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#! perl | |
# Getopt::Long.pm -- Universal options parsing | |
# Author : Johan Vromans | |
# Created On : Tue Sep 11 15:00:12 1990 | |
# Last Modified By: Johan Vromans | |
# Last Modified On: Tue Jun 16 15:28:03 2015 | |
# Update Count : 1695 | |
# Status : Released | |
################ Module Preamble ################ | |
class Getopt::Long; | |
#use 5.004; | |
#use strict; | |
our $VERSION; | |
$VERSION = 2.47; | |
# For testing versions only. | |
our $VERSION_STRING; | |
$VERSION_STRING = "2.47"; | |
#use Exporter; | |
#use vars qw(@ISA @EXPORT @EXPORT_OK); | |
#@ISA = qw(Exporter); | |
# Exported subroutines. | |
sub GetOptions {...}; # always | |
sub GetOptionsFromArray {...}; # on demand | |
sub GetOptionsFromString {...}; # on demand | |
sub Configure {...}; # on demand | |
sub HelpMessage {...}; # on demand | |
sub VersionMessage {...}; # in demand | |
BEGIN { | |
# Init immediately so their contents can be used in the 'use vars' below. | |
# @EXPORT = qw(&GetOptions $REQUIRE_ORDER $PERMUTE $RETURN_IN_ORDER); | |
# @EXPORT_OK = qw(&HelpMessage &VersionMessage &Configure | |
# &GetOptionsFromArray &GetOptionsFromString); | |
} | |
our ($REQUIRE_ORDER,$PERMUTE,$RETURN_IN_ORDER); | |
# User visible variables. | |
#use vars @EXPORT, @EXPORT_OK; | |
our ($error,$debug,$major_version,$minor_version); | |
# Deprecated visible variables. | |
our ($autoabbrev,$getopt_compat,$ignorecase,$bundling,$order, | |
$passthrough); | |
# Official invisible variables. | |
our ($genprefix,$caller,$gnu_compat,$auto_help,$auto_version,$longprefix); | |
# Really invisible variables. | |
my $bundling_values; | |
# Public subroutines. | |
sub config {}; # deprecated name | |
# Private subroutines. | |
#sub ConfigDefaults() {...}; | |
sub ParseOptionSpec {...}; | |
sub OptCtl {...}; | |
sub FindOption {...}; | |
sub ValidValue {...}; | |
################ Local Variables ################ | |
# $requested_version holds the version that was mentioned in the 'use' | |
# or 'require', if any. It can be used to enable or disable specific | |
# features. | |
my $requested_version = 0; | |
################ Resident subroutines ################ | |
sub ConfigDefaults() { | |
# Handle POSIX compliancy. | |
if ( defined $*ENV{"POSIXLY_CORRECT"} ) { | |
$genprefix = "(--|-)"; | |
$autoabbrev = 0; # no automatic abbrev of options | |
$bundling = 0; # no bundling of single letter switches | |
$getopt_compat = 0; # disallow '+' to start options | |
$order = $REQUIRE_ORDER; | |
} | |
else { | |
$genprefix = "(--|-|\\+)"; | |
$autoabbrev = 1; # automatic abbrev of options | |
$bundling = 0; # bundling off by default | |
$getopt_compat = 1; # allow '+' to start options | |
$order = $PERMUTE; | |
} | |
# Other configurable settings. | |
$debug = 0; # for debugging | |
$error = 0; # error tally | |
$ignorecase = 1; # ignore case when matching options | |
$passthrough = 0; # leave unrecognized options alone | |
$gnu_compat = 0; # require --opt=val if value is optional | |
$longprefix = "(--)"; # what does a long prefix look like | |
$bundling_values = 0; # no bundling of values | |
} | |
## Override import. | |
#sub import { | |
# my $pkg = shift; # package | |
# my @syms = (); # symbols to import | |
# my @config = (); # configuration | |
# my $dest = \@syms; # symbols first | |
# for ( @_ ) { | |
# if ( $_ eq ':config' ) { | |
# $dest = \@config; # config next | |
# next; | |
# } | |
# push(@$dest, $_); # push | |
# } | |
## Hide one level and call super. | |
# local $Exporter::ExportLevel = 1; | |
# push(@syms, qw(&GetOptions)) if @syms; # always export GetOptions | |
# $requested_version = 0; | |
# $pkg->SUPER::import(@syms); | |
## And configure. | |
# Configure(@config) if @config; | |
#} | |
################ Initialization ################ | |
# Values for $order. See GNU getopt.c for details. | |
($REQUIRE_ORDER, $PERMUTE, $RETURN_IN_ORDER) = (0..2); | |
# Version major/minor numbers. | |
($major_version, $minor_version) = $VERSION ~~ m:P5 /^(\d+)\.(\d+)/; | |
ConfigDefaults(); | |
################ OO Interface ################ | |
class Getopt::Long::Parser | |
{ | |
# Store a copy of the default configuration. Since ConfigDefaults has | |
# just been called, what we get from Configure is the default. | |
my $default_config = do { | |
Getopt::Long::Configure () | |
}; | |
sub new { | |
my $that = shift; | |
my $class = ref($that) || $that; | |
my %atts = @_; | |
# Register the callers package. | |
my $self = { caller_pkg => (caller)[0] }; | |
bless ($self, $class); | |
# Process config attributes. | |
if ( defined %atts{config} ) { | |
my $save = Getopt::Long::Configure ($default_config, @(%atts{config})); | |
$self.{settings} = Getopt::Long::Configure ($save); | |
delete (%atts{config}); | |
} | |
# Else use default config. | |
else { | |
$self.{settings} = $default_config; | |
} | |
if ( %atts ) { # Oops | |
die(__PACKAGE__~": unhandled attributes: "~ | |
join(" ", sort(keys(%atts)))~"\n"); | |
} | |
$self; | |
} | |
sub configure { | |
my ($self) = shift; | |
# Restore settings, merge new settings in. | |
my $save = Getopt::Long::Configure ($self.{settings}, @_); | |
# Restore orig config and save the new config. | |
$self.{settings} = Getopt::Long::Configure ($save); | |
} | |
sub getoptions { | |
my ($self) = shift; | |
return $self.getoptionsfromarray(\@*ARGS, @_); | |
} | |
sub getoptionsfromarray { | |
my ($self) = shift; | |
# Restore config settings. | |
my $save = Getopt::Long::Configure ($self.{settings}); | |
# Call main routine. | |
my $ret = 0; | |
$Getopt::Long::caller = $self.{caller_pkg}; | |
my @__= @_; | |
try { | |
# Locally set exception handler to default, otherwise it will | |
# be called implicitly here, and again explicitly when we try | |
# to deliver the messages. | |
# local (%SIG{__DIE__}) = 'DEFAULT'; check this | |
$ret = Getopt::Long::GetOptionsFromArray (@__); | |
}; | |
# Restore saved settings. | |
Getopt::Long::Configure ($save); | |
# Handle errors and return value. | |
die ($!) if $!; | |
return $ret; | |
} | |
} | |
class Getopt::Long | |
{ | |
################ Back to Normal ################ | |
# Indices in option control info. | |
# Note that ParseOptions uses the fields directly. Search for 'hard-wired'. | |
constant CTL_TYPE = 0; | |
#use constant CTL_TYPE_FLAG => ''; | |
#use constant CTL_TYPE_NEG => '!'; | |
#use constant CTL_TYPE_INCR => '+'; | |
#use constant CTL_TYPE_INT => 'i'; | |
#use constant CTL_TYPE_INTINC => 'I'; | |
#use constant CTL_TYPE_XINT => 'o'; | |
#use constant CTL_TYPE_FLOAT => 'f'; | |
#use constant CTL_TYPE_STRING => 's'; | |
constant CTL_CNAME = 1; | |
constant CTL_DEFAULT = 2; | |
constant CTL_DEST = 3; | |
constant CTL_DEST_SCALAR = 0; | |
constant CTL_DEST_ARRAY = 1; | |
constant CTL_DEST_HASH = 2; | |
constant CTL_DEST_CODE = 3; | |
constant CTL_AMIN = 4; | |
constant CTL_AMAX = 5; | |
# FFU. | |
#use constant CTL_RANGE => ; | |
#use constant CTL_REPEAT => ; | |
# Rather liberal patterns to match numbers. | |
constant PAT_INT = "[-+]?_*[0-9][0-9_]*"; | |
constant PAT_XINT = | |
"(?:"~ | |
"[-+]?_*[1-9][0-9_]*"~ | |
"|"~ | |
"0x_*[0-9a-f][0-9a-f_]*"~ | |
"|"~ | |
"0b_*[01][01_]*"~ | |
"|"~ | |
"0[0-7_]*"~ | |
")"; | |
constant PAT_FLOAT = | |
"[-+]?"~ # optional sign | |
"(?=[0-9.])"~ # must start with digit or dec.point | |
"[0-9_]*"~ # digits before the dec.point | |
"(\.[0-9_]+)?"~ # optional fraction | |
"([eE][-+]?[0-9_]+)?"; # optional exponent | |
sub GetOptions { | |
# Shift in default array. | |
unshift(@_, \@*ARGV); | |
# Try to keep caller() and Carp consistent. | |
goto &GetOptionsFromArray; | |
} | |
sub GetOptionsFromString { | |
my ($string) = shift; | |
require Text::ParseWords; | |
my $args = [ Text::ParseWords::shellwords($string) ]; | |
$caller ||= (caller)[0]; # current context | |
my $ret = GetOptionsFromArray($args, @_); | |
return ( $ret, $args ) if wantarray; | |
if ( @$args ) { | |
$ret = 0; | |
warn("GetOptionsFromString: Excess data \"@$args\" in string \"$string\"\n"); | |
} | |
$ret; | |
} | |
sub GetOptionsFromArray($argv, @optionlist) { # check this | |
# my ($argv, @optionlist) = @_; # local copy of the option descriptions | |
my $argend = '--'; # option list terminator | |
my %opctl = (); # table of option specs | |
my $pkg = $caller || (caller)[0]; # current context | |
# Needed if linkage is omitted. | |
my @ret = (); # accum for non-options | |
my %linkage; # linkage | |
my $userlinkage; # user supplied HASH | |
my $opt; # current option | |
my $prefix = $genprefix; # current prefix | |
$error = ''; | |
if ( $debug ) { | |
# Avoid some warnings if debugging. | |
#local ($^W) = 0; | |
print STDERR | |
("Getopt::Long $Getopt::Long::VERSION ", | |
"called from package \"$pkg\".", | |
"\n ", | |
"argv: ", | |
defined($argv) | |
?? UNIVERSAL::isa( $argv, 'ARRAY' ) ?? "(@$argv)" !! $argv | |
!! "<undef>", | |
"\n ", | |
"autoabbrev=$autoabbrev,", | |
"bundling=$bundling,", | |
"bundling_values=$bundling_values,", | |
"getopt_compat=$getopt_compat,", | |
"gnu_compat=$gnu_compat,", | |
"order=$order,", | |
"\n ", | |
"ignorecase=$ignorecase,", | |
"requested_version=$requested_version,", | |
"passthrough=$passthrough,", | |
"genprefix=\"$genprefix\",", | |
"longprefix=\"$longprefix\".", | |
"\n"); | |
} | |
# Check for ref HASH as first argument. | |
# First argument may be an object. It's OK to use this as long | |
# as it is really a hash underneath. | |
$userlinkage = Mu; | |
if ( @optionlist && ref(@optionlist[0]) and | |
UNIVERSAL::isa(@optionlist[0],'HASH') ) { | |
$userlinkage = shift (@optionlist); | |
print STDERR ("=> user linkage: $userlinkage\n") if $debug; | |
} | |
# See if the first element of the optionlist contains option | |
# starter characters. | |
# Be careful not to interpret '<>' as option starters. | |
if ( @optionlist && @optionlist[0] ~~ m:P5 /^\W+$/ | |
&& !(@optionlist[0] eq '<>' | |
&& @optionlist > 0 | |
&& ref(@optionlist[1])) ) { | |
$prefix = shift (@optionlist); | |
# Turn into regexp. Needs to be parenthesized! | |
$prefix ~~ s:P5:g/(\W)/\\$0/; | |
$prefix = "([" ~ $prefix ~ "])"; | |
print STDERR ("=> prefix=\"$prefix\"\n") if $debug; | |
} | |
# Verify correctness of optionlist. | |
%opctl = (); | |
while ( @optionlist ) { | |
my $opt = shift (@optionlist); | |
unless ( defined($opt) ) { | |
$error ~= "Undefined argument in option spec\n"; | |
next; | |
} | |
# Strip leading prefix so people can specify "--foo=i" if they like. | |
$opt = $+ if $opt ~~ m:P5 /^$prefix+(.*)$/; | |
if ( $opt eq '<>' ) { | |
if ( (defined $userlinkage) | |
&& !(@optionlist > 0 && ref(@optionlist[0])) | |
&& (exists $userlinkage.{$opt}) | |
&& ref($userlinkage.{$opt}) ) { | |
unshift (@optionlist, $userlinkage.{$opt}); | |
} | |
unless ( @optionlist > 0 | |
&& ref(@optionlist[0]) && ref(@optionlist[0]) eq 'CODE' ) { | |
$error ~= "Option spec <> requires a reference to a subroutine\n"; | |
# Kill the linkage (to avoid another error). | |
shift (@optionlist) | |
if @optionlist && ref(@optionlist[0]); | |
next; | |
} | |
%linkage{'<>'} = shift (@optionlist); | |
next; | |
} | |
# Parse option spec. | |
my ($name, $orig) = ParseOptionSpec ($opt, \%opctl); | |
unless ( defined $name ) { | |
# Failed. $orig contains the error message. Sorry for the abuse. | |
$error ~= $orig; | |
# Kill the linkage (to avoid another error). | |
shift (@optionlist) | |
if @optionlist && ref(@optionlist[0]); | |
next; | |
} | |
# If no linkage is supplied in the @optionlist, copy it from | |
# the userlinkage if available. | |
if ( defined $userlinkage ) { | |
unless ( @optionlist > 0 && ref(@optionlist[0]) ) { | |
if ( exists $userlinkage.{$orig} && | |
ref($userlinkage.{$orig}) ) { | |
print STDERR ("=> found userlinkage for \"$orig\": ", | |
"$userlinkage.{$orig}\n") | |
if $debug; | |
unshift (@optionlist, $userlinkage.{$orig}); | |
} | |
else { | |
# Do nothing. Being undefined will be handled later. | |
next; | |
} | |
} | |
} | |
# Copy the linkage. If omitted, link to global variable. | |
if ( @optionlist > 0 && ref(@optionlist[0]) ) { | |
print STDERR ("=> link \"$orig\" to @optionlist[0]\n") | |
if $debug; | |
my $rl = ref(%linkage{$orig} = shift (@optionlist)); | |
if ( $rl eq "ARRAY" ) { | |
%opctl{$name}[CTL_DEST] = CTL_DEST_ARRAY; | |
} | |
elsif ( $rl eq "HASH" ) { | |
%opctl{$name}[CTL_DEST] = CTL_DEST_HASH; | |
} | |
elsif ( $rl eq "SCALAR" || $rl eq "REF" ) { | |
# if ( %opctl{$name}[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_ARRAY ) { | |
# my $t = %linkage{$orig}; | |
# $$t = %linkage{$orig} = []; | |
# } | |
# elsif ( %opctl{$name}[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH ) { | |
# } | |
# else { | |
# Ok. | |
# } | |
} | |
elsif ( $rl eq "CODE" ) { | |
# Ok. | |
} | |
else { | |
$error ~= "Invalid option linkage for \"$opt\"\n"; | |
} | |
} | |
else { | |
# Link to global $opt_XXX variable. | |
# Make sure a valid perl identifier results. | |
my $ov = $orig; | |
$ov ~~ s:P5:g/\W/_/; | |
if ( %opctl{$name}[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_ARRAY ) { | |
print STDERR ("=> link \"$orig\" to \@$pkg","::opt_$ov\n") | |
if $debug; | |
eval ("\%linkage{\$orig} = \\\@"~$pkg~"::opt_$ov;"); | |
} | |
elsif ( %opctl{$name}[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH ) { | |
print STDERR ("=> link \"$orig\" to \%$pkg","::opt_$ov\n") | |
if $debug; | |
eval ("\%linkage{\$orig} = \\\%"~$pkg~"::opt_$ov;"); | |
} | |
else { | |
print STDERR ("=> link \"$orig\" to \$$pkg"~"::opt_$ov\n") | |
if $debug; | |
eval ("\%linkage{\$orig} = \\\$"~$pkg~"::opt_$ov;"); | |
} | |
} | |
if ( %opctl{$name}[CTL_TYPE] eq 'I' | |
&& ( %opctl{$name}[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_ARRAY | |
|| %opctl{$name}[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH ) | |
) { | |
$error ~= "Invalid option linkage for \"$opt\"\n"; | |
} | |
} | |
$error ~= "GetOptionsFromArray: 1st parameter is not an array reference\n" | |
unless $argv && UNIVERSAL::isa( $argv, 'ARRAY' ); | |
# Bail out if errors found. | |
die ($error) if $error; | |
$error = 0; | |
# Supply --version and --help support, if needed and allowed. | |
if ( defined($auto_version) ?? $auto_version !! ($requested_version >= 2.3203) ) { | |
if ( !defined(%opctl{version}) ) { | |
%opctl{version} = ['','version',0,CTL_DEST_CODE,Mu]; | |
%linkage{version} = \&VersionMessage; | |
} | |
$auto_version = 1; | |
} | |
if ( defined($auto_help) ?? $auto_help !! ($requested_version >= 2.3203) ) { | |
if ( !defined(%opctl{help}) && !defined(%opctl{'?'}) ) { | |
%opctl{help} = %opctl{'?'} = ['','help',0,CTL_DEST_CODE,Mu]; | |
%linkage{help} = \&HelpMessage; | |
} | |
$auto_help = 1; | |
} | |
# Show the options tables if debugging. | |
if ( $debug ) { | |
my ($arrow, $k, $v); | |
$arrow = "=> "; | |
while ( ($k,$v) = each(%opctl) ) { | |
print STDERR ($arrow, "\%opctl{$k} = $v ", OptCtl($v), "\n"); | |
$arrow = " "; | |
} | |
} | |
# Process argument list | |
my $goon = 1; | |
while ( $goon && @$argv > 0 ) { | |
# Get next argument. | |
$opt = shift (@$argv); | |
print STDERR ("=> arg \"", $opt, "\"\n") if $debug; | |
# Double dash is option list terminator. | |
if ( defined($opt) && $opt eq $argend ) { | |
push (@ret, $argend) if $passthrough; | |
last; | |
} | |
# Look it up. | |
my $tryopt = $opt; | |
my $found; # success status | |
my $key; # key (if hash type) | |
my $arg; # option argument | |
my $ctl; # the opctl entry | |
($found, $opt, $ctl, $arg, $key) = | |
FindOption ($argv, $prefix, $argend, $opt, \%opctl); | |
if ( $found ) { | |
# FindOption undefines $opt in case of errors. | |
next unless defined $opt; | |
my $argcnt = 0; | |
while ( defined $arg ) { | |
# Get the canonical name. | |
print STDERR ("=> cname for \"$opt\" is ") if $debug; | |
$opt = $ctl.[CTL_CNAME]; | |
print STDERR ("\"$ctl.[CTL_CNAME]\"\n") if $debug; | |
if ( defined %linkage{$opt} ) { | |
print STDERR ("=> ref(\%L{$opt}) -> ", | |
ref(%linkage{$opt}), "\n") if $debug; | |
if ( ref(%linkage{$opt}) eq 'SCALAR' | |
|| ref(%linkage{$opt}) eq 'REF' ) { | |
if ( $ctl.[CTL_TYPE] eq '+' ) { | |
print STDERR ("=> \$\%L\{$opt} += \"$arg\"\n") | |
if $debug; | |
if ( defined $(%linkage{$opt}) ) { | |
$(%linkage{$opt}) += $arg; | |
} | |
else { | |
$(%linkage{$opt}) = $arg; | |
} | |
} | |
elsif ( $ctl.[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_ARRAY ) { | |
print STDERR ("=> ref(\%L\{$opt}) auto-vivified", | |
" to ARRAY\n") | |
if $debug; | |
my $t = %linkage{$opt}; | |
$$t = %linkage{$opt} = []; | |
print STDERR ("=> push(\@\{\%L\{$opt}, \"$arg\")\n") | |
if $debug; | |
push (@(%linkage{$opt}), $arg); | |
} | |
elsif ( $ctl.[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH ) { | |
print STDERR ("=> ref(\%L\{$opt}) auto-vivified", | |
" to HASH\n") | |
if $debug; | |
my $t = %linkage{$opt}; | |
$$t = %linkage{$opt} = {}; | |
print STDERR ("=> \$\%L{$opt}.{$key} = \"$arg\"\n") | |
if $debug; | |
%linkage{$opt}.{$key} = $arg; | |
} | |
else { | |
print STDERR ("=> \$\%L{$opt} = \"$arg\"\n") | |
if $debug; | |
$(%linkage{$opt}) = $arg; | |
} | |
} | |
elsif ( ref(%linkage{$opt}) eq 'ARRAY' ) { | |
print STDERR ("=> push(\@\{\%L{$opt}, \"$arg\")\n") | |
if $debug; | |
push (@(%linkage{$opt}), $arg); | |
} | |
elsif ( ref(%linkage{$opt}) eq 'HASH' ) { | |
print STDERR ("=> \$\%L\{$opt}.\{$key} = \"$arg\"\n") | |
if $debug; | |
%linkage{$opt}.{$key} = $arg; | |
} | |
elsif ( ref(%linkage{$opt}) eq 'CODE' ) { | |
print STDERR ("=> &L\{$opt}(\"$opt\"", | |
$ctl.[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH ?? ", \"$key\"" !! "", | |
", \"$arg\")\n") | |
if $debug; | |
my $eval_error; # check " | |
{ | |
temp $!; | |
# local %SIG{__DIE__} = 'DEFAULT'; | |
eval { | |
&(%linkage{$opt})(Getopt::Long::CallBack.new(name => $opt, | |
ctl => $ctl, | |
opctl => \%opctl, | |
linkage => \%linkage, | |
prefix => $prefix, | |
), | |
$ctl.[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH ?? ($key) !! (), | |
$arg); | |
}; | |
$eval_error = $!; | |
}; | |
print STDERR ("=> die($eval_error)\n") | |
if $debug && $eval_error ne ''; | |
if ( $eval_error ~~ m:P5 /^!/ ) { | |
if ( $eval_error ~~ m:P5 /^!FINISH\b/ ) { | |
$goon = 0; | |
} | |
} | |
elsif ( $eval_error ne '' ) { | |
warn ($eval_error); | |
$error++; | |
} | |
} | |
else { | |
print STDERR ("Invalid REF type \"", ref(%linkage{$opt}), | |
"\" in linkage\n"); | |
die("Getopt::Long -- internal error!\n"); | |
} | |
} | |
# No entry in linkage means entry in userlinkage. | |
elsif ( $ctl.[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_ARRAY ) { | |
if ( defined $userlinkage.{$opt} ) { | |
print STDERR ("=> push(\@\{\%L{$opt}}, \"$arg\")\n") | |
if $debug; | |
push (@($userlinkage.{$opt}), $arg); | |
} | |
else { | |
print STDERR ("=>\%L{$opt} = [\"$arg\"]\n") | |
if $debug; | |
$userlinkage.{$opt} = [$arg]; | |
} | |
} | |
elsif ( $ctl.[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH ) { | |
if ( defined $userlinkage.{$opt} ) { | |
print STDERR ("=> \%L\{$opt}.\{$key} = \"$arg\"\n") | |
if $debug; | |
$userlinkage.{$opt}.{$key} = $arg; | |
} | |
else { | |
print STDERR ("=>\%L\{$opt} = \{$key => \"$arg\"}\n") | |
if $debug; | |
$userlinkage.{$opt} = {$key => $arg}; | |
} | |
} | |
else { | |
if ( $ctl.[CTL_TYPE] eq '+' ) { | |
print STDERR ("=> \%L\{$opt} += \"$arg\"\n") | |
if $debug; | |
if ( defined $userlinkage.{$opt} ) { | |
$userlinkage.{$opt} += $arg; | |
} | |
else { | |
$userlinkage.{$opt} = $arg; | |
} | |
} | |
else { | |
print STDERR ("=>\%L\{$opt} = \"$arg\"\n") if $debug; | |
$userlinkage.{$opt} = $arg; | |
} | |
} | |
$argcnt++; | |
last if $argcnt >= $ctl.[CTL_AMAX] && $ctl.[CTL_AMAX] != -1; | |
undef($arg); | |
# Need more args? | |
if ( $argcnt < $ctl.[CTL_AMIN] ) { | |
if ( @$argv ) { | |
if ( ValidValue($ctl, $argv.[0], 1, $argend, $prefix) ) { | |
$arg = shift(@$argv); | |
if ( $ctl.[CTL_TYPE] ~~ m:P5 /^[iIo]$/ ) { | |
$arg ~~ s:P5:g/_//; | |
$arg = $ctl.[CTL_TYPE] eq 'o' && $arg ~~ m:P5 /^0/ | |
?? oct($arg) | |
!! 0+$arg | |
} | |
($key,$arg) = $arg ~~ m:P5 /^([^=]+)=(.*)/ | |
if $ctl.[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH; | |
next; | |
} | |
warn("Value \"$$argv[0]\" invalid for option $opt\n"); | |
$error++; | |
} | |
else { | |
warn("Insufficient arguments for option $opt\n"); | |
$error++; | |
} | |
} | |
# Any more args? | |
if ( @$argv && ValidValue($ctl, $argv.[0], 0, $argend, $prefix) ) { | |
$arg = shift(@$argv); | |
if ( $ctl.[CTL_TYPE] ~~ m:P5 /^[iIo]$/ ) { | |
$arg ~~ s:P5:g/_//; | |
$arg = $ctl.[CTL_TYPE] eq 'o' && $arg ~~ m:P5 /^0/ | |
?? oct($arg) | |
!! 0+$arg | |
} | |
($key,$arg) = $arg ~~ m:P5 /^([^=]+)=(.*)/ | |
if $ctl.[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH; | |
next; | |
} | |
} | |
} | |
# Not an option. Save it if we $PERMUTE and don't have a <>. | |
elsif ( $order == $PERMUTE ) { | |
# Try non-options call-back. | |
my $cb; | |
if ( defined ($cb = %linkage{'<>'}) ) { | |
print STDERR ("=> &L\{$tryopt}(\"$tryopt\")\n") | |
if $debug; | |
my $eval_error = do { | |
temp $!; | |
#local %SIG{__DIE__} = 'DEFAULT'; | |
try { | |
# The arg to <> cannot be the CallBack object | |
# since it may be passed to other modules that | |
# get confused (e.g., Archive::Tar). Well, | |
# it's not relevant for this callback anyway. | |
&$cb($tryopt); | |
}; | |
$!; | |
}; | |
print STDERR ("=> die($eval_error)\n") | |
if $debug && $eval_error ne ''; | |
if ( $eval_error ~~ m:P5 /^!/ ) { | |
if ( $eval_error ~~ m:P5 /^!FINISH\b/ ) { | |
$goon = 0; | |
} | |
} | |
elsif ( $eval_error ne '' ) { | |
warn ($eval_error); | |
$error++; | |
} | |
} | |
else { | |
print STDERR ("=> saving \"$tryopt\" ", | |
"(not an option, may permute)\n") if $debug; | |
push (@ret, $tryopt); | |
} | |
next; | |
} | |
# ...otherwise, terminate. | |
else { | |
# Push this one back and exit. | |
unshift (@$argv, $tryopt); | |
return ($error == 0); | |
} | |
} | |
# Finish. | |
if ( @ret && $order == $PERMUTE ) { | |
# Push back accumulated arguments | |
print STDERR ("=> restoring \"", join('" "', @ret), "\"\n") | |
if $debug; | |
unshift (@$argv, @ret); | |
} | |
return ($error == 0); | |
} | |
# A readable representation of what's in an optbl. | |
sub OptCtl ($v) { | |
# my ($v) = @_; | |
my @v = map { defined($_) ?? ($_) !! ("<undef>") }, @$v; | |
"["~ | |
join(",", | |
"\"$v[CTL_TYPE]\"", | |
"\"$v[CTL_CNAME]\"", | |
"\"$v[CTL_DEFAULT]\"", | |
("\$","\@","\%","\&")[$v[CTL_DEST] || 0], | |
$v[CTL_AMIN] || '', | |
$v[CTL_AMAX] || '', | |
# $v[CTL_RANGE] || '', | |
# $v[CTL_REPEAT] || '', | |
)~ "]"; | |
} | |
# Parse an option specification and fill the tables. | |
sub ParseOptionSpec ($opt, $opctl) { | |
# my ($opt, $opctl) = @_; | |
# Match option spec. | |
if ( $opt !~~ m:P5:x;^ | |
( | |
# Option name | |
(?: \w+[-\w]* ) | |
# Alias names, or "?" | |
(?: \| (?: \? | \w[-\w]* ) )* | |
# Aliases | |
(?: \| (?: [^-|!+=:][^|!+=:]* )? )* | |
)? | |
( | |
# Either modifiers ... | |
[!+] | |
| | |
# ... or a value/dest/repeat specification | |
[=:] [ionfs] [@%]? (?: \{\d*,?\d*\} )? | |
| | |
# ... or an optional-with-default spec | |
: (?: -?\d+ | \+ ) [@%]? | |
)? | |
$; ) { | |
return (Mu, "Error in option spec: \"$opt\"\n"); | |
} | |
my ($names, $spec) = ($1, $2); | |
$spec = '' unless defined $spec; | |
# $orig keeps track of the primary name the user specified. | |
# This name will be used for the internal or external linkage. | |
# In other words, if the user specifies "FoO|BaR", it will | |
# match any case combinations of 'foo' and 'bar', but if a global | |
# variable needs to be set, it will be $opt_FoO in the exact case | |
# as specified. | |
my $orig; | |
my @names; | |
if ( defined $names ) { | |
@names = split (/\|/, $names); | |
$orig = $names[0]; | |
} | |
else { | |
@names = (''); | |
$orig = ''; | |
} | |
# Construct the opctl entries. | |
my $entry; | |
if ( $spec eq '' || $spec eq '+' || $spec eq '!' ) { | |
# Fields are hard-wired here. | |
$entry = [$spec,$orig,Mu,CTL_DEST_SCALAR,0,0]; | |
} | |
elsif ( $spec ~~ m:P5 /^:(-?\d+|\+)([@%])?$/ ) { | |
my $def = $1; | |
my $dest = $2; | |
my $type = $def eq '+' ?? 'I' !! 'i'; | |
$dest ||= '$'; | |
$dest = $dest eq '@' ?? CTL_DEST_ARRAY | |
!! $dest eq '%' ?? CTL_DEST_HASH !! CTL_DEST_SCALAR; | |
# Fields are hard-wired here. | |
$entry = [$type,$orig,$def eq '+' ?? Mu !! $def, | |
$dest,0,1]; | |
} | |
else { | |
my ($mand, $type, $dest) = | |
$spec ~~ m:P5 /^([=:])([ionfs])([@%])?(\{(\d+)?(,)?(\d+)?\})?$/; | |
return (Mu, "Cannot repeat while bundling: \"$opt\"\n") | |
if $bundling && defined($4); | |
my ($mi, $cm, $ma) = ($5, $6, $7); | |
return (Mu, "{0} is useless in option spec: \"$opt\"\n") | |
if defined($mi) && !$mi && !defined($ma) && !defined($cm); | |
$type = 'i' if $type eq 'n'; | |
$dest ||= '$'; | |
$dest = $dest eq '@' ?? CTL_DEST_ARRAY | |
!! $dest eq '%' ?? CTL_DEST_HASH !! CTL_DEST_SCALAR; | |
# Default minargs to 1/0 depending on mand status. | |
$mi = $mand eq '=' ?? 1 !! 0 unless defined $mi; | |
# Adjust mand status according to minargs. | |
$mand = $mi ?? '=' !! ':'; | |
# Adjust maxargs. | |
$ma = $mi ?? $mi !! 1 unless defined $ma || defined $cm; | |
return (Mu, "Max must be greater than zero in option spec: \"$opt\"\n") | |
if defined($ma) && !$ma; | |
return (Mu, "Max less than min in option spec: \"$opt\"\n") | |
if defined($ma) && $ma < $mi; | |
# Fields are hard-wired here. | |
$entry = [$type,$orig,Mu,$dest,$mi,$ma||-1]; | |
} | |
# Process all names. First is canonical, the rest are aliases. | |
my $dups = ''; | |
for ( @names ) { | |
$_ = lc ($_) | |
if $ignorecase > (($bundling && length($_) == 1) ?? 1 !! 0); | |
if ( exists $opctl.{$_} ) { | |
$dups ~= "Duplicate specification \"$opt\" for option \"$_\"\n"; | |
} | |
if ( $spec eq '!' ) { | |
$opctl.{"no$_"} = $entry; | |
$opctl.{"no-$_"} = $entry; | |
$opctl.{$_} = [@$entry]; | |
$opctl.{$_}.[CTL_TYPE] = ''; | |
} | |
else { | |
$opctl.{$_} = $entry; | |
} | |
} | |
if ( $dups && 0 ) { # check this $^W | |
for ( split(/\n+/, $dups) ) { | |
warn($_~"\n"); | |
} | |
} | |
($names[0], $orig); | |
} | |
# Option lookup. | |
sub FindOption ($argv, $prefix, $argend, $opt, $opctl) { | |
# returns (1, $opt, $ctl, $arg, $key) if okay, | |
# returns (1, undef) if option in error, | |
# returns (0) otherwise. | |
#my ($argv, $prefix, $argend, $opt, $opctl) = @_; | |
print STDERR ("=> find \"$opt\"\n") if $debug; | |
return (0) unless defined($opt); | |
return (0) unless $opt ~~ m:P5 /^($prefix)(.*)$/; | |
return (0) if $opt eq "-" && !defined $opctl.{''}; | |
$opt = substr( $opt, length($1) ); # retain taintedness | |
my $starter = $1; | |
print STDERR ("=> split \"$starter\"+\"$opt\"\n") if $debug; | |
my $optarg; # value supplied with --opt=value | |
my $rest; # remainder from unbundling | |
# If it is a long option, it may include the value. | |
# With getopt_compat, only if not bundling. | |
if ( ($starter~~ m:P5/^$longprefix$/ | |
|| ($getopt_compat && ($bundling == 0 || $bundling == 2))) | |
&& (my $oppos = index($opt, '=', 1)) > 0) { | |
my $optorg = $opt; | |
$opt = substr($optorg, 0, $oppos); | |
$optarg = substr($optorg, $oppos + 1); # retain tainedness | |
print STDERR ("=> option \"", $opt, | |
"\", optarg = \"$optarg\"\n") if $debug; | |
} | |
#### Look it up ### | |
my $tryopt = $opt; # option to try | |
if ( ( $bundling || $bundling_values ) && $starter eq '-' ) { | |
# To try overrides, obey case ignore. | |
$tryopt = $ignorecase ?? lc($opt) !! $opt; | |
# If bundling == 2, long options can override bundles. | |
if ( $bundling == 2 && length($tryopt) > 1 | |
&& defined ($opctl.{$tryopt}) ) { | |
print STDERR ("=> $starter$tryopt overrides unbundling\n") | |
if $debug; | |
} | |
# If bundling_values, option may be followed by the value. | |
elsif ( $bundling_values ) { | |
$tryopt = $opt; | |
# Unbundle single letter option. | |
$rest = length ($tryopt) > 0 ?? substr ($tryopt, 1) !! ''; | |
$tryopt = substr ($tryopt, 0, 1); | |
$tryopt = lc ($tryopt) if $ignorecase > 1; | |
print STDERR ("=> $starter$tryopt unbundled from ", | |
"$starter$tryopt$rest\n") if $debug; | |
# Whatever remains may not be considered an option. | |
$optarg = $rest eq '' ?? Mu !! $rest; | |
$rest = Mu; | |
} | |
# Split off a single letter and leave the rest for | |
# further processing. | |
else { | |
$tryopt = $opt; | |
# Unbundle single letter option. | |
$rest = length ($tryopt) > 0 ?? substr ($tryopt, 1) !! ''; | |
$tryopt = substr ($tryopt, 0, 1); | |
$tryopt = lc ($tryopt) if $ignorecase > 1; | |
print STDERR ("=> $starter$tryopt unbundled from ", | |
"$starter$tryopt$rest\n") if $debug; | |
$rest = Mu unless $rest ne ''; | |
} | |
} | |
# Try auto-abbreviation. | |
elsif ( $autoabbrev && $opt ne "" ) { | |
# Sort the possible long option names. | |
my @names = sort(keys (%$opctl)); | |
# Downcase if allowed. | |
$opt = lc ($opt) if $ignorecase; | |
$tryopt = $opt; | |
# Turn option name into pattern. | |
my $pat = quotemeta ($opt); | |
# Look up in option names. | |
my @hits = grep (/^$pat/, @names); | |
print STDERR ("=> ", scalar(@hits), " hits (@hits) with \"$pat\" ", | |
"out of ", scalar(@names), "\n") if $debug; | |
BEGIN { note "here $?FILE: $?LINE"; } | |
# Check for ambiguous results. | |
unless ( (@hits <= 1) || (@hits.grep($opt).elems == 1) ) { | |
# See if all matches are for the same option. | |
my %hit; BEGIN { note "here $?FILE: $?LINE"; } | |
for ( @hits ) { BEGIN { note "here $?FILE: $?LINE"; } | |
#my $hit; | |
BEGIN { note "here $?FILE: $?LINE"; }; my $hit; | |
if defined $opctl.{$_}.[CTL_CNAME] | |
{ | |
$hit = $opctl.{$_}.[CTL_CNAME] | |
} | |
BEGIN { note "here $?FILE: $?LINE"; } | |
if $opctl.{$_}.[CTL_TYPE] eq '!' | |
{ | |
$hit = "no" ~ $hit; | |
} | |
%hit{$hit} = 1; BEGIN { note "here $?FILE: $?LINE"; } | |
} | |
BEGIN { note "here $?FILE: $?LINE"; } | |
# Remove auto-supplied options (version, help). | |
if ( keys(%hit) == 2 ) { | |
if ( $auto_version && exists(%hit{version}) ) { | |
delete %hit{version}; | |
} | |
elsif ( $auto_help && exists(%hit{help}) ) { | |
delete %hit{help}; | |
} | |
} ; BEGIN { note "here $?FILE: $?LINE"; } | |
# Now see if it really is ambiguous. | |
unless ( keys(%hit).elems == 1 ) { BEGIN { note "here $?FILE: $?LINE"; } | |
if $passthrough { BEGIN { note "here $?FILE: $?LINE"; } ; | |
return (0); | |
} | |
warn ("Option ", $opt, " is ambiguous (", | |
join(", ", @hits), ")\n"); | |
$error++; BEGIN { note "here $?FILE: $?LINE"; } | |
return (1, Mu); | |
} | |
@hits = keys(%hit); BEGIN { note "here $?FILE: $?LINE"; } | |
} | |
;BEGIN { note "here $?FILE: $?LINE"; } | |
# Complete the option name, if appropriate. | |
if ( @hits.elems == 1 && @hits[0] ne $opt ) { | |
$tryopt = @hits[0]; | |
if $ignorecase | |
{ | |
$tryopt = lc ($tryopt); | |
} | |
if $debug | |
{ | |
print STDERR ("=> option \"$opt\" -> \"$tryopt\"\n"); | |
} | |
} | |
} | |
# Map to all lowercase if ignoring case. | |
elsif ( $ignorecase ) { | |
$tryopt = lc ($opt); BEGIN { note "here $?FILE: $?LINE"; } | |
} | |
BEGIN { note "here $?FILE: $?LINE"; } | |
# Check validity by fetching the info. | |
my $ctl = $opctl.{$tryopt}; | |
unless ( defined $ctl ) { | |
if $passthrough | |
{ | |
return (0) | |
} | |
# Pretend one char when bundling. | |
if ( $bundling == 1 && length($starter) == 1 ) { | |
$opt = substr($opt,0,1); | |
if defined $rest | |
{ | |
unshift (@$argv, $starter.$rest) ; | |
} | |
} | |
if ( $opt eq "" ) { | |
warn ("Missing option after ", $starter, "\n"); | |
} | |
else { | |
warn ("Unknown option: ", $opt, "\n"); | |
} | |
$error++; | |
return (1, Mu); | |
} | |
BEGIN { note "here $?FILE: $?LINE"; } | |
# Apparently valid. | |
$opt = $tryopt; BEGIN { note "here $?FILE: $?LINE"; } | |
print STDERR ("=> found ", OptCtl($ctl), | |
" for \"", $opt, "\"\n") if $debug; | |
#### Determine argument status #### | |
# If it is an option w/o argument, we're almost finished with it. | |
my $type = $ctl.[CTL_TYPE]; | |
my $arg; | |
BEGIN { note "here $?FILE: $?LINE"; } | |
if ( $type eq '' || $type eq '!' || $type eq '+' ) { | |
if ( defined $optarg ) { | |
if $passthrough | |
{ | |
return (0); | |
} | |
warn ("Option ", $opt, " does not take an argument\n"); | |
$error++; | |
$opt = Mu; | |
if $bundling_values | |
{ | |
$optarg =Mu | |
} | |
} | |
elsif ( $type eq '' || $type eq '+' ) { | |
# Supply explicit value. | |
$arg = 1; | |
} | |
else { | |
$opt ~~ s:P5:i/^no-?//; # strip NO prefix | |
$arg = 0; # supply explicit value | |
} | |
unshift (@$argv, $starter.$rest) if defined $rest; | |
return (1, $opt, $ctl, $arg); | |
} | |
BEGIN { note "here $?FILE: $?LINE"; } | |
# Get mandatory status and type info. | |
my $mand = $ctl.[CTL_AMIN]; | |
# Check if there is an option argument available. | |
if ( $gnu_compat && defined $optarg && $optarg eq '' ) { | |
return (1, $opt, $ctl, $type eq 's' ? '' : 0) ;#unless $mand; | |
$optarg = 0 unless $type eq 's'; | |
} | |
# Check if there is an option argument available. | |
if ( defined $optarg | |
? ($optarg eq '') | |
: !(defined $rest || @$argv > 0) ) { | |
# Complain if this option needs an argument. | |
# if ( $mand && !($type eq 's' ? defined($optarg) : 0) ) { | |
if ( $mand ) { | |
return (0) if $passthrough; | |
warn ("Option ", $opt, " requires an argument\n"); | |
$error++; | |
return (1, Mu); | |
} | |
if ( $type eq 'I' ) { | |
# Fake incremental type. | |
my @c = @$ctl; | |
$c[CTL_TYPE] = '+'; | |
return (1, $opt, \@c, 1); | |
} | |
return (1, $opt, $ctl, | |
defined($ctl.[CTL_DEFAULT]) ? $ctl.[CTL_DEFAULT] : | |
$type eq 's' ? '' : 0); | |
} | |
# Get (possibly optional) argument. | |
$arg = (defined $rest ? $rest | |
: (defined $optarg ? $optarg : shift (@$argv))); | |
# Get key if this is a "name=value" pair for a hash option. | |
my $key; | |
if ($ctl.[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH && defined $arg) { | |
($key, $arg) = ($arg ~~ m:P5 /^([^=]*)=(.*)$/s) ? ($1, $2) | |
: ($arg, defined($ctl.[CTL_DEFAULT]) ? $ctl.[CTL_DEFAULT] : | |
($mand ? Mu : ($type eq 's' ? "" : 1))); | |
if (! defined $arg) { | |
warn ("Option $opt, key \"$key\", requires a value\n"); | |
$error++; | |
# Push back. | |
unshift (@$argv, $starter.$rest) if defined $rest; | |
return (1, Mu); | |
} | |
} | |
#### Check if the argument is valid for this option #### | |
my $key_valid = $ctl.[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH ? "[^=]+=" : ""; | |
if ( $type eq 's' ) { # string | |
# A mandatory string takes anything. | |
return (1, $opt, $ctl, $arg, $key) if $mand; | |
# Same for optional string as a hash value | |
return (1, $opt, $ctl, $arg, $key) | |
if $ctl.[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH; | |
# An optional string takes almost anything. | |
return (1, $opt, $ctl, $arg, $key) | |
if defined $optarg || defined $rest; | |
return (1, $opt, $ctl, $arg, $key) if $arg eq "-"; # ?? | |
# Check for option or option list terminator. | |
if ($arg eq $argend || | |
$arg ~~ m:P5 /^$prefix.+/) { | |
# Push back. | |
unshift (@$argv, $arg); | |
# Supply empty value. | |
$arg = ''; | |
} | |
} | |
elsif ( $type eq 'i' # numeric/integer | |
|| $type eq 'I' # numeric/integer w/ incr default | |
|| $type eq 'o' ) { # dec/oct/hex/bin value | |
my $o_valid = $type eq 'o' ? PAT_XINT : PAT_INT; | |
if ( $bundling && defined $rest | |
&& $rest ~~ m:P5 /^($key_valid)($o_valid)(.*)$/si ) { | |
($key, $arg, $rest) = ($1, $2, $+); | |
chop($key) if $key; | |
$arg = ($type eq 'o' && $arg ~~ m:P5 /^0/) ? oct($arg) : 0+$arg; | |
unshift (@$argv, $starter.$rest) if defined $rest && $rest ne ''; | |
} | |
elsif ( $arg ~~ m:P5 /^$o_valid$/si ) { | |
$arg ~~ m:P5 tr/_//d; | |
$arg = ($type eq 'o' && $arg ~~ m:P5 /^0/) ? oct($arg) : 0+$arg; | |
} | |
else { | |
if ( defined $optarg || $mand ) { | |
if ( $passthrough ) { | |
unshift (@$argv, defined $rest ? $starter.$rest : $arg) | |
unless defined $optarg; | |
return (0); | |
} | |
warn ("Value \"", $arg, "\" invalid for option ", | |
$opt, " (", | |
$type eq 'o' ? "extended " : '', | |
"number expected)\n"); | |
$error++; | |
# Push back. | |
unshift (@$argv, $starter.$rest) if defined $rest; | |
return (1, Mu); | |
} | |
else { | |
# Push back. | |
unshift (@$argv, defined $rest ? $starter.$rest : $arg); | |
if ( $type eq 'I' ) { | |
# Fake incremental type. | |
my @c = @$ctl; | |
$c[CTL_TYPE] = '+'; | |
return (1, $opt, \@c, 1); | |
} | |
# Supply default value. | |
$arg = defined($ctl.[CTL_DEFAULT]) ? $ctl.[CTL_DEFAULT] : 0; | |
} | |
} | |
} | |
elsif ( $type eq 'f' ) { # real number, int is also ok | |
my $o_valid = PAT_FLOAT; | |
if ( $bundling && defined $rest && | |
$rest ~~ m:P5 /^($key_valid)($o_valid)(.*)$/s ) { | |
$arg ~~ m:P5 tr/_//d; | |
($key, $arg, $rest) = ($1, $2, $+); | |
chop($key) if $key; | |
unshift (@$argv, $starter.$rest) if defined $rest && $rest ne ''; | |
} | |
elsif ( $arg ~~ m:P5 /^$o_valid$/ ) { | |
$arg ~~ m:P5 tr/_//d; | |
} | |
else { | |
if ( defined $optarg || $mand ) { | |
if ( $passthrough ) { | |
unshift (@$argv, defined $rest ? $starter.$rest : $arg) | |
unless defined $optarg; | |
return (0); | |
} | |
warn ("Value \"", $arg, "\" invalid for option ", | |
$opt, " (real number expected)\n"); | |
$error++; | |
# Push back. | |
unshift (@$argv, $starter.$rest) if defined $rest; | |
return (1, Mu); | |
} | |
else { | |
# Push back. | |
unshift (@$argv, defined $rest ? $starter.$rest : $arg); | |
# Supply default value. | |
$arg = 0.0; | |
} | |
} | |
} | |
else { | |
die("Getopt::Long internal error (Can't happen)\n"); | |
} | |
return (1, $opt, $ctl, $arg, $key); | |
} | |
sub ValidValue ($$$$$) { | |
my ($ctl, $arg, $mand, $argend, $prefix) = @_; | |
if ( $ctl.[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH ) { | |
return 0 unless $arg ~~ m:P5 /[^=]+=(.*)/; | |
$arg = $1; | |
} | |
my $type = $ctl.[CTL_TYPE]; | |
if ( $type eq 's' ) { # string | |
# A mandatory string takes anything. | |
return (1) if $mand; | |
return (1) if $arg eq "-"; | |
# Check for option or option list terminator. | |
return 0 if $arg eq $argend || $arg ~~ m:P5 /^$prefix.+/; | |
return 1; | |
} | |
elsif ( $type eq 'i' # numeric/integer | |
|| $type eq 'I' # numeric/integer w/ incr default | |
|| $type eq 'o' ) { # dec/oct/hex/bin value | |
my $o_valid = $type eq 'o' ? PAT_XINT : PAT_INT; | |
return $arg ~~ m:P5 /^$o_valid$/si; | |
} | |
elsif ( $type eq 'f' ) { # real number, int is also ok | |
my $o_valid = PAT_FLOAT; | |
return $arg ~~ m:P5 /^$o_valid$/; | |
} | |
die("ValidValue: Cannot happen\n"); | |
} | |
# Getopt::Long Configuration. | |
sub Configure (@) { | |
my (@options) = @_; | |
my $prevconfig = | |
[ $error, $debug, $major_version, $minor_version, $caller, | |
$autoabbrev, $getopt_compat, $ignorecase, $bundling, $order, | |
$gnu_compat, $passthrough, $genprefix, $auto_version, $auto_help, | |
$longprefix, $bundling_values ]; | |
if ( ref($options[0]) eq 'ARRAY' ) { | |
( $error, $debug, $major_version, $minor_version, $caller, | |
$autoabbrev, $getopt_compat, $ignorecase, $bundling, $order, | |
$gnu_compat, $passthrough, $genprefix, $auto_version, $auto_help, | |
$longprefix, $bundling_values ) = @{shift(@options)}; | |
} | |
my $opt; | |
foreach $opt ( @options ) { | |
my $try = lc ($opt); | |
my $action = 1; | |
if ( $try ~~ m:P5 /^no_?(.*)$/s ) { | |
$action = 0; | |
$try = $+; | |
} | |
if ( ($try eq 'default' or $try eq 'defaults') && $action ) { | |
ConfigDefaults (); | |
} | |
elsif ( ($try eq 'posix_default' or $try eq 'posix_defaults') ) { | |
local %ENV{POSIXLY_CORRECT}; | |
%ENV{POSIXLY_CORRECT} = 1 if $action; | |
ConfigDefaults (); | |
} | |
elsif ( $try eq 'auto_abbrev' or $try eq 'autoabbrev' ) { | |
$autoabbrev = $action; | |
} | |
elsif ( $try eq 'getopt_compat' ) { | |
$getopt_compat = $action; | |
$genprefix = $action ? "(--|-|\\+)" : "(--|-)"; | |
} | |
elsif ( $try eq 'gnu_getopt' ) { | |
if ( $action ) { | |
$gnu_compat = 1; | |
$bundling = 1; | |
$getopt_compat = 0; | |
$genprefix = "(--|-)"; | |
$order = $PERMUTE; | |
$bundling_values = 0; | |
} | |
} | |
elsif ( $try eq 'gnu_compat' ) { | |
$gnu_compat = $action; | |
} | |
elsif ( $try ~~ m:P5 /^(auto_?)?version$/ ) { | |
$auto_version = $action; | |
} | |
elsif ( $try ~~ m:P5 /^(auto_?)?help$/ ) { | |
$auto_help = $action; | |
} | |
elsif ( $try eq 'ignorecase' or $try eq 'ignore_case' ) { | |
$ignorecase = $action; | |
} | |
elsif ( $try eq 'ignorecase_always' or $try eq 'ignore_case_always' ) { | |
$ignorecase = $action ? 2 : 0; | |
} | |
elsif ( $try eq 'bundling' ) { | |
$bundling = $action; | |
$bundling_values = 0 if $action; | |
} | |
elsif ( $try eq 'bundling_override' ) { | |
$bundling = $action ? 2 : 0; | |
$bundling_values = 0 if $action; | |
} | |
elsif ( $try eq 'bundling_values' ) { | |
$bundling_values = $action; | |
$bundling = 0 if $action; | |
} | |
elsif ( $try eq 'require_order' ) { | |
$order = $action ? $REQUIRE_ORDER : $PERMUTE; | |
} | |
elsif ( $try eq 'permute' ) { | |
$order = $action ? $PERMUTE : $REQUIRE_ORDER; | |
} | |
elsif ( $try eq 'pass_through' or $try eq 'passthrough' ) { | |
$passthrough = $action; | |
} | |
elsif ( $try ~~ m:P5 /^prefix=(.+)$/ && $action ) { | |
$genprefix = $1; | |
# Turn into regexp. Needs to be parenthesized! | |
$genprefix = "(" . quotemeta($genprefix) . ")"; | |
eval { '' ~~ m:P5 /$genprefix/; }; | |
die("Getopt::Long: invalid pattern \"$genprefix\"\n") if $@; | |
} | |
elsif ( $try ~~ m:P5 /^prefix_pattern=(.+)$/ && $action ) { | |
$genprefix = $1; | |
# Parenthesize if needed. | |
$genprefix = "(" . $genprefix . ")" | |
unless $genprefix ~~ m:P5 /^\(.*\)$/; | |
eval { '' ~~ m:P5 m"$genprefix"; }; | |
die("Getopt::Long: invalid pattern \"$genprefix\"\n") if $@; | |
} | |
elsif ( $try ~~ m:P5 /^long_prefix_pattern=(.+)$/ && $action ) { | |
$longprefix = $1; | |
# Parenthesize if needed. | |
$longprefix = "(" . $longprefix . ")" | |
unless $longprefix ~~ m:P5 /^\(.*\)$/; | |
eval { '' ~~ m:P5 m"$longprefix"; }; | |
die("Getopt::Long: invalid long prefix pattern \"$longprefix\"\n") if $@; | |
} | |
elsif ( $try eq 'debug' ) { | |
$debug = $action; | |
} | |
else { | |
die("Getopt::Long: unknown or erroneous config parameter \"$opt\"\n") | |
} | |
} | |
$prevconfig; | |
} | |
# Deprecated name. | |
sub config (@) { | |
Configure (@_); | |
} | |
# Issue a standard message for --version. | |
# | |
# The arguments are mostly the same as for Pod::Usage::pod2usage: | |
# | |
# - a number (exit value) | |
# - a string (lead in message) | |
# - a hash with options. See Pod::Usage for details. | |
# | |
sub VersionMessage(@) { | |
# Massage args. | |
my $pa = setup_pa_args("version", @_); | |
my $v = $main::VERSION; | |
my $fh = $pa.{-output} || | |
($pa.{-exitval} eq "NOEXIT" || $pa.{-exitval} < 2) ? \*STDOUT : \*STDERR; | |
print $fh (defined($pa.{-message}) ? $pa.{-message} : (), | |
$0, defined $v ? " version $v" : (), | |
"\n", | |
"(", __PACKAGE__, "::", "GetOptions", | |
" version ", | |
defined($Getopt::Long::VERSION_STRING) | |
? $Getopt::Long::VERSION_STRING : $VERSION, ";", | |
" Perl version ", | |
$] >= 5.006 ? sprintf("%vd", $^V) : $], | |
")\n"); | |
exit($pa.{-exitval}) unless $pa.{-exitval} eq "NOEXIT"; | |
} | |
# Issue a standard message for --help. | |
# | |
# The arguments are the same as for Pod::Usage::pod2usage: | |
# | |
# - a number (exit value) | |
# - a string (lead in message) | |
# - a hash with options. See Pod::Usage for details. | |
# | |
sub HelpMessage(@) { | |
eval { | |
require Pod::Usage; | |
import Pod::Usage; | |
1; | |
} || die("Cannot provide help: cannot load Pod::Usage\n"); | |
# Note that pod2usage will issue a warning if -exitval => NOEXIT. | |
pod2usage(setup_pa_args("help", @_)); | |
} | |
# Helper routine to set up a normalized hash ref to be used as | |
# argument to pod2usage. | |
sub setup_pa_args($@) { | |
my $tag = shift; # who's calling | |
# If called by direct binding to an option, it will get the option | |
# name and value as arguments. Remove these, if so. | |
@_ = () if @_ == 2 && $_[0] eq $tag; | |
my $pa; | |
if ( @_ > 1 ) { | |
$pa = { @_ }; | |
} | |
else { | |
$pa = shift || {}; | |
} | |
# At this point, $pa can be a number (exit value), string | |
# (message) or hash with options. | |
if ( UNIVERSAL::isa($pa, 'HASH') ) { | |
# Get rid of -msg vs. -message ambiguity. | |
$pa.{-message} = $pa.{-msg}; | |
delete($pa.{-msg}); | |
} | |
elsif ( $pa ~~ m:P5 /^-?\d+$/ ) { | |
$pa = { -exitval => $pa }; | |
} | |
else { | |
$pa = { -message => $pa }; | |
} | |
# These are _our_ defaults. | |
$pa.{-verbose} = 0 unless exists($pa.{-verbose}); | |
$pa.{-exitval} = 0 unless exists($pa.{-exitval}); | |
$pa; | |
} | |
# Sneak way to know what version the user requested. | |
sub VERSION { | |
$requested_version = $_[1]; | |
shift.SUPER::VERSION(@_); | |
} | |
} | |
class Getopt::Long::CallBack | |
{ | |
sub new { | |
my ($pkg, %atts) = @_; | |
bless { %atts }, $pkg; | |
} | |
sub name { | |
my $self = shift; | |
''.$self.{name}; | |
} | |
use overload | |
# Treat this object as an ordinary string for legacy API. | |
'""' => \&name, | |
fallback => 1; | |
} | |
1; | |
################ Documentation ################ | |
=head1 NAME | |
Getopt::Long - Extended processing of command line options | |
=head1 SYNOPSIS | |
use Getopt::Long; | |
my $data = "file.dat"; | |
my $length = 24; | |
my $verbose; | |
GetOptions ("length=i" => \$length, # numeric | |
"file=s" => \$data, # string | |
"verbose" => \$verbose) # flag | |
or die("Error in command line arguments\n"); | |
=head1 DESCRIPTION | |
The Getopt::Long module implements an extended getopt function called | |
GetOptions(). It parses the command line from C<@ARGV>, recognizing | |
and removing specified options and their possible values. | |
This function adheres to the POSIX syntax for command | |
line options, with GNU extensions. In general, this means that options | |
have long names instead of single letters, and are introduced with a | |
double dash "--". Support for bundling of command line options, as was | |
the case with the more traditional single-letter approach, is provided | |
but not enabled by default. | |
=head1 Command Line Options, an Introduction | |
Command line operated programs traditionally take their arguments from | |
the command line, for example filenames or other information that the | |
program needs to know. Besides arguments, these programs often take | |
command line I<options> as well. Options are not necessary for the | |
program to work, hence the name 'option', but are used to modify its | |
default behaviour. For example, a program could do its job quietly, | |
but with a suitable option it could provide verbose information about | |
what it did. | |
Command line options come in several flavours. Historically, they are | |
preceded by a single dash C<->, and consist of a single letter. | |
-l -a -c | |
Usually, these single-character options can be bundled: | |
-lac | |
Options can have values, the value is placed after the option | |
character. Sometimes with whitespace in between, sometimes not: | |
-s 24 -s24 | |
Due to the very cryptic nature of these options, another style was | |
developed that used long names. So instead of a cryptic C<-l> one | |
could use the more descriptive C<--long>. To distinguish between a | |
bundle of single-character options and a long one, two dashes are used | |
to precede the option name. Early implementations of long options used | |
a plus C<+> instead. Also, option values could be specified either | |
like | |
--size=24 | |
or | |
--size 24 | |
The C<+> form is now obsolete and strongly deprecated. | |
=head1 Getting Started with Getopt::Long | |
Getopt::Long is the Perl5 successor of C<newgetopt.pl>. This was the | |
first Perl module that provided support for handling the new style of | |
command line options, in particular long option names, hence the Perl5 | |
name Getopt::Long. This module also supports single-character options | |
and bundling. | |
To use Getopt::Long from a Perl program, you must include the | |
following line in your Perl program: | |
use Getopt::Long; | |
This will load the core of the Getopt::Long module and prepare your | |
program for using it. Most of the actual Getopt::Long code is not | |
loaded until you really call one of its functions. | |
In the default configuration, options names may be abbreviated to | |
uniqueness, case does not matter, and a single dash is sufficient, | |
even for long option names. Also, options may be placed between | |
non-option arguments. See L<Configuring Getopt::Long> for more | |
details on how to configure Getopt::Long. | |
=head2 Simple options | |
The most simple options are the ones that take no values. Their mere | |
presence on the command line enables the option. Popular examples are: | |
--all --verbose --quiet --debug | |
Handling simple options is straightforward: | |
my $verbose = ''; # option variable with default value (false) | |
my $all = ''; # option variable with default value (false) | |
GetOptions ('verbose' => \$verbose, 'all' => \$all); | |
The call to GetOptions() parses the command line arguments that are | |
present in C<@ARGV> and sets the option variable to the value C<1> if | |
the option did occur on the command line. Otherwise, the option | |
variable is not touched. Setting the option value to true is often | |
called I<enabling> the option. | |
The option name as specified to the GetOptions() function is called | |
the option I<specification>. Later we'll see that this specification | |
can contain more than just the option name. The reference to the | |
variable is called the option I<destination>. | |
GetOptions() will return a true value if the command line could be | |
processed successfully. Otherwise, it will write error messages using | |
die() and warn(), and return a false result. | |
=head2 A little bit less simple options | |
Getopt::Long supports two useful variants of simple options: | |
I<negatable> options and I<incremental> options. | |
A negatable option is specified with an exclamation mark C<!> after the | |
option name: | |
my $verbose = ''; # option variable with default value (false) | |
GetOptions ('verbose!' => \$verbose); | |
Now, using C<--verbose> on the command line will enable C<$verbose>, | |
as expected. But it is also allowed to use C<--noverbose>, which will | |
disable C<$verbose> by setting its value to C<0>. Using a suitable | |
default value, the program can find out whether C<$verbose> is false | |
by default, or disabled by using C<--noverbose>. | |
An incremental option is specified with a plus C<+> after the | |
option name: | |
my $verbose = ''; # option variable with default value (false) | |
GetOptions ('verbose+' => \$verbose); | |
Using C<--verbose> on the command line will increment the value of | |
C<$verbose>. This way the program can keep track of how many times the | |
option occurred on the command line. For example, each occurrence of | |
C<--verbose> could increase the verbosity level of the program. | |
=head2 Mixing command line option with other arguments | |
Usually programs take command line options as well as other arguments, | |
for example, file names. It is good practice to always specify the | |
options first, and the other arguments last. Getopt::Long will, | |
however, allow the options and arguments to be mixed and 'filter out' | |
all the options before passing the rest of the arguments to the | |
program. To stop Getopt::Long from processing further arguments, | |
insert a double dash C<--> on the command line: | |
--size 24 -- --all | |
In this example, C<--all> will I<not> be treated as an option, but | |
passed to the program unharmed, in C<@ARGV>. | |
=head2 Options with values | |
For options that take values it must be specified whether the option | |
value is required or not, and what kind of value the option expects. | |
Three kinds of values are supported: integer numbers, floating point | |
numbers, and strings. | |
If the option value is required, Getopt::Long will take the | |
command line argument that follows the option and assign this to the | |
option variable. If, however, the option value is specified as | |
optional, this will only be done if that value does not look like a | |
valid command line option itself. | |
my $tag = ''; # option variable with default value | |
GetOptions ('tag=s' => \$tag); | |
In the option specification, the option name is followed by an equals | |
sign C<=> and the letter C<s>. The equals sign indicates that this | |
option requires a value. The letter C<s> indicates that this value is | |
an arbitrary string. Other possible value types are C<i> for integer | |
values, and C<f> for floating point values. Using a colon C<:> instead | |
of the equals sign indicates that the option value is optional. In | |
this case, if no suitable value is supplied, string valued options get | |
an empty string C<''> assigned, while numeric options are set to C<0>. | |
=head2 Options with multiple values | |
Options sometimes take several values. For example, a program could | |
use multiple directories to search for library files: | |
--library lib/stdlib --library lib/extlib | |
To accomplish this behaviour, simply specify an array reference as the | |
destination for the option: | |
GetOptions ("library=s" => \@libfiles); | |
Alternatively, you can specify that the option can have multiple | |
values by adding a "@", and pass a scalar reference as the | |
destination: | |
GetOptions ("library=s@" => \$libfiles); | |
Used with the example above, C<@libfiles> (or C<@$libfiles>) would | |
contain two strings upon completion: C<"lib/stdlib"> and | |
C<"lib/extlib">, in that order. It is also possible to specify that | |
only integer or floating point numbers are acceptable values. | |
Often it is useful to allow comma-separated lists of values as well as | |
multiple occurrences of the options. This is easy using Perl's split() | |
and join() operators: | |
GetOptions ("library=s" => \@libfiles); | |
@libfiles = split(/,/,join(',',@libfiles)); | |
Of course, it is important to choose the right separator string for | |
each purpose. | |
Warning: What follows is an experimental feature. | |
Options can take multiple values at once, for example | |
--coordinates 52.2 16.4 --rgbcolor 255 255 149 | |
This can be accomplished by adding a repeat specifier to the option | |
specification. Repeat specifiers are very similar to the C<{...}> | |
repeat specifiers that can be used with regular expression patterns. | |
For example, the above command line would be handled as follows: | |
GetOptions('coordinates=f{2}' => \@coor, 'rgbcolor=i{3}' => \@color); | |
The destination for the option must be an array or array reference. | |
It is also possible to specify the minimal and maximal number of | |
arguments an option takes. C<foo=s{2,4}> indicates an option that | |
takes at least two and at most 4 arguments. C<foo=s{1,}> indicates one | |
or more values; C<foo:s{,}> indicates zero or more option values. | |
=head2 Options with hash values | |
If the option destination is a reference to a hash, the option will | |
take, as value, strings of the form I<key>C<=>I<value>. The value will | |
be stored with the specified key in the hash. | |
GetOptions ("define=s" => \%defines); | |
Alternatively you can use: | |
GetOptions ("define=s%" => \$defines); | |
When used with command line options: | |
--define os=linux --define vendor=redhat | |
the hash C<%defines> (or C<%$defines>) will contain two keys, C<"os"> | |
with value C<"linux"> and C<"vendor"> with value C<"redhat">. It is | |
also possible to specify that only integer or floating point numbers | |
are acceptable values. The keys are always taken to be strings. | |
=head2 User-defined subroutines to handle options | |
Ultimate control over what should be done when (actually: each time) | |
an option is encountered on the command line can be achieved by | |
designating a reference to a subroutine (or an anonymous subroutine) | |
as the option destination. When GetOptions() encounters the option, it | |
will call the subroutine with two or three arguments. The first | |
argument is the name of the option. (Actually, it is an object that | |
stringifies to the name of the option.) For a scalar or array destination, | |
the second argument is the value to be stored. For a hash destination, | |
the second argument is the key to the hash, and the third argument | |
the value to be stored. It is up to the subroutine to store the value, | |
or do whatever it thinks is appropriate. | |
A trivial application of this mechanism is to implement options that | |
are related to each other. For example: | |
my $verbose = ''; # option variable with default value (false) | |
GetOptions ('verbose' => \$verbose, | |
'quiet' => sub { $verbose = 0 }); | |
Here C<--verbose> and C<--quiet> control the same variable | |
C<$verbose>, but with opposite values. | |
If the subroutine needs to signal an error, it should call die() with | |
the desired error message as its argument. GetOptions() will catch the | |
die(), issue the error message, and record that an error result must | |
be returned upon completion. | |
If the text of the error message starts with an exclamation mark C<!> | |
it is interpreted specially by GetOptions(). There is currently one | |
special command implemented: C<die("!FINISH")> will cause GetOptions() | |
to stop processing options, as if it encountered a double dash C<-->. | |
In version 2.37 the first argument to the callback function was | |
changed from string to object. This was done to make room for | |
extensions and more detailed control. The object stringifies to the | |
option name so this change should not introduce compatibility | |
problems. | |
Here is an example of how to access the option name and value from within | |
a subroutine: | |
GetOptions ('opt=i' => \&handler); | |
sub handler { | |
my ($opt_name, $opt_value) = @_; | |
print("Option name is $opt_name and value is $opt_value\n"); | |
} | |
=head2 Options with multiple names | |
Often it is user friendly to supply alternate mnemonic names for | |
options. For example C<--height> could be an alternate name for | |
C<--length>. Alternate names can be included in the option | |
specification, separated by vertical bar C<|> characters. To implement | |
the above example: | |
GetOptions ('length|height=f' => \$length); | |
The first name is called the I<primary> name, the other names are | |
called I<aliases>. When using a hash to store options, the key will | |
always be the primary name. | |
Multiple alternate names are possible. | |
=head2 Case and abbreviations | |
Without additional configuration, GetOptions() will ignore the case of | |
option names, and allow the options to be abbreviated to uniqueness. | |
GetOptions ('length|height=f' => \$length, "head" => \$head); | |
This call will allow C<--l> and C<--L> for the length option, but | |
requires a least C<--hea> and C<--hei> for the head and height options. | |
=head2 Summary of Option Specifications | |
Each option specifier consists of two parts: the name specification | |
and the argument specification. | |
The name specification contains the name of the option, optionally | |
followed by a list of alternative names separated by vertical bar | |
characters. | |
length option name is "length" | |
length|size|l name is "length", aliases are "size" and "l" | |
The argument specification is optional. If omitted, the option is | |
considered boolean, a value of 1 will be assigned when the option is | |
used on the command line. | |
The argument specification can be | |
=over 4 | |
=item ! | |
The option does not take an argument and may be negated by prefixing | |
it with "no" or "no-". E.g. C<"foo!"> will allow C<--foo> (a value of | |
1 will be assigned) as well as C<--nofoo> and C<--no-foo> (a value of | |
0 will be assigned). If the option has aliases, this applies to the | |
aliases as well. | |
Using negation on a single letter option when bundling is in effect is | |
pointless and will result in a warning. | |
=item + | |
The option does not take an argument and will be incremented by 1 | |
every time it appears on the command line. E.g. C<"more+">, when used | |
with C<--more --more --more>, will increment the value three times, | |
resulting in a value of 3 (provided it was 0 or undefined at first). | |
The C<+> specifier is ignored if the option destination is not a scalar. | |
=item = I<type> [ I<desttype> ] [ I<repeat> ] | |
The option requires an argument of the given type. Supported types | |
are: | |
=over 4 | |
=item s | |
String. An arbitrary sequence of characters. It is valid for the | |
argument to start with C<-> or C<-->. | |
=item i | |
Integer. An optional leading plus or minus sign, followed by a | |
sequence of digits. | |
=item o | |
Extended integer, Perl style. This can be either an optional leading | |
plus or minus sign, followed by a sequence of digits, or an octal | |
string (a zero, optionally followed by '0', '1', .. '7'), or a | |
hexadecimal string (C<0x> followed by '0' .. '9', 'a' .. 'f', case | |
insensitive), or a binary string (C<0b> followed by a series of '0' | |
and '1'). | |
=item f | |
Real number. For example C<3.14>, C<-6.23E24> and so on. | |
=back | |
The I<desttype> can be C<@> or C<%> to specify that the option is | |
list or a hash valued. This is only needed when the destination for | |
the option value is not otherwise specified. It should be omitted when | |
not needed. | |
The I<repeat> specifies the number of values this option takes per | |
occurrence on the command line. It has the format C<{> [ I<min> ] [ C<,> [ I<max> ] ] C<}>. | |
I<min> denotes the minimal number of arguments. It defaults to 1 for | |
options with C<=> and to 0 for options with C<:>, see below. Note that | |
I<min> overrules the C<=> / C<:> semantics. | |
I<max> denotes the maximum number of arguments. It must be at least | |
I<min>. If I<max> is omitted, I<but the comma is not>, there is no | |
upper bound to the number of argument values taken. | |
=item : I<type> [ I<desttype> ] | |
Like C<=>, but designates the argument as optional. | |
If omitted, an empty string will be assigned to string values options, | |
and the value zero to numeric options. | |
Note that if a string argument starts with C<-> or C<-->, it will be | |
considered an option on itself. | |
=item : I<number> [ I<desttype> ] | |
Like C<:i>, but if the value is omitted, the I<number> will be assigned. | |
=item : + [ I<desttype> ] | |
Like C<:i>, but if the value is omitted, the current value for the | |
option will be incremented. | |
=back | |
=head1 Advanced Possibilities | |
=head2 Object oriented interface | |
Getopt::Long can be used in an object oriented way as well: | |
use Getopt::Long; | |
$p = Getopt::Long::Parser->new; | |
$p->configure(...configuration options...); | |
if ($p->getoptions(...options descriptions...)) ... | |
if ($p->getoptionsfromarray( \@array, ...options descriptions...)) ... | |
Configuration options can be passed to the constructor: | |
$p = new Getopt::Long::Parser | |
config => [...configuration options...]; | |
=head2 Thread Safety | |
Getopt::Long is thread safe when using ithreads as of Perl 5.8. It is | |
I<not> thread safe when using the older (experimental and now | |
obsolete) threads implementation that was added to Perl 5.005. | |
=head2 Documentation and help texts | |
Getopt::Long encourages the use of Pod::Usage to produce help | |
messages. For example: | |
use Getopt::Long; | |
use Pod::Usage; | |
my $man = 0; | |
my $help = 0; | |
GetOptions('help|?' => \$help, man => \$man) or pod2usage(2); | |
pod2usage(1) if $help; | |
pod2usage(-exitval => 0, -verbose => 2) if $man; | |
__END__ | |
=head1 NAME | |
sample - Using Getopt::Long and Pod::Usage | |
=head1 SYNOPSIS | |
sample [options] [file ...] | |
Options: | |
-help brief help message | |
-man full documentation | |
=head1 OPTIONS | |
=over 8 | |
=item B<-help> | |
Print a brief help message and exits. | |
=item B<-man> | |
Prints the manual page and exits. | |
=back | |
=head1 DESCRIPTION | |
B<This program> will read the given input file(s) and do something | |
useful with the contents thereof. | |
=cut | |
See L<Pod::Usage> for details. | |
=head2 Parsing options from an arbitrary array | |
By default, GetOptions parses the options that are present in the | |
global array C<@ARGV>. A special entry C<GetOptionsFromArray> can be | |
used to parse options from an arbitrary array. | |
use Getopt::Long qw(GetOptionsFromArray); | |
$ret = GetOptionsFromArray(\@myopts, ...); | |
When used like this, options and their possible values are removed | |
from C<@myopts>, the global C<@ARGV> is not touched at all. | |
The following two calls behave identically: | |
$ret = GetOptions( ... ); | |
$ret = GetOptionsFromArray(\@ARGV, ... ); | |
This also means that a first argument hash reference now becomes the | |
second argument: | |
$ret = GetOptions(\%opts, ... ); | |
$ret = GetOptionsFromArray(\@ARGV, \%opts, ... ); | |
=head2 Parsing options from an arbitrary string | |
A special entry C<GetOptionsFromString> can be used to parse options | |
from an arbitrary string. | |
use Getopt::Long qw(GetOptionsFromString); | |
$ret = GetOptionsFromString($string, ...); | |
The contents of the string are split into arguments using a call to | |
C<Text::ParseWords::shellwords>. As with C<GetOptionsFromArray>, the | |
global C<@ARGV> is not touched. | |
It is possible that, upon completion, not all arguments in the string | |
have been processed. C<GetOptionsFromString> will, when called in list | |
context, return both the return status and an array reference to any | |
remaining arguments: | |
($ret, $args) = GetOptionsFromString($string, ... ); | |
If any arguments remain, and C<GetOptionsFromString> was not called in | |
list context, a message will be given and C<GetOptionsFromString> will | |
return failure. | |
As with GetOptionsFromArray, a first argument hash reference now | |
becomes the second argument. | |
=head2 Storing options values in a hash | |
Sometimes, for example when there are a lot of options, having a | |
separate variable for each of them can be cumbersome. GetOptions() | |
supports, as an alternative mechanism, storing options values in a | |
hash. | |
To obtain this, a reference to a hash must be passed I<as the first | |
argument> to GetOptions(). For each option that is specified on the | |
command line, the option value will be stored in the hash with the | |
option name as key. Options that are not actually used on the command | |
line will not be put in the hash, on other words, | |
C<exists($h{option})> (or defined()) can be used to test if an option | |
was used. The drawback is that warnings will be issued if the program | |
runs under C<use strict> and uses C<$h{option}> without testing with | |
exists() or defined() first. | |
my %h = (); | |
GetOptions (\%h, 'length=i'); # will store in $h{length} | |
For options that take list or hash values, it is necessary to indicate | |
this by appending an C<@> or C<%> sign after the type: | |
GetOptions (\%h, 'colours=s@'); # will push to @{$h{colours}} | |
To make things more complicated, the hash may contain references to | |
the actual destinations, for example: | |
my $len = 0; | |
my %h = ('length' => \$len); | |
GetOptions (\%h, 'length=i'); # will store in $len | |
This example is fully equivalent with: | |
my $len = 0; | |
GetOptions ('length=i' => \$len); # will store in $len | |
Any mixture is possible. For example, the most frequently used options | |
could be stored in variables while all other options get stored in the | |
hash: | |
my $verbose = 0; # frequently referred | |
my $debug = 0; # frequently referred | |
my %h = ('verbose' => \$verbose, 'debug' => \$debug); | |
GetOptions (\%h, 'verbose', 'debug', 'filter', 'size=i'); | |
if ( $verbose ) { ... } | |
if ( exists $h{filter} ) { ... option 'filter' was specified ... } | |
=head2 Bundling | |
With bundling it is possible to set several single-character options | |
at once. For example if C<a>, C<v> and C<x> are all valid options, | |
-vax | |
will set all three. | |
Getopt::Long supports three styles of bundling. To enable bundling, a | |
call to Getopt::Long::Configure is required. | |
The simplest style of bundling can be enabled with: | |
Getopt::Long::Configure ("bundling"); | |
Configured this way, single-character options can be bundled but long | |
options B<must> always start with a double dash C<--> to avoid | |
ambiguity. For example, when C<vax>, C<a>, C<v> and C<x> are all valid | |
options, | |
-vax | |
will set C<a>, C<v> and C<x>, but | |
--vax | |
will set C<vax>. | |
The second style of bundling lifts this restriction. It can be enabled | |
with: | |
Getopt::Long::Configure ("bundling_override"); | |
Now, C<-vax> will set the option C<vax>. | |
In all of the above cases, option values may be inserted in the | |
bundle. For example: | |
-h24w80 | |
is equivalent to | |
-h 24 -w 80 | |
A third style of bundling allows only values to be bundled with | |
options. It can be enabled with: | |
Getopt::Long::Configure ("bundling_values"); | |
Now, C<-h24> will set the option C<h> to C<24>, but option bundles | |
like C<-vxa> and C<-h24w80> are flagged as errors. | |
Enabling C<bundling_values> will disable the other two styles of | |
bundling. | |
When configured for bundling, single-character options are matched | |
case sensitive while long options are matched case insensitive. To | |
have the single-character options matched case insensitive as well, | |
use: | |
Getopt::Long::Configure ("bundling", "ignorecase_always"); | |
It goes without saying that bundling can be quite confusing. | |
=head2 The lonesome dash | |
Normally, a lone dash C<-> on the command line will not be considered | |
an option. Option processing will terminate (unless "permute" is | |
configured) and the dash will be left in C<@ARGV>. | |
It is possible to get special treatment for a lone dash. This can be | |
achieved by adding an option specification with an empty name, for | |
example: | |
GetOptions ('' => \$stdio); | |
A lone dash on the command line will now be a legal option, and using | |
it will set variable C<$stdio>. | |
=head2 Argument callback | |
A special option 'name' C<< <> >> can be used to designate a subroutine | |
to handle non-option arguments. When GetOptions() encounters an | |
argument that does not look like an option, it will immediately call this | |
subroutine and passes it one parameter: the argument name. Well, actually | |
it is an object that stringifies to the argument name. | |
For example: | |
my $width = 80; | |
sub process { ... } | |
GetOptions ('width=i' => \$width, '<>' => \&process); | |
When applied to the following command line: | |
arg1 --width=72 arg2 --width=60 arg3 | |
This will call | |
C<process("arg1")> while C<$width> is C<80>, | |
C<process("arg2")> while C<$width> is C<72>, and | |
C<process("arg3")> while C<$width> is C<60>. | |
This feature requires configuration option B<permute>, see section | |
L<Configuring Getopt::Long>. | |
=head1 Configuring Getopt::Long | |
Getopt::Long can be configured by calling subroutine | |
Getopt::Long::Configure(). This subroutine takes a list of quoted | |
strings, each specifying a configuration option to be enabled, e.g. | |
C<ignore_case>, or disabled, e.g. C<no_ignore_case>. Case does not | |
matter. Multiple calls to Configure() are possible. | |
Alternatively, as of version 2.24, the configuration options may be | |
passed together with the C<use> statement: | |
use Getopt::Long qw(:config no_ignore_case bundling); | |
The following options are available: | |
=over 12 | |
=item default | |
This option causes all configuration options to be reset to their | |
default values. | |
=item posix_default | |
This option causes all configuration options to be reset to their | |
default values as if the environment variable POSIXLY_CORRECT had | |
been set. | |
=item auto_abbrev | |
Allow option names to be abbreviated to uniqueness. | |
Default is enabled unless environment variable | |
POSIXLY_CORRECT has been set, in which case C<auto_abbrev> is disabled. | |
=item getopt_compat | |
Allow C<+> to start options. | |
Default is enabled unless environment variable | |
POSIXLY_CORRECT has been set, in which case C<getopt_compat> is disabled. | |
=item gnu_compat | |
C<gnu_compat> controls whether C<--opt=> is allowed, and what it should | |
do. Without C<gnu_compat>, C<--opt=> gives an error. With C<gnu_compat>, | |
C<--opt=> will give option C<opt> and empty value. | |
This is the way GNU getopt_long() does it. | |
=item gnu_getopt | |
This is a short way of setting C<gnu_compat> C<bundling> C<permute> | |
C<no_getopt_compat>. With C<gnu_getopt>, command line handling should be | |
fully compatible with GNU getopt_long(). | |
=item require_order | |
Whether command line arguments are allowed to be mixed with options. | |
Default is disabled unless environment variable | |
POSIXLY_CORRECT has been set, in which case C<require_order> is enabled. | |
See also C<permute>, which is the opposite of C<require_order>. | |
=item permute | |
Whether command line arguments are allowed to be mixed with options. | |
Default is enabled unless environment variable | |
POSIXLY_CORRECT has been set, in which case C<permute> is disabled. | |
Note that C<permute> is the opposite of C<require_order>. | |
If C<permute> is enabled, this means that | |
--foo arg1 --bar arg2 arg3 | |
is equivalent to | |
--foo --bar arg1 arg2 arg3 | |
If an argument callback routine is specified, C<@ARGV> will always be | |
empty upon successful return of GetOptions() since all options have been | |
processed. The only exception is when C<--> is used: | |
--foo arg1 --bar arg2 -- arg3 | |
This will call the callback routine for arg1 and arg2, and then | |
terminate GetOptions() leaving C<"arg3"> in C<@ARGV>. | |
If C<require_order> is enabled, options processing | |
terminates when the first non-option is encountered. | |
--foo arg1 --bar arg2 arg3 | |
is equivalent to | |
--foo -- arg1 --bar arg2 arg3 | |
If C<pass_through> is also enabled, options processing will terminate | |
at the first unrecognized option, or non-option, whichever comes | |
first. | |
=item bundling (default: disabled) | |
Enabling this option will allow single-character options to be | |
bundled. To distinguish bundles from long option names, long options | |
I<must> be introduced with C<--> and bundles with C<->. | |
Note that, if you have options C<a>, C<l> and C<all>, and | |
auto_abbrev enabled, possible arguments and option settings are: | |
using argument sets option(s) | |
------------------------------------------ | |
-a, --a a | |
-l, --l l | |
-al, -la, -ala, -all,... a, l | |
--al, --all all | |
The surprising part is that C<--a> sets option C<a> (due to auto | |
completion), not C<all>. | |
Note: disabling C<bundling> also disables C<bundling_override>. | |
=item bundling_override (default: disabled) | |
If C<bundling_override> is enabled, bundling is enabled as with | |
C<bundling> but now long option names override option bundles. | |
Note: disabling C<bundling_override> also disables C<bundling>. | |
B<Note:> Using option bundling can easily lead to unexpected results, | |
especially when mixing long options and bundles. Caveat emptor. | |
=item ignore_case (default: enabled) | |
If enabled, case is ignored when matching option names. If, however, | |
bundling is enabled as well, single character options will be treated | |
case-sensitive. | |
With C<ignore_case>, option specifications for options that only | |
differ in case, e.g., C<"foo"> and C<"Foo">, will be flagged as | |
duplicates. | |
Note: disabling C<ignore_case> also disables C<ignore_case_always>. | |
=item ignore_case_always (default: disabled) | |
When bundling is in effect, case is ignored on single-character | |
options also. | |
Note: disabling C<ignore_case_always> also disables C<ignore_case>. | |
=item auto_version (default:disabled) | |
Automatically provide support for the B<--version> option if | |
the application did not specify a handler for this option itself. | |
Getopt::Long will provide a standard version message that includes the | |
program name, its version (if $main::VERSION is defined), and the | |
versions of Getopt::Long and Perl. The message will be written to | |
standard output and processing will terminate. | |
C<auto_version> will be enabled if the calling program explicitly | |
specified a version number higher than 2.32 in the C<use> or | |
C<require> statement. | |
=item auto_help (default:disabled) | |
Automatically provide support for the B<--help> and B<-?> options if | |
the application did not specify a handler for this option itself. | |
Getopt::Long will provide a help message using module L<Pod::Usage>. The | |
message, derived from the SYNOPSIS POD section, will be written to | |
standard output and processing will terminate. | |
C<auto_help> will be enabled if the calling program explicitly | |
specified a version number higher than 2.32 in the C<use> or | |
C<require> statement. | |
=item pass_through (default: disabled) | |
With C<pass_through> anything that is unknown, ambiguous or supplied with | |
an invalid option will not be flagged as an error. Instead the unknown | |
option(s) will be passed to the catchall C<< <> >> if present, otherwise | |
through to C<@ARGV>. This makes it possible to write wrapper scripts that | |
process only part of the user supplied command line arguments, and pass the | |
remaining options to some other program. | |
If C<require_order> is enabled, options processing will terminate at the | |
first unrecognized option, or non-option, whichever comes first and all | |
remaining arguments are passed to C<@ARGV> instead of the catchall | |
C<< <> >> if present. However, if C<permute> is enabled instead, results | |
can become confusing. | |
Note that the options terminator (default C<-->), if present, will | |
also be passed through in C<@ARGV>. | |
=item prefix | |
The string that starts options. If a constant string is not | |
sufficient, see C<prefix_pattern>. | |
=item prefix_pattern | |
A Perl pattern that identifies the strings that introduce options. | |
Default is C<--|-|\+> unless environment variable | |
POSIXLY_CORRECT has been set, in which case it is C<--|->. | |
=item long_prefix_pattern | |
A Perl pattern that allows the disambiguation of long and short | |
prefixes. Default is C<-->. | |
Typically you only need to set this if you are using nonstandard | |
prefixes and want some or all of them to have the same semantics as | |
'--' does under normal circumstances. | |
For example, setting prefix_pattern to C<--|-|\+|\/> and | |
long_prefix_pattern to C<--|\/> would add Win32 style argument | |
handling. | |
=item debug (default: disabled) | |
Enable debugging output. | |
=back | |
=head1 Exportable Methods | |
=over | |
=item VersionMessage | |
This subroutine provides a standard version message. Its argument can be: | |
=over 4 | |
=item * | |
A string containing the text of a message to print I<before> printing | |
the standard message. | |
=item * | |
A numeric value corresponding to the desired exit status. | |
=item * | |
A reference to a hash. | |
=back | |
If more than one argument is given then the entire argument list is | |
assumed to be a hash. If a hash is supplied (either as a reference or | |
as a list) it should contain one or more elements with the following | |
keys: | |
=over 4 | |
=item C<-message> | |
=item C<-msg> | |
The text of a message to print immediately prior to printing the | |
program's usage message. | |
=item C<-exitval> | |
The desired exit status to pass to the B<exit()> function. | |
This should be an integer, or else the string "NOEXIT" to | |
indicate that control should simply be returned without | |
terminating the invoking process. | |
=item C<-output> | |
A reference to a filehandle, or the pathname of a file to which the | |
usage message should be written. The default is C<\*STDERR> unless the | |
exit value is less than 2 (in which case the default is C<\*STDOUT>). | |
=back | |
You cannot tie this routine directly to an option, e.g.: | |
GetOptions("version" => \&VersionMessage); | |
Use this instead: | |
GetOptions("version" => sub { VersionMessage() }); | |
=item HelpMessage | |
This subroutine produces a standard help message, derived from the | |
program's POD section SYNOPSIS using L<Pod::Usage>. It takes the same | |
arguments as VersionMessage(). In particular, you cannot tie it | |
directly to an option, e.g.: | |
GetOptions("help" => \&HelpMessage); | |
Use this instead: | |
GetOptions("help" => sub { HelpMessage() }); | |
=back | |
=head1 Return values and Errors | |
Configuration errors and errors in the option definitions are | |
signalled using die() and will terminate the calling program unless | |
the call to Getopt::Long::GetOptions() was embedded in C<eval { ... | |
}>, or die() was trapped using C<$SIG{__DIE__}>. | |
GetOptions returns true to indicate success. | |
It returns false when the function detected one or more errors during | |
option parsing. These errors are signalled using warn() and can be | |
trapped with C<$SIG{__WARN__}>. | |
=head1 Legacy | |
The earliest development of C<newgetopt.pl> started in 1990, with Perl | |
version 4. As a result, its development, and the development of | |
Getopt::Long, has gone through several stages. Since backward | |
compatibility has always been extremely important, the current version | |
of Getopt::Long still supports a lot of constructs that nowadays are | |
no longer necessary or otherwise unwanted. This section describes | |
briefly some of these 'features'. | |
=head2 Default destinations | |
When no destination is specified for an option, GetOptions will store | |
the resultant value in a global variable named C<opt_>I<XXX>, where | |
I<XXX> is the primary name of this option. When a program executes | |
under C<use strict> (recommended), these variables must be | |
pre-declared with our() or C<use vars>. | |
our $opt_length = 0; | |
GetOptions ('length=i'); # will store in $opt_length | |
To yield a usable Perl variable, characters that are not part of the | |
syntax for variables are translated to underscores. For example, | |
C<--fpp-struct-return> will set the variable | |
C<$opt_fpp_struct_return>. Note that this variable resides in the | |
namespace of the calling program, not necessarily C<main>. For | |
example: | |
GetOptions ("size=i", "sizes=i@"); | |
with command line "-size 10 -sizes 24 -sizes 48" will perform the | |
equivalent of the assignments | |
$opt_size = 10; | |
@opt_sizes = (24, 48); | |
=head2 Alternative option starters | |
A string of alternative option starter characters may be passed as the | |
first argument (or the first argument after a leading hash reference | |
argument). | |
my $len = 0; | |
GetOptions ('/', 'length=i' => $len); | |
Now the command line may look like: | |
/length 24 -- arg | |
Note that to terminate options processing still requires a double dash | |
C<-->. | |
GetOptions() will not interpret a leading C<< "<>" >> as option starters | |
if the next argument is a reference. To force C<< "<" >> and C<< ">" >> as | |
option starters, use C<< "><" >>. Confusing? Well, B<using a starter | |
argument is strongly deprecated> anyway. | |
=head2 Configuration variables | |
Previous versions of Getopt::Long used variables for the purpose of | |
configuring. Although manipulating these variables still work, it is | |
strongly encouraged to use the C<Configure> routine that was introduced | |
in version 2.17. Besides, it is much easier. | |
=head1 Tips and Techniques | |
=head2 Pushing multiple values in a hash option | |
Sometimes you want to combine the best of hashes and arrays. For | |
example, the command line: | |
--list add=first --list add=second --list add=third | |
where each successive 'list add' option will push the value of add | |
into array ref $list->{'add'}. The result would be like | |
$list->{add} = [qw(first second third)]; | |
This can be accomplished with a destination routine: | |
GetOptions('list=s%' => | |
sub { push(@{$list{$_[1]}}, $_[2]) }); | |
=head1 Troubleshooting | |
=head2 GetOptions does not return a false result when an option is not supplied | |
That's why they're called 'options'. | |
=head2 GetOptions does not split the command line correctly | |
The command line is not split by GetOptions, but by the command line | |
interpreter (CLI). On Unix, this is the shell. On Windows, it is | |
COMMAND.COM or CMD.EXE. Other operating systems have other CLIs. | |
It is important to know that these CLIs may behave different when the | |
command line contains special characters, in particular quotes or | |
backslashes. For example, with Unix shells you can use single quotes | |
(C<'>) and double quotes (C<">) to group words together. The following | |
alternatives are equivalent on Unix: | |
"two words" | |
'two words' | |
two\ words | |
In case of doubt, insert the following statement in front of your Perl | |
program: | |
print STDERR (join("|",@ARGV),"\n"); | |
to verify how your CLI passes the arguments to the program. | |
=head2 Undefined subroutine &main::GetOptions called | |
Are you running Windows, and did you write | |
use GetOpt::Long; | |
(note the capital 'O')? | |
=head2 How do I put a "-?" option into a Getopt::Long? | |
You can only obtain this using an alias, and Getopt::Long of at least | |
version 2.13. | |
use Getopt::Long; | |
GetOptions ("help|?"); # -help and -? will both set $opt_help | |
Other characters that can't appear in Perl identifiers are also supported | |
as aliases with Getopt::Long of at least version 2.39. | |
As of version 2.32 Getopt::Long provides auto-help, a quick and easy way | |
to add the options --help and -? to your program, and handle them. | |
See C<auto_help> in section L<Configuring Getopt::Long>. | |
=head1 AUTHOR | |
Johan Vromans <[email protected]> | |
=head1 COPYRIGHT AND DISCLAIMER | |
This program is Copyright 1990,2015 by Johan Vromans. | |
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or | |
modify it under the terms of the Perl Artistic License or 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. | |
If you do not have a copy of the GNU General Public License write to | |
the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, | |
MA 02139, USA. | |
=cut | |
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