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/*
Copyright 2014 The Kubernetes Authors.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.
*/
package resource
import (
"bytes"
"errors"
"fmt"
"math/big"
"strconv"
"strings"
inf "gopkg.in/inf.v0"
)
// Quantity is a fixed-point representation of a number.
// It provides convenient marshaling/unmarshaling in JSON and YAML,
// in addition to String() and Int64() accessors.
//
// The serialization format is:
//
// <quantity> ::= <signedNumber><suffix>
// (Note that <suffix> may be empty, from the "" case in <decimalSI>.)
// <digit> ::= 0 | 1 | ... | 9
// <digits> ::= <digit> | <digit><digits>
// <number> ::= <digits> | <digits>.<digits> | <digits>. | .<digits>
// <sign> ::= "+" | "-"
// <signedNumber> ::= <number> | <sign><number>
// <suffix> ::= <binarySI> | <decimalExponent> | <decimalSI>
// <binarySI> ::= Ki | Mi | Gi | Ti | Pi | Ei
// (International System of units; See: http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html)
// <decimalSI> ::= m | "" | k | M | G | T | P | E
// (Note that 1024 = 1Ki but 1000 = 1k; I didn't choose the capitalization.)
// <decimalExponent> ::= "e" <signedNumber> | "E" <signedNumber>
//
// No matter which of the three exponent forms is used, no quantity may represent
// a number greater than 2^63-1 in magnitude, nor may it have more than 3 decimal
// places. Numbers larger or more precise will be capped or rounded up.
// (E.g.: 0.1m will rounded up to 1m.)
// This may be extended in the future if we require larger or smaller quantities.
//
// When a Quantity is parsed from a string, it will remember the type of suffix
// it had, and will use the same type again when it is serialized.
//
// Before serializing, Quantity will be put in "canonical form".
// This means that Exponent/suffix will be adjusted up or down (with a
// corresponding increase or decrease in Mantissa) such that:
// a. No precision is lost
// b. No fractional digits will be emitted
// c. The exponent (or suffix) is as large as possible.
// The sign will be omitted unless the number is negative.
//
// Examples:
// 1.5 will be serialized as "1500m"
// 1.5Gi will be serialized as "1536Mi"
//
// Note that the quantity will NEVER be internally represented by a
// floating point number. That is the whole point of this exercise.
//
// Non-canonical values will still parse as long as they are well formed,
// but will be re-emitted in their canonical form. (So always use canonical
// form, or don't diff.)
//
// This format is intended to make it difficult to use these numbers without
// writing some sort of special handling code in the hopes that that will
// cause implementors to also use a fixed point implementation.
//
// +protobuf=true
// +protobuf.embed=string
// +protobuf.options.marshal=false
// +protobuf.options.(gogoproto.goproto_stringer)=false
// +k8s:deepcopy-gen=true
// +k8s:openapi-gen=true
type Quantity struct {
// i is the quantity in int64 scaled form, if d.Dec == nil
i int64Amount
// d is the quantity in inf.Dec form if d.Dec != nil
d infDecAmount
// s is the generated value of this quantity to avoid recalculation
s string
// Change Format at will. See the comment for Canonicalize for
// more details.
Format
}
// CanonicalValue allows a quantity amount to be converted to a string.
type CanonicalValue interface {
// AsCanonicalBytes returns a byte array representing the string representation
// of the value mantissa and an int32 representing its exponent in base-10. Callers may
// pass a byte slice to the method to avoid allocations.
AsCanonicalBytes(out []byte) ([]byte, int32)
// AsCanonicalBase1024Bytes returns a byte array representing the string representation
// of the value mantissa and an int32 representing its exponent in base-1024. Callers
// may pass a byte slice to the method to avoid allocations.
AsCanonicalBase1024Bytes(out []byte) ([]byte, int32)
}
// Format lists the three possible formattings of a quantity.
type Format string
const (
DecimalExponent = Format("DecimalExponent") // e.g., 12e6
BinarySI = Format("BinarySI") // e.g., 12Mi (12 * 2^20)
DecimalSI = Format("DecimalSI") // e.g., 12M (12 * 10^6)
)
// MustParse turns the given string into a quantity or panics; for tests
// or others cases where you know the string is valid.
func MustParse(str string) Quantity {
q, err := ParseQuantity(str)
if err != nil {
panic(fmt.Errorf("cannot parse '%v': %v", str, err))
}
return q
}
const (
// splitREString is used to separate a number from its suffix; as such,
// this is overly permissive, but that's OK-- it will be checked later.
splitREString = "^([+-]?[0-9.]+)([eEinumkKMGTP]*[-+]?[0-9]*)$"
)
var (
// Errors that could happen while parsing a string.
ErrFormatWrong = errors.New("quantities must match the regular expression '" + splitREString + "'")
ErrNumeric = errors.New("unable to parse numeric part of quantity")
ErrSuffix = errors.New("unable to parse quantity's suffix")
)
// parseQuantityString is a fast scanner for quantity values.
func parseQuantityString(str string) (positive bool, value, num, denom, suffix string, err error) {
positive = true
pos := 0
end := len(str)
// handle leading sign
if pos < end {
switch str[0] {
case '-':
positive = false
pos++
case '+':
pos++
}
}
// strip leading zeros
Zeroes:
for i := pos; ; i++ {
if i >= end {
num = "0"
value = num
return
}
switch str[i] {
case '0':
pos++
default:
break Zeroes
}
}
// extract the numerator
Num:
for i := pos; ; i++ {
if i >= end {
num = str[pos:end]
value = str[0:end]
return
}
switch str[i] {
case '0', '1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8', '9':
default:
num = str[pos:i]
pos = i
break Num
}
}
// if we stripped all numerator positions, always return 0
if len(num) == 0 {
num = "0"
}
// handle a denominator
if pos < end && str[pos] == '.' {
pos++
Denom:
for i := pos; ; i++ {
if i >= end {
denom = str[pos:end]
value = str[0:end]
return
}
switch str[i] {
case '0', '1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8', '9':
default:
denom = str[pos:i]
pos = i
break Denom
}
}
// TODO: we currently allow 1.G, but we may not want to in the future.
// if len(denom) == 0 {
// err = ErrFormatWrong
// return
// }
}
value = str[0:pos]
// grab the elements of the suffix
suffixStart := pos
for i := pos; ; i++ {
if i >= end {
suffix = str[suffixStart:end]
return
}
if !strings.ContainsAny(str[i:i+1], "eEinumkKMGTP") {
pos = i
break
}
}
if pos < end {
switch str[pos] {
case '-', '+':
pos++
}
}
Suffix:
for i := pos; ; i++ {
if i >= end {
suffix = str[suffixStart:end]
return
}
switch str[i] {
case '0', '1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8', '9':
default:
break Suffix
}
}
// we encountered a non decimal in the Suffix loop, but the last character
// was not a valid exponent
err = ErrFormatWrong
return
}
// ParseQuantity turns str into a Quantity, or returns an error.
func ParseQuantity(str string) (Quantity, error) {
if len(str) == 0 {
return Quantity{}, ErrFormatWrong
}
if str == "0" {
return Quantity{Format: DecimalSI, s: str}, nil
}
positive, value, num, denom, suf, err := parseQuantityString(str)
if err != nil {
return Quantity{}, err
}
base, exponent, format, ok := quantitySuffixer.interpret(suffix(suf))
if !ok {
return Quantity{}, ErrSuffix
}
precision := int32(0)
scale := int32(0)
mantissa := int64(1)
switch format {
case DecimalExponent, DecimalSI:
scale = exponent
precision = maxInt64Factors - int32(len(num)+len(denom))
case BinarySI:
scale = 0
switch {
case exponent >= 0 && len(denom) == 0:
// only handle positive binary numbers with the fast path
mantissa = int64(int64(mantissa) << uint64(exponent))
// 1Mi (2^20) has ~6 digits of decimal precision, so exponent*3/10 -1 is roughly the precision
precision = 15 - int32(len(num)) - int32(float32(exponent)*3/10) - 1
default:
precision = -1
}
}
if precision >= 0 {
// if we have a denominator, shift the entire value to the left by the number of places in the
// denominator
scale -= int32(len(denom))
if scale >= int32(Nano) {
shifted := num + denom
var value int64
value, err := strconv.ParseInt(shifted, 10, 64)
if err != nil {
return Quantity{}, ErrNumeric
}
if result, ok := int64Multiply(value, int64(mantissa)); ok {
if !positive {
result = -result
}
// if the number is in canonical form, reuse the string
switch format {
case BinarySI:
if exponent%10 == 0 && (value&0x07 != 0) {
return Quantity{i: int64Amount{value: result, scale: Scale(scale)}, Format: format, s: str}, nil
}
default:
if scale%3 == 0 && !strings.HasSuffix(shifted, "000") && shifted[0] != '0' {
return Quantity{i: int64Amount{value: result, scale: Scale(scale)}, Format: format, s: str}, nil
}
}
return Quantity{i: int64Amount{value: result, scale: Scale(scale)}, Format: format}, nil
}
}
}
amount := new(inf.Dec)
if _, ok := amount.SetString(value); !ok {
return Quantity{}, ErrNumeric
}
// So that no one but us has to think about suffixes, remove it.
if base == 10 {
amount.SetScale(amount.Scale() + Scale(exponent).infScale())
} else if base == 2 {
// numericSuffix = 2 ** exponent
numericSuffix := big.NewInt(1).Lsh(bigOne, uint(exponent))
ub := amount.UnscaledBig()
amount.SetUnscaledBig(ub.Mul(ub, numericSuffix))
}
// Cap at min/max bounds.
sign := amount.Sign()
if sign == -1 {
amount.Neg(amount)
}
// This rounds non-zero values up to the minimum representable value, under the theory that
// if you want some resources, you should get some resources, even if you asked for way too small
// of an amount. Arguably, this should be inf.RoundHalfUp (normal rounding), but that would have
// the side effect of rounding values < .5n to zero.
if v, ok := amount.Unscaled(); v != int64(0) || !ok {
amount.Round(amount, Nano.infScale(), inf.RoundUp)
}
// The max is just a simple cap.
// TODO: this prevents accumulating quantities greater than int64, for instance quota across a cluster
if format == BinarySI && amount.Cmp(maxAllowed.Dec) > 0 {
amount.Set(maxAllowed.Dec)
}
if format == BinarySI && amount.Cmp(decOne) < 0 && amount.Cmp(decZero) > 0 {
// This avoids rounding and hopefully confusion, too.
format = DecimalSI
}
if sign == -1 {
amount.Neg(amount)
}
return Quantity{d: infDecAmount{amount}, Format: format}, nil
}
// DeepCopy returns a deep-copy of the Quantity value. Note that the method
// receiver is a value, so we can mutate it in-place and return it.
func (q Quantity) DeepCopy() Quantity {
if q.d.Dec != nil {
tmp := &inf.Dec{}
q.d.Dec = tmp.Set(q.d.Dec)
}
return q
}
// OpenAPISchemaType is used by the kube-openapi generator when constructing
// the OpenAPI spec of this type.
//
// See: https://github.com/kubernetes/kube-openapi/tree/master/pkg/generators
func (_ Quantity) OpenAPISchemaType() []string { return []string{"string"} }
// OpenAPISchemaFormat is used by the kube-openapi generator when constructing
// the OpenAPI spec of this type.
func (_ Quantity) OpenAPISchemaFormat() string { return "" }
// CanonicalizeBytes returns the canonical form of q and its suffix (see comment on Quantity).
//
// Note about BinarySI:
// * If q.Format is set to BinarySI and q.Amount represents a non-zero value between
// -1 and +1, it will be emitted as if q.Format were DecimalSI.
// * Otherwise, if q.Format is set to BinarySI, fractional parts of q.Amount will be
// rounded up. (1.1i becomes 2i.)
func (q *Quantity) CanonicalizeBytes(out []byte) (result, suffix []byte) {
if q.IsZero() {
return zeroBytes, nil
}
var rounded CanonicalValue
format := q.Format
switch format {
case DecimalExponent, DecimalSI:
case BinarySI:
if q.CmpInt64(-1024) > 0 && q.CmpInt64(1024) < 0 {
// This avoids rounding and hopefully confusion, too.
format = DecimalSI
} else {
var exact bool
if rounded, exact = q.AsScale(0); !exact {
// Don't lose precision-- show as DecimalSI
format = DecimalSI
}
}
default:
format = DecimalExponent
}
// TODO: If BinarySI formatting is requested but would cause rounding, upgrade to
// one of the other formats.
switch format {
case DecimalExponent, DecimalSI:
number, exponent := q.AsCanonicalBytes(out)
suffix, _ := quantitySuffixer.constructBytes(10, exponent, format)
return number, suffix
default:
// format must be BinarySI
number, exponent := rounded.AsCanonicalBase1024Bytes(out)
suffix, _ := quantitySuffixer.constructBytes(2, exponent*10, format)
return number, suffix
}
}
// AsInt64 returns a representation of the current value as an int64 if a fast conversion
// is possible. If false is returned, callers must use the inf.Dec form of this quantity.
func (q *Quantity) AsInt64() (int64, bool) {
if q.d.Dec != nil {
return 0, false
}
return q.i.AsInt64()
}
// ToDec promotes the quantity in place to use an inf.Dec representation and returns itself.
func (q *Quantity) ToDec() *Quantity {
if q.d.Dec == nil {
q.d.Dec = q.i.AsDec()
q.i = int64Amount{}
}
return q
}
// AsDec returns the quantity as represented by a scaled inf.Dec.
func (q *Quantity) AsDec() *inf.Dec {
if q.d.Dec != nil {
return q.d.Dec
}
q.d.Dec = q.i.AsDec()
q.i = int64Amount{}
return q.d.Dec
}
// AsCanonicalBytes returns the canonical byte representation of this quantity as a mantissa
// and base 10 exponent. The out byte slice may be passed to the method to avoid an extra
// allocation.
func (q *Quantity) AsCanonicalBytes(out []byte) (result []byte, exponent int32) {
if q.d.Dec != nil {
return q.d.AsCanonicalBytes(out)
}
return q.i.AsCanonicalBytes(out)
}
// IsZero returns true if the quantity is equal to zero.
func (q *Quantity) IsZero() bool {
if q.d.Dec != nil {
return q.d.Dec.Sign() == 0
}
return q.i.value == 0
}
// Sign returns 0 if the quantity is zero, -1 if the quantity is less than zero, or 1 if the
// quantity is greater than zero.
func (q *Quantity) Sign() int {
if q.d.Dec != nil {
return q.d.Dec.Sign()
}
return q.i.Sign()
}
// AsScale returns the current value, rounded up to the provided scale, and returns
// false if the scale resulted in a loss of precision.
func (q *Quantity) AsScale(scale Scale) (CanonicalValue, bool) {
if q.d.Dec != nil {
return q.d.AsScale(scale)
}
return q.i.AsScale(scale)
}
// RoundUp updates the quantity to the provided scale, ensuring that the value is at
// least 1. False is returned if the rounding operation resulted in a loss of precision.
// Negative numbers are rounded away from zero (-9 scale 1 rounds to -10).
func (q *Quantity) RoundUp(scale Scale) bool {
if q.d.Dec != nil {
q.s = ""
d, exact := q.d.AsScale(scale)
q.d = d
return exact
}
// avoid clearing the string value if we have already calculated it
if q.i.scale >= scale {
return true
}
q.s = ""
i, exact := q.i.AsScale(scale)
q.i = i
return exact
}
// Add adds the provide y quantity to the current value. If the current value is zero,
// the format of the quantity will be updated to the format of y.
func (q *Quantity) Add(y Quantity) {
q.s = ""
if q.d.Dec == nil && y.d.Dec == nil {
if q.i.value == 0 {
q.Format = y.Format
}
if q.i.Add(y.i) {
return
}
} else if q.IsZero() {
q.Format = y.Format
}
q.ToDec().d.Dec.Add(q.d.Dec, y.AsDec())
}
// Sub subtracts the provided quantity from the current value in place. If the current
// value is zero, the format of the quantity will be updated to the format of y.
func (q *Quantity) Sub(y Quantity) {
q.s = ""
if q.IsZero() {
q.Format = y.Format
}
if q.d.Dec == nil && y.d.Dec == nil && q.i.Sub(y.i) {
return
}
q.ToDec().d.Dec.Sub(q.d.Dec, y.AsDec())
}
// Cmp returns 0 if the quantity is equal to y, -1 if the quantity is less than y, or 1 if the
// quantity is greater than y.
func (q *Quantity) Cmp(y Quantity) int {
if q.d.Dec == nil && y.d.Dec == nil {
return q.i.Cmp(y.i)
}
return q.AsDec().Cmp(y.AsDec())
}
// CmpInt64 returns 0 if the quantity is equal to y, -1 if the quantity is less than y, or 1 if the
// quantity is greater than y.
func (q *Quantity) CmpInt64(y int64) int {
if q.d.Dec != nil {
return q.d.Dec.Cmp(inf.NewDec(y, inf.Scale(0)))
}
return q.i.Cmp(int64Amount{value: y})
}
// Neg sets quantity to be the negative value of itself.
func (q *Quantity) Neg() {
q.s = ""
if q.d.Dec == nil {
q.i.value = -q.i.value
return
}
q.d.Dec.Neg(q.d.Dec)
}
// Equal checks equality of two Quantities. This is useful for testing with
// cmp.Equal.
func (q Quantity) Equal(v Quantity) bool {
return q.Cmp(v) == 0
}
// int64QuantityExpectedBytes is the expected width in bytes of the canonical string representation
// of most Quantity values.
const int64QuantityExpectedBytes = 18
// String formats the Quantity as a string, caching the result if not calculated.
// String is an expensive operation and caching this result significantly reduces the cost of
// normal parse / marshal operations on Quantity.
func (q *Quantity) String() string {
if len(q.s) == 0 {
result := make([]byte, 0, int64QuantityExpectedBytes)
number, suffix := q.CanonicalizeBytes(result)
number = append(number, suffix...)
q.s = string(number)
}
return q.s
}
// MarshalJSON implements the json.Marshaller interface.
func (q Quantity) MarshalJSON() ([]byte, error) {
if len(q.s) > 0 {
out := make([]byte, len(q.s)+2)
out[0], out[len(out)-1] = '"', '"'
copy(out[1:], q.s)
return out, nil
}
result := make([]byte, int64QuantityExpectedBytes, int64QuantityExpectedBytes)
result[0] = '"'
number, suffix := q.CanonicalizeBytes(result[1:1])
// if the same slice was returned to us that we passed in, avoid another allocation by copying number into
// the source slice and returning that
if len(number) > 0 && &number[0] == &result[1] && (len(number)+len(suffix)+2) <= int64QuantityExpectedBytes {
number = append(number, suffix...)
number = append(number, '"')
return result[:1+len(number)], nil
}
// if CanonicalizeBytes needed more space than our slice provided, we may need to allocate again so use
// append
result = result[:1]
result = append(result, number...)
result = append(result, suffix...)
result = append(result, '"')
return result, nil
}
// UnmarshalJSON implements the json.Unmarshaller interface.
// TODO: Remove support for leading/trailing whitespace
func (q *Quantity) UnmarshalJSON(value []byte) error {
l := len(value)
if l == 4 && bytes.Equal(value, []byte("null")) {
q.d.Dec = nil
q.i = int64Amount{}
return nil
}
if l >= 2 && value[0] == '"' && value[l-1] == '"' {
value = value[1 : l-1]
}
parsed, err := ParseQuantity(strings.TrimSpace(string(value)))
if err != nil {
return err
}
// This copy is safe because parsed will not be referred to again.
*q = parsed
return nil
}
// NewQuantity returns a new Quantity representing the given
// value in the given format.
func NewQuantity(value int64, format Format) *Quantity {
return &Quantity{
i: int64Amount{value: value},
Format: format,
}
}
// NewMilliQuantity returns a new Quantity representing the given
// value * 1/1000 in the given format. Note that BinarySI formatting
// will round fractional values, and will be changed to DecimalSI for
// values x where (-1 < x < 1) && (x != 0).
func NewMilliQuantity(value int64, format Format) *Quantity {
return &Quantity{
i: int64Amount{value: value, scale: -3},
Format: format,
}
}
// NewScaledQuantity returns a new Quantity representing the given
// value * 10^scale in DecimalSI format.
func NewScaledQuantity(value int64, scale Scale) *Quantity {
return &Quantity{
i: int64Amount{value: value, scale: scale},
Format: DecimalSI,
}
}
// Value returns the unscaled value of q rounded up to the nearest integer away from 0.
func (q *Quantity) Value() int64 {
return q.ScaledValue(0)
}
// MilliValue returns the value of ceil(q * 1000); this could overflow an int64;
// if that's a concern, call Value() first to verify the number is small enough.
func (q *Quantity) MilliValue() int64 {
return q.ScaledValue(Milli)
}
// ScaledValue returns the value of ceil(q * 10^scale); this could overflow an int64.
// To detect overflow, call Value() first and verify the expected magnitude.
func (q *Quantity) ScaledValue(scale Scale) int64 {
if q.d.Dec == nil {
i, _ := q.i.AsScaledInt64(scale)
return i
}
dec := q.d.Dec
return scaledValue(dec.UnscaledBig(), int(dec.Scale()), int(scale.infScale()))
}
// Set sets q's value to be value.
func (q *Quantity) Set(value int64) {
q.SetScaled(value, 0)
}
// SetMilli sets q's value to be value * 1/1000.
func (q *Quantity) SetMilli(value int64) {
q.SetScaled(value, Milli)
}
// SetScaled sets q's value to be value * 10^scale
func (q *Quantity) SetScaled(value int64, scale Scale) {
q.s = ""
q.d.Dec = nil
q.i = int64Amount{value: value, scale: scale}
}
// Copy is a convenience function that makes a deep copy for you. Non-deep
// copies of quantities share pointers and you will regret that.
func (q *Quantity) Copy() *Quantity {
if q.d.Dec == nil {
return &Quantity{
s: q.s,
i: q.i,
Format: q.Format,
}
}
tmp := &inf.Dec{}
return &Quantity{
s: q.s,
d: infDecAmount{tmp.Set(q.d.Dec)},
Format: q.Format,
}
}