فهرست منبع

Do not parse an empty string as an IpAddress.

This is more likely to result in downstream confusion than not.
Let downstream code decide exactly what it wants to do with
an empty string; be conservative here.
whitequark 7 سال پیش
والد
کامیت
1e105253f9
1فایلهای تغییر یافته به همراه2 افزوده شده و 6 حذف شده
  1. 2 6
      src/parsers.rs

+ 2 - 6
src/parsers.rs

@@ -127,9 +127,6 @@ impl<'a> Parser<'a> {
     }
 
     fn accept_ip(&mut self) -> Result<IpAddress> {
-        if let Some(()) = self.try(|p| p.accept_eof()) {
-            return Ok(IpAddress::Unspecified)
-        }
         if let Some(ipv4) = self.try(|p| p.accept_ipv4()) {
             return Ok(IpAddress::Ipv4(ipv4))
         }
@@ -158,7 +155,7 @@ impl FromStr for Ipv4Address {
 impl FromStr for IpAddress {
     type Err = ();
 
-    /// Parse a string representation of an IPv4 address.
+    /// Parse a string representation of an IP address.
     fn from_str(s: &str) -> Result<IpAddress> {
         Parser::new(s).until_eof(|p| p.accept_ip())
     }
@@ -229,8 +226,7 @@ mod test {
 
     #[test]
     fn test_ip() {
-        assert_eq!(IpAddress::from_str(""),
-                   Ok(IpAddress::Unspecified));
+        assert_eq!(IpAddress::from_str(""), Err(()));
         assert_eq!(IpAddress::from_str("1.2.3.4"),
                    Ok(IpAddress::Ipv4(Ipv4Address([1, 2, 3, 4]))));
         assert_eq!(IpAddress::from_str("x"), Err(()));