pointer.h 8.2 KB

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  1. #pragma once
  2. #include <algorithm>
  3. #include <cassert>
  4. #include <iostream>
  5. #include <jvalidate/detail/number.h>
  6. #include <string>
  7. #include <string_view>
  8. #include <variant>
  9. #include <vector>
  10. #include <jvalidate/compat/compare.h>
  11. #include <jvalidate/forward.h>
  12. namespace jvalidate::detail {
  13. /**
  14. * @brief A helper struct for use in appending elements to a json Pointer object
  15. * in a way that allows it to be used as a template parameter - similar to how
  16. * ostream allows operator<<(void(*)(ostream&)) to pass in a function callback
  17. * for implementing various iomanip functions as piped (read:fluent) values.
  18. *
  19. * However, the primary usecase for this is in a template context, where I want
  20. * to add 0-or-more path components to a JSON-Pointer of any type, and also want
  21. * to support neighbor Pointers, instead of only child Pointers.
  22. *
  23. * For example, @see ValidationVisitor::visit(constraint::ConditionalConstraint)
  24. * where we use parent to rewind the path back to the owning scope for
  25. * if-then-else processing.
  26. */
  27. struct parent_t {};
  28. constexpr parent_t parent;
  29. class Pointer {
  30. public:
  31. Pointer() = default;
  32. Pointer(std::vector<std::variant<std::string, size_t>> const & tokens) : tokens_(tokens) {}
  33. /**
  34. * @brief Parse a JSON-Pointer from a serialized JSON-Pointer-String. In
  35. * principle, this should either be a factory function returning an optional/
  36. * throwing on error - but we'll generously assume that all JSON-Pointers are
  37. * valid - and therefore that an invalidly formatter pointer string will
  38. * point to somewhere non-existant (since it will be used in schema handling)
  39. */
  40. Pointer(std::string_view path) {
  41. if (path.empty()) {
  42. return;
  43. }
  44. auto append_with_parse = [this](std::string in) {
  45. // Best-guess that the input token text represents a numeric value.
  46. // Technically - this could mean that we have an object key that is also
  47. // a number (e.g. the jsonized form of map<int, T>), but we can generally
  48. // assume that we are not going to use those kinds of paths in a reference
  49. // field. Therefore we don't need to include any clever tricks for storage
  50. if (not in.empty() && in.find_first_not_of("0123456789") == std::string::npos) {
  51. return tokens_.push_back(from_str<size_t>(in));
  52. }
  53. for (size_t i = 0; i < in.size(); ++i) {
  54. // Allow URL-Escaped characters (%\x\x) to be turned into their
  55. // matching ASCII characters. This allows passing abnormal chars other
  56. // than '/' and '~' to be handled in all contexts.
  57. // TODO(samjaffe): Only do this if enc is hex-like (currently throws?)
  58. if (in[i] == '%') {
  59. char const enc[3] = {in[i + 1], in[i + 2], '\0'};
  60. in.replace(i, 3, 1, from_str<char>(enc, 16));
  61. } else if (in[i] != '~') {
  62. // Not a special char-sequence, does not need massaging
  63. continue;
  64. }
  65. // In order to properly support '/' inside the property name of an
  66. // object, we must escape it. The designers of the JSON-Pointer RFC
  67. // chose to use '~' as a special signifier. Mapping '~0' to '~', and
  68. // '~1' to '/'.
  69. if (in[i + 1] == '0') {
  70. in.replace(i, 2, 1, '~');
  71. } else if (in[i + 1] == '1') {
  72. in.replace(i, 2, 1, '/');
  73. }
  74. }
  75. tokens_.push_back(std::move(in));
  76. };
  77. // JSON-Pointers are required to start with a '/'.
  78. EXPECT_M(path.starts_with('/'), "Missing leading '/' in JSON Pointer: " << path);
  79. path.remove_prefix(1);
  80. // The rules of JSON-Pointer is that if a token were to contain a '/' as a
  81. // strict character: then that character would be escaped, using the above
  82. // rules. We take advantage of string_view's sliding view to make iteration
  83. // easy.
  84. for (size_t p = path.find('/'); p != std::string::npos;
  85. path.remove_prefix(p + 1), p = path.find('/')) {
  86. append_with_parse(std::string(path.substr(0, p)));
  87. }
  88. append_with_parse(std::string(path));
  89. }
  90. /**
  91. * @brief Dive into a JSON object throught the entire path of the this object
  92. *
  93. * @param document A JSON Adapter document - confirming to the following spec:
  94. * 1. Is indexable by size_t, returning its own type
  95. * 2. Is indexable by std::string, returning its own type
  96. * 3. Indexing into a null/incorrect json type, or for an absent child is safe
  97. *
  98. * @returns A new JSON Adapter at the pointed to location, or a generic null
  99. * JSON object.
  100. */
  101. auto walk(Adapter auto document) const {
  102. for (auto const & token : tokens_) {
  103. document = std::visit([&document](auto const & next) { return document[next]; }, token);
  104. }
  105. return document;
  106. }
  107. /**
  108. * @brief Fetch the last item in this pointer as a string (for easy
  109. * formatting). This function is used more-or-less exclusively to support the
  110. * improved annotation/error listing concepts described in the article:
  111. * https://json-schema.org/blog/posts/fixing-json-schema-output
  112. */
  113. std::string back() const {
  114. struct {
  115. std::string operator()(std::string const & in) const { return in; }
  116. std::string operator()(size_t in) const { return std::to_string(in); }
  117. } g_as_str;
  118. return tokens_.empty() ? "" : std::visit(g_as_str, tokens_.back());
  119. }
  120. bool empty() const { return tokens_.empty(); }
  121. /**
  122. * @brief Determines if this JSON-Pointer is prefixed by the other
  123. * JSON-Pointer. For example: `"/A/B/C"_jsptr.starts_with("/A/B") == true`
  124. *
  125. * This is an important thing to know when dealing with schemas that use
  126. * Anchors or nest $id tags in a singular document. Consider the schema below:
  127. * @code{.json}
  128. * {
  129. * "$id": "A",
  130. * "$defs": {
  131. * "B": {
  132. * "$anchor": "B"
  133. * "$defs": {
  134. * "C": {
  135. * "$anchor": "C"
  136. * }
  137. * }
  138. * }
  139. * }
  140. * }
  141. * @endcode
  142. *
  143. * How can we deduce that "A#B" and "A#C" are related to one-another as parent
  144. * and child nodes? First we translate them both into absolute (no-anchor)
  145. * forms "A#/$defs/B" and "A#/$defs/B/$defs/C". Visually - these are now
  146. * obviously related - but we need to expose the functionalty to make that
  147. * check happen (that "/$defs/B/$defs/C" starts with "/$defs/B").
  148. */
  149. bool starts_with(Pointer const & other) const {
  150. return other.tokens_.size() <= tokens_.size() &&
  151. std::equal(other.tokens_.begin(), other.tokens_.end(), tokens_.begin());
  152. }
  153. /**
  154. * @brief A corollary function to starts_with, create a "relative"
  155. * JSON-Pointer to some parent. Relative pointers are only partially supported
  156. * (e.g. if you tried to print it it would still emit the leading slash), so
  157. * the standard use case of this function is to either use it when choosing
  158. * a URI or Anchor that is a closer parent:
  159. * `Reference(uri, anchor, ptr.relative_to(other))`
  160. * or immediately concatenating it onto another absolute pointer:
  161. * `abs /= ptr.relative_to(other)`
  162. */
  163. Pointer relative_to(Pointer const & other) const {
  164. assert(starts_with(other));
  165. return Pointer(std::vector(tokens_.begin() + other.tokens_.size(), tokens_.end()));
  166. }
  167. Pointer parent(size_t i = 1) const { return Pointer({tokens_.begin(), tokens_.end() - i}); }
  168. Pointer & operator/=(Pointer const & relative) {
  169. tokens_.insert(tokens_.end(), relative.tokens_.begin(), relative.tokens_.end());
  170. return *this;
  171. }
  172. Pointer operator/(Pointer const & relative) const { return Pointer(*this) /= relative; }
  173. Pointer & operator/=(parent_t) {
  174. tokens_.pop_back();
  175. return *this;
  176. }
  177. Pointer operator/(parent_t) const { return parent(); }
  178. Pointer & operator/=(std::string_view key) {
  179. tokens_.emplace_back(std::string(key));
  180. return *this;
  181. }
  182. Pointer operator/(std::string_view key) const { return Pointer(*this) /= key; }
  183. Pointer & operator/=(size_t index) {
  184. tokens_.emplace_back(index);
  185. return *this;
  186. }
  187. Pointer operator/(size_t index) const { return Pointer(*this) /= index; }
  188. friend std::ostream & operator<<(std::ostream & os, Pointer const & self) {
  189. for (auto const & elem : self.tokens_) {
  190. std::visit([&os](auto const & v) { os << '/' << v; }, elem);
  191. }
  192. return os;
  193. }
  194. auto operator<=>(Pointer const &) const = default;
  195. private:
  196. std::vector<std::variant<std::string, size_t>> tokens_{};
  197. };
  198. }