30b71cbbac
* Refactor to consolidate constraints on the matching chain * Add CN prefix/suffix constraint * Maintain backwards compatibility (pick a random cert if multiple match) * Vendor go-glob * Replace cn_prefix/suffix with required_name/globbing Move all the new tests to acceptance-capable tests instead of embedding in the CRL test * Allow authenticating against a single cert * Add new params to documentation * Add CLI support for new param * Refactor for style * Support multiple (ORed) name patterns * Rename required_names to allowed_names * Update docs for parameter rename * Use the new TypeCommaStringSlice |
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.. | ||
glob.go | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md |
String globbing in golang
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
}