go-ethereum/whisper/topic.go
Ricardo Catalinas Jiménez 436fc8d76a all: Rename crypto.Sha3{,Hash}() to crypto.Keccak256{,Hash}()
As we aren't really using the standarized SHA-3
2016-02-21 22:34:34 +00:00

141 lines
5.0 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2015 The go-ethereum Authors
// This file is part of the go-ethereum library.
//
// The go-ethereum library is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
// it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
// the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
// (at your option) any later version.
//
// The go-ethereum library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
// but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
// MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
// GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
//
// You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
// along with the go-ethereum library. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
// Contains the Whisper protocol Topic element. For formal details please see
// the specs at https://github.com/ethereum/wiki/wiki/Whisper-PoC-1-Protocol-Spec#topics.
package whisper
import "github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/crypto"
// Topic represents a cryptographically secure, probabilistic partial
// classifications of a message, determined as the first (left) 4 bytes of the
// SHA3 hash of some arbitrary data given by the original author of the message.
type Topic [4]byte
// NewTopic creates a topic from the 4 byte prefix of the SHA3 hash of the data.
//
// Note, empty topics are considered the wildcard, and cannot be used in messages.
func NewTopic(data []byte) Topic {
prefix := [4]byte{}
copy(prefix[:], crypto.Keccak256(data)[:4])
return Topic(prefix)
}
// NewTopics creates a list of topics from a list of binary data elements, by
// iteratively calling NewTopic on each of them.
func NewTopics(data ...[]byte) []Topic {
topics := make([]Topic, len(data))
for i, element := range data {
topics[i] = NewTopic(element)
}
return topics
}
// NewTopicFromString creates a topic using the binary data contents of the
// specified string.
func NewTopicFromString(data string) Topic {
return NewTopic([]byte(data))
}
// NewTopicsFromStrings creates a list of topics from a list of textual data
// elements, by iteratively calling NewTopicFromString on each of them.
func NewTopicsFromStrings(data ...string) []Topic {
topics := make([]Topic, len(data))
for i, element := range data {
topics[i] = NewTopicFromString(element)
}
return topics
}
// String converts a topic byte array to a string representation.
func (self *Topic) String() string {
return string(self[:])
}
// topicMatcher is a filter expression to verify if a list of topics contained
// in an arriving message matches some topic conditions. The topic matcher is
// built up of a list of conditions, each of which must be satisfied by the
// corresponding topic in the message. Each condition may require: a) an exact
// topic match; b) a match from a set of topics; or c) a wild-card matching all.
//
// If a message contains more topics than required by the matcher, those beyond
// the condition count are ignored and assumed to match.
//
// Consider the following sample topic matcher:
// sample := {
// {TopicA1, TopicA2, TopicA3},
// {TopicB},
// nil,
// {TopicD1, TopicD2}
// }
// In order for a message to pass this filter, it should enumerate at least 4
// topics, the first any of [TopicA1, TopicA2, TopicA3], the second mandatory
// "TopicB", the third is ignored by the filter and the fourth either "TopicD1"
// or "TopicD2". If the message contains further topics, the filter will match
// them too.
type topicMatcher struct {
conditions []map[Topic]struct{}
}
// newTopicMatcher create a topic matcher from a list of topic conditions.
func newTopicMatcher(topics ...[]Topic) *topicMatcher {
matcher := make([]map[Topic]struct{}, len(topics))
for i, condition := range topics {
matcher[i] = make(map[Topic]struct{})
for _, topic := range condition {
matcher[i][topic] = struct{}{}
}
}
return &topicMatcher{conditions: matcher}
}
// newTopicMatcherFromBinary create a topic matcher from a list of binary conditions.
func newTopicMatcherFromBinary(data ...[][]byte) *topicMatcher {
topics := make([][]Topic, len(data))
for i, condition := range data {
topics[i] = NewTopics(condition...)
}
return newTopicMatcher(topics...)
}
// newTopicMatcherFromStrings creates a topic matcher from a list of textual
// conditions.
func newTopicMatcherFromStrings(data ...[]string) *topicMatcher {
topics := make([][]Topic, len(data))
for i, condition := range data {
topics[i] = NewTopicsFromStrings(condition...)
}
return newTopicMatcher(topics...)
}
// Matches checks if a list of topics matches this particular condition set.
func (self *topicMatcher) Matches(topics []Topic) bool {
// Mismatch if there aren't enough topics
if len(self.conditions) > len(topics) {
return false
}
// Check each topic condition for existence (skip wild-cards)
for i := 0; i < len(topics) && i < len(self.conditions); i++ {
if len(self.conditions[i]) > 0 {
if _, ok := self.conditions[i][topics[i]]; !ok {
return false
}
}
}
return true
}