1#! perl 2 3# Getopt::Long.pm -- Universal options parsing 4# Author : Johan Vromans 5# Created On : Tue Sep 11 15:00:12 1990 6# Last Modified By: Johan Vromans 7# Last Modified On: Tue Oct 1 08:25:52 2013 8# Update Count : 1651 9# Status : Released 10 11################ Module Preamble ################ 12 13package Getopt::Long; 14 15use 5.004; 16 17use strict; 18 19use vars qw($VERSION); 20$VERSION = 2.42; 21# For testing versions only. 22use vars qw($VERSION_STRING); 23$VERSION_STRING = "2.42"; 24 25use Exporter; 26use vars qw(@ISA @EXPORT @EXPORT_OK); 27@ISA = qw(Exporter); 28 29# Exported subroutines. 30sub GetOptions(@); # always 31sub GetOptionsFromArray(@); # on demand 32sub GetOptionsFromString(@); # on demand 33sub Configure(@); # on demand 34sub HelpMessage(@); # on demand 35sub VersionMessage(@); # in demand 36 37BEGIN { 38 # Init immediately so their contents can be used in the 'use vars' below. 39 @EXPORT = qw(&GetOptions $REQUIRE_ORDER $PERMUTE $RETURN_IN_ORDER); 40 @EXPORT_OK = qw(&HelpMessage &VersionMessage &Configure 41 &GetOptionsFromArray &GetOptionsFromString); 42} 43 44# User visible variables. 45use vars @EXPORT, @EXPORT_OK; 46use vars qw($error $debug $major_version $minor_version); 47# Deprecated visible variables. 48use vars qw($autoabbrev $getopt_compat $ignorecase $bundling $order 49 $passthrough); 50# Official invisible variables. 51use vars qw($genprefix $caller $gnu_compat $auto_help $auto_version $longprefix); 52 53# Public subroutines. 54sub config(@); # deprecated name 55 56# Private subroutines. 57sub ConfigDefaults(); 58sub ParseOptionSpec($$); 59sub OptCtl($); 60sub FindOption($$$$$); 61sub ValidValue ($$$$$); 62 63################ Local Variables ################ 64 65# $requested_version holds the version that was mentioned in the 'use' 66# or 'require', if any. It can be used to enable or disable specific 67# features. 68my $requested_version = 0; 69 70################ Resident subroutines ################ 71 72sub ConfigDefaults() { 73 # Handle POSIX compliancy. 74 if ( defined $ENV{"POSIXLY_CORRECT"} ) { 75 $genprefix = "(--|-)"; 76 $autoabbrev = 0; # no automatic abbrev of options 77 $bundling = 0; # no bundling of single letter switches 78 $getopt_compat = 0; # disallow '+' to start options 79 $order = $REQUIRE_ORDER; 80 } 81 else { 82 $genprefix = "(--|-|\\+)"; 83 $autoabbrev = 1; # automatic abbrev of options 84 $bundling = 0; # bundling off by default 85 $getopt_compat = 1; # allow '+' to start options 86 $order = $PERMUTE; 87 } 88 # Other configurable settings. 89 $debug = 0; # for debugging 90 $error = 0; # error tally 91 $ignorecase = 1; # ignore case when matching options 92 $passthrough = 0; # leave unrecognized options alone 93 $gnu_compat = 0; # require --opt=val if value is optional 94 $longprefix = "(--)"; # what does a long prefix look like 95} 96 97# Override import. 98sub import { 99 my $pkg = shift; # package 100 my @syms = (); # symbols to import 101 my @config = (); # configuration 102 my $dest = \@syms; # symbols first 103 for ( @_ ) { 104 if ( $_ eq ':config' ) { 105 $dest = \@config; # config next 106 next; 107 } 108 push(@$dest, $_); # push 109 } 110 # Hide one level and call super. 111 local $Exporter::ExportLevel = 1; 112 push(@syms, qw(&GetOptions)) if @syms; # always export GetOptions 113 $requested_version = 0; 114 $pkg->SUPER::import(@syms); 115 # And configure. 116 Configure(@config) if @config; 117} 118 119################ Initialization ################ 120 121# Values for $order. See GNU getopt.c for details. 122($REQUIRE_ORDER, $PERMUTE, $RETURN_IN_ORDER) = (0..2); 123# Version major/minor numbers. 124($major_version, $minor_version) = $VERSION =~ /^(\d+)\.(\d+)/; 125 126ConfigDefaults(); 127 128################ OO Interface ################ 129 130package Getopt::Long::Parser; 131 132# Store a copy of the default configuration. Since ConfigDefaults has 133# just been called, what we get from Configure is the default. 134my $default_config = do { 135 Getopt::Long::Configure () 136}; 137 138sub new { 139 my $that = shift; 140 my $class = ref($that) || $that; 141 my %atts = @_; 142 143 # Register the callers package. 144 my $self = { caller_pkg => (caller)[0] }; 145 146 bless ($self, $class); 147 148 # Process config attributes. 149 if ( defined $atts{config} ) { 150 my $save = Getopt::Long::Configure ($default_config, @{$atts{config}}); 151 $self->{settings} = Getopt::Long::Configure ($save); 152 delete ($atts{config}); 153 } 154 # Else use default config. 155 else { 156 $self->{settings} = $default_config; 157 } 158 159 if ( %atts ) { # Oops 160 die(__PACKAGE__.": unhandled attributes: ". 161 join(" ", sort(keys(%atts)))."\n"); 162 } 163 164 $self; 165} 166 167sub configure { 168 my ($self) = shift; 169 170 # Restore settings, merge new settings in. 171 my $save = Getopt::Long::Configure ($self->{settings}, @_); 172 173 # Restore orig config and save the new config. 174 $self->{settings} = Getopt::Long::Configure ($save); 175} 176 177sub getoptions { 178 my ($self) = shift; 179 180 return $self->getoptionsfromarray(\@ARGV, @_); 181} 182 183sub getoptionsfromarray { 184 my ($self) = shift; 185 186 # Restore config settings. 187 my $save = Getopt::Long::Configure ($self->{settings}); 188 189 # Call main routine. 190 my $ret = 0; 191 $Getopt::Long::caller = $self->{caller_pkg}; 192 193 eval { 194 # Locally set exception handler to default, otherwise it will 195 # be called implicitly here, and again explicitly when we try 196 # to deliver the messages. 197 local ($SIG{__DIE__}) = 'DEFAULT'; 198 $ret = Getopt::Long::GetOptionsFromArray (@_); 199 }; 200 201 # Restore saved settings. 202 Getopt::Long::Configure ($save); 203 204 # Handle errors and return value. 205 die ($@) if $@; 206 return $ret; 207} 208 209package Getopt::Long; 210 211################ Back to Normal ################ 212 213# Indices in option control info. 214# Note that ParseOptions uses the fields directly. Search for 'hard-wired'. 215use constant CTL_TYPE => 0; 216#use constant CTL_TYPE_FLAG => ''; 217#use constant CTL_TYPE_NEG => '!'; 218#use constant CTL_TYPE_INCR => '+'; 219#use constant CTL_TYPE_INT => 'i'; 220#use constant CTL_TYPE_INTINC => 'I'; 221#use constant CTL_TYPE_XINT => 'o'; 222#use constant CTL_TYPE_FLOAT => 'f'; 223#use constant CTL_TYPE_STRING => 's'; 224 225use constant CTL_CNAME => 1; 226 227use constant CTL_DEFAULT => 2; 228 229use constant CTL_DEST => 3; 230 use constant CTL_DEST_SCALAR => 0; 231 use constant CTL_DEST_ARRAY => 1; 232 use constant CTL_DEST_HASH => 2; 233 use constant CTL_DEST_CODE => 3; 234 235use constant CTL_AMIN => 4; 236use constant CTL_AMAX => 5; 237 238# FFU. 239#use constant CTL_RANGE => ; 240#use constant CTL_REPEAT => ; 241 242# Rather liberal patterns to match numbers. 243use constant PAT_INT => "[-+]?_*[0-9][0-9_]*"; 244use constant PAT_XINT => 245 "(?:". 246 "[-+]?_*[1-9][0-9_]*". 247 "|". 248 "0x_*[0-9a-f][0-9a-f_]*". 249 "|". 250 "0b_*[01][01_]*". 251 "|". 252 "0[0-7_]*". 253 ")"; 254use constant PAT_FLOAT => "[-+]?[0-9_]+(\.[0-9_]+)?([eE][-+]?[0-9_]+)?"; 255 256sub GetOptions(@) { 257 # Shift in default array. 258 unshift(@_, \@ARGV); 259 # Try to keep caller() and Carp consistent. 260 goto &GetOptionsFromArray; 261} 262 263sub GetOptionsFromString(@) { 264 my ($string) = shift; 265 require Text::ParseWords; 266 my $args = [ Text::ParseWords::shellwords($string) ]; 267 $caller ||= (caller)[0]; # current context 268 my $ret = GetOptionsFromArray($args, @_); 269 return ( $ret, $args ) if wantarray; 270 if ( @$args ) { 271 $ret = 0; 272 warn("GetOptionsFromString: Excess data \"@$args\" in string \"$string\"\n"); 273 } 274 $ret; 275} 276 277sub GetOptionsFromArray(@) { 278 279 my ($argv, @optionlist) = @_; # local copy of the option descriptions 280 my $argend = '--'; # option list terminator 281 my %opctl = (); # table of option specs 282 my $pkg = $caller || (caller)[0]; # current context 283 # Needed if linkage is omitted. 284 my @ret = (); # accum for non-options 285 my %linkage; # linkage 286 my $userlinkage; # user supplied HASH 287 my $opt; # current option 288 my $prefix = $genprefix; # current prefix 289 290 $error = ''; 291 292 if ( $debug ) { 293 # Avoid some warnings if debugging. 294 local ($^W) = 0; 295 print STDERR 296 ("Getopt::Long $Getopt::Long::VERSION ", 297 "called from package \"$pkg\".", 298 "\n ", 299 "argv: (@$argv)", 300 "\n ", 301 "autoabbrev=$autoabbrev,". 302 "bundling=$bundling,", 303 "getopt_compat=$getopt_compat,", 304 "gnu_compat=$gnu_compat,", 305 "order=$order,", 306 "\n ", 307 "ignorecase=$ignorecase,", 308 "requested_version=$requested_version,", 309 "passthrough=$passthrough,", 310 "genprefix=\"$genprefix\",", 311 "longprefix=\"$longprefix\".", 312 "\n"); 313 } 314 315 # Check for ref HASH as first argument. 316 # First argument may be an object. It's OK to use this as long 317 # as it is really a hash underneath. 318 $userlinkage = undef; 319 if ( @optionlist && ref($optionlist[0]) and 320 UNIVERSAL::isa($optionlist[0],'HASH') ) { 321 $userlinkage = shift (@optionlist); 322 print STDERR ("=> user linkage: $userlinkage\n") if $debug; 323 } 324 325 # See if the first element of the optionlist contains option 326 # starter characters. 327 # Be careful not to interpret '<>' as option starters. 328 if ( @optionlist && $optionlist[0] =~ /^\W+$/ 329 && !($optionlist[0] eq '<>' 330 && @optionlist > 0 331 && ref($optionlist[1])) ) { 332 $prefix = shift (@optionlist); 333 # Turn into regexp. Needs to be parenthesized! 334 $prefix =~ s/(\W)/\\$1/g; 335 $prefix = "([" . $prefix . "])"; 336 print STDERR ("=> prefix=\"$prefix\"\n") if $debug; 337 } 338 339 # Verify correctness of optionlist. 340 %opctl = (); 341 while ( @optionlist ) { 342 my $opt = shift (@optionlist); 343 344 unless ( defined($opt) ) { 345 $error .= "Undefined argument in option spec\n"; 346 next; 347 } 348 349 # Strip leading prefix so people can specify "--foo=i" if they like. 350 $opt = $+ if $opt =~ /^$prefix+(.*)$/s; 351 352 if ( $opt eq '<>' ) { 353 if ( (defined $userlinkage) 354 && !(@optionlist > 0 && ref($optionlist[0])) 355 && (exists $userlinkage->{$opt}) 356 && ref($userlinkage->{$opt}) ) { 357 unshift (@optionlist, $userlinkage->{$opt}); 358 } 359 unless ( @optionlist > 0 360 && ref($optionlist[0]) && ref($optionlist[0]) eq 'CODE' ) { 361 $error .= "Option spec <> requires a reference to a subroutine\n"; 362 # Kill the linkage (to avoid another error). 363 shift (@optionlist) 364 if @optionlist && ref($optionlist[0]); 365 next; 366 } 367 $linkage{'<>'} = shift (@optionlist); 368 next; 369 } 370 371 # Parse option spec. 372 my ($name, $orig) = ParseOptionSpec ($opt, \%opctl); 373 unless ( defined $name ) { 374 # Failed. $orig contains the error message. Sorry for the abuse. 375 $error .= $orig; 376 # Kill the linkage (to avoid another error). 377 shift (@optionlist) 378 if @optionlist && ref($optionlist[0]); 379 next; 380 } 381 382 # If no linkage is supplied in the @optionlist, copy it from 383 # the userlinkage if available. 384 if ( defined $userlinkage ) { 385 unless ( @optionlist > 0 && ref($optionlist[0]) ) { 386 if ( exists $userlinkage->{$orig} && 387 ref($userlinkage->{$orig}) ) { 388 print STDERR ("=> found userlinkage for \"$orig\": ", 389 "$userlinkage->{$orig}\n") 390 if $debug; 391 unshift (@optionlist, $userlinkage->{$orig}); 392 } 393 else { 394 # Do nothing. Being undefined will be handled later. 395 next; 396 } 397 } 398 } 399 400 # Copy the linkage. If omitted, link to global variable. 401 if ( @optionlist > 0 && ref($optionlist[0]) ) { 402 print STDERR ("=> link \"$orig\" to $optionlist[0]\n") 403 if $debug; 404 my $rl = ref($linkage{$orig} = shift (@optionlist)); 405 406 if ( $rl eq "ARRAY" ) { 407 $opctl{$name}[CTL_DEST] = CTL_DEST_ARRAY; 408 } 409 elsif ( $rl eq "HASH" ) { 410 $opctl{$name}[CTL_DEST] = CTL_DEST_HASH; 411 } 412 elsif ( $rl eq "SCALAR" || $rl eq "REF" ) { 413# if ( $opctl{$name}[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_ARRAY ) { 414# my $t = $linkage{$orig}; 415# $$t = $linkage{$orig} = []; 416# } 417# elsif ( $opctl{$name}[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH ) { 418# } 419# else { 420 # Ok. 421# } 422 } 423 elsif ( $rl eq "CODE" ) { 424 # Ok. 425 } 426 else { 427 $error .= "Invalid option linkage for \"$opt\"\n"; 428 } 429 } 430 else { 431 # Link to global $opt_XXX variable. 432 # Make sure a valid perl identifier results. 433 my $ov = $orig; 434 $ov =~ s/\W/_/g; 435 if ( $opctl{$name}[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_ARRAY ) { 436 print STDERR ("=> link \"$orig\" to \@$pkg","::opt_$ov\n") 437 if $debug; 438 eval ("\$linkage{\$orig} = \\\@".$pkg."::opt_$ov;"); 439 } 440 elsif ( $opctl{$name}[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH ) { 441 print STDERR ("=> link \"$orig\" to \%$pkg","::opt_$ov\n") 442 if $debug; 443 eval ("\$linkage{\$orig} = \\\%".$pkg."::opt_$ov;"); 444 } 445 else { 446 print STDERR ("=> link \"$orig\" to \$$pkg","::opt_$ov\n") 447 if $debug; 448 eval ("\$linkage{\$orig} = \\\$".$pkg."::opt_$ov;"); 449 } 450 } 451 452 if ( $opctl{$name}[CTL_TYPE] eq 'I' 453 && ( $opctl{$name}[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_ARRAY 454 || $opctl{$name}[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH ) 455 ) { 456 $error .= "Invalid option linkage for \"$opt\"\n"; 457 } 458 459 } 460 461 # Bail out if errors found. 462 die ($error) if $error; 463 $error = 0; 464 465 # Supply --version and --help support, if needed and allowed. 466 if ( defined($auto_version) ? $auto_version : ($requested_version >= 2.3203) ) { 467 if ( !defined($opctl{version}) ) { 468 $opctl{version} = ['','version',0,CTL_DEST_CODE,undef]; 469 $linkage{version} = \&VersionMessage; 470 } 471 $auto_version = 1; 472 } 473 if ( defined($auto_help) ? $auto_help : ($requested_version >= 2.3203) ) { 474 if ( !defined($opctl{help}) && !defined($opctl{'?'}) ) { 475 $opctl{help} = $opctl{'?'} = ['','help',0,CTL_DEST_CODE,undef]; 476 $linkage{help} = \&HelpMessage; 477 } 478 $auto_help = 1; 479 } 480 481 # Show the options tables if debugging. 482 if ( $debug ) { 483 my ($arrow, $k, $v); 484 $arrow = "=> "; 485 while ( ($k,$v) = each(%opctl) ) { 486 print STDERR ($arrow, "\$opctl{$k} = $v ", OptCtl($v), "\n"); 487 $arrow = " "; 488 } 489 } 490 491 # Process argument list 492 my $goon = 1; 493 while ( $goon && @$argv > 0 ) { 494 495 # Get next argument. 496 $opt = shift (@$argv); 497 print STDERR ("=> arg \"", $opt, "\"\n") if $debug; 498 499 # Double dash is option list terminator. 500 if ( defined($opt) && $opt eq $argend ) { 501 push (@ret, $argend) if $passthrough; 502 last; 503 } 504 505 # Look it up. 506 my $tryopt = $opt; 507 my $found; # success status 508 my $key; # key (if hash type) 509 my $arg; # option argument 510 my $ctl; # the opctl entry 511 512 ($found, $opt, $ctl, $arg, $key) = 513 FindOption ($argv, $prefix, $argend, $opt, \%opctl); 514 515 if ( $found ) { 516 517 # FindOption undefines $opt in case of errors. 518 next unless defined $opt; 519 520 my $argcnt = 0; 521 while ( defined $arg ) { 522 523 # Get the canonical name. 524 print STDERR ("=> cname for \"$opt\" is ") if $debug; 525 $opt = $ctl->[CTL_CNAME]; 526 print STDERR ("\"$ctl->[CTL_CNAME]\"\n") if $debug; 527 528 if ( defined $linkage{$opt} ) { 529 print STDERR ("=> ref(\$L{$opt}) -> ", 530 ref($linkage{$opt}), "\n") if $debug; 531 532 if ( ref($linkage{$opt}) eq 'SCALAR' 533 || ref($linkage{$opt}) eq 'REF' ) { 534 if ( $ctl->[CTL_TYPE] eq '+' ) { 535 print STDERR ("=> \$\$L{$opt} += \"$arg\"\n") 536 if $debug; 537 if ( defined ${$linkage{$opt}} ) { 538 ${$linkage{$opt}} += $arg; 539 } 540 else { 541 ${$linkage{$opt}} = $arg; 542 } 543 } 544 elsif ( $ctl->[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_ARRAY ) { 545 print STDERR ("=> ref(\$L{$opt}) auto-vivified", 546 " to ARRAY\n") 547 if $debug; 548 my $t = $linkage{$opt}; 549 $$t = $linkage{$opt} = []; 550 print STDERR ("=> push(\@{\$L{$opt}, \"$arg\")\n") 551 if $debug; 552 push (@{$linkage{$opt}}, $arg); 553 } 554 elsif ( $ctl->[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH ) { 555 print STDERR ("=> ref(\$L{$opt}) auto-vivified", 556 " to HASH\n") 557 if $debug; 558 my $t = $linkage{$opt}; 559 $$t = $linkage{$opt} = {}; 560 print STDERR ("=> \$\$L{$opt}->{$key} = \"$arg\"\n") 561 if $debug; 562 $linkage{$opt}->{$key} = $arg; 563 } 564 else { 565 print STDERR ("=> \$\$L{$opt} = \"$arg\"\n") 566 if $debug; 567 ${$linkage{$opt}} = $arg; 568 } 569 } 570 elsif ( ref($linkage{$opt}) eq 'ARRAY' ) { 571 print STDERR ("=> push(\@{\$L{$opt}, \"$arg\")\n") 572 if $debug; 573 push (@{$linkage{$opt}}, $arg); 574 } 575 elsif ( ref($linkage{$opt}) eq 'HASH' ) { 576 print STDERR ("=> \$\$L{$opt}->{$key} = \"$arg\"\n") 577 if $debug; 578 $linkage{$opt}->{$key} = $arg; 579 } 580 elsif ( ref($linkage{$opt}) eq 'CODE' ) { 581 print STDERR ("=> &L{$opt}(\"$opt\"", 582 $ctl->[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH ? ", \"$key\"" : "", 583 ", \"$arg\")\n") 584 if $debug; 585 my $eval_error = do { 586 local $@; 587 local $SIG{__DIE__} = 'DEFAULT'; 588 eval { 589 &{$linkage{$opt}} 590 (Getopt::Long::CallBack->new 591 (name => $opt, 592 ctl => $ctl, 593 opctl => \%opctl, 594 linkage => \%linkage, 595 prefix => $prefix, 596 ), 597 $ctl->[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH ? ($key) : (), 598 $arg); 599 }; 600 $@; 601 }; 602 print STDERR ("=> die($eval_error)\n") 603 if $debug && $eval_error ne ''; 604 if ( $eval_error =~ /^!/ ) { 605 if ( $eval_error =~ /^!FINISH\b/ ) { 606 $goon = 0; 607 } 608 } 609 elsif ( $eval_error ne '' ) { 610 warn ($eval_error); 611 $error++; 612 } 613 } 614 else { 615 print STDERR ("Invalid REF type \"", ref($linkage{$opt}), 616 "\" in linkage\n"); 617 die("Getopt::Long -- internal error!\n"); 618 } 619 } 620 # No entry in linkage means entry in userlinkage. 621 elsif ( $ctl->[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_ARRAY ) { 622 if ( defined $userlinkage->{$opt} ) { 623 print STDERR ("=> push(\@{\$L{$opt}}, \"$arg\")\n") 624 if $debug; 625 push (@{$userlinkage->{$opt}}, $arg); 626 } 627 else { 628 print STDERR ("=>\$L{$opt} = [\"$arg\"]\n") 629 if $debug; 630 $userlinkage->{$opt} = [$arg]; 631 } 632 } 633 elsif ( $ctl->[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH ) { 634 if ( defined $userlinkage->{$opt} ) { 635 print STDERR ("=> \$L{$opt}->{$key} = \"$arg\"\n") 636 if $debug; 637 $userlinkage->{$opt}->{$key} = $arg; 638 } 639 else { 640 print STDERR ("=>\$L{$opt} = {$key => \"$arg\"}\n") 641 if $debug; 642 $userlinkage->{$opt} = {$key => $arg}; 643 } 644 } 645 else { 646 if ( $ctl->[CTL_TYPE] eq '+' ) { 647 print STDERR ("=> \$L{$opt} += \"$arg\"\n") 648 if $debug; 649 if ( defined $userlinkage->{$opt} ) { 650 $userlinkage->{$opt} += $arg; 651 } 652 else { 653 $userlinkage->{$opt} = $arg; 654 } 655 } 656 else { 657 print STDERR ("=>\$L{$opt} = \"$arg\"\n") if $debug; 658 $userlinkage->{$opt} = $arg; 659 } 660 } 661 662 $argcnt++; 663 last if $argcnt >= $ctl->[CTL_AMAX] && $ctl->[CTL_AMAX] != -1; 664 undef($arg); 665 666 # Need more args? 667 if ( $argcnt < $ctl->[CTL_AMIN] ) { 668 if ( @$argv ) { 669 if ( ValidValue($ctl, $argv->[0], 1, $argend, $prefix) ) { 670 $arg = shift(@$argv); 671 if ( $ctl->[CTL_TYPE] =~ /^[iIo]$/ ) { 672 $arg =~ tr/_//d; 673 $arg = $ctl->[CTL_TYPE] eq 'o' && $arg =~ /^0/ 674 ? oct($arg) 675 : 0+$arg 676 } 677 ($key,$arg) = $arg =~ /^([^=]+)=(.*)/ 678 if $ctl->[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH; 679 next; 680 } 681 warn("Value \"$$argv[0]\" invalid for option $opt\n"); 682 $error++; 683 } 684 else { 685 warn("Insufficient arguments for option $opt\n"); 686 $error++; 687 } 688 } 689 690 # Any more args? 691 if ( @$argv && ValidValue($ctl, $argv->[0], 0, $argend, $prefix) ) { 692 $arg = shift(@$argv); 693 if ( $ctl->[CTL_TYPE] =~ /^[iIo]$/ ) { 694 $arg =~ tr/_//d; 695 $arg = $ctl->[CTL_TYPE] eq 'o' && $arg =~ /^0/ 696 ? oct($arg) 697 : 0+$arg 698 } 699 ($key,$arg) = $arg =~ /^([^=]+)=(.*)/ 700 if $ctl->[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH; 701 next; 702 } 703 } 704 } 705 706 # Not an option. Save it if we $PERMUTE and don't have a <>. 707 elsif ( $order == $PERMUTE ) { 708 # Try non-options call-back. 709 my $cb; 710 if ( (defined ($cb = $linkage{'<>'})) ) { 711 print STDERR ("=> &L{$tryopt}(\"$tryopt\")\n") 712 if $debug; 713 my $eval_error = do { 714 local $@; 715 local $SIG{__DIE__} = 'DEFAULT'; 716 eval { 717 # The arg to <> cannot be the CallBack object 718 # since it may be passed to other modules that 719 # get confused (e.g., Archive::Tar). Well, 720 # it's not relevant for this callback anyway. 721 &$cb($tryopt); 722 }; 723 $@; 724 }; 725 print STDERR ("=> die($eval_error)\n") 726 if $debug && $eval_error ne ''; 727 if ( $eval_error =~ /^!/ ) { 728 if ( $eval_error =~ /^!FINISH\b/ ) { 729 $goon = 0; 730 } 731 } 732 elsif ( $eval_error ne '' ) { 733 warn ($eval_error); 734 $error++; 735 } 736 } 737 else { 738 print STDERR ("=> saving \"$tryopt\" ", 739 "(not an option, may permute)\n") if $debug; 740 push (@ret, $tryopt); 741 } 742 next; 743 } 744 745 # ...otherwise, terminate. 746 else { 747 # Push this one back and exit. 748 unshift (@$argv, $tryopt); 749 return ($error == 0); 750 } 751 752 } 753 754 # Finish. 755 if ( @ret && $order == $PERMUTE ) { 756 # Push back accumulated arguments 757 print STDERR ("=> restoring \"", join('" "', @ret), "\"\n") 758 if $debug; 759 unshift (@$argv, @ret); 760 } 761 762 return ($error == 0); 763} 764 765# A readable representation of what's in an optbl. 766sub OptCtl ($) { 767 my ($v) = @_; 768 my @v = map { defined($_) ? ($_) : ("<undef>") } @$v; 769 "[". 770 join(",", 771 "\"$v[CTL_TYPE]\"", 772 "\"$v[CTL_CNAME]\"", 773 "\"$v[CTL_DEFAULT]\"", 774 ("\$","\@","\%","\&")[$v[CTL_DEST] || 0], 775 $v[CTL_AMIN] || '', 776 $v[CTL_AMAX] || '', 777# $v[CTL_RANGE] || '', 778# $v[CTL_REPEAT] || '', 779 ). "]"; 780} 781 782# Parse an option specification and fill the tables. 783sub ParseOptionSpec ($$) { 784 my ($opt, $opctl) = @_; 785 786 # Match option spec. 787 if ( $opt !~ m;^ 788 ( 789 # Option name 790 (?: \w+[-\w]* ) 791 # Alias names, or "?" 792 (?: \| (?: \? | \w[-\w]* ) )* 793 # Aliases 794 (?: \| (?: [^-|!+=:][^|!+=:]* )? )* 795 )? 796 ( 797 # Either modifiers ... 798 [!+] 799 | 800 # ... or a value/dest/repeat specification 801 [=:] [ionfs] [@%]? (?: \{\d*,?\d*\} )? 802 | 803 # ... or an optional-with-default spec 804 : (?: -?\d+ | \+ ) [@%]? 805 )? 806 $;x ) { 807 return (undef, "Error in option spec: \"$opt\"\n"); 808 } 809 810 my ($names, $spec) = ($1, $2); 811 $spec = '' unless defined $spec; 812 813 # $orig keeps track of the primary name the user specified. 814 # This name will be used for the internal or external linkage. 815 # In other words, if the user specifies "FoO|BaR", it will 816 # match any case combinations of 'foo' and 'bar', but if a global 817 # variable needs to be set, it will be $opt_FoO in the exact case 818 # as specified. 819 my $orig; 820 821 my @names; 822 if ( defined $names ) { 823 @names = split (/\|/, $names); 824 $orig = $names[0]; 825 } 826 else { 827 @names = (''); 828 $orig = ''; 829 } 830 831 # Construct the opctl entries. 832 my $entry; 833 if ( $spec eq '' || $spec eq '+' || $spec eq '!' ) { 834 # Fields are hard-wired here. 835 $entry = [$spec,$orig,undef,CTL_DEST_SCALAR,0,0]; 836 } 837 elsif ( $spec =~ /^:(-?\d+|\+)([@%])?$/ ) { 838 my $def = $1; 839 my $dest = $2; 840 my $type = $def eq '+' ? 'I' : 'i'; 841 $dest ||= '$'; 842 $dest = $dest eq '@' ? CTL_DEST_ARRAY 843 : $dest eq '%' ? CTL_DEST_HASH : CTL_DEST_SCALAR; 844 # Fields are hard-wired here. 845 $entry = [$type,$orig,$def eq '+' ? undef : $def, 846 $dest,0,1]; 847 } 848 else { 849 my ($mand, $type, $dest) = 850 $spec =~ /^([=:])([ionfs])([@%])?(\{(\d+)?(,)?(\d+)?\})?$/; 851 return (undef, "Cannot repeat while bundling: \"$opt\"\n") 852 if $bundling && defined($4); 853 my ($mi, $cm, $ma) = ($5, $6, $7); 854 return (undef, "{0} is useless in option spec: \"$opt\"\n") 855 if defined($mi) && !$mi && !defined($ma) && !defined($cm); 856 857 $type = 'i' if $type eq 'n'; 858 $dest ||= '$'; 859 $dest = $dest eq '@' ? CTL_DEST_ARRAY 860 : $dest eq '%' ? CTL_DEST_HASH : CTL_DEST_SCALAR; 861 # Default minargs to 1/0 depending on mand status. 862 $mi = $mand eq '=' ? 1 : 0 unless defined $mi; 863 # Adjust mand status according to minargs. 864 $mand = $mi ? '=' : ':'; 865 # Adjust maxargs. 866 $ma = $mi ? $mi : 1 unless defined $ma || defined $cm; 867 return (undef, "Max must be greater than zero in option spec: \"$opt\"\n") 868 if defined($ma) && !$ma; 869 return (undef, "Max less than min in option spec: \"$opt\"\n") 870 if defined($ma) && $ma < $mi; 871 872 # Fields are hard-wired here. 873 $entry = [$type,$orig,undef,$dest,$mi,$ma||-1]; 874 } 875 876 # Process all names. First is canonical, the rest are aliases. 877 my $dups = ''; 878 foreach ( @names ) { 879 880 $_ = lc ($_) 881 if $ignorecase > (($bundling && length($_) == 1) ? 1 : 0); 882 883 if ( exists $opctl->{$_} ) { 884 $dups .= "Duplicate specification \"$opt\" for option \"$_\"\n"; 885 } 886 887 if ( $spec eq '!' ) { 888 $opctl->{"no$_"} = $entry; 889 $opctl->{"no-$_"} = $entry; 890 $opctl->{$_} = [@$entry]; 891 $opctl->{$_}->[CTL_TYPE] = ''; 892 } 893 else { 894 $opctl->{$_} = $entry; 895 } 896 } 897 898 if ( $dups && $^W ) { 899 foreach ( split(/\n+/, $dups) ) { 900 warn($_."\n"); 901 } 902 } 903 ($names[0], $orig); 904} 905 906# Option lookup. 907sub FindOption ($$$$$) { 908 909 # returns (1, $opt, $ctl, $arg, $key) if okay, 910 # returns (1, undef) if option in error, 911 # returns (0) otherwise. 912 913 my ($argv, $prefix, $argend, $opt, $opctl) = @_; 914 915 print STDERR ("=> find \"$opt\"\n") if $debug; 916 917 return (0) unless defined($opt); 918 return (0) unless $opt =~ /^($prefix)(.*)$/s; 919 return (0) if $opt eq "-" && !defined $opctl->{''}; 920 921 $opt = substr( $opt, length($1) ); # retain taintedness 922 my $starter = $1; 923 924 print STDERR ("=> split \"$starter\"+\"$opt\"\n") if $debug; 925 926 my $optarg; # value supplied with --opt=value 927 my $rest; # remainder from unbundling 928 929 # If it is a long option, it may include the value. 930 # With getopt_compat, only if not bundling. 931 if ( ($starter=~/^$longprefix$/ 932 || ($getopt_compat && ($bundling == 0 || $bundling == 2))) 933 && (my $oppos = index($opt, '=', 1)) > 0) { 934 my $optorg = $opt; 935 $opt = substr($optorg, 0, $oppos); 936 $optarg = substr($optorg, $oppos + 1); # retain tainedness 937 print STDERR ("=> option \"", $opt, 938 "\", optarg = \"$optarg\"\n") if $debug; 939 } 940 941 #### Look it up ### 942 943 my $tryopt = $opt; # option to try 944 945 if ( $bundling && $starter eq '-' ) { 946 947 # To try overrides, obey case ignore. 948 $tryopt = $ignorecase ? lc($opt) : $opt; 949 950 # If bundling == 2, long options can override bundles. 951 if ( $bundling == 2 && length($tryopt) > 1 952 && defined ($opctl->{$tryopt}) ) { 953 print STDERR ("=> $starter$tryopt overrides unbundling\n") 954 if $debug; 955 } 956 else { 957 $tryopt = $opt; 958 # Unbundle single letter option. 959 $rest = length ($tryopt) > 0 ? substr ($tryopt, 1) : ''; 960 $tryopt = substr ($tryopt, 0, 1); 961 $tryopt = lc ($tryopt) if $ignorecase > 1; 962 print STDERR ("=> $starter$tryopt unbundled from ", 963 "$starter$tryopt$rest\n") if $debug; 964 $rest = undef unless $rest ne ''; 965 } 966 } 967 968 # Try auto-abbreviation. 969 elsif ( $autoabbrev && $opt ne "" ) { 970 # Sort the possible long option names. 971 my @names = sort(keys (%$opctl)); 972 # Downcase if allowed. 973 $opt = lc ($opt) if $ignorecase; 974 $tryopt = $opt; 975 # Turn option name into pattern. 976 my $pat = quotemeta ($opt); 977 # Look up in option names. 978 my @hits = grep (/^$pat/, @names); 979 print STDERR ("=> ", scalar(@hits), " hits (@hits) with \"$pat\" ", 980 "out of ", scalar(@names), "\n") if $debug; 981 982 # Check for ambiguous results. 983 unless ( (@hits <= 1) || (grep ($_ eq $opt, @hits) == 1) ) { 984 # See if all matches are for the same option. 985 my %hit; 986 foreach ( @hits ) { 987 my $hit = $opctl->{$_}->[CTL_CNAME] 988 if defined $opctl->{$_}->[CTL_CNAME]; 989 $hit = "no" . $hit if $opctl->{$_}->[CTL_TYPE] eq '!'; 990 $hit{$hit} = 1; 991 } 992 # Remove auto-supplied options (version, help). 993 if ( keys(%hit) == 2 ) { 994 if ( $auto_version && exists($hit{version}) ) { 995 delete $hit{version}; 996 } 997 elsif ( $auto_help && exists($hit{help}) ) { 998 delete $hit{help}; 999 } 1000 } 1001 # Now see if it really is ambiguous. 1002 unless ( keys(%hit) == 1 ) { 1003 return (0) if $passthrough; 1004 warn ("Option ", $opt, " is ambiguous (", 1005 join(", ", @hits), ")\n"); 1006 $error++; 1007 return (1, undef); 1008 } 1009 @hits = keys(%hit); 1010 } 1011 1012 # Complete the option name, if appropriate. 1013 if ( @hits == 1 && $hits[0] ne $opt ) { 1014 $tryopt = $hits[0]; 1015 $tryopt = lc ($tryopt) if $ignorecase; 1016 print STDERR ("=> option \"$opt\" -> \"$tryopt\"\n") 1017 if $debug; 1018 } 1019 } 1020 1021 # Map to all lowercase if ignoring case. 1022 elsif ( $ignorecase ) { 1023 $tryopt = lc ($opt); 1024 } 1025 1026 # Check validity by fetching the info. 1027 my $ctl = $opctl->{$tryopt}; 1028 unless ( defined $ctl ) { 1029 return (0) if $passthrough; 1030 # Pretend one char when bundling. 1031 if ( $bundling == 1 && length($starter) == 1 ) { 1032 $opt = substr($opt,0,1); 1033 unshift (@$argv, $starter.$rest) if defined $rest; 1034 } 1035 if ( $opt eq "" ) { 1036 warn ("Missing option after ", $starter, "\n"); 1037 } 1038 else { 1039 warn ("Unknown option: ", $opt, "\n"); 1040 } 1041 $error++; 1042 return (1, undef); 1043 } 1044 # Apparently valid. 1045 $opt = $tryopt; 1046 print STDERR ("=> found ", OptCtl($ctl), 1047 " for \"", $opt, "\"\n") if $debug; 1048 1049 #### Determine argument status #### 1050 1051 # If it is an option w/o argument, we're almost finished with it. 1052 my $type = $ctl->[CTL_TYPE]; 1053 my $arg; 1054 1055 if ( $type eq '' || $type eq '!' || $type eq '+' ) { 1056 if ( defined $optarg ) { 1057 return (0) if $passthrough; 1058 warn ("Option ", $opt, " does not take an argument\n"); 1059 $error++; 1060 undef $opt; 1061 } 1062 elsif ( $type eq '' || $type eq '+' ) { 1063 # Supply explicit value. 1064 $arg = 1; 1065 } 1066 else { 1067 $opt =~ s/^no-?//i; # strip NO prefix 1068 $arg = 0; # supply explicit value 1069 } 1070 unshift (@$argv, $starter.$rest) if defined $rest; 1071 return (1, $opt, $ctl, $arg); 1072 } 1073 1074 # Get mandatory status and type info. 1075 my $mand = $ctl->[CTL_AMIN]; 1076 1077 # Check if there is an option argument available. 1078 if ( $gnu_compat && defined $optarg && $optarg eq '' ) { 1079 return (1, $opt, $ctl, $type eq 's' ? '' : 0) ;#unless $mand; 1080 $optarg = 0 unless $type eq 's'; 1081 } 1082 1083 # Check if there is an option argument available. 1084 if ( defined $optarg 1085 ? ($optarg eq '') 1086 : !(defined $rest || @$argv > 0) ) { 1087 # Complain if this option needs an argument. 1088# if ( $mand && !($type eq 's' ? defined($optarg) : 0) ) { 1089 if ( $mand ) { 1090 return (0) if $passthrough; 1091 warn ("Option ", $opt, " requires an argument\n"); 1092 $error++; 1093 return (1, undef); 1094 } 1095 if ( $type eq 'I' ) { 1096 # Fake incremental type. 1097 my @c = @$ctl; 1098 $c[CTL_TYPE] = '+'; 1099 return (1, $opt, \@c, 1); 1100 } 1101 return (1, $opt, $ctl, 1102 defined($ctl->[CTL_DEFAULT]) ? $ctl->[CTL_DEFAULT] : 1103 $type eq 's' ? '' : 0); 1104 } 1105 1106 # Get (possibly optional) argument. 1107 $arg = (defined $rest ? $rest 1108 : (defined $optarg ? $optarg : shift (@$argv))); 1109 1110 # Get key if this is a "name=value" pair for a hash option. 1111 my $key; 1112 if ($ctl->[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH && defined $arg) { 1113 ($key, $arg) = ($arg =~ /^([^=]*)=(.*)$/s) ? ($1, $2) 1114 : ($arg, defined($ctl->[CTL_DEFAULT]) ? $ctl->[CTL_DEFAULT] : 1115 ($mand ? undef : ($type eq 's' ? "" : 1))); 1116 if (! defined $arg) { 1117 warn ("Option $opt, key \"$key\", requires a value\n"); 1118 $error++; 1119 # Push back. 1120 unshift (@$argv, $starter.$rest) if defined $rest; 1121 return (1, undef); 1122 } 1123 } 1124 1125 #### Check if the argument is valid for this option #### 1126 1127 my $key_valid = $ctl->[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH ? "[^=]+=" : ""; 1128 1129 if ( $type eq 's' ) { # string 1130 # A mandatory string takes anything. 1131 return (1, $opt, $ctl, $arg, $key) if $mand; 1132 1133 # Same for optional string as a hash value 1134 return (1, $opt, $ctl, $arg, $key) 1135 if $ctl->[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH; 1136 1137 # An optional string takes almost anything. 1138 return (1, $opt, $ctl, $arg, $key) 1139 if defined $optarg || defined $rest; 1140 return (1, $opt, $ctl, $arg, $key) if $arg eq "-"; # ?? 1141 1142 # Check for option or option list terminator. 1143 if ($arg eq $argend || 1144 $arg =~ /^$prefix.+/) { 1145 # Push back. 1146 unshift (@$argv, $arg); 1147 # Supply empty value. 1148 $arg = ''; 1149 } 1150 } 1151 1152 elsif ( $type eq 'i' # numeric/integer 1153 || $type eq 'I' # numeric/integer w/ incr default 1154 || $type eq 'o' ) { # dec/oct/hex/bin value 1155 1156 my $o_valid = $type eq 'o' ? PAT_XINT : PAT_INT; 1157 1158 if ( $bundling && defined $rest 1159 && $rest =~ /^($key_valid)($o_valid)(.*)$/si ) { 1160 ($key, $arg, $rest) = ($1, $2, $+); 1161 chop($key) if $key; 1162 $arg = ($type eq 'o' && $arg =~ /^0/) ? oct($arg) : 0+$arg; 1163 unshift (@$argv, $starter.$rest) if defined $rest && $rest ne ''; 1164 } 1165 elsif ( $arg =~ /^$o_valid$/si ) { 1166 $arg =~ tr/_//d; 1167 $arg = ($type eq 'o' && $arg =~ /^0/) ? oct($arg) : 0+$arg; 1168 } 1169 else { 1170 if ( defined $optarg || $mand ) { 1171 if ( $passthrough ) { 1172 unshift (@$argv, defined $rest ? $starter.$rest : $arg) 1173 unless defined $optarg; 1174 return (0); 1175 } 1176 warn ("Value \"", $arg, "\" invalid for option ", 1177 $opt, " (", 1178 $type eq 'o' ? "extended " : '', 1179 "number expected)\n"); 1180 $error++; 1181 # Push back. 1182 unshift (@$argv, $starter.$rest) if defined $rest; 1183 return (1, undef); 1184 } 1185 else { 1186 # Push back. 1187 unshift (@$argv, defined $rest ? $starter.$rest : $arg); 1188 if ( $type eq 'I' ) { 1189 # Fake incremental type. 1190 my @c = @$ctl; 1191 $c[CTL_TYPE] = '+'; 1192 return (1, $opt, \@c, 1); 1193 } 1194 # Supply default value. 1195 $arg = defined($ctl->[CTL_DEFAULT]) ? $ctl->[CTL_DEFAULT] : 0; 1196 } 1197 } 1198 } 1199 1200 elsif ( $type eq 'f' ) { # real number, int is also ok 1201 # We require at least one digit before a point or 'e', 1202 # and at least one digit following the point and 'e'. 1203 my $o_valid = PAT_FLOAT; 1204 if ( $bundling && defined $rest && 1205 $rest =~ /^($key_valid)($o_valid)(.*)$/s ) { 1206 $arg =~ tr/_//d; 1207 ($key, $arg, $rest) = ($1, $2, $+); 1208 chop($key) if $key; 1209 unshift (@$argv, $starter.$rest) if defined $rest && $rest ne ''; 1210 } 1211 elsif ( $arg =~ /^$o_valid$/ ) { 1212 $arg =~ tr/_//d; 1213 } 1214 else { 1215 if ( defined $optarg || $mand ) { 1216 if ( $passthrough ) { 1217 unshift (@$argv, defined $rest ? $starter.$rest : $arg) 1218 unless defined $optarg; 1219 return (0); 1220 } 1221 warn ("Value \"", $arg, "\" invalid for option ", 1222 $opt, " (real number expected)\n"); 1223 $error++; 1224 # Push back. 1225 unshift (@$argv, $starter.$rest) if defined $rest; 1226 return (1, undef); 1227 } 1228 else { 1229 # Push back. 1230 unshift (@$argv, defined $rest ? $starter.$rest : $arg); 1231 # Supply default value. 1232 $arg = 0.0; 1233 } 1234 } 1235 } 1236 else { 1237 die("Getopt::Long internal error (Can't happen)\n"); 1238 } 1239 return (1, $opt, $ctl, $arg, $key); 1240} 1241 1242sub ValidValue ($$$$$) { 1243 my ($ctl, $arg, $mand, $argend, $prefix) = @_; 1244 1245 if ( $ctl->[CTL_DEST] == CTL_DEST_HASH ) { 1246 return 0 unless $arg =~ /[^=]+=(.*)/; 1247 $arg = $1; 1248 } 1249 1250 my $type = $ctl->[CTL_TYPE]; 1251 1252 if ( $type eq 's' ) { # string 1253 # A mandatory string takes anything. 1254 return (1) if $mand; 1255 1256 return (1) if $arg eq "-"; 1257 1258 # Check for option or option list terminator. 1259 return 0 if $arg eq $argend || $arg =~ /^$prefix.+/; 1260 return 1; 1261 } 1262 1263 elsif ( $type eq 'i' # numeric/integer 1264 || $type eq 'I' # numeric/integer w/ incr default 1265 || $type eq 'o' ) { # dec/oct/hex/bin value 1266 1267 my $o_valid = $type eq 'o' ? PAT_XINT : PAT_INT; 1268 return $arg =~ /^$o_valid$/si; 1269 } 1270 1271 elsif ( $type eq 'f' ) { # real number, int is also ok 1272 # We require at least one digit before a point or 'e', 1273 # and at least one digit following the point and 'e'. 1274 # [-]NN[.NN][eNN] 1275 my $o_valid = PAT_FLOAT; 1276 return $arg =~ /^$o_valid$/; 1277 } 1278 die("ValidValue: Cannot happen\n"); 1279} 1280 1281# Getopt::Long Configuration. 1282sub Configure (@) { 1283 my (@options) = @_; 1284 1285 my $prevconfig = 1286 [ $error, $debug, $major_version, $minor_version, 1287 $autoabbrev, $getopt_compat, $ignorecase, $bundling, $order, 1288 $gnu_compat, $passthrough, $genprefix, $auto_version, $auto_help, 1289 $longprefix ]; 1290 1291 if ( ref($options[0]) eq 'ARRAY' ) { 1292 ( $error, $debug, $major_version, $minor_version, 1293 $autoabbrev, $getopt_compat, $ignorecase, $bundling, $order, 1294 $gnu_compat, $passthrough, $genprefix, $auto_version, $auto_help, 1295 $longprefix ) = @{shift(@options)}; 1296 } 1297 1298 my $opt; 1299 foreach $opt ( @options ) { 1300 my $try = lc ($opt); 1301 my $action = 1; 1302 if ( $try =~ /^no_?(.*)$/s ) { 1303 $action = 0; 1304 $try = $+; 1305 } 1306 if ( ($try eq 'default' or $try eq 'defaults') && $action ) { 1307 ConfigDefaults (); 1308 } 1309 elsif ( ($try eq 'posix_default' or $try eq 'posix_defaults') ) { 1310 local $ENV{POSIXLY_CORRECT}; 1311 $ENV{POSIXLY_CORRECT} = 1 if $action; 1312 ConfigDefaults (); 1313 } 1314 elsif ( $try eq 'auto_abbrev' or $try eq 'autoabbrev' ) { 1315 $autoabbrev = $action; 1316 } 1317 elsif ( $try eq 'getopt_compat' ) { 1318 $getopt_compat = $action; 1319 $genprefix = $action ? "(--|-|\\+)" : "(--|-)"; 1320 } 1321 elsif ( $try eq 'gnu_getopt' ) { 1322 if ( $action ) { 1323 $gnu_compat = 1; 1324 $bundling = 1; 1325 $getopt_compat = 0; 1326 $genprefix = "(--|-)"; 1327 $order = $PERMUTE; 1328 } 1329 } 1330 elsif ( $try eq 'gnu_compat' ) { 1331 $gnu_compat = $action; 1332 } 1333 elsif ( $try =~ /^(auto_?)?version$/ ) { 1334 $auto_version = $action; 1335 } 1336 elsif ( $try =~ /^(auto_?)?help$/ ) { 1337 $auto_help = $action; 1338 } 1339 elsif ( $try eq 'ignorecase' or $try eq 'ignore_case' ) { 1340 $ignorecase = $action; 1341 } 1342 elsif ( $try eq 'ignorecase_always' or $try eq 'ignore_case_always' ) { 1343 $ignorecase = $action ? 2 : 0; 1344 } 1345 elsif ( $try eq 'bundling' ) { 1346 $bundling = $action; 1347 } 1348 elsif ( $try eq 'bundling_override' ) { 1349 $bundling = $action ? 2 : 0; 1350 } 1351 elsif ( $try eq 'require_order' ) { 1352 $order = $action ? $REQUIRE_ORDER : $PERMUTE; 1353 } 1354 elsif ( $try eq 'permute' ) { 1355 $order = $action ? $PERMUTE : $REQUIRE_ORDER; 1356 } 1357 elsif ( $try eq 'pass_through' or $try eq 'passthrough' ) { 1358 $passthrough = $action; 1359 } 1360 elsif ( $try =~ /^prefix=(.+)$/ && $action ) { 1361 $genprefix = $1; 1362 # Turn into regexp. Needs to be parenthesized! 1363 $genprefix = "(" . quotemeta($genprefix) . ")"; 1364 eval { '' =~ /$genprefix/; }; 1365 die("Getopt::Long: invalid pattern \"$genprefix\"\n") if $@; 1366 } 1367 elsif ( $try =~ /^prefix_pattern=(.+)$/ && $action ) { 1368 $genprefix = $1; 1369 # Parenthesize if needed. 1370 $genprefix = "(" . $genprefix . ")" 1371 unless $genprefix =~ /^\(.*\)$/; 1372 eval { '' =~ m"$genprefix"; }; 1373 die("Getopt::Long: invalid pattern \"$genprefix\"\n") if $@; 1374 } 1375 elsif ( $try =~ /^long_prefix_pattern=(.+)$/ && $action ) { 1376 $longprefix = $1; 1377 # Parenthesize if needed. 1378 $longprefix = "(" . $longprefix . ")" 1379 unless $longprefix =~ /^\(.*\)$/; 1380 eval { '' =~ m"$longprefix"; }; 1381 die("Getopt::Long: invalid long prefix pattern \"$longprefix\"\n") if $@; 1382 } 1383 elsif ( $try eq 'debug' ) { 1384 $debug = $action; 1385 } 1386 else { 1387 die("Getopt::Long: unknown or erroneous config parameter \"$opt\"\n") 1388 } 1389 } 1390 $prevconfig; 1391} 1392 1393# Deprecated name. 1394sub config (@) { 1395 Configure (@_); 1396} 1397 1398# Issue a standard message for --version. 1399# 1400# The arguments are mostly the same as for Pod::Usage::pod2usage: 1401# 1402# - a number (exit value) 1403# - a string (lead in message) 1404# - a hash with options. See Pod::Usage for details. 1405# 1406sub VersionMessage(@) { 1407 # Massage args. 1408 my $pa = setup_pa_args("version", @_); 1409 1410 my $v = $main::VERSION; 1411 my $fh = $pa->{-output} || 1412 ($pa->{-exitval} eq "NOEXIT" || $pa->{-exitval} < 2) ? \*STDOUT : \*STDERR; 1413 1414 print $fh (defined($pa->{-message}) ? $pa->{-message} : (), 1415 $0, defined $v ? " version $v" : (), 1416 "\n", 1417 "(", __PACKAGE__, "::", "GetOptions", 1418 " version ", 1419 defined($Getopt::Long::VERSION_STRING) 1420 ? $Getopt::Long::VERSION_STRING : $VERSION, ";", 1421 " Perl version ", 1422 $] >= 5.006 ? sprintf("%vd", $^V) : $], 1423 ")\n"); 1424 exit($pa->{-exitval}) unless $pa->{-exitval} eq "NOEXIT"; 1425} 1426 1427# Issue a standard message for --help. 1428# 1429# The arguments are the same as for Pod::Usage::pod2usage: 1430# 1431# - a number (exit value) 1432# - a string (lead in message) 1433# - a hash with options. See Pod::Usage for details. 1434# 1435sub HelpMessage(@) { 1436 eval { 1437 require Pod::Usage; 1438 import Pod::Usage; 1439 1; 1440 } || die("Cannot provide help: cannot load Pod::Usage\n"); 1441 1442 # Note that pod2usage will issue a warning if -exitval => NOEXIT. 1443 pod2usage(setup_pa_args("help", @_)); 1444 1445} 1446 1447# Helper routine to set up a normalized hash ref to be used as 1448# argument to pod2usage. 1449sub setup_pa_args($@) { 1450 my $tag = shift; # who's calling 1451 1452 # If called by direct binding to an option, it will get the option 1453 # name and value as arguments. Remove these, if so. 1454 @_ = () if @_ == 2 && $_[0] eq $tag; 1455 1456 my $pa; 1457 if ( @_ > 1 ) { 1458 $pa = { @_ }; 1459 } 1460 else { 1461 $pa = shift || {}; 1462 } 1463 1464 # At this point, $pa can be a number (exit value), string 1465 # (message) or hash with options. 1466 1467 if ( UNIVERSAL::isa($pa, 'HASH') ) { 1468 # Get rid of -msg vs. -message ambiguity. 1469 $pa->{-message} = $pa->{-msg}; 1470 delete($pa->{-msg}); 1471 } 1472 elsif ( $pa =~ /^-?\d+$/ ) { 1473 $pa = { -exitval => $pa }; 1474 } 1475 else { 1476 $pa = { -message => $pa }; 1477 } 1478 1479 # These are _our_ defaults. 1480 $pa->{-verbose} = 0 unless exists($pa->{-verbose}); 1481 $pa->{-exitval} = 0 unless exists($pa->{-exitval}); 1482 $pa; 1483} 1484 1485# Sneak way to know what version the user requested. 1486sub VERSION { 1487 $requested_version = $_[1]; 1488 shift->SUPER::VERSION(@_); 1489} 1490 1491package Getopt::Long::CallBack; 1492 1493sub new { 1494 my ($pkg, %atts) = @_; 1495 bless { %atts }, $pkg; 1496} 1497 1498sub name { 1499 my $self = shift; 1500 ''.$self->{name}; 1501} 1502 1503use overload 1504 # Treat this object as an ordinary string for legacy API. 1505 '""' => \&name, 1506 fallback => 1; 1507 15081; 1509 1510################ Documentation ################ 1511 1512=head1 NAME 1513 1514Getopt::Long - Extended processing of command line options 1515 1516=head1 SYNOPSIS 1517 1518 use Getopt::Long; 1519 my $data = "file.dat"; 1520 my $length = 24; 1521 my $verbose; 1522 GetOptions ("length=i" => \$length, # numeric 1523 "file=s" => \$data, # string 1524 "verbose" => \$verbose) # flag 1525 or die("Error in command line arguments\n"); 1526 1527=head1 DESCRIPTION 1528 1529The Getopt::Long module implements an extended getopt function called 1530GetOptions(). It parses the command line from C<@ARGV>, recognizing 1531and removing specified options and their possible values. 1532 1533This function adheres to the POSIX syntax for command 1534line options, with GNU extensions. In general, this means that options 1535have long names instead of single letters, and are introduced with a 1536double dash "--". Support for bundling of command line options, as was 1537the case with the more traditional single-letter approach, is provided 1538but not enabled by default. 1539 1540=head1 Command Line Options, an Introduction 1541 1542Command line operated programs traditionally take their arguments from 1543the command line, for example filenames or other information that the 1544program needs to know. Besides arguments, these programs often take 1545command line I<options> as well. Options are not necessary for the 1546program to work, hence the name 'option', but are used to modify its 1547default behaviour. For example, a program could do its job quietly, 1548but with a suitable option it could provide verbose information about 1549what it did. 1550 1551Command line options come in several flavours. Historically, they are 1552preceded by a single dash C<->, and consist of a single letter. 1553 1554 -l -a -c 1555 1556Usually, these single-character options can be bundled: 1557 1558 -lac 1559 1560Options can have values, the value is placed after the option 1561character. Sometimes with whitespace in between, sometimes not: 1562 1563 -s 24 -s24 1564 1565Due to the very cryptic nature of these options, another style was 1566developed that used long names. So instead of a cryptic C<-l> one 1567could use the more descriptive C<--long>. To distinguish between a 1568bundle of single-character options and a long one, two dashes are used 1569to precede the option name. Early implementations of long options used 1570a plus C<+> instead. Also, option values could be specified either 1571like 1572 1573 --size=24 1574 1575or 1576 1577 --size 24 1578 1579The C<+> form is now obsolete and strongly deprecated. 1580 1581=head1 Getting Started with Getopt::Long 1582 1583Getopt::Long is the Perl5 successor of C<newgetopt.pl>. This was the 1584first Perl module that provided support for handling the new style of 1585command line options, in particular long option names, hence the Perl5 1586name Getopt::Long. This module also supports single-character options 1587and bundling. 1588 1589To use Getopt::Long from a Perl program, you must include the 1590following line in your Perl program: 1591 1592 use Getopt::Long; 1593 1594This will load the core of the Getopt::Long module and prepare your 1595program for using it. Most of the actual Getopt::Long code is not 1596loaded until you really call one of its functions. 1597 1598In the default configuration, options names may be abbreviated to 1599uniqueness, case does not matter, and a single dash is sufficient, 1600even for long option names. Also, options may be placed between 1601non-option arguments. See L<Configuring Getopt::Long> for more 1602details on how to configure Getopt::Long. 1603 1604=head2 Simple options 1605 1606The most simple options are the ones that take no values. Their mere 1607presence on the command line enables the option. Popular examples are: 1608 1609 --all --verbose --quiet --debug 1610 1611Handling simple options is straightforward: 1612 1613 my $verbose = ''; # option variable with default value (false) 1614 my $all = ''; # option variable with default value (false) 1615 GetOptions ('verbose' => \$verbose, 'all' => \$all); 1616 1617The call to GetOptions() parses the command line arguments that are 1618present in C<@ARGV> and sets the option variable to the value C<1> if 1619the option did occur on the command line. Otherwise, the option 1620variable is not touched. Setting the option value to true is often 1621called I<enabling> the option. 1622 1623The option name as specified to the GetOptions() function is called 1624the option I<specification>. Later we'll see that this specification 1625can contain more than just the option name. The reference to the 1626variable is called the option I<destination>. 1627 1628GetOptions() will return a true value if the command line could be 1629processed successfully. Otherwise, it will write error messages using 1630die() and warn(), and return a false result. 1631 1632=head2 A little bit less simple options 1633 1634Getopt::Long supports two useful variants of simple options: 1635I<negatable> options and I<incremental> options. 1636 1637A negatable option is specified with an exclamation mark C<!> after the 1638option name: 1639 1640 my $verbose = ''; # option variable with default value (false) 1641 GetOptions ('verbose!' => \$verbose); 1642 1643Now, using C<--verbose> on the command line will enable C<$verbose>, 1644as expected. But it is also allowed to use C<--noverbose>, which will 1645disable C<$verbose> by setting its value to C<0>. Using a suitable 1646default value, the program can find out whether C<$verbose> is false 1647by default, or disabled by using C<--noverbose>. 1648 1649An incremental option is specified with a plus C<+> after the 1650option name: 1651 1652 my $verbose = ''; # option variable with default value (false) 1653 GetOptions ('verbose+' => \$verbose); 1654 1655Using C<--verbose> on the command line will increment the value of 1656C<$verbose>. This way the program can keep track of how many times the 1657option occurred on the command line. For example, each occurrence of 1658C<--verbose> could increase the verbosity level of the program. 1659 1660=head2 Mixing command line option with other arguments 1661 1662Usually programs take command line options as well as other arguments, 1663for example, file names. It is good practice to always specify the 1664options first, and the other arguments last. Getopt::Long will, 1665however, allow the options and arguments to be mixed and 'filter out' 1666all the options before passing the rest of the arguments to the 1667program. To stop Getopt::Long from processing further arguments, 1668insert a double dash C<--> on the command line: 1669 1670 --size 24 -- --all 1671 1672In this example, C<--all> will I<not> be treated as an option, but 1673passed to the program unharmed, in C<@ARGV>. 1674 1675=head2 Options with values 1676 1677For options that take values it must be specified whether the option 1678value is required or not, and what kind of value the option expects. 1679 1680Three kinds of values are supported: integer numbers, floating point 1681numbers, and strings. 1682 1683If the option value is required, Getopt::Long will take the 1684command line argument that follows the option and assign this to the 1685option variable. If, however, the option value is specified as 1686optional, this will only be done if that value does not look like a 1687valid command line option itself. 1688 1689 my $tag = ''; # option variable with default value 1690 GetOptions ('tag=s' => \$tag); 1691 1692In the option specification, the option name is followed by an equals 1693sign C<=> and the letter C<s>. The equals sign indicates that this 1694option requires a value. The letter C<s> indicates that this value is 1695an arbitrary string. Other possible value types are C<i> for integer 1696values, and C<f> for floating point values. Using a colon C<:> instead 1697of the equals sign indicates that the option value is optional. In 1698this case, if no suitable value is supplied, string valued options get 1699an empty string C<''> assigned, while numeric options are set to C<0>. 1700 1701=head2 Options with multiple values 1702 1703Options sometimes take several values. For example, a program could 1704use multiple directories to search for library files: 1705 1706 --library lib/stdlib --library lib/extlib 1707 1708To accomplish this behaviour, simply specify an array reference as the 1709destination for the option: 1710 1711 GetOptions ("library=s" => \@libfiles); 1712 1713Alternatively, you can specify that the option can have multiple 1714values by adding a "@", and pass a scalar reference as the 1715destination: 1716 1717 GetOptions ("library=s@" => \$libfiles); 1718 1719Used with the example above, C<@libfiles> (or C<@$libfiles>) would 1720contain two strings upon completion: C<"lib/stdlib"> and 1721C<"lib/extlib">, in that order. It is also possible to specify that 1722only integer or floating point numbers are acceptable values. 1723 1724Often it is useful to allow comma-separated lists of values as well as 1725multiple occurrences of the options. This is easy using Perl's split() 1726and join() operators: 1727 1728 GetOptions ("library=s" => \@libfiles); 1729 @libfiles = split(/,/,join(',',@libfiles)); 1730 1731Of course, it is important to choose the right separator string for 1732each purpose. 1733 1734Warning: What follows is an experimental feature. 1735 1736Options can take multiple values at once, for example 1737 1738 --coordinates 52.2 16.4 --rgbcolor 255 255 149 1739 1740This can be accomplished by adding a repeat specifier to the option 1741specification. Repeat specifiers are very similar to the C<{...}> 1742repeat specifiers that can be used with regular expression patterns. 1743For example, the above command line would be handled as follows: 1744 1745 GetOptions('coordinates=f{2}' => \@coor, 'rgbcolor=i{3}' => \@color); 1746 1747The destination for the option must be an array or array reference. 1748 1749It is also possible to specify the minimal and maximal number of 1750arguments an option takes. C<foo=s{2,4}> indicates an option that 1751takes at least two and at most 4 arguments. C<foo=s{1,}> indicates one 1752or more values; C<foo:s{,}> indicates zero or more option values. 1753 1754=head2 Options with hash values 1755 1756If the option destination is a reference to a hash, the option will 1757take, as value, strings of the form I<key>C<=>I<value>. The value will 1758be stored with the specified key in the hash. 1759 1760 GetOptions ("define=s" => \%defines); 1761 1762Alternatively you can use: 1763 1764 GetOptions ("define=s%" => \$defines); 1765 1766When used with command line options: 1767 1768 --define os=linux --define vendor=redhat 1769 1770the hash C<%defines> (or C<%$defines>) will contain two keys, C<"os"> 1771with value C<"linux"> and C<"vendor"> with value C<"redhat">. It is 1772also possible to specify that only integer or floating point numbers 1773are acceptable values. The keys are always taken to be strings. 1774 1775=head2 User-defined subroutines to handle options 1776 1777Ultimate control over what should be done when (actually: each time) 1778an option is encountered on the command line can be achieved by 1779designating a reference to a subroutine (or an anonymous subroutine) 1780as the option destination. When GetOptions() encounters the option, it 1781will call the subroutine with two or three arguments. The first 1782argument is the name of the option. (Actually, it is an object that 1783stringifies to the name of the option.) For a scalar or array destination, 1784the second argument is the value to be stored. For a hash destination, 1785the second argument is the key to the hash, and the third argument 1786the value to be stored. It is up to the subroutine to store the value, 1787or do whatever it thinks is appropriate. 1788 1789A trivial application of this mechanism is to implement options that 1790are related to each other. For example: 1791 1792 my $verbose = ''; # option variable with default value (false) 1793 GetOptions ('verbose' => \$verbose, 1794 'quiet' => sub { $verbose = 0 }); 1795 1796Here C<--verbose> and C<--quiet> control the same variable 1797C<$verbose>, but with opposite values. 1798 1799If the subroutine needs to signal an error, it should call die() with 1800the desired error message as its argument. GetOptions() will catch the 1801die(), issue the error message, and record that an error result must 1802be returned upon completion. 1803 1804If the text of the error message starts with an exclamation mark C<!> 1805it is interpreted specially by GetOptions(). There is currently one 1806special command implemented: C<die("!FINISH")> will cause GetOptions() 1807to stop processing options, as if it encountered a double dash C<-->. 1808 1809In version 2.37 the first argument to the callback function was 1810changed from string to object. This was done to make room for 1811extensions and more detailed control. The object stringifies to the 1812option name so this change should not introduce compatibility 1813problems. 1814 1815Here is an example of how to access the option name and value from within 1816a subroutine: 1817 1818 GetOptions ('opt=i' => \&handler); 1819 sub handler { 1820 my ($opt_name, $opt_value) = @_; 1821 print("Option name is $opt_name and value is $opt_value\n"); 1822 } 1823 1824=head2 Options with multiple names 1825 1826Often it is user friendly to supply alternate mnemonic names for 1827options. For example C<--height> could be an alternate name for 1828C<--length>. Alternate names can be included in the option 1829specification, separated by vertical bar C<|> characters. To implement 1830the above example: 1831 1832 GetOptions ('length|height=f' => \$length); 1833 1834The first name is called the I<primary> name, the other names are 1835called I<aliases>. When using a hash to store options, the key will 1836always be the primary name. 1837 1838Multiple alternate names are possible. 1839 1840=head2 Case and abbreviations 1841 1842Without additional configuration, GetOptions() will ignore the case of 1843option names, and allow the options to be abbreviated to uniqueness. 1844 1845 GetOptions ('length|height=f' => \$length, "head" => \$head); 1846 1847This call will allow C<--l> and C<--L> for the length option, but 1848requires a least C<--hea> and C<--hei> for the head and height options. 1849 1850=head2 Summary of Option Specifications 1851 1852Each option specifier consists of two parts: the name specification 1853and the argument specification. 1854 1855The name specification contains the name of the option, optionally 1856followed by a list of alternative names separated by vertical bar 1857characters. 1858 1859 length option name is "length" 1860 length|size|l name is "length", aliases are "size" and "l" 1861 1862The argument specification is optional. If omitted, the option is 1863considered boolean, a value of 1 will be assigned when the option is 1864used on the command line. 1865 1866The argument specification can be 1867 1868=over 4 1869 1870=item ! 1871 1872The option does not take an argument and may be negated by prefixing 1873it with "no" or "no-". E.g. C<"foo!"> will allow C<--foo> (a value of 18741 will be assigned) as well as C<--nofoo> and C<--no-foo> (a value of 18750 will be assigned). If the option has aliases, this applies to the 1876aliases as well. 1877 1878Using negation on a single letter option when bundling is in effect is 1879pointless and will result in a warning. 1880 1881=item + 1882 1883The option does not take an argument and will be incremented by 1 1884every time it appears on the command line. E.g. C<"more+">, when used 1885with C<--more --more --more>, will increment the value three times, 1886resulting in a value of 3 (provided it was 0 or undefined at first). 1887 1888The C<+> specifier is ignored if the option destination is not a scalar. 1889 1890=item = I<type> [ I<desttype> ] [ I<repeat> ] 1891 1892The option requires an argument of the given type. Supported types 1893are: 1894 1895=over 4 1896 1897=item s 1898 1899String. An arbitrary sequence of characters. It is valid for the 1900argument to start with C<-> or C<-->. 1901 1902=item i 1903 1904Integer. An optional leading plus or minus sign, followed by a 1905sequence of digits. 1906 1907=item o 1908 1909Extended integer, Perl style. This can be either an optional leading 1910plus or minus sign, followed by a sequence of digits, or an octal 1911string (a zero, optionally followed by '0', '1', .. '7'), or a 1912hexadecimal string (C<0x> followed by '0' .. '9', 'a' .. 'f', case 1913insensitive), or a binary string (C<0b> followed by a series of '0' 1914and '1'). 1915 1916=item f 1917 1918Real number. For example C<3.14>, C<-6.23E24> and so on. 1919 1920=back 1921 1922The I<desttype> can be C<@> or C<%> to specify that the option is 1923list or a hash valued. This is only needed when the destination for 1924the option value is not otherwise specified. It should be omitted when 1925not needed. 1926 1927The I<repeat> specifies the number of values this option takes per 1928occurrence on the command line. It has the format C<{> [ I<min> ] [ C<,> [ I<max> ] ] C<}>. 1929 1930I<min> denotes the minimal number of arguments. It defaults to 1 for 1931options with C<=> and to 0 for options with C<:>, see below. Note that 1932I<min> overrules the C<=> / C<:> semantics. 1933 1934I<max> denotes the maximum number of arguments. It must be at least 1935I<min>. If I<max> is omitted, I<but the comma is not>, there is no 1936upper bound to the number of argument values taken. 1937 1938=item : I<type> [ I<desttype> ] 1939 1940Like C<=>, but designates the argument as optional. 1941If omitted, an empty string will be assigned to string values options, 1942and the value zero to numeric options. 1943 1944Note that if a string argument starts with C<-> or C<-->, it will be 1945considered an option on itself. 1946 1947=item : I<number> [ I<desttype> ] 1948 1949Like C<:i>, but if the value is omitted, the I<number> will be assigned. 1950 1951=item : + [ I<desttype> ] 1952 1953Like C<:i>, but if the value is omitted, the current value for the 1954option will be incremented. 1955 1956=back 1957 1958=head1 Advanced Possibilities 1959 1960=head2 Object oriented interface 1961 1962Getopt::Long can be used in an object oriented way as well: 1963 1964 use Getopt::Long; 1965 $p = Getopt::Long::Parser->new; 1966 $p->configure(...configuration options...); 1967 if ($p->getoptions(...options descriptions...)) ... 1968 if ($p->getoptionsfromarray( \@array, ...options descriptions...)) ... 1969 1970Configuration options can be passed to the constructor: 1971 1972 $p = new Getopt::Long::Parser 1973 config => [...configuration options...]; 1974 1975=head2 Thread Safety 1976 1977Getopt::Long is thread safe when using ithreads as of Perl 5.8. It is 1978I<not> thread safe when using the older (experimental and now 1979obsolete) threads implementation that was added to Perl 5.005. 1980 1981=head2 Documentation and help texts 1982 1983Getopt::Long encourages the use of Pod::Usage to produce help 1984messages. For example: 1985 1986 use Getopt::Long; 1987 use Pod::Usage; 1988 1989 my $man = 0; 1990 my $help = 0; 1991 1992 GetOptions('help|?' => \$help, man => \$man) or pod2usage(2); 1993 pod2usage(1) if $help; 1994 pod2usage(-exitval => 0, -verbose => 2) if $man; 1995 1996 __END__ 1997 1998 =head1 NAME 1999 2000 sample - Using Getopt::Long and Pod::Usage 2001 2002 =head1 SYNOPSIS 2003 2004 sample [options] [file ...] 2005 2006 Options: 2007 -help brief help message 2008 -man full documentation 2009 2010 =head1 OPTIONS 2011 2012 =over 8 2013 2014 =item B<-help> 2015 2016 Print a brief help message and exits. 2017 2018 =item B<-man> 2019 2020 Prints the manual page and exits. 2021 2022 =back 2023 2024 =head1 DESCRIPTION 2025 2026 B<This program> will read the given input file(s) and do something 2027 useful with the contents thereof. 2028 2029 =cut 2030 2031See L<Pod::Usage> for details. 2032 2033=head2 Parsing options from an arbitrary array 2034 2035By default, GetOptions parses the options that are present in the 2036global array C<@ARGV>. A special entry C<GetOptionsFromArray> can be 2037used to parse options from an arbitrary array. 2038 2039 use Getopt::Long qw(GetOptionsFromArray); 2040 $ret = GetOptionsFromArray(\@myopts, ...); 2041 2042When used like this, options and their possible values are removed 2043from C<@myopts>, the global C<@ARGV> is not touched at all. 2044 2045The following two calls behave identically: 2046 2047 $ret = GetOptions( ... ); 2048 $ret = GetOptionsFromArray(\@ARGV, ... ); 2049 2050This also means that a first argument hash reference now becomes the 2051second argument: 2052 2053 $ret = GetOptions(\%opts, ... ); 2054 $ret = GetOptionsFromArray(\@ARGV, \%opts, ... ); 2055 2056=head2 Parsing options from an arbitrary string 2057 2058A special entry C<GetOptionsFromString> can be used to parse options 2059from an arbitrary string. 2060 2061 use Getopt::Long qw(GetOptionsFromString); 2062 $ret = GetOptionsFromString($string, ...); 2063 2064The contents of the string are split into arguments using a call to 2065C<Text::ParseWords::shellwords>. As with C<GetOptionsFromArray>, the 2066global C<@ARGV> is not touched. 2067 2068It is possible that, upon completion, not all arguments in the string 2069have been processed. C<GetOptionsFromString> will, when called in list 2070context, return both the return status and an array reference to any 2071remaining arguments: 2072 2073 ($ret, $args) = GetOptionsFromString($string, ... ); 2074 2075If any arguments remain, and C<GetOptionsFromString> was not called in 2076list context, a message will be given and C<GetOptionsFromString> will 2077return failure. 2078 2079As with GetOptionsFromArray, a first argument hash reference now 2080becomes the second argument. 2081 2082=head2 Storing options values in a hash 2083 2084Sometimes, for example when there are a lot of options, having a 2085separate variable for each of them can be cumbersome. GetOptions() 2086supports, as an alternative mechanism, storing options values in a 2087hash. 2088 2089To obtain this, a reference to a hash must be passed I<as the first 2090argument> to GetOptions(). For each option that is specified on the 2091command line, the option value will be stored in the hash with the 2092option name as key. Options that are not actually used on the command 2093line will not be put in the hash, on other words, 2094C<exists($h{option})> (or defined()) can be used to test if an option 2095was used. The drawback is that warnings will be issued if the program 2096runs under C<use strict> and uses C<$h{option}> without testing with 2097exists() or defined() first. 2098 2099 my %h = (); 2100 GetOptions (\%h, 'length=i'); # will store in $h{length} 2101 2102For options that take list or hash values, it is necessary to indicate 2103this by appending an C<@> or C<%> sign after the type: 2104 2105 GetOptions (\%h, 'colours=s@'); # will push to @{$h{colours}} 2106 2107To make things more complicated, the hash may contain references to 2108the actual destinations, for example: 2109 2110 my $len = 0; 2111 my %h = ('length' => \$len); 2112 GetOptions (\%h, 'length=i'); # will store in $len 2113 2114This example is fully equivalent with: 2115 2116 my $len = 0; 2117 GetOptions ('length=i' => \$len); # will store in $len 2118 2119Any mixture is possible. For example, the most frequently used options 2120could be stored in variables while all other options get stored in the 2121hash: 2122 2123 my $verbose = 0; # frequently referred 2124 my $debug = 0; # frequently referred 2125 my %h = ('verbose' => \$verbose, 'debug' => \$debug); 2126 GetOptions (\%h, 'verbose', 'debug', 'filter', 'size=i'); 2127 if ( $verbose ) { ... } 2128 if ( exists $h{filter} ) { ... option 'filter' was specified ... } 2129 2130=head2 Bundling 2131 2132With bundling it is possible to set several single-character options 2133at once. For example if C<a>, C<v> and C<x> are all valid options, 2134 2135 -vax 2136 2137would set all three. 2138 2139Getopt::Long supports two levels of bundling. To enable bundling, a 2140call to Getopt::Long::Configure is required. 2141 2142The first level of bundling can be enabled with: 2143 2144 Getopt::Long::Configure ("bundling"); 2145 2146Configured this way, single-character options can be bundled but long 2147options B<must> always start with a double dash C<--> to avoid 2148ambiguity. For example, when C<vax>, C<a>, C<v> and C<x> are all valid 2149options, 2150 2151 -vax 2152 2153would set C<a>, C<v> and C<x>, but 2154 2155 --vax 2156 2157would set C<vax>. 2158 2159The second level of bundling lifts this restriction. It can be enabled 2160with: 2161 2162 Getopt::Long::Configure ("bundling_override"); 2163 2164Now, C<-vax> would set the option C<vax>. 2165 2166When any level of bundling is enabled, option values may be inserted 2167in the bundle. For example: 2168 2169 -h24w80 2170 2171is equivalent to 2172 2173 -h 24 -w 80 2174 2175When configured for bundling, single-character options are matched 2176case sensitive while long options are matched case insensitive. To 2177have the single-character options matched case insensitive as well, 2178use: 2179 2180 Getopt::Long::Configure ("bundling", "ignorecase_always"); 2181 2182It goes without saying that bundling can be quite confusing. 2183 2184=head2 The lonesome dash 2185 2186Normally, a lone dash C<-> on the command line will not be considered 2187an option. Option processing will terminate (unless "permute" is 2188configured) and the dash will be left in C<@ARGV>. 2189 2190It is possible to get special treatment for a lone dash. This can be 2191achieved by adding an option specification with an empty name, for 2192example: 2193 2194 GetOptions ('' => \$stdio); 2195 2196A lone dash on the command line will now be a legal option, and using 2197it will set variable C<$stdio>. 2198 2199=head2 Argument callback 2200 2201A special option 'name' C<< <> >> can be used to designate a subroutine 2202to handle non-option arguments. When GetOptions() encounters an 2203argument that does not look like an option, it will immediately call this 2204subroutine and passes it one parameter: the argument name. Well, actually 2205it is an object that stringifies to the argument name. 2206 2207For example: 2208 2209 my $width = 80; 2210 sub process { ... } 2211 GetOptions ('width=i' => \$width, '<>' => \&process); 2212 2213When applied to the following command line: 2214 2215 arg1 --width=72 arg2 --width=60 arg3 2216 2217This will call 2218C<process("arg1")> while C<$width> is C<80>, 2219C<process("arg2")> while C<$width> is C<72>, and 2220C<process("arg3")> while C<$width> is C<60>. 2221 2222This feature requires configuration option B<permute>, see section 2223L<Configuring Getopt::Long>. 2224 2225=head1 Configuring Getopt::Long 2226 2227Getopt::Long can be configured by calling subroutine 2228Getopt::Long::Configure(). This subroutine takes a list of quoted 2229strings, each specifying a configuration option to be enabled, e.g. 2230C<ignore_case>, or disabled, e.g. C<no_ignore_case>. Case does not 2231matter. Multiple calls to Configure() are possible. 2232 2233Alternatively, as of version 2.24, the configuration options may be 2234passed together with the C<use> statement: 2235 2236 use Getopt::Long qw(:config no_ignore_case bundling); 2237 2238The following options are available: 2239 2240=over 12 2241 2242=item default 2243 2244This option causes all configuration options to be reset to their 2245default values. 2246 2247=item posix_default 2248 2249This option causes all configuration options to be reset to their 2250default values as if the environment variable POSIXLY_CORRECT had 2251been set. 2252 2253=item auto_abbrev 2254 2255Allow option names to be abbreviated to uniqueness. 2256Default is enabled unless environment variable 2257POSIXLY_CORRECT has been set, in which case C<auto_abbrev> is disabled. 2258 2259=item getopt_compat 2260 2261Allow C<+> to start options. 2262Default is enabled unless environment variable 2263POSIXLY_CORRECT has been set, in which case C<getopt_compat> is disabled. 2264 2265=item gnu_compat 2266 2267C<gnu_compat> controls whether C<--opt=> is allowed, and what it should 2268do. Without C<gnu_compat>, C<--opt=> gives an error. With C<gnu_compat>, 2269C<--opt=> will give option C<opt> and empty value. 2270This is the way GNU getopt_long() does it. 2271 2272=item gnu_getopt 2273 2274This is a short way of setting C<gnu_compat> C<bundling> C<permute> 2275C<no_getopt_compat>. With C<gnu_getopt>, command line handling should be 2276fully compatible with GNU getopt_long(). 2277 2278=item require_order 2279 2280Whether command line arguments are allowed to be mixed with options. 2281Default is disabled unless environment variable 2282POSIXLY_CORRECT has been set, in which case C<require_order> is enabled. 2283 2284See also C<permute>, which is the opposite of C<require_order>. 2285 2286=item permute 2287 2288Whether command line arguments are allowed to be mixed with options. 2289Default is enabled unless environment variable 2290POSIXLY_CORRECT has been set, in which case C<permute> is disabled. 2291Note that C<permute> is the opposite of C<require_order>. 2292 2293If C<permute> is enabled, this means that 2294 2295 --foo arg1 --bar arg2 arg3 2296 2297is equivalent to 2298 2299 --foo --bar arg1 arg2 arg3 2300 2301If an argument callback routine is specified, C<@ARGV> will always be 2302empty upon successful return of GetOptions() since all options have been 2303processed. The only exception is when C<--> is used: 2304 2305 --foo arg1 --bar arg2 -- arg3 2306 2307This will call the callback routine for arg1 and arg2, and then 2308terminate GetOptions() leaving C<"arg3"> in C<@ARGV>. 2309 2310If C<require_order> is enabled, options processing 2311terminates when the first non-option is encountered. 2312 2313 --foo arg1 --bar arg2 arg3 2314 2315is equivalent to 2316 2317 --foo -- arg1 --bar arg2 arg3 2318 2319If C<pass_through> is also enabled, options processing will terminate 2320at the first unrecognized option, or non-option, whichever comes 2321first. 2322 2323=item bundling (default: disabled) 2324 2325Enabling this option will allow single-character options to be 2326bundled. To distinguish bundles from long option names, long options 2327I<must> be introduced with C<--> and bundles with C<->. 2328 2329Note that, if you have options C<a>, C<l> and C<all>, and 2330auto_abbrev enabled, possible arguments and option settings are: 2331 2332 using argument sets option(s) 2333 ------------------------------------------ 2334 -a, --a a 2335 -l, --l l 2336 -al, -la, -ala, -all,... a, l 2337 --al, --all all 2338 2339The surprising part is that C<--a> sets option C<a> (due to auto 2340completion), not C<all>. 2341 2342Note: disabling C<bundling> also disables C<bundling_override>. 2343 2344=item bundling_override (default: disabled) 2345 2346If C<bundling_override> is enabled, bundling is enabled as with 2347C<bundling> but now long option names override option bundles. 2348 2349Note: disabling C<bundling_override> also disables C<bundling>. 2350 2351B<Note:> Using option bundling can easily lead to unexpected results, 2352especially when mixing long options and bundles. Caveat emptor. 2353 2354=item ignore_case (default: enabled) 2355 2356If enabled, case is ignored when matching option names. If, however, 2357bundling is enabled as well, single character options will be treated 2358case-sensitive. 2359 2360With C<ignore_case>, option specifications for options that only 2361differ in case, e.g., C<"foo"> and C<"Foo">, will be flagged as 2362duplicates. 2363 2364Note: disabling C<ignore_case> also disables C<ignore_case_always>. 2365 2366=item ignore_case_always (default: disabled) 2367 2368When bundling is in effect, case is ignored on single-character 2369options also. 2370 2371Note: disabling C<ignore_case_always> also disables C<ignore_case>. 2372 2373=item auto_version (default:disabled) 2374 2375Automatically provide support for the B<--version> option if 2376the application did not specify a handler for this option itself. 2377 2378Getopt::Long will provide a standard version message that includes the 2379program name, its version (if $main::VERSION is defined), and the 2380versions of Getopt::Long and Perl. The message will be written to 2381standard output and processing will terminate. 2382 2383C<auto_version> will be enabled if the calling program explicitly 2384specified a version number higher than 2.32 in the C<use> or 2385C<require> statement. 2386 2387=item auto_help (default:disabled) 2388 2389Automatically provide support for the B<--help> and B<-?> options if 2390the application did not specify a handler for this option itself. 2391 2392Getopt::Long will provide a help message using module L<Pod::Usage>. The 2393message, derived from the SYNOPSIS POD section, will be written to 2394standard output and processing will terminate. 2395 2396C<auto_help> will be enabled if the calling program explicitly 2397specified a version number higher than 2.32 in the C<use> or 2398C<require> statement. 2399 2400=item pass_through (default: disabled) 2401 2402Options that are unknown, ambiguous or supplied with an invalid option 2403value are passed through in C<@ARGV> instead of being flagged as 2404errors. This makes it possible to write wrapper scripts that process 2405only part of the user supplied command line arguments, and pass the 2406remaining options to some other program. 2407 2408If C<require_order> is enabled, options processing will terminate at 2409the first unrecognized option, or non-option, whichever comes first. 2410However, if C<permute> is enabled instead, results can become confusing. 2411 2412Note that the options terminator (default C<-->), if present, will 2413also be passed through in C<@ARGV>. 2414 2415=item prefix 2416 2417The string that starts options. If a constant string is not 2418sufficient, see C<prefix_pattern>. 2419 2420=item prefix_pattern 2421 2422A Perl pattern that identifies the strings that introduce options. 2423Default is C<--|-|\+> unless environment variable 2424POSIXLY_CORRECT has been set, in which case it is C<--|->. 2425 2426=item long_prefix_pattern 2427 2428A Perl pattern that allows the disambiguation of long and short 2429prefixes. Default is C<-->. 2430 2431Typically you only need to set this if you are using nonstandard 2432prefixes and want some or all of them to have the same semantics as 2433'--' does under normal circumstances. 2434 2435For example, setting prefix_pattern to C<--|-|\+|\/> and 2436long_prefix_pattern to C<--|\/> would add Win32 style argument 2437handling. 2438 2439=item debug (default: disabled) 2440 2441Enable debugging output. 2442 2443=back 2444 2445=head1 Exportable Methods 2446 2447=over 2448 2449=item VersionMessage 2450 2451This subroutine provides a standard version message. Its argument can be: 2452 2453=over 4 2454 2455=item * 2456 2457A string containing the text of a message to print I<before> printing 2458the standard message. 2459 2460=item * 2461 2462A numeric value corresponding to the desired exit status. 2463 2464=item * 2465 2466A reference to a hash. 2467 2468=back 2469 2470If more than one argument is given then the entire argument list is 2471assumed to be a hash. If a hash is supplied (either as a reference or 2472as a list) it should contain one or more elements with the following 2473keys: 2474 2475=over 4 2476 2477=item C<-message> 2478 2479=item C<-msg> 2480 2481The text of a message to print immediately prior to printing the 2482program's usage message. 2483 2484=item C<-exitval> 2485 2486The desired exit status to pass to the B<exit()> function. 2487This should be an integer, or else the string "NOEXIT" to 2488indicate that control should simply be returned without 2489terminating the invoking process. 2490 2491=item C<-output> 2492 2493A reference to a filehandle, or the pathname of a file to which the 2494usage message should be written. The default is C<\*STDERR> unless the 2495exit value is less than 2 (in which case the default is C<\*STDOUT>). 2496 2497=back 2498 2499You cannot tie this routine directly to an option, e.g.: 2500 2501 GetOptions("version" => \&VersionMessage); 2502 2503Use this instead: 2504 2505 GetOptions("version" => sub { VersionMessage() }); 2506 2507=item HelpMessage 2508 2509This subroutine produces a standard help message, derived from the 2510program's POD section SYNOPSIS using L<Pod::Usage>. It takes the same 2511arguments as VersionMessage(). In particular, you cannot tie it 2512directly to an option, e.g.: 2513 2514 GetOptions("help" => \&HelpMessage); 2515 2516Use this instead: 2517 2518 GetOptions("help" => sub { HelpMessage() }); 2519 2520=back 2521 2522=head1 Return values and Errors 2523 2524Configuration errors and errors in the option definitions are 2525signalled using die() and will terminate the calling program unless 2526the call to Getopt::Long::GetOptions() was embedded in C<eval { ... 2527}>, or die() was trapped using C<$SIG{__DIE__}>. 2528 2529GetOptions returns true to indicate success. 2530It returns false when the function detected one or more errors during 2531option parsing. These errors are signalled using warn() and can be 2532trapped with C<$SIG{__WARN__}>. 2533 2534=head1 Legacy 2535 2536The earliest development of C<newgetopt.pl> started in 1990, with Perl 2537version 4. As a result, its development, and the development of 2538Getopt::Long, has gone through several stages. Since backward 2539compatibility has always been extremely important, the current version 2540of Getopt::Long still supports a lot of constructs that nowadays are 2541no longer necessary or otherwise unwanted. This section describes 2542briefly some of these 'features'. 2543 2544=head2 Default destinations 2545 2546When no destination is specified for an option, GetOptions will store 2547the resultant value in a global variable named C<opt_>I<XXX>, where 2548I<XXX> is the primary name of this option. When a program executes 2549under C<use strict> (recommended), these variables must be 2550pre-declared with our() or C<use vars>. 2551 2552 our $opt_length = 0; 2553 GetOptions ('length=i'); # will store in $opt_length 2554 2555To yield a usable Perl variable, characters that are not part of the 2556syntax for variables are translated to underscores. For example, 2557C<--fpp-struct-return> will set the variable 2558C<$opt_fpp_struct_return>. Note that this variable resides in the 2559namespace of the calling program, not necessarily C<main>. For 2560example: 2561 2562 GetOptions ("size=i", "sizes=i@"); 2563 2564with command line "-size 10 -sizes 24 -sizes 48" will perform the 2565equivalent of the assignments 2566 2567 $opt_size = 10; 2568 @opt_sizes = (24, 48); 2569 2570=head2 Alternative option starters 2571 2572A string of alternative option starter characters may be passed as the 2573first argument (or the first argument after a leading hash reference 2574argument). 2575 2576 my $len = 0; 2577 GetOptions ('/', 'length=i' => $len); 2578 2579Now the command line may look like: 2580 2581 /length 24 -- arg 2582 2583Note that to terminate options processing still requires a double dash 2584C<-->. 2585 2586GetOptions() will not interpret a leading C<< "<>" >> as option starters 2587if the next argument is a reference. To force C<< "<" >> and C<< ">" >> as 2588option starters, use C<< "><" >>. Confusing? Well, B<using a starter 2589argument is strongly deprecated> anyway. 2590 2591=head2 Configuration variables 2592 2593Previous versions of Getopt::Long used variables for the purpose of 2594configuring. Although manipulating these variables still work, it is 2595strongly encouraged to use the C<Configure> routine that was introduced 2596in version 2.17. Besides, it is much easier. 2597 2598=head1 Tips and Techniques 2599 2600=head2 Pushing multiple values in a hash option 2601 2602Sometimes you want to combine the best of hashes and arrays. For 2603example, the command line: 2604 2605 --list add=first --list add=second --list add=third 2606 2607where each successive 'list add' option will push the value of add 2608into array ref $list->{'add'}. The result would be like 2609 2610 $list->{add} = [qw(first second third)]; 2611 2612This can be accomplished with a destination routine: 2613 2614 GetOptions('list=s%' => 2615 sub { push(@{$list{$_[1]}}, $_[2]) }); 2616 2617=head1 Troubleshooting 2618 2619=head2 GetOptions does not return a false result when an option is not supplied 2620 2621That's why they're called 'options'. 2622 2623=head2 GetOptions does not split the command line correctly 2624 2625The command line is not split by GetOptions, but by the command line 2626interpreter (CLI). On Unix, this is the shell. On Windows, it is 2627COMMAND.COM or CMD.EXE. Other operating systems have other CLIs. 2628 2629It is important to know that these CLIs may behave different when the 2630command line contains special characters, in particular quotes or 2631backslashes. For example, with Unix shells you can use single quotes 2632(C<'>) and double quotes (C<">) to group words together. The following 2633alternatives are equivalent on Unix: 2634 2635 "two words" 2636 'two words' 2637 two\ words 2638 2639In case of doubt, insert the following statement in front of your Perl 2640program: 2641 2642 print STDERR (join("|",@ARGV),"\n"); 2643 2644to verify how your CLI passes the arguments to the program. 2645 2646=head2 Undefined subroutine &main::GetOptions called 2647 2648Are you running Windows, and did you write 2649 2650 use GetOpt::Long; 2651 2652(note the capital 'O')? 2653 2654=head2 How do I put a "-?" option into a Getopt::Long? 2655 2656You can only obtain this using an alias, and Getopt::Long of at least 2657version 2.13. 2658 2659 use Getopt::Long; 2660 GetOptions ("help|?"); # -help and -? will both set $opt_help 2661 2662Other characters that can't appear in Perl identifiers are also supported 2663as aliases with Getopt::Long of at least version 2.39. 2664 2665As of version 2.32 Getopt::Long provides auto-help, a quick and easy way 2666to add the options --help and -? to your program, and handle them. 2667 2668See C<auto_help> in section L<Configuring Getopt::Long>. 2669 2670=head1 AUTHOR 2671 2672Johan Vromans <jvromans@squirrel.nl> 2673 2674=head1 COPYRIGHT AND DISCLAIMER 2675 2676This program is Copyright 1990,2013 by Johan Vromans. 2677This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or 2678modify it under the terms of the Perl Artistic License or the 2679GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software 2680Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any 2681later version. 2682 2683This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 2684but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 2685MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 2686GNU General Public License for more details. 2687 2688If you do not have a copy of the GNU General Public License write to 2689the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, 2690MA 02139, USA. 2691 2692=cut 2693 2694