| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153 | /* Argp example #3 -- a program with options and arguments using argp *//* This program uses the same features as example 2, and uses options and   arguments.   We now use the first four fields in ARGP, so here's a description of them:     OPTIONS  -- A pointer to a vector of struct argp_option (see below)     PARSER   -- A function to parse a single option, called by argp     ARGS_DOC -- A string describing how the non-option arguments should look     DOC      -- A descriptive string about this program; if it contains a                 vertical tab character (\v), the part after it will be                 printed *following* the options   The function PARSER takes the following arguments:     KEY  -- An integer specifying which option this is (taken             from the KEY field in each struct argp_option), or             a special key specifying something else; the only             special keys we use here are ARGP_KEY_ARG, meaning             a non-option argument, and ARGP_KEY_END, meaning             that all arguments have been parsed     ARG  -- For an option KEY, the string value of its             argument, or NULL if it has none     STATE-- A pointer to a struct argp_state, containing             various useful information about the parsing state; used here             are the INPUT field, which reflects the INPUT argument to             argp_parse, and the ARG_NUM field, which is the number of the             current non-option argument being parsed   It should return either 0, meaning success, ARGP_ERR_UNKNOWN, meaning the   given KEY wasn't recognized, or an errno value indicating some other   error.   Note that in this example, main uses a structure to communicate with the   parse_opt function, a pointer to which it passes in the INPUT argument to   argp_parse.  Of course, it's also possible to use global variables   instead, but this is somewhat more flexible.   The OPTIONS field contains a pointer to a vector of struct argp_option's;   that structure has the following fields (if you assign your option   structures using array initialization like this example, unspecified   fields will be defaulted to 0, and need not be specified):     NAME   -- The name of this option's long option (may be zero)     KEY    -- The KEY to pass to the PARSER function when parsing this option,               *and* the name of this option's short option, if it is a               printable ascii character     ARG    -- The name of this option's argument, if any     FLAGS  -- Flags describing this option; some of them are:                 OPTION_ARG_OPTIONAL -- The argument to this option is optional                 OPTION_ALIAS        -- This option is an alias for the                                        previous option                 OPTION_HIDDEN       -- Don't show this option in --help output     DOC    -- A documentation string for this option, shown in --help output   An options vector should be terminated by an option with all fields zero. */#include <stdlib.h>#include <argp.h>const char *argp_program_version =  "argp-ex3 1.0";const char *argp_program_bug_address =  "<bug-gnu-utils@@gnu.org>";/* Program documentation.  */static char doc[] =  "Argp example #3 -- a program with options and arguments using argp";/* A description of the arguments we accept.  */static char args_doc[] = "ARG1 ARG2";/* The options we understand.  */static struct argp_option options[] = {  {"verbose",  'v', 0,      0,  "Produce verbose output" },  {"quiet",    'q', 0,      0,  "Don't produce any output" },  {"silent",   's', 0,      OPTION_ALIAS },  {"output",   'o', "FILE", 0,   "Output to FILE instead of standard output" },  { 0 }};/* Used by @code{main} to communicate with @code{parse_opt}.  */struct arguments{  char *args[2];               /* @var{arg1} & @var{arg2} */  int silent, verbose;  char *output_file;};/* Parse a single option.  */static error_tparse_opt (int key, char *arg, struct argp_state *state){  /* Get the @var{input} argument from @code{argp_parse}, which we     know is a pointer to our arguments structure.  */  struct arguments *arguments = state->input;  switch (key)    {    case 'q': case 's':      arguments->silent = 1;      break;    case 'v':      arguments->verbose = 1;      break;    case 'o':      arguments->output_file = arg;      break;    case ARGP_KEY_ARG:      if (state->arg_num >= 2)       /* Too many arguments.  */       argp_usage (state);      arguments->args[state->arg_num] = arg;      break;    case ARGP_KEY_END:      if (state->arg_num < 2)       /* Not enough arguments.  */       argp_usage (state);      break;    default:      return ARGP_ERR_UNKNOWN;    }  return 0;}/* Our argp parser.  */static struct argp argp = { options, parse_opt, args_doc, doc };int main (int argc, char **argv){  struct arguments arguments;  /* Default values.  */  arguments.silent = 0;  arguments.verbose = 0;  arguments.output_file = "-";  /* Parse our arguments; every option seen by @code{parse_opt} will     be reflected in @code{arguments}.  */  argp_parse (&argp, argc, argv, 0, 0, &arguments);  printf ("ARG1 = %s\nARG2 = %s\nOUTPUT_FILE = %s\n"         "VERBOSE = %s\nSILENT = %s\n",         arguments.args[0], arguments.args[1],         arguments.output_file,         arguments.verbose ? "yes" : "no",         arguments.silent ? "yes" : "no");  exit (0);}
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