githaven/vendor/gopkg.in/src-d/go-git.v4/utils/merkletrie/noder/noder.go
Lauris BH 08bf443016 Implement git refs API for listing references (branches, tags and other) (#5354)
* Inital routes to git refs api

* Git refs API implementation

* Update swagger

* Fix copyright

* Make swagger happy add basic test

* Fix test

* Fix test again :)
2018-11-27 16:52:20 -05:00

60 lines
2.1 KiB
Go

// Package noder provide an interface for defining nodes in a
// merkletrie, their hashes and their paths (a noders and its
// ancestors).
//
// The hasher interface is easy to implement naively by elements that
// already have a hash, like git blobs and trees. More sophisticated
// implementations can implement the Equal function in exotic ways
// though: for instance, comparing the modification time of directories
// in a filesystem.
package noder
import "fmt"
// Hasher interface is implemented by types that can tell you
// their hash.
type Hasher interface {
Hash() []byte
}
// Equal functions take two hashers and return if they are equal.
//
// These functions are expected to be faster than reflect.Equal or
// reflect.DeepEqual because they can compare just the hash of the
// objects, instead of their contents, so they are expected to be O(1).
type Equal func(a, b Hasher) bool
// The Noder interface is implemented by the elements of a Merkle Trie.
//
// There are two types of elements in a Merkle Trie:
//
// - file-like nodes: they cannot have children.
//
// - directory-like nodes: they can have 0 or more children and their
// hash is calculated by combining their children hashes.
type Noder interface {
Hasher
fmt.Stringer // for testing purposes
// Name returns the name of an element (relative, not its full
// path).
Name() string
// IsDir returns true if the element is a directory-like node or
// false if it is a file-like node.
IsDir() bool
// Children returns the children of the element. Note that empty
// directory-like noders and file-like noders will both return
// NoChildren.
Children() ([]Noder, error)
// NumChildren returns the number of children this element has.
//
// This method is an optimization: the number of children is easily
// calculated as the length of the value returned by the Children
// method (above); yet, some implementations will be able to
// implement NumChildren in O(1) while Children is usually more
// complex.
NumChildren() (int, error)
}
// NoChildren represents the children of a noder without children.
var NoChildren = []Noder{}