containerd/archive/strconv.go
Darren Stahl c195ebb3e2 Implement archive.Apply on Windows
Signed-off-by: Darren Stahl <darst@microsoft.com>
2017-12-15 11:33:03 -08:00

53 lines
1.4 KiB
Go

// +build windows
package archive
import (
"strconv"
"strings"
"time"
"github.com/dmcgowan/go-tar"
)
// Forked from https://github.com/golang/go/blob/master/src/archive/tar/strconv.go
// as archive/tar doesn't support CreationTime, but does handle PAX time parsing,
// and there's no need to re-invent the wheel.
// parsePAXTime takes a string of the form %d.%d as described in the PAX
// specification. Note that this implementation allows for negative timestamps,
// which is allowed for by the PAX specification, but not always portable.
func parsePAXTime(s string) (time.Time, error) {
const maxNanoSecondDigits = 9
// Split string into seconds and sub-seconds parts.
ss, sn := s, ""
if pos := strings.IndexByte(s, '.'); pos >= 0 {
ss, sn = s[:pos], s[pos+1:]
}
// Parse the seconds.
secs, err := strconv.ParseInt(ss, 10, 64)
if err != nil {
return time.Time{}, tar.ErrHeader
}
if len(sn) == 0 {
return time.Unix(secs, 0), nil // No sub-second values
}
// Parse the nanoseconds.
if strings.Trim(sn, "0123456789") != "" {
return time.Time{}, tar.ErrHeader
}
if len(sn) < maxNanoSecondDigits {
sn += strings.Repeat("0", maxNanoSecondDigits-len(sn)) // Right pad
} else {
sn = sn[:maxNanoSecondDigits] // Right truncate
}
nsecs, _ := strconv.ParseInt(sn, 10, 64) // Must succeed
if len(ss) > 0 && ss[0] == '-' {
return time.Unix(secs, -1*int64(nsecs)), nil // Negative correction
}
return time.Unix(secs, int64(nsecs)), nil
}