I'll just post my code:
/*
* Role will ALWAYS reserve the session key "role".
*/
package goserver
const (
ROLE_KEY string = "role"
)
type Role string
//if index is higher or equal than role, will pass
type RolesHierarchy []Role
func (r Role) String() string {
return string(r)
}
func NewRole(session ServerSession) Role {
return session.GetValue(ROLE_KEY).(Role)
}
func (this Role) IsRole(role Role, hierarchy RolesHierarchy) bool {
if role == this {
return true
}
if len(hierarchy) == 0 {
return false
}
var thisI int = 0
var roleI int = 0
//Duped roles in hierarchy are verified in verifyConfig during parse
for i, r := range hierarchy {
if this == r {
thisI = i
}
if role == r {
roleI = i
}
}
//TODO I can probably condense what follows into one if
if thisI == 0 && roleI == 0 {
return false
}
return thisI >= roleI
}
func (this *Role) AssumeRole(session ServerSession, role Role) {
session.SetValue(ROLE_KEY, role)
*this = role
}
It should be noted that ServerSession is also an interface, calling "ServerSessioner" just feels wonky to me.
I'm toying with the idea of creating an interface with IsRole() and AssumeRole(), however "Roler" seems very wonky. It's dawning on me that I don't really know or have ever come across naming conventions for interfaces, other than the standard "er" suffix. I do seem to recall the VS C++ convention is to just throw an "I" in front of everything. Is this "idiomatic"?
Any suggestions?
In your case I would just name them RoleChecker
and RoleAssumer
, the "merged" one RoleCheckerAssumer
. Or if you'd go with a single interface, that could be RoleHelper
or RoleChecker
.
ServerSession
is also fine, or even just Session
(especially if there is no "client" session). ServerSessioner
on the other hand is bad, Session
is not a verb and not a method of the interface.
There has been many posts about the conventions.
Effective Go: Interface names:
By convention, one-method interfaces are named by the method name plus an -er suffix or similar modification to construct an agent noun:
Reader
,Writer
,Formatter
,CloseNotifier
etc.There are a number of such names and it's productive to honor them and the function names they capture.
Read
,Write
,Close
,Flush
,String
and so on have canonical signatures and meanings. To avoid confusion, don't give your method one of those names unless it has the same signature and meaning. Conversely, if your type implements a method with the same meaning as a method on a well-known type, give it the same name and signature; call your string-converter methodString
notToString
.
Interface Types @ What's in a name? - Talks at golang.org
Interfaces that specify just one method are usually just that function name with 'er' appended to it.
type Reader interface { Read(p []byte) (n int, err error) }
Sometimes the result isn't correct English, but we do it anyway:
type Execer interface { Exec(query string, args []Value) (Result, error) }
Sometimes we use English to make it nicer:
type ByteReader interface { ReadByte() (c byte, err error) }
When an interface includes multiple methods, choose a name that accurately describes its purpose (examples: net.Conn, http.ResponseWriter, io.ReadWriter).
For receiver names, don't use this
or self
or similar ones. Instead:
Receivers @ What's in a name? - Talks at golang.org
Receivers are a special kind of argument.
By convention, they are one or two characters that reflect the receiver type, because they typically appear on almost every line:
func (b *Buffer) Read(p []byte) (n int, err error) func (sh serverHandler) ServeHTTP(rw ResponseWriter, req *Request) func (r Rectangle) Size() Point
Receiver names should be consistent across a type's methods. (Don't use r in one method and rdr in another.)
Go Code Review Comments: Receiver Names:
The name of a method's receiver should be a reflection of its identity; often a one or two letter abbreviation of its type suffices (such as "c" or "cl" for "Client"). Don't use generic names such as "me", "this" or "self", identifiers typical of object-oriented languages that place more emphasis on methods as opposed to functions. The name need not be as descriptive as that of a method argument, as its role is obvious and serves no documentary purpose. It can be very short as it will appear on almost every line of every method of the type; familiarity admits brevity. Be consistent, too: if you call the receiver "c" in one method, don't call it "cl" in another.