viant / toolbox

Toolbox - go utility library

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Toolbox - go utility library

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This library is compatible with Go 1.8+

Please refer to CHANGELOG.md if you encounter breaking changes.

Motivation

This library was developed as part of Datastore Connectivity and Testibility libraries: (Assertly, Datastore testing, End to end testing) as a way to share utilities, and other abstractions that may be useful in other projects.

Collection Utilities

Iterator

Example

	slice := []string{"a", "z", "c"}
	iterator := toolbox.NewSliceIterator(slice)
    value := ""
    for iterator.HasNext() {
        iterator.Next(&value)
        ...
    }

Slice utilities

The following methods work on any slice type.

ProcessSlice

Example

	var aSlice interface{}
	
	toolbox.ProcessSlice(aSlice, func(item interface{}) bool {
    		...
    		return true //to continue to next element return true
    })
	

ProcessSliceWithIndex

Example:

	var aSlice interface{}
	
	toolbox.ProcessSlice(aSlice, func(index int, item interface{}) bool {
    		...
    		return true //to continue to next element return true
    })
	

IndexSlice

Example:

    type Foo struct{
		id int
		name string
	}

	var aSlice = []Foo{ Foo{1, "A"}, Foo{2, "B"} }
	var indexedMap = make(map[int]Foo)
	
	toolbox.IndexSlice(aSlice, indexedMap, func(foo Foo) int {
		return foo.id
	})
	
	

CopySliceElements

Example:

   source := []interface{}{
   		"abc", "def", "cyz",
   	}
   	var target = make([]string, 0)
   	toolbox.CopySliceElements(source, &target)
	
	

FilterSliceElements

Example:

	source := []interface{}{
		"abc", "def", "cyz","adc",
	}
	var target = make([]string, 0)
	
	toolbox.FilterSliceElements(source, func(item string) bool {
		return strings.HasPrefix(item, "a") //this matches any elements starting with a
	}, &target)

HasSliceAnyElements

Example:

    source := []interface{}{
		"abc", "def", "cyz","adc",
	}
	toolbox.HasSliceAnyElements(source, "cyz")

SliceToMap

Example:

    var source = []Foo{ Foo{1, "A"}, Foo{2, "B"} }
	var target = make(map[int]string)
	toolbox.SliceToMap(source, target, func(foo Foo) int {
		return foo.id
	},
	func(foo Foo) string {
		return foo.name
	})
	

TransformSlice

Example:

type Product struct{ vendor, name string }
	products := []Product{
		Product{"Vendor1", "Product1"},
		Product{"Vendor2", "Product2"},
		Product{"Vendor1", "Product3"},
		Product{"Vendor1", "Product4"},
	}
	var vendors=make([]string, 0)
	toolbox.TransformSlice(products, &vendors, func(product Product) string {
		return product.vendor
	})

Map utilities

ProcessMap

The following methods work on any map type.

Example:

    var aMap interface{}
	toolbox.ProcessMap(aMap, func(key, value interface{}) bool {
    		...
    		return true //to continue to next element return true
    })

CopyMapEntries

Example:

    type Foo struct{id int;name string}
	
	source := map[interface{}]interface{} {
		1: Foo{1, "A"},
		2: Foo{2, "B"},
	}
	var target = make   (map[int]Foo)

	toolbox.CopyMapEntries(source, target)

MapKeysToSlice

Example:

    aMap := map[string]int {
		"abc":1,
		"efg":2,
	}
	var keys = make([]string, 0)
	toolbox.MapKeysToSlice(aMap, &keys)

GroupSliceElements

Example:

	type Product struct{vendor,name string}
    	products := []Product{
    		Product{"Vendor1", "Product1"},
    		Product{"Vendor2", "Product2"},
    		Product{"Vendor1", "Product3"},
    		Product{"Vendor1", "Product4"},
    	}
    
    	productsByVendor := make(map[string][]Product)
    	toolbox.GroupSliceElements(products, productsByVendor, func(product Product) string {
    		return product.vendor
    	})

SliceToMultimap

	type Product struct {
    		vendor, name string
    		productId    int
    	}
    
    	products := []Product{
    		Product{"Vendor1", "Product1", 1},
    		Product{"Vendor2", "Product2", 2},
    		Product{"Vendor1", "Product3", 3},
    		Product{"Vendor1", "Product4", 4},
    	}
    
    	productsByVendor := make(map[string][]int)
    	toolbox.SliceToMultimap(products, productsByVendor, func(product Product) string {
    		return product.vendor
    	},
    	func(product Product) int {
    		return product.productId
    	})

Converter && Conversion Utilities

Converter transforms, data between any compatible or incompatible data type including struct/basicType/map/slice/interface{} On top of that it supports custom tag to map field to target data type (i.e map)

    myStruct :=  //some struct ...
    myMap := make(map[string]interface{})
    converter := NewConverter(dateLayout, keyTag) 	
    err = converter.AssignConverted(&myMap, myStruct)
    err = converter.AssignConverted(myStruct, myMap) 

Struct Utilities

ScanStructMethods

Scan struct methods

    service := New()
    err = toolbox.ScanStructMethods(service, 1, func(method reflect.Method) error {
		fmt.Printf("%v\n", method.Name)
		return nil
	})

ProcessStruct

Scan struct fields

   service := New()
    err = toolbox.ProcessStruct(service,
        func(field reflect.StructField, value reflect.Value) error {
            fmt.Print(field.Type.Name)
            return nil
    })

Function Utilities

Time Utilities

DateFormatToLayout

Java date format style to go date layout conversion.

    dateLaout := toolbox.DateFormatToLayout("yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:ss z")
    timeValue, err := time.Parse(dateLaout, "2016-02-22 12:32:01 UTC")

TimeAt

Provide dynamic semantic for creating time object

    
    tomorrow, err = TimeAt("tomorrow")//tomorrow in local timezone
    timeInUTC, err := TimeAt("2 days ago in UTC") //or 2DayAgoInUTC
    yesterdayUTC, err := TimeAt("yesterdayInUTC")//yesterday in UTC
    hoursAhead, err := TimeAt("50 hours ahead")

TimeDiff

Provide dynamic semantic for creating time object based on time dif

    lastyear, _ := time.Parse(DateFormatToLayout("yyyy-MM-dd"), "2017-01-01")
    ts1, e := TimeDiff(lastyear, "50 hours earlier")
    ts2, e := TimeDiff(lastyear, "3 days before in Poland")
	

DayElapsed

    t0, _ := time.Parse(DateFormatToLayout("yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:ss"), "2017-01-01 12:00:00")
    dayElapsedInT0, err := ElapsedDay(t0) //0.5
	

ElapsedToday

    elapscedInLocalTz, err := ElapsedTodayInPct("")  
    elapscedInUTC, err := ElapsedToday("UTC")
	

RemainingToday

    elapscedInLocalTz, err := RemainingTodayInPct("")
    elapscedInUTC, err := RemainingToday("UTC")
	

AtTime

    atTime := &AtTime{
        WeekDay: "*",
        Hour:    "*",
        Minute:  "10,30",
	}
    
    //returns the nearest future time for xx:10 or xx:30  
    nextScheduleTime := atTime.Next(time.Now)

Storage

Storage API provides unified way of accessing local or remote storage system.

This API has been deprecated, please consider using Abstract Storage

Example

    import (
    	"github.com/viant/toolbox/storage"
    	_ "github.com/viant/toolbox/storage/gs"	
    )
    
    
    destinationURL := "gs://myBucket/set1/content.gz"
    destinationCredentialFile = "gs-secret.json"
    storageService, err := storage.NewServiceForURL(destinationURL, destinationCredentialFile)

Text utilities

Text Case Format

You can format with format.Case.Format(text, destCase)

    formatted := format.CaseLowerUnderscore.Format(text, format.CaseLowerCamel)

Tokenizer

ServiceRouter

This ServiceRouter provides simple WebService Endpoint abstractin and RESET Client utilities.

Take as example of a ReverseService defined as follow

type ReverseService interface {
        Reverse(values []int) []int 
}

type reverseService struct{}

func (r *reverseService) Reverse(values []int) []int {
	var result = make([]int, 0)
	for i := len(values) - 1; i >= 0; i-- {
		result = append(result, values[i])
	}

	return result
}

In order to define Endpoint for this service, define a server, a router with the service routes;



type Server struct {
    service ReverseService
    port string
}

func (s *Server) Start() {
    
    router := toolbox.NewServiceRouter(
		toolbox.ServiceRouting{
			HTTPMethod: "GET",
			URI:        "/v1/reverse/{ids}",
			Handler:    s.service.Reverse,
			Parameters: []string{"ids"}, 
		},
		toolbox.ServiceRouting{
			HTTPMethod: "POST",
			URI:        "/v1/reverse/",
			Handler:    s.service.Reverse,
			Parameters: []string{"ids"},
		})
		
        http.HandleFunc("/v1/", func(writer http.ResponseWriter, reader *http.Request) {
            err := router.Route(writer, reader)
            if err != nil {
                response.WriteHeader(http.StatusInternalServerError)
            }
        })
    
        fmt.Printf("Started test server on port %v\n", port)
        log.Fatal(http.ListenAndServe(":"+port, nil))
}

ServiceRouting parameters define handler parameters that can be extracted from URI, QueryString, or from Post Body (json payload) In addition two special parameter names are supported: @httpRequest, @httpResponseWriter to pass in request, and response object respectively.

The REST client utility invoking our reverse service may look as follow

               var result = make([]int, 0)
               err := toolbox.RouteToService("get", "http://127.0.0.1:8082/v1/reverse/1,7,3", nil, &result)
               //...
               err := toolbox.RouteToService("post", "http://127.0.0.1:8082/v1/reverse/", []int{1, 7, 3}, &result)

By default a service router uses reflection to call the matched routes handler, it is possible to avoid reflection overhead by providing the custom handler invoker.

var ReverseInvoker = func(serviceRouting *toolbox.ServiceRouting, request *http.Request, response http.ResponseWriter, uriParameters map[string]interface{}) error {
	var function = serviceRouting.Handler.(func(values []int) []int)
	idsParam := uriParameters["ids"]
	ids := idsParam.([]string)
	values := make([]int, 0)
	for _, item := range ids {
		values = append(values, toolbox.AsInt(item))
	}
	var result = function(values)
	err := toolbox.WriteServiceRoutingResponse(response, request, serviceRouting, result)
	if err != nil {
		return err
	}
	return nil
}

//...

 
        router := toolbox.NewServiceRouter(
		toolbox.ServiceRouting{
			HTTPMethod: "GET",
			URI:        "/v1/reverse/{ids}",
			Handler:    s.service.Reverse,
			Parameters: []string{"ids"},
			HandlerInvoker: ReverseInvoker,
		})
//...		
		

Decoder and Encoder

Decoder

This library defines DecoderFactory interface to delegate decoder creation, This library comes with standard JSON and UnMarshaler (protobuf) factory implementation.

Example

    factory :=toolbox.NewJsonDecoderFactory()
    ....
    
    decoder := factory.Create(reader)
    foo := &Foo{}
    err = decoder.Decode(foo)



    marshalerFactory := toolbox.NewUnMarshalerDecoderFactory()
    decoder := marshalerFactory.Create(reader)
    foo := &Foo{}
    err = decoder.Decode(foo)

Encoder

This library defines EncoderFactory interface to delegate encoder creation, This library comes with standard JSON and Marshaler (protobuf) factory implementation.

Example

        factory :=toolbox.NewJsonEncoderFactory()
        ....
        buffer := new(bytes.Buffer)
        
        
        decoder := factory.Create(buffer)
        err = decoder.Encode(foo)
    
    
    
        marshalerFactory := toolbox.NewMarshalerEncoderFactory()
        decoder := marshalerFactory.Create(buffer)
        err = decoder.Encode(foo)

Logger

This library provides a file logger implementation that optimizes writes. Log messages are queues until max queue size or flush frequency are met. On top of that Ctrl-C also forces immediate log messages flush to disk.

File template support java style time format to manage rotation on the file name level.

    logger, err := toolbox.NewFileLogger(toolbox.FileLoggerConfig{
		LogType:           "test",
		FileTemplate:      "/tmp/test[yyyyMMdd-hhmm].log",
		QueueFlashCount:   250,
		MaxQueueSize:      500,
		FlushFrequencyInMs: 2000,
		MaxIddleTimeInSec: 1,
	}, toolbox.FileLoggerConfig{
       		LogType:           "transaction",
       		FileTemplate:      "/tmp/transaction[yyyyMMdd-hhmm].log",
       		QueueFlashCount:   250,
       		MaxQueueSize:      500,
       		FlushFrequencyInMs:2000,
       		MaxIddleTimeInSec: 1,
       	},
	)

    logger.Log(&toolbox.LogMessage{
        MessageType: "test",
        Message:     message
    })
    
    logger.Log(&toolbox.LogMessage{
            MessageType: "transaction",
            Message:     message
        })

BatchLimiter

This library provides a batch limiter, that enables controling number of active go routines.

     var tasks []*Task
     var batchSize = 4
	 limiter:= toolbox.NewBatchLimiter(batchSize, len(tasks))
   	 for i, _ :=  range tasks {
            go func(task *Task) {
                    limiter.Acquire()
                    defer limiter.Done()
                    task.Run();
        	}(tasks[i])
	}
	limiter.Wait()

AST Based FileSetInfo

    pkgPath := ""
	source := path.Join(pkgPath)
	filesetInfo, err :=toolbox.NewFileSetInfo(source)
    myType := fileSetInfo.Type("MyType")
    fields := myType.Fields()
    method := myType.Receivers

GoCover

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License

The source code is made available under the terms of the Apache License, Version 2, as stated in the file LICENSE.

Individual files may be made available under their own specific license, all compatible with Apache License, Version 2. Please see individual files for details.

Credits and Acknowledgements

Library Author: Adrian Witas

Contributors:

About

Toolbox - go utility library

License:Apache License 2.0


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