gotosocial/vendor/codeberg.org/gruf/go-errors/v2/standard.go

135 lines
4 KiB
Go

package errors
import (
_ "unsafe"
)
// Is reports whether any error in err's tree matches target.
//
// The tree consists of err itself, followed by the errors obtained by repeatedly
// calling Unwrap. When err wraps multiple errors, Is examines err followed by a
// depth-first traversal of its children.
//
// An error is considered to match a target if it is equal to that target or if
// it implements a method Is(error) bool such that Is(target) returns true.
//
// An error type might provide an Is method so it can be treated as equivalent
// to an existing error. For example, if MyError defines
//
// func (m MyError) Is(target error) bool { return target == fs.ErrExist }
//
// then Is(MyError{}, fs.ErrExist) returns true. See [syscall.Errno.Is] for
// an example in the standard library. An Is method should only shallowly
// compare err and the target and not call Unwrap on either.
//
//go:linkname Is errors.Is
func Is(err error, target error) bool
// IsV2 calls Is(err, target) for each target within targets.
func IsV2(err error, targets ...error) bool {
for _, target := range targets {
if Is(err, target) {
return true
}
}
return false
}
// As finds the first error in err's tree that matches target, and if one is found, sets
// target to that error value and returns true. Otherwise, it returns false.
//
// The tree consists of err itself, followed by the errors obtained by repeatedly
// calling Unwrap. When err wraps multiple errors, As examines err followed by a
// depth-first traversal of its children.
//
// An error matches target if the error's concrete value is assignable to the value
// pointed to by target, or if the error has a method As(interface{}) bool such that
// As(target) returns true. In the latter case, the As method is responsible for
// setting target.
//
// An error type might provide an As method so it can be treated as if it were a
// different error type.
//
// As panics if target is not a non-nil pointer to either a type that implements
// error, or to any interface type.
//
//go:linkname As errors.As
func As(err error, target any) bool
// AsV2 is functionally similar to As(), instead
// leveraging generics to handle allocation and
// returning of a concrete generic parameter type.
func AsV2[Type any](err error) Type {
var t Type
var ok bool
errs := []error{err}
for len(errs) > 0 {
// Pop next error to check.
err := errs[len(errs)-1]
errs = errs[:len(errs)-1]
// Check direct type.
t, ok = err.(Type)
if ok {
return t
}
// Look for .As() support.
as, ok := err.(interface {
As(target any) bool
})
if ok {
// Attempt .As().
if as.As(&t) {
return t
}
}
// Try unwrap errors.
switch u := err.(type) {
case interface{ Unwrap() error }:
errs = append(errs, u.Unwrap())
case interface{ Unwrap() []error }:
errs = append(errs, u.Unwrap()...)
}
}
return t
}
// Unwrap returns the result of calling the Unwrap method on err, if err's
// type contains an Unwrap method returning error.
// Otherwise, Unwrap returns nil.
//
// Unwrap only calls a method of the form "Unwrap() error".
// In particular Unwrap does not unwrap errors returned by [Join].
//
//go:linkname Unwrap errors.Unwrap
func Unwrap(err error) error
// UnwrapV2 is functionally similar to Unwrap(), except that
// it also handles the case of interface{ Unwrap() []error }.
func UnwrapV2(err error) []error {
switch u := err.(type) {
case interface{ Unwrap() error }:
if e := u.Unwrap(); err != nil {
return []error{e}
}
case interface{ Unwrap() []error }:
return u.Unwrap()
}
return nil
}
// Join returns an error that wraps the given errors.
// Any nil error values are discarded.
// Join returns nil if every value in errs is nil.
// The error formats as the concatenation of the strings obtained
// by calling the Error method of each element of errs, with a newline
// between each string.
//
// A non-nil error returned by Join implements the Unwrap() []error method.
//
//go:linkname Join errors.Join
func Join(errs ...error) error