decoder) nextUint() uint64 { |
| n, _, err := decodeUintReader(&dec.buf, dec.countBuf) |
| if err != nil { |
| dec.err = err |
| } |
| return n |
| } |
| |
| // decodeTypeSequence parses: |
| // TypeSequence |
| // (TypeDefinition DelimitedTypeDefinition*)? |
| // and returns the type id of the next value. It returns -1 at |
| // EOF. Upon return, the remainder of dec.buf is the value to be |
| // decoded. If this is an interface value, it can be ignored by |
| // resetting that buffer. |
| func (dec *Decoder) decodeTypeSequence(isInterface bool) typeId { |
| for dec.err == nil { |
| if dec.buf.Len() == 0 { |
| if !dec.recvMessage() { |
| break |
| } |
| } |
| // Receive a type id. |
| id := typeId(dec.nextInt()) |
| if id >= 0 { |
| // Value follows. |
| return id |
| } |
| // Type definition for (-id) follows. |
| dec.recvType(-id) |
| // When decoding an interface, after a type there may be a |
| // DelimitedValue still in the buffer. Skip its count. |
| // (Alternatively, the buffer is empty and the byte count |
| // will be absorbed by recvMessage.) |
| if dec.buf.Len() > 0 { |
| if !isInterface { |
| dec.err = errors.New("extra data in buffer") |
| break |
| } |
| dec.nextUint() |
| } |
| } |
| return -1 |
| } |
| |
| // Decode reads the next value from the input stream and stores |
| // it in the data represented by the empty interface value. |
| // If e is nil, the value will be discarded. Otherwise, |
| // the value underlying e must be a pointer to the |
| // correct type for the next data item received. |
| // If the input is at EOF, Decode returns io.EOF and |
| // does not modify e. |
| func (dec *Decoder) Decode(e interface{}) error { |
| if e == nil { |
| return dec.DecodeValue(reflect.Value{}) |
| } |
| value := reflect.ValueOf(e) |
| // If e represents a value as opposed to a pointer, the answer won't |
| // get back to the caller. Make sure it's a pointer. |
| if value.Type().Kind() != reflect.Ptr { |
| dec.err = errors.New("gob: attempt to decode into a non-pointer") |
| return dec.err |
| } |
| return dec.DecodeValue(value) |
| } |
| |
| // DecodeValue reads the next value from the input stream. |
| // If v is the zero reflect.Value (v.Kind() == Invalid), DecodeValue discards the value. |
| // Otherwise, it stores the value into v. In that case, v must represent |
| // a non-nil pointer to data or be an assignable reflect.Value (v.CanSet()) |
| // If the input is at EOF, DecodeValue returns io.EOF and |
| // does not modify v. |
| func (dec *Decoder) DecodeValue(v reflect.Value) error { |
| if v.IsValid() { |
| if v.Kind() == reflect.Ptr && !v.IsNil() { |
| // That's okay, we'll store through the pointer. |
| } else if !v.CanSet() { |
| return errors.New("gob: DecodeValue of unassignable value") |
| } |
| } |
| // Make sure we're single-threaded through here. |
| dec.mutex.Lock() |
| defer dec.mutex.Unlock() |
| |
| dec.buf.Reset() // In case data lingers from previous invocation. |
| dec.err = nil |
| id := dec.decodeTypeSequence(false) |
| if dec.err == nil { |
| dec.decodeValue(id, v) |
| } |
| return dec.err |
| } |
| |
| // If debug.go is compiled into the program , debugFunc prints a human-readable |
| // representation of the gob data read from r by calling that file's Debug function. |
| // Otherwise it is nil. |
| var debugFunc func(io.Reader) |