* use gofmput to format code
* use gci to format imports
* reconfigure gci
* linter autofixes
* rearrange imports a little
* export GOOS=windows golangci-lint run ./... --fix
* implement variadic placeholders
imported snippets reflect actual lines in file
* add import directive line number for imported snippets
add tests for parsing
* add realfile field to help debug import cycle detection.
* use file field to reflect import chain
* Switch syntax, deprecate old syntax, refactoring
- Moved the import args handling to a separate file
- Using {args[0:1]} syntax now
- Deprecate {args.*} syntax
- Use a replacer map for better control over the parsing
- Add plenty of warnings when invalid placeholders are detected
- Renaming variables, cleanup comments for readability
- More tests to cover edgecases I could think of
- Minor cleanup to snippet tracking in tokens, drop a redundant boolean field in tokens
---------
Co-authored-by: Francis Lavoie <lavofr@gmail.com>
* httpcaddyfile: Change the parse rules when empty file or dotfile with a glob.
* Fixes#5295
* Empty file should just log a warning, and result in no tokens.
* The last segment of the path is '*', it should skip any dotfiles.
* The last segment of the path is '.*', it should read all dotfiles in a dir.
* httpcaddyfile: Regard empty files as import files which include only white space.
* caddyfile: Support for raw token values, improve `map`, `expression`
* Applied code review comments
* Rename RawVal to ValRaw
Co-authored-by: Matthew Holt <mholt@users.noreply.github.com>
Some new users mistakenly try to define two sites without braces around each. Doing this can yield a confusing error message saying that their site address is an "unknown directive".
We can do better by keeping track of whether the current site block was parsed with or without a brace, then changing the error message later based on that.
For example, now this invalid config:
```
foo.example.com
respond "foo"
bar.example.com
respond "bar"
```
Will yield this error message:
```
$ caddy adapt
2021/08/22 19:21:31.028 INFO using adjacent Caddyfile
adapt: Caddyfile:4: unrecognized directive: bar.example.com
Did you mean to define a second site? If so, you must use curly braces around each site to separate their configurations.
```
Some users forget to use a comma between their site addresses. This is invalid (commas aren't a valid character in domains) and later parts of the code like certificate automation will try to use this otherwise, which doesn't make sense. Best to error as early as possible.
Example thread on the forums where this happened: https://caddy.community/t/simplify-caddyfile/13281/9
* caddyfile: Add parse error on site address in `{`
This is an incredibly common mistake made by users, so we should catch it earlier in the parser and give a more friendly message. Often it ends up adapting but with mistakes, or erroring out later due to other site addresses being read as directives.
There's not really ever a situation where a lone '{' is valid at the end of a site address (but I suppose there are edgecases where the user wants to use a path matcher where it ends specifically in `{`, but... why?), so this should be fine.
* Update caddyconfig/caddyfile/parse.go