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NAME

       getarg, arg_printusage — collect command line options

SYNOPSIS

       #include <getarg.h>

       int
       getarg(struct getargs *args, size_t num_args, int argc, char **argv, int *optind);

       void
       arg_printusage(struct getargs *args, size_t num_args, const char *progname, const char *extra_string);

DESCRIPTION

       getarg()  collects  any  command line options given to a program in an easily used way.  arg_printusage()
       pretty-prints the available options, with a short help text.

       args is the option specification to use, and it's an array of struct getargs elements.  num_args  is  the
       size  of  args (in elements).  argc and argv are the argument count and argument vector to extract option
       from.  optind is a pointer to an integer where the index to the last processed  argument  is  stored,  it
       must be initialised to the first index (minus one) to process (normally 0) before the first call.

       arg_printusage take the same args and num_args as getarg; progname is the name of the program (to be used
       in  the  help  text),  and  extra_string  is  a string to print after the actual options to indicate more
       arguments. The usefulness of this function is realised only be people who has used programs that has help
       strings that doesn't match what the code does.

       The getargs struct has the following elements.

       struct getargs{
           const char *long_name;
           char short_name;
           enum { arg_integer,
                  arg_string,
                  arg_flag,
                  arg_negative_flag,
                  arg_strings,
                  arg_double,
                  arg_collect
           } type;
           void *value;
           const char *help;
           const char *arg_help;
       };

       long_name is the long name of the option, it can be NULL, if you don't want a long name.   short_name  is
       the  characted  to  use  as  short option, it can be zero. If the option has a value the value field gets
       filled in with that value interpreted as specified by the type field.  help is a longer help  string  for
       the  option as a whole, if it's NULL the help text for the option is omitted (but it's still displayed in
       the synopsis).  arg_help is a description of the  argument,  if  NULL  a  default  value  will  be  used,
       depending on the type of the option:

       arg_integer        the argument is a signed integer, and value should point to an int.

       arg_string         the argument is a string, and value should point to a char*.

       arg_flag           the  argument  is  a  flag,  and  value should point to a int.  It gets filled in with
                          either zero or one, depending on how the option is given, the normal case  being  one.
                          Note  that  if  the  option  isn't  given,  the  value  isn't altered, so it should be
                          initialised to some useful default.

       arg_negative_flag  this is the same as arg_flag but it reverses the meaning of the flag  (a  given  short
                          option clears the flag), and the synopsis of a long option is negated.

       arg_strings        the  argument  can  be given multiple times, and the values are collected in an array;
                          value should be a pointer to a struct getarg_strings structure, which holds  a  length
                          and a string pointer.

       arg_double         argument  is  a  double  precision  floating  point value, and value should point to a
                          double.

       arg_collect        allows more fine-grained control of the option parsing process.   value  should  be  a
                          pointer to a getarg_collect_info structure:

                          typedef int (*getarg_collect_func)(int short_opt,
                                                             int argc,
                                                             char **argv,
                                                             int *optind,
                                                             int *optarg,
                                                             void *data);

                          typedef struct getarg_collect_info {
                              getarg_collect_func func;
                              void *data;
                          } getarg_collect_info;

                          With  the func member set to a function to call, and data to some application specific
                          data. The parameters to the collect function are:

                          short_flag non-zero if this call is via a short option flag, zero otherwise

                          argc, argv the whole argument list

                          optind pointer to the index in argv where the flag is

                          optarg pointer to the index in argv[*optind] where the flag name starts

                          data application specific data

                          You can modify *optind, and *optarg, but to do this correct you (more or less) have to
                          know about the inner workings of getarg.

                          You can skip parts of arguments by increasing *optarg (you could implement the -z3 set
                          of flags from gzip with this), or whole argument strings by increasing *optind  (let's
                          say you want a flag -c x y z to specify a coordinate); if you also have to set *optarg
                          to a sane value.

                          The   collect   function  should  return  one  of  ARG_ERR_NO_MATCH,  ARG_ERR_BAD_ARG,
                          ARG_ERR_NO_ARG, ENOMEM on error, zero otherwise.

                          For  your  convenience  there  is  a  function,  getarg_optarg(),  that  returns   the
                          traditional  argument  string,  and  you  pass it all arguments, sans data, that where
                          given to the collection function.

                          Don't use this more this unless you absolutely have to.

       Option parsing is similar to what getopt uses. Short options without arguments can be compressed (-xyz is
       the same as -x -y -z), and short options with arguments take these as either the rest of the  argv-string
       or as the next option (-ofoo, or -o foo).

       Long  option  names  are prefixed with -- (double dash), and the value with a = (equal), --foo=bar.  Long
       option flags can either be specified  as  they  are  (--help),  or  with  an  (boolean  parsable)  option
       (--help=yes,  --help=true, or similar), or they can also be negated (--no-help is the same as --help=no),
       and  if  you're  really  confused  you  can  do  it   multiple   times   (--no-no-help=false,   or   even
       --no-no-help=maybe).

EXAMPLE

       #include <stdio.h>
       #include <string.h>
       #include <getarg.h>

       char *source = "Ouagadougou";
       char *destination;
       int weight;
       int include_catalog = 1;
       int help_flag;

       struct getargs args[] = {
           { "source",      's', arg_string,  &source,
             "source of shippment", "city" },
           { "destination", 'd', arg_string,  &destination,
             "destination of shippment", "city" },
           { "weight",      'w', arg_integer, &weight,
             "weight of shippment", "tons" },
           { "catalog",     'c', arg_negative_flag, &include_catalog,
             "include product catalog" },
           { "help",        'h', arg_flag, &help_flag }
       };

       int num_args = sizeof(args) / sizeof(args[0]); /* number of elements in args */

       const char *progname = "ship++";

       int
       main(int argc, char **argv)
       {
           int optind = 0;
           if (getarg(args, num_args, argc, argv, &optind)) {
               arg_printusage(args, num_args, progname, "stuff...");
               exit (1);
           }
           if (help_flag) {
               arg_printusage(args, num_args, progname, "stuff...");
               exit (0);
           }
           if (destination == NULL) {
               fprintf(stderr, "%s: must specify destination\n", progname);
               exit(1);
           }
           if (strcmp(source, destination) == 0) {
               fprintf(stderr, "%s: destination must be different from source\n");
               exit(1);
           }
           /* include more stuff here ... */
           exit(2);
       }

       The output help output from this program looks like this:

       $ ship++ --help
       Usage: ship++ [--source=city] [-s city] [--destination=city] [-d city]
          [--weight=tons] [-w tons] [--no-catalog] [-c] [--help] [-h] stuff...
       -s city, --source=city      source of shippment
       -d city, --destination=city destination of shippment
       -w tons, --weight=tons      weight of shippment
       -c, --no-catalog            include product catalog

BUGS

       It  should  be more flexible, so it would be possible to use other more complicated option syntaxes, such
       as what ps(1), and tar(1), uses, or the AFS model where you can skip  the  flag  names  as  long  as  the
       options come in the correct order.

       Options with multiple arguments should be handled better.

       Should be integrated with SL.

       It's very confusing that the struct you pass in is called getargS.

SEE ALSO

       getopt(3)

ROKEN                                          September 24, 1999                                      GETARG(3)