ceph-csi/e2e/vendor/github.com/onsi/gomega/matchers/and.go
Niels de Vos f87d06ed85 build: move e2e dependencies into e2e/go.mod
Several packages are only used while running the e2e suite. These
packages are less important to update, as the they can not influence the
final executable that is part of the Ceph-CSI container-image.

By moving these dependencies out of the main Ceph-CSI go.mod, it is
easier to identify if a reported CVE affects Ceph-CSI, or only the
testing (like most of the Kubernetes CVEs).

Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@ibm.com>
2025-03-04 17:43:49 +01:00

63 lines
1.8 KiB
Go

package matchers
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/onsi/gomega/format"
"github.com/onsi/gomega/types"
)
type AndMatcher struct {
Matchers []types.GomegaMatcher
// state
firstFailedMatcher types.GomegaMatcher
}
func (m *AndMatcher) Match(actual interface{}) (success bool, err error) {
m.firstFailedMatcher = nil
for _, matcher := range m.Matchers {
success, err := matcher.Match(actual)
if !success || err != nil {
m.firstFailedMatcher = matcher
return false, err
}
}
return true, nil
}
func (m *AndMatcher) FailureMessage(actual interface{}) (message string) {
return m.firstFailedMatcher.FailureMessage(actual)
}
func (m *AndMatcher) NegatedFailureMessage(actual interface{}) (message string) {
// not the most beautiful list of matchers, but not bad either...
return format.Message(actual, fmt.Sprintf("To not satisfy all of these matchers: %s", m.Matchers))
}
func (m *AndMatcher) MatchMayChangeInTheFuture(actual interface{}) bool {
/*
Example with 3 matchers: A, B, C
Match evaluates them: T, F, <?> => F
So match is currently F, what should MatchMayChangeInTheFuture() return?
Seems like it only depends on B, since currently B MUST change to allow the result to become T
Match eval: T, T, T => T
So match is currently T, what should MatchMayChangeInTheFuture() return?
Seems to depend on ANY of them being able to change to F.
*/
if m.firstFailedMatcher == nil {
// so all matchers succeeded.. Any one of them changing would change the result.
for _, matcher := range m.Matchers {
if types.MatchMayChangeInTheFuture(matcher, actual) {
return true
}
}
return false // none of were going to change
}
// one of the matchers failed.. it must be able to change in order to affect the result
return types.MatchMayChangeInTheFuture(m.firstFailedMatcher, actual)
}