/* Argp example #4 -- a program with somewhat more complicated options Copyright (C) 1991-2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program 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 General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ /* This program uses the same features as example 3, but has more options, and somewhat more structure in the -help output. It also shows how you can `steal' the remainder of the input arguments past a certain point, for programs that accept a list of items. It also shows the special argp KEY value ARGP_KEY_NO_ARGS, which is only given if no non-option arguments were supplied to the program. For structuring the help output, two features are used, *headers* which are entries in the options vector with the first four fields being zero, and a two part documentation string (in the variable DOC), which allows documentation both before and after the options; the two parts of DOC are separated by a vertical-tab character ('\v', or '\013'). By convention, the documentation before the options is just a short string saying what the program does, and that afterwards is longer, describing the behavior in more detail. All documentation strings are automatically filled for output, although newlines may be included to force a line break at a particular point. All documentation strings are also passed to the `gettext' function, for possible translation into the current locale. */ #include <stdlib.h> #include <error.h> #include <argp.h> const char *argp_program_version = "argp-ex4 1.0"; const char *argp_program_bug_address = "<bug-gnu-utils@@prep.ai.mit.edu>"; /* Program documentation. */ static char doc[] = "Argp example #4 -- a program with somewhat more complicated\ options\ \vThis part of the documentation comes *after* the options;\ note that the text is automatically filled, but it's possible\ to force a line-break, e.g.\n<-- here."; /* A description of the arguments we accept. */ static char args_doc[] = "ARG1 [STRING...]"; /* Keys for options without short-options. */ #define OPT_ABORT 1 /* --abort */ /* The options we understand. */ static struct argp_option options[] = { {"verbose", 'v', 0, 0, "Produce verbose output" }, {"quiet", 'q', 0, 0, "Don't produce any output" }, {"silent", 's', 0, OPTION_ALIAS }, {"output", 'o', "FILE", 0, "Output to FILE instead of standard output" }, {0,0,0,0, "The following options should be grouped together:" }, {"repeat", 'r', "COUNT", OPTION_ARG_OPTIONAL, "Repeat the output COUNT (default 10) times"}, {"abort", OPT_ABORT, 0, 0, "Abort before showing any output"}, { 0 } }; /* Used by @code{main} to communicate with @code{parse_opt}. */ struct arguments { char *arg1; /* @var{arg1} */ char **strings; /* [@var{string}@dots{}] */ int silent, verbose, abort; /* @samp{-s}, @samp{-v}, @samp{--abort} */ char *output_file; /* @var{file} arg to @samp{--output} */ int repeat_count; /* @var{count} arg to @samp{--repeat} */ }; /* Parse a single option. */ static error_t parse_opt (int key, char *arg, struct argp_state *state) { /* Get the @code{input} argument from @code{argp_parse}, which we know is a pointer to our arguments structure. */ struct arguments *arguments = state->input; switch (key) { case 'q': case 's': arguments->silent = 1; break; case 'v': arguments->verbose = 1; break; case 'o': arguments->output_file = arg; break; case 'r': arguments->repeat_count = arg ? atoi (arg) : 10; break; case OPT_ABORT: arguments->abort = 1; break; case ARGP_KEY_NO_ARGS: argp_usage (state); case ARGP_KEY_ARG: /* Here we know that @code{state->arg_num == 0}, since we force argument parsing to end before any more arguments can get here. */ arguments->arg1 = arg; /* Now we consume all the rest of the arguments. @code{state->next} is the index in @code{state->argv} of the next argument to be parsed, which is the first @var{string} we're interested in, so we can just use @code{&state->argv[state->next]} as the value for arguments->strings. @emph{In addition}, by setting @code{state->next} to the end of the arguments, we can force argp to stop parsing here and return. */ arguments->strings = &state->argv[state->next]; state->next = state->argc; break; default: return ARGP_ERR_UNKNOWN; } return 0; } /* Our argp parser. */ static struct argp argp = { options, parse_opt, args_doc, doc }; int main (int argc, char **argv) { int i, j; struct arguments arguments; /* Default values. */ arguments.silent = 0; arguments.verbose = 0; arguments.output_file = "-"; arguments.repeat_count = 1; arguments.abort = 0; /* Parse our arguments; every option seen by @code{parse_opt} will be reflected in @code{arguments}. */ argp_parse (&argp, argc, argv, 0, 0, &arguments); if (arguments.abort) error (10, 0, "ABORTED"); for (i = 0; i < arguments.repeat_count; i++) { printf ("ARG1 = %s\n", arguments.arg1); printf ("STRINGS = "); for (j = 0; arguments.strings[j]; j++) printf (j == 0 ? "%s" : ", %s", arguments.strings[j]); printf ("\n"); printf ("OUTPUT_FILE = %s\nVERBOSE = %s\nSILENT = %s\n", arguments.output_file, arguments.verbose ? "yes" : "no", arguments.silent ? "yes" : "no"); } exit (0); }