| // Copyright 2018 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 modfetch |
| |
| import ( |
| "fmt" |
| "os" |
| pathpkg "path" |
| "sort" |
| "time" |
| |
| "cmd/go/internal/cfg" |
| "cmd/go/internal/get" |
| "cmd/go/internal/modfetch/codehost" |
| "cmd/go/internal/module" |
| "cmd/go/internal/par" |
| "cmd/go/internal/semver" |
| web "cmd/go/internal/web" |
| ) |
| |
| const traceRepo = false // trace all repo actions, for debugging |
| |
| // A Repo represents a repository storing all versions of a single module. |
| // It must be safe for simultaneous use by multiple goroutines. |
| type Repo interface { |
| // ModulePath returns the module path. |
| ModulePath() string |
| |
| // Versions lists all known versions with the given prefix. |
| // Pseudo-versions are not included. |
| // Versions should be returned sorted in semver order |
| // (implementations can use SortVersions). |
| Versions(prefix string) (tags []string, err error) |
| |
| // Stat returns information about the revision rev. |
| // A revision can be any identifier known to the underlying service: |
| // commit hash, branch, tag, and so on. |
| Stat(rev string) (*RevInfo, error) |
| |
| // Latest returns the latest revision on the default branch, |
| // whatever that means in the underlying source code repository. |
| // It is only used when there are no tagged versions. |
| Latest() (*RevInfo, error) |
| |
| // GoMod returns the go.mod file for the given version. |
| GoMod(version string) (data []byte, err error) |
| |
| // Zip downloads a zip file for the given version |
| // to a new file in a given temporary directory. |
| // It returns the name of the new file. |
| // The caller should remove the file when finished with it. |
| Zip(version, tmpdir string) (tmpfile string, err error) |
| } |
| |
| // A Rev describes a single revision in a module repository. |
| type RevInfo struct { |
| Version string // version string |
| Name string // complete ID in underlying repository |
| Short string // shortened ID, for use in pseudo-version |
| Time time.Time // commit time |
| } |
| |
| // Re: module paths, import paths, repository roots, and lookups |
| // |
| // A module is a collection of Go packages stored in a file tree |
| // with a go.mod file at the root of the tree. |
| // The go.mod defines the module path, which is the import path |
| // corresponding to the root of the file tree. |
| // The import path of a directory within that file tree is the module path |
| // joined with the name of the subdirectory relative to the root. |
| // |
| // For example, the module with path rsc.io/qr corresponds to the |
| // file tree in the repository https://github.com/rsc/qr. |
| // That file tree has a go.mod that says "module rsc.io/qr". |
| // The package in the root directory has import path "rsc.io/qr". |
| // The package in the gf256 subdirectory has import path "rsc.io/qr/gf256". |
| // In this example, "rsc.io/qr" is both a module path and an import path. |
| // But "rsc.io/qr/gf256" is only an import path, not a module path: |
| // it names an importable package, but not a module. |
| // |
| // As a special case to incorporate code written before modules were |
| // introduced, if a path p resolves using the pre-module "go get" lookup |
| // to the root of a source code repository without a go.mod file, |
| // that repository is treated as if it had a go.mod in its root directory |
| // declaring module path p. (The go.mod is further considered to |
| // contain requirements corresponding to any legacy version |
| // tracking format such as Gopkg.lock, vendor/vendor.conf, and so on.) |
| // |
| // The presentation so far ignores the fact that a source code repository |
| // has many different versions of a file tree, and those versions may |
| // differ in whether a particular go.mod exists and what it contains. |
| // In fact there is a well-defined mapping only from a module path, version |
| // pair - often written path@version - to a particular file tree. |
| // For example rsc.io/qr@v0.1.0 depends on the "implicit go.mod at root of |
| // repository" rule, while rsc.io/qr@v0.2.0 has an explicit go.mod. |
| // Because the "go get" import paths rsc.io/qr and github.com/rsc/qr |
| // both redirect to the Git repository https://github.com/rsc/qr, |
| // github.com/rsc/qr@v0.1.0 is the same file tree as rsc.io/qr@v0.1.0 |
| // but a different module (a different name). In contrast, since v0.2.0 |
| // of that repository has an explicit go.mod that declares path rsc.io/qr, |
| // github.com/rsc/qr@v0.2.0 is an invalid module path, version pair. |
| // Before modules, import comments would have had the same effect. |
| // |
| // The set of import paths associated with a given module path is |
| // clearly not fixed: at the least, new directories with new import paths |
| // can always be added. But another potential operation is to split a |
| // subtree out of a module into its own module. If done carefully, |
| // this operation can be done while preserving compatibility for clients. |
| // For example, suppose that we want to split rsc.io/qr/gf256 into its |
| // own module, so that there would be two modules rsc.io/qr and rsc.io/qr/gf256. |
| // Then we can simultaneously issue rsc.io/qr v0.3.0 (dropping the gf256 subdirectory) |
| // and rsc.io/qr/gf256 v0.1.0, including in their respective go.mod |
| // cyclic requirements pointing at each other: rsc.io/qr v0.3.0 requires |
| // rsc.io/qr/gf256 v0.1.0 and vice versa. Then a build can be |
| // using an older rsc.io/qr module that includes the gf256 package, but if |
| // it adds a requirement on either the newer rsc.io/qr or the newer |
| // rsc.io/qr/gf256 module, it will automatically add the requirement |
| // on the complementary half, ensuring both that rsc.io/qr/gf256 is |
| // available for importing by the build and also that it is only defined |
| // by a single module. The gf256 package could move back into the |
| // original by another simultaneous release of rsc.io/qr v0.4.0 including |
| // the gf256 subdirectory and an rsc.io/qr/gf256 v0.2.0 with no code |
| // in its root directory, along with a new requirement cycle. |
| // The ability to shift module boundaries in this way is expected to be |
| // important in large-scale program refactorings, similar to the ones |
| // described in https://talks.golang.org/2016/refactor.article. |
| // |
| // The possibility of shifting module boundaries reemphasizes |
| // that you must know both the module path and its version |
| // to determine the set of packages provided directly by that module. |
| // |
| // On top of all this, it is possible for a single code repository |
| // to contain multiple modules, either in branches or subdirectories, |
| // as a limited kind of monorepo. For example rsc.io/qr/v2, |
| // the v2.x.x continuation of rsc.io/qr, is expected to be found |
| // in v2-tagged commits in https://github.com/rsc/qr, either |
| // in the root or in a v2 subdirectory, disambiguated by go.mod. |
| // Again the precise file tree corresponding to a module |
| // depends on which version we are considering. |
| // |
| // It is also possible for the underlying repository to change over time, |
| // without changing the module path. If I copy the github repo over |
| // to https://bitbucket.org/rsc/qr and update https://rsc.io/qr?go-get=1, |
| // then clients of all versions should start fetching from bitbucket |
| // instead of github. That is, in contrast to the exact file tree, |
| // the location of the source code repository associated with a module path |
| // does not depend on the module version. (This is by design, as the whole |
| // point of these redirects is to allow package authors to establish a stable |
| // name that can be updated as code moves from one service to another.) |
| // |
| // All of this is important background for the lookup APIs defined in this |
| // file. |
| // |
| // The Lookup function takes a module path and returns a Repo representing |
| // that module path. Lookup can do only a little with the path alone. |
| // It can check that the path is well-formed (see semver.CheckPath) |
| // and it can check that the path can be resolved to a target repository. |
| // To avoid version control access except when absolutely necessary, |
| // Lookup does not attempt to connect to the repository itself. |
| // |
| // The Import function takes an import path found in source code and |
| // determines which module to add to the requirement list to satisfy |
| // that import. It checks successive truncations of the import path |
| // to determine possible modules and stops when it finds a module |
| // in which the latest version satisfies the import path. |
| // |
| // The ImportRepoRev function is a variant of Import which is limited |
| // to code in a source code repository at a particular revision identifier |
| // (usually a commit hash or source code repository tag, not necessarily |
| // a module version). |
| // ImportRepoRev is used when converting legacy dependency requirements |
| // from older systems into go.mod files. Those older systems worked |
| // at either package or repository granularity, and most of the time they |
| // recorded commit hashes, not tagged versions. |
| |
| var lookupCache par.Cache |
| |
| // Lookup returns the module with the given module path. |
| // A successful return does not guarantee that the module |
| // has any defined versions. |
| func Lookup(path string) (Repo, error) { |
| if traceRepo { |
| defer logCall("Lookup(%q)", path)() |
| } |
| |
| type cached struct { |
| r Repo |
| err error |
| } |
| c := lookupCache.Do(path, func() interface{} { |
| r, err := lookup(path) |
| if err == nil { |
| if traceRepo { |
| r = newLoggingRepo(r) |
| } |
| r = newCachingRepo(r) |
| } |
| return cached{r, err} |
| }).(cached) |
| |
| return c.r, c.err |
| } |
| |
| // lookup returns the module with the given module path. |
| func lookup(path string) (r Repo, err error) { |
| if cfg.BuildGetmode != "" { |
| return nil, fmt.Errorf("module lookup disabled by -getmode=%s", cfg.BuildGetmode) |
| } |
| if proxyURL != "" { |
| return lookupProxy(path) |
| } |
| |
| rr, err := get.RepoRootForImportPath(path, get.PreferMod, web.Secure) |
| if err != nil { |
| // We don't know where to find code for a module with this path. |
| return nil, err |
| } |
| |
| if rr.VCS == "mod" { |
| // Fetch module from proxy with base URL rr.Repo. |
| return newProxyRepo(rr.Repo, path), nil |
| } |
| |
| code, err := lookupCodeRepo(rr) |
| if err != nil { |
| return nil, err |
| } |
| return newCodeRepo(code, rr.Root, path) |
| } |
| |
| func lookupCodeRepo(rr *get.RepoRoot) (codehost.Repo, error) { |
| code, err := codehost.NewRepo(rr.VCS, rr.Repo) |
| if err != nil { |
| return nil, fmt.Errorf("lookup %s: %v", rr.Root, err) |
| } |
| return code, nil |
| } |
| |
| // Import returns the module repo and version to use to satisfy the given import path. |
| // It considers a sequence of module paths starting with the import path and |
| // removing successive path elements from the end. It stops when it finds a module |
| // path for which the latest version of the module provides the expected package. |
| // If non-nil, the allowed function is used to filter known versions of a given module |
| // before determining which one is "latest". |
| func Import(path string, allowed func(module.Version) bool) (Repo, *RevInfo, error) { |
| if cfg.BuildGetmode != "" { |
| return nil, nil, fmt.Errorf("import resolution disabled by -getmode=%s", cfg.BuildGetmode) |
| } |
| if traceRepo { |
| defer logCall("Import(%q, ...)", path)() |
| } |
| |
| try := func(path string) (Repo, *RevInfo, error) { |
| r, err := Lookup(path) |
| if err != nil { |
| return nil, nil, err |
| } |
| info, err := Query(path, "latest", allowed) |
| if err != nil { |
| return nil, nil, err |
| } |
| _, err = r.GoMod(info.Version) |
| if err != nil { |
| return nil, nil, err |
| } |
| // TODO(rsc): Do what the docs promise: download the module |
| // source code and check that it actually contains code for the |
| // target import path. To do that efficiently we will need to move |
| // the unzipped code cache out of ../vgo into this package. |
| return r, info, nil |
| } |
| |
| // Find enclosing module by walking up path element by element. |
| var firstErr error |
| for { |
| r, info, err := try(path) |
| if err == nil { |
| return r, info, nil |
| } |
| if firstErr == nil { |
| firstErr = err |
| } |
| p := pathpkg.Dir(path) |
| if p == "." { |
| break |
| } |
| path = p |
| } |
| return nil, nil, firstErr |
| } |
| |
| // ImportRepoRev returns the module and version to use to access |
| // the given import path loaded from the source code repository that |
| // the original "go get" would have used, at the specific repository revision |
| // (typically a commit hash, but possibly also a source control tag). |
| func ImportRepoRev(path, rev string) (Repo, *RevInfo, error) { |
| if cfg.BuildGetmode != "" { |
| return nil, nil, fmt.Errorf("repo version lookup disabled by -getmode=%s", cfg.BuildGetmode) |
| } |
| |
| // Note: Because we are converting a code reference from a legacy |
| // version control system, we ignore meta tags about modules |
| // and use only direct source control entries (get.IgnoreMod). |
| rr, err := get.RepoRootForImportPath(path, get.IgnoreMod, web.Secure) |
| if err != nil { |
| return nil, nil, err |
| } |
| |
| code, err := lookupCodeRepo(rr) |
| if err != nil { |
| return nil, nil, err |
| } |
| |
| revInfo, err := code.Stat(rev) |
| if err != nil { |
| return nil, nil, err |
| } |
| |
| // TODO: Look in repo to find path, check for go.mod files. |
| // For now we're just assuming rr.Root is the module path, |
| // which is true in the absence of go.mod files. |
| |
| repo, err := newCodeRepo(code, rr.Root, rr.Root) |
| if err != nil { |
| return nil, nil, err |
| } |
| |
| info, err := repo.(*codeRepo).convert(revInfo, "") |
| if err != nil { |
| return nil, nil, err |
| } |
| return repo, info, nil |
| } |
| |
| func SortVersions(list []string) { |
| sort.Slice(list, func(i, j int) bool { |
| cmp := semver.Compare(list[i], list[j]) |
| if cmp != 0 { |
| return cmp < 0 |
| } |
| return list[i] < list[j] |
| }) |
| } |
| |
| // A loggingRepo is a wrapper around an underlying Repo |
| // that prints a log message at the start and end of each call. |
| // It can be inserted when debugging. |
| type loggingRepo struct { |
| r Repo |
| } |
| |
| func newLoggingRepo(r Repo) *loggingRepo { |
| return &loggingRepo{r} |
| } |
| |
| // logCall prints a log message using format and args and then |
| // also returns a function that will print the same message again, |
| // along with the elapsed time. |
| // Typical usage is: |
| // |
| // defer logCall("hello %s", arg)() |
| // |
| // Note the final (). |
| func logCall(format string, args ...interface{}) func() { |
| start := time.Now() |
| fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "+++ %s\n", fmt.Sprintf(format, args...)) |
| return func() { |
| fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "%.3fs %s\n", time.Since(start).Seconds(), fmt.Sprintf(format, args...)) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| func (l *loggingRepo) ModulePath() string { |
| return l.r.ModulePath() |
| } |
| |
| func (l *loggingRepo) Versions(prefix string) (tags []string, err error) { |
| defer logCall("Repo[%s]: Versions(%q)", l.r.ModulePath(), prefix)() |
| return l.r.Versions(prefix) |
| } |
| |
| func (l *loggingRepo) Stat(rev string) (*RevInfo, error) { |
| defer logCall("Repo[%s]: Stat(%q)", l.r.ModulePath(), rev)() |
| return l.r.Stat(rev) |
| } |
| |
| func (l *loggingRepo) Latest() (*RevInfo, error) { |
| defer logCall("Repo[%s]: Latest()", l.r.ModulePath())() |
| return l.r.Latest() |
| } |
| |
| func (l *loggingRepo) GoMod(version string) ([]byte, error) { |
| defer logCall("Repo[%s]: GoMod(%q)", l.r.ModulePath(), version)() |
| return l.r.GoMod(version) |
| } |
| |
| func (l *loggingRepo) Zip(version, tmpdir string) (string, error) { |
| defer logCall("Repo[%s]: Zip(%q, %q)", l.r.ModulePath(), version, tmpdir)() |
| return l.r.Zip(version, tmpdir) |
| } |