// Copyright 2013 Julien Schmidt. All rights reserved. // Based on the path package, Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be found // at https://github.com/julienschmidt/httprouter/blob/master/LICENSE. package gin // cleanPath is the URL version of path.Clean, it returns a canonical URL path // for p, eliminating . and .. elements. // // The following rules are applied iteratively until no further processing can // be done: // 1. Replace multiple slashes with a single slash. // 2. Eliminate each . path name element (the current directory). // 3. Eliminate each inner .. path name element (the parent directory) // along with the non-.. element that precedes it. // 4. Eliminate .. elements that begin a rooted path: // that is, replace "/.." by "/" at the beginning of a path. // // If the result of this process is an empty string, "/" is returned. func cleanPath(p string) string { const stackBufSize = 128 // Turn empty string into "/" if p == "" { return "/" } // Reasonably sized buffer on stack to avoid allocations in the common case. // If a larger buffer is required, it gets allocated dynamically. buf := make([]byte, 0, stackBufSize) n := len(p) // Invariants: // reading from path; r is index of next byte to process. // writing to buf; w is index of next byte to write. // path must start with '/' r := 1 w := 1 if p[0] != '/' { r = 0 if n+1 > stackBufSize { buf = make([]byte, n+1) } else { buf = buf[:n+1] } buf[0] = '/' } trailing := n > 1 && p[n-1] == '/' // A bit more clunky without a 'lazybuf' like the path package, but the loop // gets completely inlined (bufApp calls). // loop has no expensive function calls (except 1x make) // So in contrast to the path package this loop has no expensive function // calls (except make, if needed). for r < n { switch { case p[r] == '/': // empty path element, trailing slash is added after the end r++ case p[r] == '.' && r+1 == n: trailing = true r++ case p[r] == '.' && p[r+1] == '/': // . element r += 2 case p[r] == '.' && p[r+1] == '.' && (r+2 == n || p[r+2] == '/'): // .. element: remove to last / r += 3 if w > 1 { // can backtrack w-- if len(buf) == 0 { for w > 1 && p[w] != '/' { w-- } } else { for w > 1 && buf[w] != '/' { w-- } } } default: // Real path element. // Add slash if needed if w > 1 { bufApp(&buf, p, w, '/') w++ } // Copy element for r < n && p[r] != '/' { bufApp(&buf, p, w, p[r]) w++ r++ } } } // Re-append trailing slash if trailing && w > 1 { bufApp(&buf, p, w, '/') w++ } // If the original string was not modified (or only shortened at the end), // return the respective substring of the original string. // Otherwise return a new string from the buffer. if len(buf) == 0 { return p[:w] } return string(buf[:w]) } // Internal helper to lazily create a buffer if necessary. // Calls to this function get inlined. func bufApp(buf *[]byte, s string, w int, c byte) { b := *buf if len(b) == 0 { // No modification of the original string so far. // If the next character is the same as in the original string, we do // not yet have to allocate a buffer. if s[w] == c { return } // Otherwise use either the stack buffer, if it is large enough, or // allocate a new buffer on the heap, and copy all previous characters. length := len(s) if length > cap(b) { *buf = make([]byte, length) } else { *buf = (*buf)[:length] } b = *buf copy(b, s[:w]) } b[w] = c }