From 772f20abb0a3a0979c440114bf3a1cff5b3cef03 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: cvpcs Date: Wed, 2 Jun 2010 11:02:31 -0500 Subject: initial import of bash 4.1 --- examples/functions/getoptx.bash | 301 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 301 insertions(+) create mode 100644 examples/functions/getoptx.bash (limited to 'examples/functions/getoptx.bash') diff --git a/examples/functions/getoptx.bash b/examples/functions/getoptx.bash new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d402c7d --- /dev/null +++ b/examples/functions/getoptx.bash @@ -0,0 +1,301 @@ +#From: "Grigoriy Strokin" +#Newsgroups: comp.unix.shell +#Subject: BASH: getopt function that parses long-named options +#Date: Mon, 22 Dec 1997 20:35:18 +0300 + +#Hi, I have written a BASH function named getoptex, that is like bash builtin +#"getopts", but does parse long-named options and optional arguments. It only +#uses builtin bash commands, so it is very fast. In order to use it in your +#bash scripts, include a command ". getopt.sh" ( getopt.sh) to the file +#containing your script, and that will define functions getopt, getoptex, and +#optlistex (the file getopt.sh with its detailed description is listed +#below). + +#*** file getopt.sh *** + +#! /bin/bash +# +# getopt.sh: +# functions like getopts but do long-named options parsing +# and support optional arguments +# +# Version 1.0 1997 by Grigoriy Strokin (grg@philol.msu.ru), Public Domain +# Date created: December 21, 1997 +# Date modified: December 21, 1997 +# +# IMPORTANT FEATURES +# +# 1) Parses both short and long-named options +# 2) Supports optional arguments +# 3) Only uses bash builtins, thus no calls to external +# utilities such as expr or sed is done. Therefore, +# parsing speed is high enough +# +# +# DESCRIPTION +# +# FUNCTION getopt +# Usage: getopt OPTLIST {"$@"|ALTERNATIVE_PARAMETERS} +# +# like getopts, but parse options with both required and optional arguments, +# Options with optional arguments must have "." instead of ":" after them. +# Furthemore, a variable name to place option name cannot be specified +# and is always placed in OPTOPT variable +# +# This function is provided for compatibility with getopts() +# OPTLIST style, and it actually calls getoptex (see bellow) +# +# NOTE that a list of parameters is required and must be either "$@", +# if processing command line arguments, or some alternative parameters. +# +# FUNCTION getoptex +# Usage: getoptex OPTION_LIST {"$@"|ALTERNATIVE_PARAMETERS} +# +# like getopts, but parse long-named options. +# +# Both getopt and getoptex return 0 if an option has been parsed, +# and 1 if all options are already parsed or an error occured +# +# Both getopt and getoptex set or test the following variables: +# +# OPTERR -- tested for whether error messages must be given for invalid +options +# +# OPTOPT -- set to the name of an option parsed, +# or to "?" if no more options or error +# OPTARG -- set to the option argument, if any; +# unset if ther is no argument; +# on error, set to the erroneous option name +# +# OPTIND -- Initialized to 1. +# Then set to the number of the next parameter to be parsed +# when getopt or getoptex will be called next time. +# When all options are parsed, contains a number of +# the first non-option argument. +# +# +# OPTOFS -- If a parameter number $OPTIND containg an option parsed +# does not contain any more options, OPTOFS is unset; +# otherwise, OPTOFS is set to such a number of "?" signs +# which is equal to the number of options parsed +# +# You might not set variables OPTIND and OPTOFS yourself +# unless you want to parse a list of parameters more than once. +# Otherwise, you whould unset OPTIND (or set it to 1) +# and unset OPTOFS each time you want to parse a new parameters +list +# +# Option list format is DIFFERENT from one for getopts or getopt. +getopts-style +# option list can be converted to getoptex-style using a function optlistex +# (see bellow) +# +# DESCRIPTION of option list used with getoptex: +# Option names are separated by whitespace. Options consiting of +# more than one character are treated as long-named (--option) +# +# Special characters can appear at the and of option names specifying +# whether an argument is required (default is ";"): +# ";" (default) -- no argument +# ":" -- required argument +# "," -- optional argument +# +# For example, an option list "a b c help version f: file: separator." +# defines the following options: +# -a, -b, -c, --help, --version -- no argument +# -f, --file -- argument required +# --separator -- optional argument +# +# FUNCTION optlistex +# Usage new_style_optlist=`optlistex OLD_STYLE_OPTLIST` +# +# Converts getopts-style option list in a format suitable for use with getoptex +# Namely, it inserts spaces after each option name. +# +# +# HOW TO USE +# +# In order o use in your bash scripts the functions described, +# include a command ". getopt.sh" to the file containing the script, +# which will define functions getopt, getoptex, and optlistex +# +# EXAMPLES +# +# See files 'getopt1' and 'getopt2' that contain sample scripts that use +# getopt and getoptex functions respectively +# +# +# Please send your comments to grg@philol.msu.ru + +function getoptex() +{ + let $# || return 1 + local optlist="${1#;}" + let OPTIND || OPTIND=1 + [ $OPTIND -lt $# ] || return 1 + shift $OPTIND + if [ "$1" != "-" ] && [ "$1" != "${1#-}" ] + then OPTIND=$[OPTIND+1]; if [ "$1" != "--" ] + then + local o + o="-${1#-$OPTOFS}" + for opt in ${optlist#;} + do + OPTOPT="${opt%[;.:]}" + unset OPTARG + local opttype="${opt##*[^;:.]}" + [ -z "$opttype" ] && opttype=";" + if [ ${#OPTOPT} -gt 1 ] + then # long-named option + case $o in + "--$OPTOPT") + if [ "$opttype" != ":" ]; then return 0; fi + OPTARG="$2" + if [ -z "$OPTARG" ]; + then # error: must have an agrument + let OPTERR && echo "$0: error: $OPTOPT must have an argument" >&2 + OPTARG="$OPTOPT"; + OPTOPT="?" + return 1; + fi + OPTIND=$[OPTIND+1] # skip option's argument + return 0 + ;; + "--$OPTOPT="*) + if [ "$opttype" = ";" ]; + then # error: must not have arguments + let OPTERR && echo "$0: error: $OPTOPT must not have arguments" >&2 + OPTARG="$OPTOPT" + OPTOPT="?" + return 1 + fi + OPTARG=${o#"--$OPTOPT="} + return 0 + ;; + esac + else # short-named option + case "$o" in + "-$OPTOPT") + unset OPTOFS + [ "$opttype" != ":" ] && return 0 + OPTARG="$2" + if [ -z "$OPTARG" ] + then + echo "$0: error: -$OPTOPT must have an argument" >&2 + OPTARG="$OPTOPT" + OPTOPT="?" + return 1 + fi + OPTIND=$[OPTIND+1] # skip option's argument + return 0 + ;; + "-$OPTOPT"*) + if [ $opttype = ";" ] + then # an option with no argument is in a chain of options + OPTOFS="$OPTOFS?" # move to the next option in the chain + OPTIND=$[OPTIND-1] # the chain still has other options + return 0 + else + unset OPTOFS + OPTARG="${o#-$OPTOPT}" + return 0 + fi + ;; + esac + fi + done + echo "$0: error: invalid option: $o" + fi; fi + OPTOPT="?" + unset OPTARG + return 1 +} +function optlistex +{ + local l="$1" + local m # mask + local r # to store result + while [ ${#m} -lt $[${#l}-1] ]; do m="$m?"; done # create a "???..." mask + while [ -n "$l" ] + do + r="${r:+"$r "}${l%$m}" # append the first character of $l to $r + l="${l#?}" # cut the first charecter from $l + m="${m#?}" # cut one "?" sign from m + if [ -n "${l%%[^:.;]*}" ] + then # a special character (";", ".", or ":") was found + r="$r${l%$m}" # append it to $r + l="${l#?}" # cut the special character from l + m="${m#?}" # cut one more "?" sign + fi + done + echo $r +} +function getopt() +{ + local optlist=`optlistex "$1"` + shift + getoptex "$optlist" "$@" + return $? +} + +#************************************** +# cut here +#************************************** +#*** (end of getopt.sh) *** + + +#*** file getopt1 *** + +#! /bin/bash +# getopt1: +# Sample script using the function getopt +# +# Type something like "getopt1 -ab -d 10 -e20 text1 text2" +# on the command line to see how it works +# +# See getopt.sh for more information +#. getopt.sh +#echo Using getopt to parse arguments: +#while getopt "abcd:e." "$@" +#do +# echo "Option <$OPTOPT> ${OPTARG:+has an arg <$OPTARG>}" +#done +#shift $[OPTIND-1] +#for arg in "$@" +#do +# echo "Non option argument <$arg>" +#done +# +#************************************** +# cut here +#************************************** +#*** (end of getopt1) *** +# +# +#*** file getopt2 *** +# +#! /bin/bash +# getopt2: +# Sample script using the function getoptex +# +# Type something like "getopt2 -ab -d 10 -e20 --opt1 --opt4=100 text1 text2" +# to see how it works +# +# See getopt.sh for more information +. getopt.sh +#echo Using getoptex to parse arguments: +#while getoptex "a; b; c; d: e. opt1 opt2 opt3 opt4: opt5." "$@" +#do +# echo "Option <$OPTOPT> ${OPTARG:+has an arg <$OPTARG>}" +#done +#shift $[OPTIND-1] +#for arg in "$@" +#do +# echo "Non option argument <$arg>" +#done +# +#************************************** +# cut here +#************************************** +#*** (end of getopt2) *** + -- cgit v1.1