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[unix-history] / usr / src / usr.bin / pr / getopt.c
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1/* Getopt for GNU.
2 Copyright (C) 1987, 1989, 1990 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3
4 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
5 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
6 the Free Software Foundation; either version 1, or (at your option)
7 any later version.
8
9 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
10 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
11 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
12 GNU General Public License for more details.
13
14 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
15 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
16 Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */
17\f
18#ifdef __STDC__
19#define CONST const
20#else
21#define CONST
22#endif
23
24/* This version of `getopt' appears to the caller like standard Unix `getopt'
25 but it behaves differently for the user, since it allows the user
26 to intersperse the options with the other arguments.
27
28 As `getopt' works, it permutes the elements of `argv' so that,
29 when it is done, all the options precede everything else. Thus
30 all application programs are extended to handle flexible argument order.
31
32 Setting the environment variable _POSIX_OPTION_ORDER disables permutation.
33 Then the behavior is completely standard.
34
35 GNU application programs can use a third alternative mode in which
36 they can distinguish the relative order of options and other arguments. */
37
38#include <stdio.h>
39
40/* If compiled with GNU C, use the built-in alloca */
41#ifdef __GNUC__
42#define alloca __builtin_alloca
43#else /* not __GNUC__ */
44#ifdef sparc
45#include <alloca.h>
46#else
47char *alloca ();
48#endif
49#endif /* not __GNUC__ */
50
51#if defined(STDC_HEADERS) || defined(__GNU_LIBRARY__)
52#include <stdlib.h>
53#include <string.h>
54#define bcopy(s, d, n) memcpy ((d), (s), (n))
55#define index strchr
56#else
57
58#ifdef USG
59#include <string.h>
60#define bcopy(s, d, n) memcpy ((d), (s), (n))
61#define index strchr
62#else
63#ifdef VMS
64#include <string.h>
65#else
66#include <strings.h>
67#endif
68void bcopy ();
69#endif
70
71char *getenv ();
72char *malloc ();
73#endif
74
75/* For communication from `getopt' to the caller.
76 When `getopt' finds an option that takes an argument,
77 the argument value is returned here.
78 Also, when `ordering' is RETURN_IN_ORDER,
79 each non-option ARGV-element is returned here. */
80
81char *optarg = 0;
82
83/* Index in ARGV of the next element to be scanned.
84 This is used for communication to and from the caller
85 and for communication between successive calls to `getopt'.
86
87 On entry to `getopt', zero means this is the first call; initialize.
88
89 When `getopt' returns EOF, this is the index of the first of the
90 non-option elements that the caller should itself scan.
91
92 Otherwise, `optind' communicates from one call to the next
93 how much of ARGV has been scanned so far. */
94
95int optind = 0;
96
97/* The next char to be scanned in the option-element
98 in which the last option character we returned was found.
99 This allows us to pick up the scan where we left off.
100
101 If this is zero, or a null string, it means resume the scan
102 by advancing to the next ARGV-element. */
103
104static char *nextchar;
105
106/* Callers store zero here to inhibit the error message
107 for unrecognized options. */
108
109int opterr = 1;
110
111/* Describe how to deal with options that follow non-option ARGV-elements.
112
113 If the caller did not specify anything,
114 the default is REQUIRE_ORDER if the environment variable
115 _POSIX_OPTION_ORDER is defined, PERMUTE otherwise.
116
117 REQUIRE_ORDER means don't recognize them as options;
118 stop option processing when the first non-option is seen.
119 This is what Unix does.
120 This mode of operation is selected by either setting the environment
121 variable _POSIX_OPTION_ORDER, or using `+' as the first character
122 of the list of option characters.
123
124 PERMUTE is the default. We permute the contents of ARGV as we scan,
125 so that eventually all the non-options are at the end. This allows options
126 to be given in any order, even with programs that were not written to
127 expect this.
128
129 RETURN_IN_ORDER is an option available to programs that were written
130 to expect options and other ARGV-elements in any order and that care about
131 the ordering of the two. We describe each non-option ARGV-element
132 as if it were the argument of an option with character code 1.
133 Using `-' as the first character of the list of option characters
134 selects this mode of operation.
135
136 The special argument `--' forces an end of option-scanning regardless
137 of the value of `ordering'. In the case of RETURN_IN_ORDER, only
138 `--' can cause `getopt' to return EOF with `optind' != ARGC. */
139
140static enum
141{
142 REQUIRE_ORDER, PERMUTE, RETURN_IN_ORDER
143} ordering;
144
145/* Describe the long-named options requested by the application.
146 _GETOPT_LONG_OPTIONS is a vector of `struct option' terminated by an
147 element containing a name which is zero.
148 The field `has_arg' is 1 if the option takes an argument,
149 2 if it takes an optional argument. */
150
151struct option
152{
153 char *name;
154 int has_arg;
155 int *flag;
156 int val;
157};
158
159CONST struct option *_getopt_long_options;
160
161int _getopt_long_only = 0;
162
163/* Index in _GETOPT_LONG_OPTIONS of the long-named option actually found.
164 Only valid when a long-named option was found. */
165
166int option_index;
167\f
168/* Handle permutation of arguments. */
169
170/* Describe the part of ARGV that contains non-options that have
171 been skipped. `first_nonopt' is the index in ARGV of the first of them;
172 `last_nonopt' is the index after the last of them. */
173
174static int first_nonopt;
175static int last_nonopt;
176
177/* Exchange two adjacent subsequences of ARGV.
178 One subsequence is elements [first_nonopt,last_nonopt)
179 which contains all the non-options that have been skipped so far.
180 The other is elements [last_nonopt,optind), which contains all
181 the options processed since those non-options were skipped.
182
183 `first_nonopt' and `last_nonopt' are relocated so that they describe
184 the new indices of the non-options in ARGV after they are moved. */
185
186static void
187exchange (argv)
188 char **argv;
189{
190 int nonopts_size = (last_nonopt - first_nonopt) * sizeof (char *);
191 char **temp = (char **) alloca (nonopts_size);
192
193 /* Interchange the two blocks of data in ARGV. */
194
195 bcopy (&argv[first_nonopt], temp, nonopts_size);
196 bcopy (&argv[last_nonopt], &argv[first_nonopt],
197 (optind - last_nonopt) * sizeof (char *));
198 bcopy (temp, &argv[first_nonopt + optind - last_nonopt], nonopts_size);
199
200 /* Update records for the slots the non-options now occupy. */
201
202 first_nonopt += (optind - last_nonopt);
203 last_nonopt = optind;
204}
205\f
206/* Scan elements of ARGV (whose length is ARGC) for option characters
207 given in OPTSTRING.
208
209 If an element of ARGV starts with '-', and is not exactly "-" or "--",
210 then it is an option element. The characters of this element
211 (aside from the initial '-') are option characters. If `getopt'
212 is called repeatedly, it returns successively each of the option characters
213 from each of the option elements.
214
215 If `getopt' finds another option character, it returns that character,
216 updating `optind' and `nextchar' so that the next call to `getopt' can
217 resume the scan with the following option character or ARGV-element.
218
219 If there are no more option characters, `getopt' returns `EOF'.
220 Then `optind' is the index in ARGV of the first ARGV-element
221 that is not an option. (The ARGV-elements have been permuted
222 so that those that are not options now come last.)
223
224 OPTSTRING is a string containing the legitimate option characters.
225 If an option character is seen that is not listed in OPTSTRING,
226 return '?' after printing an error message. If you set `opterr' to
227 zero, the error message is suppressed but we still return '?'.
228
229 If a char in OPTSTRING is followed by a colon, that means it wants an arg,
230 so the following text in the same ARGV-element, or the text of the following
231 ARGV-element, is returned in `optarg'. Two colons mean an option that
232 wants an optional arg; if there is text in the current ARGV-element,
233 it is returned in `optarg', otherwise `optarg' is set to zero.
234
235 If OPTSTRING starts with `-' or `+', it requests different methods of
236 handling the non-option ARGV-elements.
237 See the comments about RETURN_IN_ORDER and REQUIRE_ORDER, above.
238
239 Long-named options begin with `+' instead of `-'.
240 Their names may be abbreviated as long as the abbreviation is unique
241 or is an exact match for some defined option. If they have an
242 argument, it follows the option name in the same ARGV-element, separated
243 from the option name by a `=', or else the in next ARGV-element.
244 When `getopt' finds a long-named option, it returns 0 if that option's
245 `flag' field is nonzero, the value of the option's `val' field
246 otherwise. */
247
248int
249getopt (argc, argv, optstring)
250 int argc;
251 char **argv;
252 CONST char *optstring;
253{
254 optarg = 0;
255
256 /* Initialize the internal data when the first call is made.
257 Start processing options with ARGV-element 1 (since ARGV-element 0
258 is the program name); the sequence of previously skipped
259 non-option ARGV-elements is empty. */
260
261 if (optind == 0)
262 {
263 first_nonopt = last_nonopt = optind = 1;
264
265 nextchar = 0;
266
267 /* Determine how to handle the ordering of options and nonoptions. */
268
269 if (optstring[0] == '-')
270 {
271 ordering = RETURN_IN_ORDER;
272 ++optstring;
273 }
274 else if (optstring[0] == '+')
275 {
276 ordering = REQUIRE_ORDER;
277 ++optstring;
278 }
279 else if (getenv ("_POSIX_OPTION_ORDER") != 0)
280 ordering = REQUIRE_ORDER;
281 else
282 ordering = PERMUTE;
283 }
284
285 if (nextchar == 0 || *nextchar == 0)
286 {
287 if (ordering == PERMUTE)
288 {
289 /* If we have just processed some options following some non-options,
290 exchange them so that the options come first. */
291
292 if (first_nonopt != last_nonopt && last_nonopt != optind)
293 exchange (argv);
294 else if (last_nonopt != optind)
295 first_nonopt = optind;
296
297 /* Now skip any additional non-options
298 and extend the range of non-options previously skipped. */
299
300 while (optind < argc
301 && (argv[optind][0] != '-'
302 || argv[optind][1] == 0)
303 && (_getopt_long_options == 0
304 || argv[optind][0] != '+'
305 || argv[optind][1] == 0))
306 optind++;
307 last_nonopt = optind;
308 }
309
310 /* Special ARGV-element `--' means premature end of options.
311 Skip it like a null option,
312 then exchange with previous non-options as if it were an option,
313 then skip everything else like a non-option. */
314
315 if (optind != argc && !strcmp (argv[optind], "--"))
316 {
317 optind++;
318
319 if (first_nonopt != last_nonopt && last_nonopt != optind)
320 exchange (argv);
321 else if (first_nonopt == last_nonopt)
322 first_nonopt = optind;
323 last_nonopt = argc;
324
325 optind = argc;
326 }
327
328 /* If we have done all the ARGV-elements, stop the scan
329 and back over any non-options that we skipped and permuted. */
330
331 if (optind == argc)
332 {
333 /* Set the next-arg-index to point at the non-options
334 that we previously skipped, so the caller will digest them. */
335 if (first_nonopt != last_nonopt)
336 optind = first_nonopt;
337 return EOF;
338 }
339
340 /* If we have come to a non-option and did not permute it,
341 either stop the scan or describe it to the caller and pass it by. */
342
343 if ((argv[optind][0] != '-' || argv[optind][1] == 0)
344 && (_getopt_long_options == 0
345 || argv[optind][0] != '+' || argv[optind][1] == 0))
346 {
347 if (ordering == REQUIRE_ORDER)
348 return EOF;
349 optarg = argv[optind++];
350 return 1;
351 }
352
353 /* We have found another option-ARGV-element.
354 Start decoding its characters. */
355
356 nextchar = argv[optind] + 1;
357 }
358
359 if (_getopt_long_options != 0
360 && (argv[optind][0] == '+'
361 || (_getopt_long_only && argv[optind][0] == '-'))
362 )
363 {
364 CONST struct option *p;
365 char *s = nextchar;
366 int exact = 0;
367 int ambig = 0;
368 CONST struct option *pfound = 0;
369 int indfound;
370
371 while (*s && *s != '=')
372 s++;
373
374 /* Test all options for either exact match or abbreviated matches. */
375 for (p = _getopt_long_options, option_index = 0; p->name;
376 p++, option_index++)
377 if (!strncmp (p->name, nextchar, s - nextchar))
378 {
379 if (s - nextchar == strlen (p->name))
380 {
381 /* Exact match found. */
382 pfound = p;
383 indfound = option_index;
384 exact = 1;
385 break;
386 }
387 else if (pfound == 0)
388 {
389 /* First nonexact match found. */
390 pfound = p;
391 indfound = option_index;
392 }
393 else
394 /* Second nonexact match found. */
395 ambig = 1;
396 }
397
398 if (ambig && !exact)
399 {
400 fprintf (stderr, "%s: option `%s' is ambiguous\n",
401 argv[0], argv[optind]);
402 nextchar += strlen (nextchar);
403 optind++;
404 return '?';
405 }
406
407 if (pfound != 0)
408 {
409 option_index = indfound;
410 optind++;
411 if (*s)
412 {
413 if (pfound->has_arg > 0)
414 optarg = s + 1;
415 else
416 {
417 fprintf (stderr,
418 "%s: option `%c%s' doesn't allow an argument\n",
419 argv[0], argv[optind - 1][0], pfound->name);
420 nextchar += strlen (nextchar);
421 return '?';
422 }
423 }
424 else if (pfound->has_arg == 1)
425 {
426 if (optind < argc)
427 optarg = argv[optind++];
428 else
429 {
430 fprintf (stderr, "%s: option `%s' requires an argument\n",
431 argv[0], argv[optind - 1]);
432 nextchar += strlen (nextchar);
433 return '?';
434 }
435 }
436 nextchar += strlen (nextchar);
437 if (pfound->flag)
438 {
439 *(pfound->flag) = pfound->val;
440 return 0;
441 }
442 return pfound->val;
443 }
444 /* Can't find it as a long option. If this is getopt_long_only,
445 and the option starts with '-' and is a valid short
446 option, then interpret it as a short option. Otherwise it's
447 an error. */
448 if (_getopt_long_only == 0 || argv[optind][0] == '+' ||
449 index (optstring, *nextchar) == 0)
450 {
451 if (opterr != 0)
452 fprintf (stderr, "%s: unrecognized option `%c%s'\n",
453 argv[0], argv[optind][0], nextchar);
454 nextchar += strlen (nextchar);
455 optind++;
456 return '?';
457 }
458 }
459
460 /* Look at and handle the next option-character. */
461
462 {
463 char c = *nextchar++;
464 char *temp = index (optstring, c);
465
466 /* Increment `optind' when we start to process its last character. */
467 if (*nextchar == 0)
468 optind++;
469
470 if (temp == 0 || c == ':')
471 {
472 if (opterr != 0)
473 {
474 if (c < 040 || c >= 0177)
475 fprintf (stderr, "%s: unrecognized option, character code 0%o\n",
476 argv[0], c);
477 else
478 fprintf (stderr, "%s: unrecognized option `-%c'\n",
479 argv[0], c);
480 }
481 return '?';
482 }
483 if (temp[1] == ':')
484 {
485 if (temp[2] == ':')
486 {
487 /* This is an option that accepts an argument optionally. */
488 if (*nextchar != 0)
489 {
490 optarg = nextchar;
491 optind++;
492 }
493 else
494 optarg = 0;
495 nextchar = 0;
496 }
497 else
498 {
499 /* This is an option that requires an argument. */
500 if (*nextchar != 0)
501 {
502 optarg = nextchar;
503 /* If we end this ARGV-element by taking the rest as an arg,
504 we must advance to the next element now. */
505 optind++;
506 }
507 else if (optind == argc)
508 {
509 if (opterr != 0)
510 fprintf (stderr, "%s: option `-%c' requires an argument\n",
511 argv[0], c);
512 c = '?';
513 }
514 else
515 /* We already incremented `optind' once;
516 increment it again when taking next ARGV-elt as argument. */
517 optarg = argv[optind++];
518 nextchar = 0;
519 }
520 }
521 return c;
522 }
523}
524\f
525#ifdef TEST
526
527/* Compile with -DTEST to make an executable for use in testing
528 the above definition of `getopt'. */
529
530int
531main (argc, argv)
532 int argc;
533 char **argv;
534{
535 int c;
536 int digit_optind = 0;
537
538 while (1)
539 {
540 int this_option_optind = optind ? optind : 1;
541
542 c = getopt (argc, argv, "abc:d:0123456789");
543 if (c == EOF)
544 break;
545
546 switch (c)
547 {
548 case '0':
549 case '1':
550 case '2':
551 case '3':
552 case '4':
553 case '5':
554 case '6':
555 case '7':
556 case '8':
557 case '9':
558 if (digit_optind != 0 && digit_optind != this_option_optind)
559 printf ("digits occur in two different argv-elements.\n");
560 digit_optind = this_option_optind;
561 printf ("option %c\n", c);
562 break;
563
564 case 'a':
565 printf ("option a\n");
566 break;
567
568 case 'b':
569 printf ("option b\n");
570 break;
571
572 case 'c':
573 printf ("option c with value `%s'\n", optarg);
574 break;
575
576 case '?':
577 break;
578
579 default:
580 printf ("?? getopt returned character code 0%o ??\n", c);
581 }
582 }
583
584 if (optind < argc)
585 {
586 printf ("non-option ARGV-elements: ");
587 while (optind < argc)
588 printf ("%s ", argv[optind++]);
589 printf ("\n");
590 }
591
592 exit (0);
593}
594
595#endif /* TEST */