Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Concatenate a OIDs #45

Draft
wants to merge 2 commits into
base: master
Choose a base branch
from
Draft

Concatenate a OIDs #45

wants to merge 2 commits into from

Conversation

zotho
Copy link

@zotho zotho commented Jun 18, 2021

Just draft to implement possibility of #44

const A: Oid = oid!(1.2.3);
const B: Oid = oid_append!(A, 4.5); // 1.2.3.4.5
const C: Oid = oid_append!(A, B);   // 1.2.3.1.2.3.4.5

But this functionality requires #![feature(const_precise_live_drops)]

@lilyball
Copy link

How much of a change would it be to change Oid so instead of exposing a single slice of bytes, it exposed an iterator of byte slices instead? This way an Oid could have an optional base_oid field. Serializing and equality comparisons would use the iterator. This would be a breaking change of course, as we'd be removing the byte slice view, but it allows for trivial compile-time and runtime appending. The biggest issue I can see (beyond it being a breaking change) is that ideally you'd want to only allow appending of relative Oids to a base, but this isn't expressed in the type system, so you'd have to define some reasonable behavior for what happens if you append an absolute Oid to another one (the obvious behavior is to treat the absolute one as a relative one instead, which just expands its encoding by one byte, and means oid!(1.2.3) + oid!(4.5.6) doesn't punish me for forgetting the rel keyword).

@chifflier chifflier self-assigned this Jul 9, 2021
Copy link
Member

@chifflier chifflier left a comment

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

So, the concatenation is done using a mix of const fn and macros. Is it entirely resolved at compile time ?

Otherwise, another approach would be to entirely do that at runtime, and use the .bytes() method from oid, so it would work generically. The caller would probably have use something like lazy_static.

@@ -225,9 +225,11 @@
no_crate_inject,
attr(deny(warnings/*, rust_2018_idioms*/), allow(dead_code, unused_variables))
))]
#![feature(const_precise_live_drops)]
Copy link
Member

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

Unfortunately, this prevents from building with stable rustc, which would not be acceptable.
Why is it required ? I see no code using it (at least in rustc 1.53, bytes_from_borrowed does not require it)

pub const fn bytes_from_borrowed(&self) -> &[u8] {
match &self.asn1 {
Cow::Borrowed(b) => *b,
_ => &[],
Copy link
Member

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

I don't know what the best behavior is:

  • returning an empty slice hides the error, which may be bad
  • this is a const fn, so we can't panic (an ugly way to do that would be to do something like {"error message"[256]; &[]} so at least we get an error message

@@ -208,7 +208,7 @@
//! (DER)."

#![deny(/*missing_docs,*/
unstable_features,
/*unstable_features,*/
Copy link
Member

Choose a reason for hiding this comment

The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.

I really would prefer not to do this (see below)

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
None yet
Projects
None yet
Development

Successfully merging this pull request may close these issues.

None yet

3 participants