// Package parsers provides helper functions to parse and validate different type // of string. It can be hosts, unix addresses, tcp addresses, filters, kernel // operating system versions. package parsers import ( "fmt" "strconv" "strings" ) // ParseKeyValueOpt parses and validates the specified string as a key/value pair (key=value) func ParseKeyValueOpt(opt string) (string, string, error) { parts := strings.SplitN(opt, "=", 2) if len(parts) != 2 { return "", "", fmt.Errorf("Unable to parse key/value option: %s", opt) } return strings.TrimSpace(parts[0]), strings.TrimSpace(parts[1]), nil } // ParseUintList parses and validates the specified string as the value // found in some cgroup file (e.g. `cpuset.cpus`, `cpuset.mems`), which could be // one of the formats below. Note that duplicates are actually allowed in the // input string. It returns a `map[int]bool` with available elements from `val` // set to `true`. // Supported formats: // 7 // 1-6 // 0,3-4,7,8-10 // 0-0,0,1-7 // 03,1-3 <- this is gonna get parsed as [1,2,3] // 3,2,1 // 0-2,3,1 func ParseUintList(val string) (map[int]bool, error) { if val == "" { return map[int]bool{}, nil } availableInts := make(map[int]bool) split := strings.Split(val, ",") errInvalidFormat := fmt.Errorf("invalid format: %s", val) for _, r := range split { if !strings.Contains(r, "-") { v, err := strconv.Atoi(r) if err != nil { return nil, errInvalidFormat } availableInts[v] = true } else { split := strings.SplitN(r, "-", 2) min, err := strconv.Atoi(split[0]) if err != nil { return nil, errInvalidFormat } max, err := strconv.Atoi(split[1]) if err != nil { return nil, errInvalidFormat } if max < min { return nil, errInvalidFormat } for i := min; i <= max; i++ { availableInts[i] = true } } } return availableInts, nil }