woodpecker/vendor/github.com/bmatcuk/doublestar/v4/UPGRADING.md
Anbraten 96828b16c1
Support recursive glob for path conditions (#327)
* Support glob with doublestar for path conditions

* Update docs and pipeline
2021-09-21 06:18:43 +02:00

3.2 KiB

Upgrading from v3 to v4

v4 is a complete rewrite with a focus on performance. Additionally, doublestar has been updated to use the new io/fs package for filesystem access. As a result, it is only supported by golang v1.16+.

Match() and PathMatch() mostly did not change, besides big performance improvements. Their API is the same. However, note the following corner cases:

  • In previous versions of doublestar, PathMatch() could accept patterns that used either platform-specific path separators, or /. This was undocumented and didn't match filepath.Match(). In v4, both pattern and name must be using appropriate path separators for the platform. You can use filepath.FromSlash() to change / to platform-specific separators if you aren't sure.
  • In previous versions of doublestar, a pattern such as path/to/a/** would not match path/to/a. In v4, this pattern will match because if a was a directory, Glob() would return it. In other words, the following returns true: Match("path/to/a/**", "path/to/a")

Glob() changed from using a doublestar-specific filesystem abstraction (the OS interface) to the io/fs package. As a result, it now takes a fs.FS as its first argument. This change has a couple ramifications:

  • Like io/fs.Glob, pattern must use a / as path separator, even on platforms that use something else. You can use filepath.ToSlash() on your patterns if you aren't sure.
  • Patterns that contain /./ or /../ are invalid. The io/fs package rejects them, returning an IO error. Since Glob() ignores IO errors, it'll end up being silently rejected. You can run path.Clean() to ensure they are removed from the pattern.

v4 also added a GlobWalk() function that is slightly more performant than Glob() if you just need to iterate over the results and don't need a string slice. You also get fs.DirEntry objects for each result, and can quit early if your callback returns an error.

Upgrading from v2 to v3

v3 introduced using ! to negate character classes, in addition to ^. If any of your patterns include a character class that starts with an exclamation mark (ie, [!...]), you'll need to update the pattern to escape or move the exclamation mark. Note that, like the caret (^), it only negates the character class if it is the first character in the character class.

Upgrading from v1 to v2

The change from v1 to v2 was fairly minor: the return type of the Open method on the OS interface was changed from *os.File to File, a new interface exported by doublestar. The new File interface only defines the functionality doublestar actually needs (io.Closer and Readdir), making it easier to use doublestar with go-billy, afero, or something similar. If you were using this functionality, updating should be as easy as updating Open's return type, since os.File already implements doublestar.File.

If you weren't using this functionality, updating should be as easy as changing your dependencies to point to v2.