# frozen_string_literal: false # # YAML::Store # require 'yaml' require 'pstore' # YAML::Store provides the same functionality as PStore, except it uses YAML # to dump objects instead of Marshal. # # == Example # # require 'yaml/store' # # Person = Struct.new :first_name, :last_name # # people = [Person.new("Bob", "Smith"), Person.new("Mary", "Johnson")] # # store = YAML::Store.new "test.store" # # store.transaction do # store["people"] = people # store["greeting"] = { "hello" => "world" } # end # # After running the above code, the contents of "test.store" will be: # # --- # people: # - !ruby/struct:Person # first_name: Bob # last_name: Smith # - !ruby/struct:Person # first_name: Mary # last_name: Johnson # greeting: # hello: world class YAML::Store < PStore # :call-seq: # initialize( file_name, yaml_opts = {} ) # initialize( file_name, thread_safe = false, yaml_opts = {} ) # # Creates a new YAML::Store object, which will store data in +file_name+. # If the file does not already exist, it will be created. # # YAML::Store objects are always reentrant. But if _thread_safe_ is set to true, # then it will become thread-safe at the cost of a minor performance hit. # # Options passed in through +yaml_opts+ will be used when converting the # store to YAML via Hash#to_yaml(). def initialize( *o ) @opt = {} if o.last.is_a? Hash @opt.update(o.pop) end super(*o) end # :stopdoc: def dump(table) table.to_yaml(@opt) end def load(content) table = YAML.load(content) if table == false {} else table end end def marshal_dump_supports_canonical_option? false end def empty_marshal_data {}.to_yaml(@opt) end def empty_marshal_checksum CHECKSUM_ALGO.digest(empty_marshal_data) end end