packer-cn/vendor/github.com/ryanuber/go-glob
Adrien Delorme 4ebcbad332
update consul and vault dependencies (#9205)
* update consul and vault dependencies

* update triton sign call accorting to https://github.com/joyent/triton-go/pull/135

* Delete readme.md

* put back github.com/mitchellh/reflectwalk to v1.0.0 and explain why

* fix/fixer_pp_docker_tag_tags.go: simplify deduplication loop and keep seen/stable order
2020-05-11 15:26:01 -04:00
..
.travis.yml go mod vendor && go mod tidy 2019-04-11 14:19:24 +02:00
LICENSE add template function allowing user to read keys from vault 2018-08-28 11:23:47 -07:00
README.md add template function allowing user to read keys from vault 2018-08-28 11:23:47 -07:00
glob.go add template function allowing user to read keys from vault 2018-08-28 11:23:47 -07:00
go.mod update consul and vault dependencies (#9205) 2020-05-11 15:26:01 -04:00

README.md

String globbing in golang Build Status

go-glob is a single-function library implementing basic string glob support.

Globs are an extremely user-friendly way of supporting string matching without requiring knowledge of regular expressions or Go's particular regex engine. Most people understand that if you put a * character somewhere in a string, it is treated as a wildcard. Surprisingly, this functionality isn't found in Go's standard library, except for path.Match, which is intended to be used while comparing paths (not arbitrary strings), and contains specialized logic for this use case. A better solution might be a POSIX basic (non-ERE) regular expression engine for Go, which doesn't exist currently.

Example

package main

import "github.com/ryanuber/go-glob"

func main() {
    glob.Glob("*World!", "Hello, World!") // true
    glob.Glob("Hello,*", "Hello, World!") // true
    glob.Glob("*ello,*", "Hello, World!") // true
    glob.Glob("World!", "Hello, World!")  // false
    glob.Glob("/home/*", "/home/ryanuber/.bashrc") // true
}