* Add Virtual Kubelet provider for VIC Initial virtual kubelet provider for VMware VIC. This provider currently handles creating and starting of a pod VM via the VIC portlayer and persona server. Image store handling via the VIC persona server. This provider currently requires the feature/wolfpack branch of VIC. * Added pod stop and delete. Also added node capacity. Added the ability to stop and delete pod VMs via VIC. Also retrieve node capacity information from the VCH. * Cleanup and readme file Some file clean up and added a Readme.md markdown file for the VIC provider. * Cleaned up errors, added function comments, moved operation code 1. Cleaned up error handling. Set standard for creating errors. 2. Added method prototype comments for all interface functions. 3. Moved PodCreator, PodStarter, PodStopper, and PodDeleter to a new folder. * Add mocking code and unit tests for podcache, podcreator, and podstarter Used the unit test framework used in VIC to handle assertions in the provider's unit test. Mocking code generated using OSS project mockery, which is compatible with the testify assertion framework. * Vendored packages for the VIC provider Requires feature/wolfpack branch of VIC and a few specific commit sha of projects used within VIC. * Implementation of POD Stopper and Deleter unit tests (#4) * Updated files for initial PR
Denco 
The fast and flexible HTTP request router for Go.
Denco is based on Double-Array implementation of Kocha-urlrouter. However, Denco is optimized and some features added.
Features
- Fast (See go-http-routing-benchmark)
- URL patterns (
/foo/:barand/foo/*wildcard) - Small (but enough) URL router API
- HTTP request multiplexer like
http.ServeMux
Installation
go get -u github.com/go-openapi/runtime/middleware/denco
Using as HTTP request multiplexer
package main
import (
"fmt"
"log"
"net/http"
"github.com/go-openapi/runtime/middleware/denco"
)
func Index(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request, params denco.Params) {
fmt.Fprintf(w, "Welcome to Denco!\n")
}
func User(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request, params denco.Params) {
fmt.Fprintf(w, "Hello %s!\n", params.Get("name"))
}
func main() {
mux := denco.NewMux()
handler, err := mux.Build([]denco.Handler{
mux.GET("/", Index),
mux.GET("/user/:name", User),
mux.POST("/user/:name", User),
})
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
log.Fatal(http.ListenAndServe(":8080", handler))
}
Using as URL router
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/go-openapi/runtime/middleware/denco"
)
type route struct {
name string
}
func main() {
router := denco.New()
router.Build([]denco.Record{
{"/", &route{"root"}},
{"/user/:id", &route{"user"}},
{"/user/:name/:id", &route{"username"}},
{"/static/*filepath", &route{"static"}},
})
data, params, found := router.Lookup("/")
// print `&main.route{name:"root"}, denco.Params(nil), true`.
fmt.Printf("%#v, %#v, %#v\n", data, params, found)
data, params, found = router.Lookup("/user/hoge")
// print `&main.route{name:"user"}, denco.Params{denco.Param{Name:"id", Value:"hoge"}}, true`.
fmt.Printf("%#v, %#v, %#v\n", data, params, found)
data, params, found = router.Lookup("/user/hoge/7")
// print `&main.route{name:"username"}, denco.Params{denco.Param{Name:"name", Value:"hoge"}, denco.Param{Name:"id", Value:"7"}}, true`.
fmt.Printf("%#v, %#v, %#v\n", data, params, found)
data, params, found = router.Lookup("/static/path/to/file")
// print `&main.route{name:"static"}, denco.Params{denco.Param{Name:"filepath", Value:"path/to/file"}}, true`.
fmt.Printf("%#v, %#v, %#v\n", data, params, found)
}
See Godoc for more details.
Getting the value of path parameter
You can get the value of path parameter by 2 ways.
- Using
denco.Params.Getmethod - Find by loop
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/go-openapi/runtime/middleware/denco"
)
func main() {
router := denco.New()
if err := router.Build([]denco.Record{
{"/user/:name/:id", "route1"},
}); err != nil {
panic(err)
}
// 1. Using denco.Params.Get method.
_, params, _ := router.Lookup("/user/alice/1")
name := params.Get("name")
if name != "" {
fmt.Printf("Hello %s.\n", name) // prints "Hello alice.".
}
// 2. Find by loop.
for _, param := range params {
if param.Name == "name" {
fmt.Printf("Hello %s.\n", name) // prints "Hello alice.".
}
}
}
URL patterns
Denco's route matching strategy is "most nearly matching".
When routes /:name and /alice have been built, URI /alice matches the route /alice, not /:name.
Because URI /alice is more match with the route /alice than /:name.
For more example, when routes below have been built:
/user/alice
/user/:name
/user/:name/:id
/user/alice/:id
/user/:id/bob
Routes matching are:
/user/alice => "/user/alice" (no match with "/user/:name")
/user/bob => "/user/:name"
/user/naoina/1 => "/user/:name/1"
/user/alice/1 => "/user/alice/:id" (no match with "/user/:name/:id")
/user/1/bob => "/user/:id/bob" (no match with "/user/:name/:id")
/user/alice/bob => "/user/alice/:id" (no match with "/user/:name/:id" and "/user/:id/bob")
Limitation
Denco has some limitations below.
- Number of param records (such as
/:name) must be less than 2^22 - Number of elements of internal slice must be less than 2^22
Benchmarks
cd $GOPATH/github.com/go-openapi/runtime/middleware/denco
go test -bench . -benchmem
License
Denco is licensed under the MIT License.