/usr/include/ace/Get_Opt.h is in libace-dev 6.0.3+dfsg-0.1.
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//==========================================================================
/**
* @file Get_Opt.h
*
* $Id: Get_Opt.h 86367 2009-08-05 09:41:11Z johnnyw $
*
* @author Douglas C. Schmidt <schmidt@cs.wustl.edu>
* @author Don Hinton <dhinton@gmx.net> (added long option support)
*/
//==========================================================================
#ifndef ACE_GET_OPT_H
#define ACE_GET_OPT_H
#include /**/ "ace/pre.h"
#include "ace/SStringfwd.h"
#include "ace/Containers.h"
#if !defined (ACE_LACKS_PRAGMA_ONCE)
# pragma once
#endif /* ACE_LACKS_PRAGMA_ONCE */
#undef optind
#undef optarg
#undef opterr
ACE_BEGIN_VERSIONED_NAMESPACE_DECL
/*
* These definitions are for backward compatibility with previous versions.
* of ACE_Get_Opt.
*/
/**
* @class ACE_Get_Opt
*
* @brief Iterator for parsing command-line arguments.
*
* This is a C++ wrapper for getopt(3c) and getopt_long(3c).
*/
class ACE_Export ACE_Get_Opt
{
public:
/// Mutually exclusive ordering values.
enum
{
/**
* REQUIRE_ORDER means that processing stops and @c EOF is
* returned as soon as a non-option argument is found. @c opt_ind()
* will return the index of the next @a argv element so the program
* can continue processing the rest of the @a argv elements.
*/
REQUIRE_ORDER = 1,
/**
* PERMUTE_ARGS means the @a argv elements are reordered dynamically
* (permuted) so that all options appear first. When the elements are
* permuted, the order of the options and the following arguments are
* maintained. When the last option has been processed, @c EOF is
* returned and @c opt_ind() returns the index into the next non-option
* element.
*/
PERMUTE_ARGS = 2,
/**
* RETURN_IN_ORDER means each @a argv element is processed in the
* order is it seen. If the element is not recognized as an option, '1'
* is returned and @c opt_arg() refers to the @a argv element found.
*/
RETURN_IN_ORDER = 3
};
/// Mutually exclusive option argument mode used by long options.
enum OPTION_ARG_MODE
{
/// Doesn't take an argument.
NO_ARG = 0,
/// Requires an argument, same as passing ":" after a short option
/// character in @a optstring.
ARG_REQUIRED = 1,
/// Argument is optional, same as passing "::" after a short
/// option character in @a optstring.
ARG_OPTIONAL = 2
};
/**
* Constructor initializes the command line to be parsed. All information
* for parsing must be supplied to this constructor.
*
* @param argc The number of @a argv elements to parse.
* @param argv Command line tokens, such as would be passed
* to @c main().
* @param optstring Nul-terminated string containing the legitimate
* short option characters. A single colon ":"
* following an option character means the option
* requires an argument. A double colon "::" following
* an option character means the argument is optional.
* The argument is taken from the rest of the current
* @a argv element, or from the following @a argv
* element (only valid for required arguments;
* optional arguments must always reside in the same
* @a argv element). The argument value, if any is
* returned by the @c opt_arg() method.
* @a optstring can be extended by adding long options
* with corresponding short options via the
* @c long_option() method. If the short option
* already appears in @a optstring, the argument
* characteristics must match, otherwise it is added.
* See @c long_option() for more information.
* If 'W', followed by a semi-colon ';' appears in
* @a optstring, then any time a 'W' appears on the
* command line, the following argument is treated as
* a long option. For example, if the command line
* contains "program -W foo", "foo" is treated as a
* long option, that is, as if "program --foo" had
* been passed.
* The following characters can appear in @a optstring
* before any option characters, with the described
* effect:
* - '+' changes the @a ordering to @a REQUIRE_ORDER.
* - '-' changes the @a ordering to @a RETURN_IN_ORDER.
* - ':' changes the return value from @c operator()
* and get_opt() from '?' to ':' when an option
* requires an argument but none is specified.
*
* @param skip_args Optional (default 1). The specified number of
* initial elements in @a argv are skipped before
* parsing begins. Thus, the default prevents
* @a argv[0] (usually the command name) from being
* parsed. @a argc includes all @a argv elements,
* including any skipped elements.
* @param report_errors Optional, if non-zero then parsing errors cause
* an error message to be displayed from the
* @c operator() method before it returns. The
* error message is suppressed if this argument is 0.
* This setting also controls whether or not an error
* message is displayed in @c long_option() encounters
* an error.
* @param ordering Optional (default is @c PERMUTE_ARGS); determines
* how the @a argv elements are processed. This argument
* is overridden by two factors:
* -# The @c POSIXLY_CORRECT environment variable. If
* this environment variable is set, the ordering
* is changed to @c REQUIRE_ORDER.
* -# Leading characters in @a optstring (see above).
* Any leading ordering characters override both
* the @a ordering argument and any effect of the
* @c POSIXLY_CORRECT environment variable.
* @param long_only Optional. If non-zero, then long options can be
* specified using a single '-' on the command line.
* If the token is not a long option, it is processed
* as usual, that is, as a short option or set of
* short options.
*
* Multiple short options can be combined as long as only the last
* one can takes an argument. For example, if @a optstring is defined as
* @c "abc:" or @c "abc::" then the command line @e "program -abcxxx" short
* options @e a, @e b, and @e c are found with @e "xxx" as the argument for
* @e c.
* However, if the command line is specified as @e "program -acb" only
* options @e a and @e c are found with @e "b" as the argument for @e c.
* Also, for options with optional arguments, that is, those followed by
* "::", the argument must be in the same @a argv element, so "program -abc
* xxx" will only find "xxx" as the argument for @e c if @a optstring is
* specified as @c "abc:" not @c "abc::".
*/
#ifndef ACE_USES_WCHAR
ACE_Get_Opt (int argc,
ACE_TCHAR **argv,
const ACE_TCHAR *optstring = ACE_TEXT (""),
int skip_args = 1,
int report_errors = 0,
int ordering = PERMUTE_ARGS,
int long_only = 0);
#else
private:
void ACE_Get_Opt_Init (const ACE_TCHAR *optstring);
public:
ACE_Get_Opt (int argc,
ACE_TCHAR **argv,
const ACE_TCHAR *optstring = ACE_TEXT (""),
int skip_args = 1,
int report_errors = 0,
int ordering = PERMUTE_ARGS,
int long_only = 0);
ACE_Get_Opt (int argc,
ACE_TCHAR **argv,
const char *optstring,
int skip_args = 1,
int report_errors = 0,
int ordering = PERMUTE_ARGS,
int long_only = 0);
#endif
/// Default dtor.
~ACE_Get_Opt (void);
/**
* Scan elements of @a argv (whose length is @a argc) for short option
* characters given in @a optstring or long options (with no short
* option equivalents).
*
* If an element of @a argv starts with '-', and is not exactly "-"
* or "--", then it is a short option element. The characters of this
* element (aside from the initial '-') are option characters. If
* it starts with "--" followed by other characters it is treated as
* a long option. If @c operator() is called repeatedly, it returns
* each of the option characters from each of the option elements.
*
* @return The parsed option character. The following characters have
* special significance.
* @retval 0 A long option was found
* @retval '\?' Either an unknown option character was found, or the
* option is known but requires an argument, none was
* specified, and @a optstring did not contain a leading
* colon.
* @retval ':' A known option character was found but it requires an
* argument and none was supplied, and the first character
* of @a optstring was a colon. @c opt_opt() indicates
* which option was specified.
* @retval '1' @c RETURN_IN_ORDER was specified and a non-option argument
* was found.
* @retval EOF No more option characters were found. @c opt_ind() will
* return the index in @a argv of the first @a argv element
* that is not an option. If @c PERMUTE_ARGS was
* specified, the @a argv elements have been permuted so that
* those that are not options now come last.
*
* @note The standards are unclear with respect to the conditions under
* which '?' and ':' are returned, so we scan the initial characters of
* @a optstring up unto the first short option character for '+', '-',
* and ':' in order to determine ordering and missing argument behavior.
*/
int operator () (void);
/**
* For communication from @c operator() to the caller. When
* @c operator() finds an option that takes an argument, the argument
* value is returned from this method, otherwise it returns 0.
*/
ACE_TCHAR *opt_arg (void) const;
/**
* Returns the most recently matched option character. Especially
* useful when operator() returns ':' for an unspecified argument
* that's required, since this allows the caller to learn what option
* was specified without its required argument.
*/
int opt_opt (void);
/**
* Index in @a argv of the next element to be scanned. This is used
* for communication to and from the caller and for communication
* between successive calls to @c operator(). On entry to
* @c operator(), zero means this is the first call; initialize.
*
* When @c operator() returns @c EOF, this is the index of the first of
* the non-option elements that the caller should itself scan.
*
* Otherwise, @c opt_ind() communicates from one call to the next how
* much of @a argv has been scanned so far.
*/
int &opt_ind (void);
/// Adds a long option with no corresponding short option.
/**
* If the @a name option is seen, @c operator() returns 0.
*
* @param name The long option to add.
* @param has_arg Defines the argument requirements for
* the new option.
*
* @retval 0 Success
* @retval -1 The long option can not be added.
*/
int long_option (const ACE_TCHAR *name,
OPTION_ARG_MODE has_arg = NO_ARG);
/// Adds a long option with a corresponding short option.
/**
* @param name The long option to add.
* @param short_option A character, the short option that corresponds
* to @a name.
* @param has_arg Defines the argument requirements for
* the new option. If the short option has already
* been supplied in the @a optstring, @a has_arg
* must match or an error is returned; otherwise, the
* new short option is added to the @a optstring.
*
* @retval 0 Success
* @retval -1 The long option can not be added.
*/
int long_option (const ACE_TCHAR *name,
int short_option,
OPTION_ARG_MODE has_arg = NO_ARG);
/// Returns the name of the long option found on the last call to
/// @c operator() or 0 if none was found.
const ACE_TCHAR *long_option (void) const;
/// The number of arguments in the internal @c argv_.
int argc (void) const;
/// Accessor for the internal @c argv_ pointer.
ACE_TCHAR **argv (void) const;
/// Accessor for the @c last_option that was processed. This allows
/// applications to know if the found option was a short or long
/// option, and is especially useful in cases where it was invalid
/// and the caller wants to print out the invalid value.
const ACE_TCHAR *last_option (void) const;
/// Dump the state of an object.
void dump (void) const;
/// Return the @a optstring. This is handy to verify that calls to
/// long_option added short options as expected.
const ACE_TCHAR *optstring (void) const;
public:
/*
* The following five data members should be private, but that
* would break backwards compatibility. However, we recommend not
* writing code that uses these fields directly.
*/
/// Holds the @a argc count.
/**
* @deprecated This is public for backwards compatibility only.
* It will be made private in a release of ACE past 5.3. Do not
* write code that relies on this member being public; use the
* @c argc() accessor method instead.
*/
int argc_;
/// Holds the @a argv pointer.
/**
* @deprecated This is public for backwards compatibility only.
* It will be made private in a release of ACE past 5.3. Do not
* write code that relies on this member being public; use the
* @c argv() accessor method instead.
*/
ACE_TCHAR **argv_;
/// Index in @c argv_ of the next element to be scanned.
/**
* @deprecated This is public for backwards compatibility only.
* It will be made private in a release of ACE past 5.3. Do not
* write code that relies on this member being public; use the
* @c opt_ind() accessor method instead.
*/
int optind;
/// Callers store zero here to inhibit the error message for
/// unrecognized options.
/**
* @deprecated This is public for backwards compatibility only.
* It will be made private in a release of ACE past 5.3. Do not
* write code that relies on this member being public; use the
* @a report_errors argument to this class's constructor instead.
*/
int opterr;
/// Points to the option argument when one is found on last call to
/// @c operator().
/**
* @deprecated This is public for backwards compatibility only.
* It will be made private in a release of ACE past 5.3. Do not
* write code that relies on this member being public; use the
* @c opt_arg() accessor method instead.
*/
ACE_TCHAR *optarg;
private:
/**
* @class ACE_Get_Opt_Long_Option This class is for internal use
* in the ACE_Get_Opt class, and is inaccessible to users.
*/
class ACE_Get_Opt_Long_Option
{
public:
/// ctor
ACE_Get_Opt_Long_Option (const ACE_TCHAR *name,
int has_arg,
int val = 0);
/// Dtor.
~ACE_Get_Opt_Long_Option (void);
bool operator < (const ACE_Get_Opt_Long_Option &rhs);
/// Long option name.
const ACE_TCHAR *name_;
/// Contains value for <OPTION_ARG_MODE>.
int has_arg_;
/// Contains a valid short option character or zero if it doesn't
/// have a corresponding short option. It can also contain a
/// non-printable value that cannot be passed to <optstring> but
/// will be returned by <operator()>. This is handy for
/// simplifying long option handling, see tests/Get_Opt_Test.cpp
/// for an example of this technique.
int val_;
};
/// Updates nextchar_.
int nextchar_i (void);
/// Handles long options.
int long_option_i (void);
/// Handles short options.
int short_option_i (void);
/// If permuting args, this functions manages the nonopt_start_ and
/// nonopt_end_ indexes and makes calls to permute to actually
/// reorder the <argv>-elements.
void permute_args (void);
/// Handles reordering <argv>-elements.
int permute (void);
/// Set last_option.
void last_option (const ACE_TString &s);
// Disallow copying and assignment.
ACE_Get_Opt (const ACE_Get_Opt &);
ACE_Get_Opt &operator= (const ACE_Get_Opt &);
private:
/// Holds the option string.
ACE_TString *optstring_;
/// Treat all options as long options.
int long_only_;
/// Keeps track of whether or not a colon was passed in <optstring>.
/// This is used to determine the return value when required
/// arguments are missing.
int has_colon_;
/// This is the last option, short or long, that was processed. This
/// is handy to have in cases where the option passed was invalid.
ACE_TString *last_option_;
/**
* The next char to be scanned in the option-element in which the
* last option character we returned was found. This allows us to
* pick up the scan where we left off *
* If this is zero, or a null string, it means resume the scan
* by advancing to the next <argv>-element.
*/
ACE_TCHAR *nextchar_;
/// Most recently matched short option character.
int optopt_;
/// Keeps track of ordering mode (default <PERMUTE_ARGS>).
int ordering_;
/// Index of the first non-option <argv>-element found (only valid
/// when permuting).
int nonopt_start_;
/// Index of the <argv>-element following the last non-option element
/// (only valid when permuting).
int nonopt_end_;
/// Points to the long_option found on last call to <operator()>.
ACE_Get_Opt_Long_Option *long_option_;
/// Array of long options.
ACE_Array<ACE_Get_Opt_Long_Option*> long_opts_;
/// Declare the dynamic allocation hooks.
ACE_ALLOC_HOOK_DECLARE;
};
ACE_END_VERSIONED_NAMESPACE_DECL
#if defined (__ACE_INLINE__)
#include "ace/Get_Opt.inl"
#endif /* __ACE_INLINE__ */
#include /**/ "ace/post.h"
#endif /* ACE_GET_OPT_H */
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