Files
faas-cli/vendor/github.com/spf13/pflag/string_array.go
John McCabe 706761e92a Migrate CLI to Cobra and add experimental bash completion
This adds the following commands:
- faas-cli
- faas-cli help
- faas-cli build
- faas-cli deploy
- faas-cli remove (alias: rm)
- faas-cli version
- faas-cli push

Note that the following is also added but hidden from help pending a
more robust bash completion solution, initially using the Cobra
generated bash completion but needs spf13/cobra#520 to merge before
it'll work on the OSX default Bash 3.x.
- faas-cli bashcompletion

This commit intercepts the command line args passed to `faas-cli` and
attempts to translate them from the deprecated go flag based syntax
(`faas-cli -action xxx`) to the new Cobra verb/noun based syntax
(`faas-cli xxx`), it also translates a frozen set of legacy flags (with
the go-style single-dash) into a GNU style double-dash.

Note that some special cases are included:
- changing the delete action to remove
- passing the function name as a noun to remove rather than as an arg to
`-name`
- it also handles the legacy format where args are passed after =
(`-name=fnname`).

If the translation results in a new set of args then a message is
displayed to the user (stderr) telling warning that they are using the
deprecated cli syntax and also prints the new syntax command that is
being executed and which they should use going forward.

Any errors thrown during translation result in the command failing with
it printing the error cause to stderr.

This renames the `fetchTemplates.go` file to use snake case. The
convention appears to be for snakecase - as observed in both the Go and
Kubernetes source. For example heres a random selection of source files.

-
https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/blob/master/pkg/kubeapiserver/default_storage_factory_builder.go
-
https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/blob/master/pkg/kubectl/bash_comp_utils.go
-
https://github.com/golang/go/blob/master/src/compress/bzip2/move_to_front.go

Note that the language spec does not set a hard rule for source file
names, only for package names, but making this change for consistency.

Note that this file was initially generated by Cobra, but has been
tweaked to include some fixes.

It it an experimental initial version.

This commit adds some instructions on enabling the `faas-cli` bash
auto-completion support.

Instructions for Linux users are very light as it differs per-distro and
the assumption is that Linux users should be capable of following their
Distros instructions on enabling bash completion support.

Signed-off-by: John McCabe <john@johnmccabe.net>
2017-08-31 15:57:15 +01:00

104 lines
3.7 KiB
Go

package pflag
// -- stringArray Value
type stringArrayValue struct {
value *[]string
changed bool
}
func newStringArrayValue(val []string, p *[]string) *stringArrayValue {
ssv := new(stringArrayValue)
ssv.value = p
*ssv.value = val
return ssv
}
func (s *stringArrayValue) Set(val string) error {
if !s.changed {
*s.value = []string{val}
s.changed = true
} else {
*s.value = append(*s.value, val)
}
return nil
}
func (s *stringArrayValue) Type() string {
return "stringArray"
}
func (s *stringArrayValue) String() string {
str, _ := writeAsCSV(*s.value)
return "[" + str + "]"
}
func stringArrayConv(sval string) (interface{}, error) {
sval = sval[1 : len(sval)-1]
// An empty string would cause a array with one (empty) string
if len(sval) == 0 {
return []string{}, nil
}
return readAsCSV(sval)
}
// GetStringArray return the []string value of a flag with the given name
func (f *FlagSet) GetStringArray(name string) ([]string, error) {
val, err := f.getFlagType(name, "stringArray", stringArrayConv)
if err != nil {
return []string{}, err
}
return val.([]string), nil
}
// StringArrayVar defines a string flag with specified name, default value, and usage string.
// The argument p points to a []string variable in which to store the values of the multiple flags.
// The value of each argument will not try to be separated by comma
func (f *FlagSet) StringArrayVar(p *[]string, name string, value []string, usage string) {
f.VarP(newStringArrayValue(value, p), name, "", usage)
}
// StringArrayVarP is like StringArrayVar, but accepts a shorthand letter that can be used after a single dash.
func (f *FlagSet) StringArrayVarP(p *[]string, name, shorthand string, value []string, usage string) {
f.VarP(newStringArrayValue(value, p), name, shorthand, usage)
}
// StringArrayVar defines a string flag with specified name, default value, and usage string.
// The argument p points to a []string variable in which to store the value of the flag.
// The value of each argument will not try to be separated by comma
func StringArrayVar(p *[]string, name string, value []string, usage string) {
CommandLine.VarP(newStringArrayValue(value, p), name, "", usage)
}
// StringArrayVarP is like StringArrayVar, but accepts a shorthand letter that can be used after a single dash.
func StringArrayVarP(p *[]string, name, shorthand string, value []string, usage string) {
CommandLine.VarP(newStringArrayValue(value, p), name, shorthand, usage)
}
// StringArray defines a string flag with specified name, default value, and usage string.
// The return value is the address of a []string variable that stores the value of the flag.
// The value of each argument will not try to be separated by comma
func (f *FlagSet) StringArray(name string, value []string, usage string) *[]string {
p := []string{}
f.StringArrayVarP(&p, name, "", value, usage)
return &p
}
// StringArrayP is like StringArray, but accepts a shorthand letter that can be used after a single dash.
func (f *FlagSet) StringArrayP(name, shorthand string, value []string, usage string) *[]string {
p := []string{}
f.StringArrayVarP(&p, name, shorthand, value, usage)
return &p
}
// StringArray defines a string flag with specified name, default value, and usage string.
// The return value is the address of a []string variable that stores the value of the flag.
// The value of each argument will not try to be separated by comma
func StringArray(name string, value []string, usage string) *[]string {
return CommandLine.StringArrayP(name, "", value, usage)
}
// StringArrayP is like StringArray, but accepts a shorthand letter that can be used after a single dash.
func StringArrayP(name, shorthand string, value []string, usage string) *[]string {
return CommandLine.StringArrayP(name, shorthand, value, usage)
}