Skip to content

Erlang module to parse command line arguments using the GNU getopt syntax

License

BSD-3-Clause, BSD-3-Clause licenses found

Licenses found

BSD-3-Clause
LICENSE
BSD-3-Clause
LICENSE.txt
Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

jcomellas/getopt

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Getopt for Erlang

Command-line parsing module that uses a syntax similar to that of GNU getopt.

Requirements

You should only need a somewhat recent version of Erlang/OTP. The module has been tested with all versions of Erlang starting with R13B and ending with 20.

You also need a recent version of rebar3 in the system path.

Installation

To compile the module you simply run rebar3 compile.

To run the unit tests run rebar3 eunit.

To build the (very) limited documentation run rebar edoc.

To use getopt in your project you can just add it as a dependency in your rebar.config file in the following way:

{deps,
 [
  {getopt, "1.0.3"}
 ]
}

Usage

The getopt module provides four functions:

parse([{Name, Short, Long, ArgSpec, Help}], Args :: string() | [string()]) ->
    {ok, {Options, NonOptionArgs}} | {error, {Reason, Data}}

tokenize(CmdLine :: string()) -> [string()]

usage([{Name, Short, Long, ArgSpec, Help}], ProgramName :: string()) -> ok

usage([{Name, Short, Long, ArgSpec, Help}], ProgramName :: string(),
      CmdLineTail :: string()) -> ok

usage([{Name, Short, Long, ArgSpec, Help}], ProgramName :: string(),
      CmdLineTail :: string(), OptionsTail :: [{string(), string}]) -> ok

The parse/2 function receives a list of tuples with the command line option specifications. The type specification for the tuple is:

-type arg_type() :: 'atom' | 'binary' | 'utf8_binary' | 'boolean' | 'float' | 'integer' | 'string'.

-type arg_value() :: atom() | binary() | boolean() | float() | integer() | string().

-type arg_spec() :: arg_type() | {arg_type(), arg_value()} | undefined.

-type option_spec() :: {
                   Name    :: atom(),
                   Short   :: char() | undefined,
                   Long    :: string() | undefined,
                   ArgSpec :: arg_spec(),
                   Help    :: string() | undefined
                  }.

The elements of the tuple are:

  • Name: name of the option.
  • Short: character for the short option (e.g. $i for -i).
  • Long: string for the long option (e.g. "info" for --info).
  • ArgSpec: data type and optional default value the argument will be converted to.
  • Help: help message that is shown for the option when usage/2 is called.

e.g.

{port, $p, "port", {integer, 5432}, "Database server port"}

The second parameter receives the list of arguments as passed to the main/1 function in escripts or the unparsed command line as a string.

If the function is successful parsing the command line arguments it will return a tuple containing the parsed options and the non-option arguments. The options will be represented by a list of key-value pairs with the Name of the option as key and the argument from the command line as value. If the option doesn't have an argument, only the atom corresponding to its Name will be added to the list of options. For the example given above we could get something like {port, 5432}. The non-option arguments are just a list of strings with all the arguments that did not have corresponding options.

e.g. Given the following option specifications:

OptSpecList =
    [
     {host,    $h,        "host",    {string, "localhost"}, "Database server host"},
     {port,    $p,        "port",    integer,               "Database server port"},
     {dbname,  undefined, "dbname",  {string, "users"},     "Database name"},
     {xml,     $x,        undefined, undefined,             "Output data in XML"},
     {verbose, $v,        "verbose", integer,               "Verbosity level"},
     {file,    undefined, undefined, string,                "Output file"}
    ].

And this command line:

Args = "-h myhost --port=1000 -x myfile.txt -vvv dummy1 dummy2"

Which could also be passed in the format the main/1 function receives the arguments in escripts:

Args = ["-h", "myhost", "--port=1000", "-x", "file.txt", "-vvv", "dummy1", "dummy2"].

The call to getopt:parse/2:

getopt:parse(OptSpecList, Args).

Will return:

{ok,{[{host,"myhost"},
      {port,1000},
      xml,
      {file,"file.txt"},
      {dbname,"users"},
      {verbose,3}],
     ["dummy1","dummy2"]}}

The tokenize/1 function will separate a command line string into tokens, taking into account whether an argument is single or double quoted, a character is escaped or if there are environment variables to be expanded. e.g.:

getopt:tokenize("  --name John\\ Smith --path \"John's Files\" -u ${USER}").

Will return something like:

["--name","John Smith","--path","John's Files","-u","jsmith"]

The other functions exported by the getopt module (usage/2, usage/3 and usage/4) are used to show the command line syntax for the program. For example, given the above-mentioned option specifications, the call to getopt:usage/2:

getopt:usage(OptSpecList, "ex1").

Will show (on standard_error):

Usage: ex1 [-h <host>] [-p <port>] [--dbname <dbname>] [-x] [-v] <file>

  -h, --host                    Database server host
  -p, --port                    Database server port
  --dbname                      Database name
  -x                            Output data in XML
  -v                            Verbosity level
  <file>                        Output file

This call to getopt:usage/3 will add a string after the usage command line:

getopt:usage(OptSpecList, "ex1", "[var=value ...] [command ...]").

Will show (on standard_error):

Usage: ex1 [-h <host>] [-p <port>] [--dbname <dbname>] [-x] [-v <verbose>] <file> [var=value ...] [command ...]

  -h, --host            Database server host
  -p, --port            Database server port
  --dbname              Database name
  -x                    Output data in XML
  -v, --verbose         Verbosity level
  <file>                Output file

Whereas this call to getopt:usage/3 will also add some lines to the options help text:

getopt:usage(OptSpecList, "ex1", "[var=value ...] [command ...]",
             [{"var=value", "Variables that will affect the execution (e.g. debug=1)"},
              {"command",   "Commands that will be executed (e.g. count)"}]).

Will show (on standard_error):

Usage: ex1 [-h <host>] [-p <port>] [--dbname <dbname>] [-x] [-v <verbose>] <file> [var=value ...] [command ...]

  -h, --host            Database server host
  -p, --port            Database server port
  --dbname              Database name
  -x                    Output data in XML
  -v, --verbose         Verbosity level
  <file>                Output file
  var=value             Variables that will affect the execution (e.g. debug=1)
  command               Commands that will be executed (e.g. count)

Command-line Syntax

The syntax supported by the getopt module is very similar to that followed by GNU programs, which is described here.

Options can have both short (single character) and long (string) option names.

A short option can have the following syntax:

-a         Single option 'a', no argument or implicit boolean argument
-a foo     Single option 'a', argument "foo"
-afoo      Single option 'a', argument "foo"
-abc       Multiple options: 'a'; 'b'; 'c'
-bcafoo    Multiple options: 'b'; 'c'; 'a' with argument "foo"
-aaa       Multiple repetitions of option 'a'

A long option can have the following syntax:

--foo      Single option 'foo', no argument
--foo=bar  Single option 'foo', argument "bar"
--foo bar  Single option 'foo', argument "bar"

Argument Types

The arguments allowed for options are: atom; binary; utf8_binary; boolean; float; integer; string. The getopt module checks every argument to see if it can be converted to its correct type.

In the case of boolean arguments, the following values (in lower or upper case) are considered true: true; t; yes; y; on; enabled; 1. These ones are considered false: false; f; no; n; off; disabled; 0.

Numeric arguments can only be negative when passed as part of an assignment expression.

e.g. --increment=-100 is a valid expression; whereas --increment -100 is invalid

Arguments of utf8_binary type allow proper binary encoding of arguments containing code points greater than 255. The resulting value is a normalized UTF-8 binary.

As of Erlang/20, standard_error device has unicode option set to false. It prevents correct printing of usage for arguments containing unicode binaries/strings as default values. To fix this, one needs to enable unicode:

io:setopts(standard_error, [{unicode, true}]).

Implicit Arguments

The arguments for options with the boolean and integer data types can sometimes be omitted. In those cases the value assigned to the option is true for boolean arguments and 1 for integer arguments.

Multiple Repetitions

An option can be repeated several times, in which case there will be multiple appearances of the option in the resulting list. The only exceptions are short options with integer arguments. In that particular case, each appearance of the short option within a single command line argument will increment the number that will be returned for that specific option.

e.g. Given an option specification list with the following format:

OptSpecList =
    [
     {define,  $D, "define",  string,  "Define a variable"},
     {verbose, $v, "verbose", integer, "Verbosity level"}
    ].

The following invocation:

getopt:parse(OptSpecList, "-DFOO -DVAR1=VAL1 -DBAR --verbose --verbose=3 -v -vvvv dummy").

would return:

{ok,{[{define,"FOO"}, {define,"VAR1=VAL1"}, {define,"BAR"},
      {verbose,1}, {verbose,3}, {verbose,1}, {verbose,4}],
     ["dummy"]}}

Positional Options

We can also have options with neither short nor long option names. In this case, the options will be taken according to their position in the option specification list passed to getopt:/parse2.

For example, with the following option specifications:

OptSpecList =
    [
     {xml,         $x,        "xml",     undefined, "Output data as XML"},
     {dbname,      undefined, undefined, string,    "Database name"},
     {output_file, undefined, undefined, string,    "File where the data will be saved to"}
    ].

This call to getopt:parse/2:

getopt:parse(OptSpecList, "-x mydb file.out dummy dummy").

Will return:

{ok,{[xml,{dbname,"mydb"},{output_file,"file.out"}],
     ["dummy","dummy"]}}

Option Terminators

The string -- is considered an option terminator. This means that all the command-line arguments after it are considered non-option arguments and will be returned without being evaluated even if they follow the getopt syntax.

e.g. This invocation using the first option specification list in the document:

getopt:parse(OptSpecList, "-h myhost -p 1000 -- --dbname mydb dummy").

will return:

{ok,{[{host,"myhost"}, {port,1000},{dbname,"users"}],
     ["--dbname","mydb","dummy"]}}

Notice that the dbname option was assigned the value users instead of mydb. This happens because the option terminator prevented getopt from evaluating it and the default value was assigned to it.

Non-option Arguments

The single - character is always considered as a non-option argument.

e.g. This invocation using the specification list from the previous example:

getopt:parse(OptSpecList, "-h myhost -p 1000 - --dbname mydb dummy").

will return:

{ok,{[{host,"myhost"}, {port,1000}, {dbname,"mydb"}],
     ["-","dummy"]}}

Arguments with embedded whitespace

Arguments that have embedded whitespace have to be quoted with either single or double quotes to be considered as a single argument.

e.g. Given an option specification list with the following format:

OptSpecList =
    [
     {define,  $D, "define",  string,  "Define a variable"},
     {user,    $u, "user",    string,  "User name"}
    ].

The following invocation:

getopt:parse(OptSpecList,
             "-D'FOO=VAR 123' --define \"VAR WITH SPACES\" -u\"my user name\"").

would return:

{ok,{[{define,"FOO=VAR 123"},
      {define,"VAR WITH SPACES"},
      {user,"my user name"}],
     []}}

When parsing a command line with unclosed quotes the last argument will be a single string starting at the position where the last quote was entered.

e.g. The following invocation:

getopt:parse(OptSpecList, "--user ' my user ' \"argument with unclosed quotes").

would return:

{ok,{[{user," my user "}],
     ["argument with unclosed quotes"]}}

Environment variable expansion

getopt:parse/2 will expand environment variables when used with a command line that is passed as a single string. The formats that are supported for environment variable expansion are:

  • $VAR (simple Unix/bash format)
  • ${VAR} (full Unix/bash format)
  • %VAR% (Windows format)

If a variable is not present in the environment it will not be expanded. Variables can be expanded within double-quoted and free arguments. getopt will not expand environment variables within single-quoted arguments.

e.g. Given the following option specification list:

OptSpecList =
    [
     {path,    $p, "path",    string,  "File path"}
    ].

The following invocation:

getopt:parse(OptSpecList, "--path ${PATH} $NONEXISTENT_DUMMY_VAR").

would return (depending on the value of your PATH variable) something like:

{ok,{[{path, "/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin"}],
     ["$NONEXISTENT_DUMMY_VAR"]}}

Currently, getopt does not perform wildcard expansion of file paths.

Escaping arguments

Any character can be escaped by prepending the \ (backslash) character to it.

e.g.

getopt:parse(OptSpecList, "--path /john\\'s\\ files dummy").

Will return:

{ok,{[{path,"/john's files"}],["dummy"]}}

About

Erlang module to parse command line arguments using the GNU getopt syntax

Resources

License

BSD-3-Clause, BSD-3-Clause licenses found

Licenses found

BSD-3-Clause
LICENSE
BSD-3-Clause
LICENSE.txt

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published