1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613 614 615 616 617 618 619 620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632 633 634 635 636 637 638 639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 647 648 649 650 651 652 653 654 655 656 657 658 659 660 661 662 663 664 665 666 667 668 669 670 671 672 673 674 675 676 677 678 679 680 681 682 683 684 685 686 687 688 689 690 691 692 693 694 695 696 697 698 699 700 701 702 703 704 705 706 707 708 709 710 711 712 713 714 715 716 717 718 719 720 721 722 723 724 725 726 727 728 729 730 731 732 733 734 735 736 737 738 739 740 741 742 743 744 745 746 747 748 749 750 751 752 753 754 755 756 757 758 759 760 761 762 763 764 765 766 767 768 769 770 771 772 773 774 775 776 777 778 779 780 781 782 783 784 785 786 787 788 789 790 791 792 793 794 795 796 797 798 799 800 801 802 803 804 805 806 807 808 809 810 811 812 813 814 815 816 817 818 819 820 821 822 823 824 825 826 827 828 829 830 831 832 833 834 835 836 837 838 839 840 841 842 843 844 845 846 847 848 849 850 851 852 853 854 855 856 857 858 859 860 861 862 863 864 865 866 867 868 869 870 871 872 873 874 875 876 877 878 879 880 881 882 883 884 885 886 887 888 889 890 891 892 893 894 895 896 897 898 899 900 901 902 903 904 905 906 907 908 909 910 911 912 913 914 915 916 917 918 919 920 921 922 923 924 925 926 927 928 929 930 931 932 933 934 935 936 937 938 939 940 941 942 943 944 945 946 947 948 949 950 951 952 953 954 955 956 957 958 959 960 961 962 963 964 965 966 967 968 969 970 971 972 973 974 975 976 977 978 979 980 981 982 983 984 985 986 987 988 989 990 991 992 993 994 995 996 997 998 999 1000 1001 1002 1003 1004 1005 1006 1007 1008 1009 1010 1011 1012 1013 1014 1015 1016 1017 1018 1019 1020 1021 1022 1023 1024 1025 1026 1027 1028 1029 1030 1031 1032 1033 1034 1035 1036 1037 1038 1039 1040 1041 1042 1043 1044 1045 1046 1047 1048 1049 1050 1051 1052 1053 1054 1055 1056 1057 1058 1059 1060 1061 1062 1063 1064 1065 1066 1067 1068 1069 1070 1071 1072 1073 1074 1075 1076 1077 1078 1079 1080 1081 1082 1083 1084 1085 1086 1087 1088 1089 1090 1091 1092 1093 1094 1095 1096 1097 1098 1099 1100 1101 1102 1103 1104 1105 1106 1107 1108 1109 1110 1111 1112 1113 1114 1115 1116 1117 1118 1119 1120 1121 1122 1123 1124 1125 1126 1127 1128 1129 1130 1131 1132 1133 1134 1135 1136 1137 1138 1139 1140 1141 1142 1143 1144 1145 1146 1147 1148 1149 1150 1151 1152 1153 1154 1155 1156 1157 1158 1159 1160 1161 1162 1163 1164 1165 1166 1167 1168 1169 1170 1171 1172 1173 1174 1175 1176 1177 1178 1179 1180 1181 1182 1183 1184 1185 1186 1187 1188 1189 1190 1191 1192 1193 1194 1195 1196 1197 1198 1199 1200 1201
|
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- --
-- GNAT COMPILER COMPONENTS --
-- --
-- G N A T . C O M M A N D _ L I N E --
-- --
-- S p e c --
-- --
-- Copyright (C) 1999-2016, AdaCore --
-- --
-- GNAT is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under --
-- terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Soft- --
-- ware Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any later ver- --
-- sion. GNAT is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITH- --
-- OUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY --
-- or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. --
-- --
-- As a special exception under Section 7 of GPL version 3, you are granted --
-- additional permissions described in the GCC Runtime Library Exception, --
-- version 3.1, as published by the Free Software Foundation. --
-- --
-- You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License and --
-- a copy of the GCC Runtime Library Exception along with this program; --
-- see the files COPYING3 and COPYING.RUNTIME respectively. If not, see --
-- <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. --
-- --
-- GNAT was originally developed by the GNAT team at New York University. --
-- Extensive contributions were provided by Ada Core Technologies Inc. --
-- --
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- High level package for command line parsing and manipulation
----------------------------------------
-- Simple Parsing of the Command Line --
----------------------------------------
-- This package provides an interface for parsing command line arguments,
-- when they are either read from Ada.Command_Line or read from a string list.
-- As shown in the example below, one should first retrieve the switches
-- (special command line arguments starting with '-' by default) and their
-- parameters, and then the rest of the command line arguments.
--
-- While it may appear easy to parse the command line arguments with
-- Ada.Command_Line, there are in fact lots of special cases to handle in some
-- applications. Those are fully managed by GNAT.Command_Line. Among these are
-- switches with optional parameters, grouping switches (for instance "-ab"
-- might mean the same as "-a -b"), various characters to separate a switch
-- and its parameter (or none: "-a 1" and "-a1" are generally the same, which
-- can introduce confusion with grouped switches),...
--
-- begin
-- loop
-- case Getopt ("a b: ad") is -- Accepts '-a', '-ad', or '-b argument'
-- when ASCII.NUL => exit;
-- when 'a' =>
-- if Full_Switch = "a" then
-- Put_Line ("Got a");
-- else
-- Put_Line ("Got ad");
-- end if;
-- when 'b' => Put_Line ("Got b + " & Parameter);
-- when others =>
-- raise Program_Error; -- cannot occur
-- end case;
-- end loop;
-- loop
-- declare
-- S : constant String := Get_Argument (Do_Expansion => True);
-- begin
-- exit when S'Length = 0;
-- Put_Line ("Got " & S);
-- end;
-- end loop;
-- exception
-- when Invalid_Switch => Put_Line ("Invalid Switch " & Full_Switch);
-- when Invalid_Parameter => Put_Line ("No parameter for " & Full_Switch);
-- end;
--------------
-- Sections --
--------------
-- A more complicated example would involve the use of sections for the
-- switches, as for instance in gnatmake. The same command line is used to
-- provide switches for several tools. Each tool recognizes its switches by
-- separating them with special switches that act as section separators.
-- Each section acts as a command line of its own.
-- begin
-- Initialize_Option_Scan ('-', False, "largs bargs cargs");
-- loop
-- -- Same loop as above to get switches and arguments
-- end loop;
-- Goto_Section ("bargs");
-- loop
-- -- Same loop as above to get switches and arguments
-- -- The supported switches in Getopt might be different
-- end loop;
-- Goto_Section ("cargs");
-- loop
-- -- Same loop as above to get switches and arguments
-- -- The supported switches in Getopt might be different
-- end loop;
-- end;
-------------------------------
-- Parsing a List of Strings --
-------------------------------
-- The examples above show how to parse the command line when the arguments
-- are read directly from Ada.Command_Line. However, these arguments can also
-- be read from a list of strings. This can be useful in several contexts,
-- either because your system does not support Ada.Command_Line, or because
-- you are manipulating other tools and creating their command lines by hand,
-- or for any other reason.
-- To create the list of strings, it is recommended to use
-- GNAT.OS_Lib.Argument_String_To_List.
-- The example below shows how to get the parameters from such a list. Note
-- also the use of '*' to get all the switches, and not report errors when an
-- unexpected switch was used by the user
-- declare
-- Parser : Opt_Parser;
-- Args : constant Argument_List_Access :=
-- GNAT.OS_Lib.Argument_String_To_List ("-g -O1 -Ipath");
-- begin
-- Initialize_Option_Scan (Parser, Args);
-- while Getopt ("* g O! I=", Parser) /= ASCII.NUL loop
-- Put_Line ("Switch " & Full_Switch (Parser)
-- & " param=" & Parameter (Parser));
-- end loop;
-- Free (Parser);
-- end;
-------------------------------------------
-- High-Level Command Line Configuration --
-------------------------------------------
-- As shown above, the code is still relatively low-level. For instance, there
-- is no way to indicate which switches are related (thus if "-l" and "--long"
-- should have the same effect, your code will need to test for both cases).
-- Likewise, it is difficult to handle more advanced constructs, like:
-- * Specifying -gnatwa is the same as specifying -gnatwu -gnatwv, but
-- shorter and more readable
-- * All switches starting with -gnatw can be grouped, for instance one
-- can write -gnatwcd instead of -gnatwc -gnatwd.
-- Of course, this can be combined with the above and -gnatwacd is the
-- same as -gnatwc -gnatwd -gnatwu -gnatwv
-- * The switch -T is the same as -gnatwAB (same as -gnatwA -gnatwB)
-- With the above form of Getopt, you would receive "-gnatwa", "-T" or
-- "-gnatwcd" in the examples above, and thus you require additional manual
-- parsing of the switch.
-- Instead, this package provides the type Command_Line_Configuration, which
-- stores all the knowledge above. For instance:
-- Config : Command_Line_Configuration;
-- Define_Alias (Config, "-gnatwa", "-gnatwu -gnatwv");
-- Define_Prefix (Config, "-gnatw");
-- Define_Alias (Config, "-T", "-gnatwAB");
-- You then need to specify all possible switches in your application by
-- calling Define_Switch, for instance:
-- Define_Switch (Config, "-gnatwu", Help => "warn on unused entities");
-- Define_Switch (Config, "-gnatwv", Help => "warn on unassigned var");
-- ...
-- Specifying the help message is optional, but makes it easy to then call
-- the function:
-- Display_Help (Config);
-- that will display a properly formatted help message for your application,
-- listing all possible switches. That way you have a single place in which
-- to maintain the list of switches and their meaning, rather than maintaining
-- both the string to pass to Getopt and a subprogram to display the help.
-- Both will properly stay synchronized.
-- Once you have this Config, you just have to call:
-- Getopt (Config, Callback'Access);
-- to parse the command line. The Callback will be called for each switch
-- found on the command line (in the case of our example, that is "-gnatwu"
-- and then "-gnatwv", not "-gnatwa" itself). This simplifies command line
-- parsing a lot.
-- In fact, this can be further automated for the most command case where the
-- parameter passed to a switch is stored in a variable in the application.
-- When a switch is defined, you only have to indicate where to store the
-- value, and let Getopt do the rest. For instance:
-- Optimization : aliased Integer;
-- Verbose : aliased Boolean;
-- Define_Switch (Config, Verbose'Access,
-- "-v", Long_Switch => "--verbose",
-- Help => "Output extra verbose information");
-- Define_Switch (Config, Optimization'Access,
-- "-O?", Help => "Optimization level");
-- Getopt (Config); -- No callback
-- Since all switches are handled automatically, we don't even need to pass
-- a callback to Getopt. Once getopt has been called, the two variables
-- Optimization and Verbose have been properly initialized, either to the
-- default value or to the value found on the command line.
------------------------------------------------
-- Creating and Manipulating the Command Line --
------------------------------------------------
-- This package provides mechanisms to create and modify command lines by
-- adding or removing arguments from them. The resulting command line is kept
-- as short as possible by coalescing arguments whenever possible.
-- Complex command lines can thus be constructed, for example from a GUI
-- (although this package does not by itself depend upon any specific GUI
-- toolkit).
-- Using the configuration defined earlier, one can then construct a command
-- line for the tool with:
-- Cmd : Command_Line;
-- Set_Configuration (Cmd, Config); -- Config created earlier
-- Add_Switch (Cmd, "-bar");
-- Add_Switch (Cmd, "-gnatwu");
-- Add_Switch (Cmd, "-gnatwv"); -- will be grouped with the above
-- Add_Switch (Cmd, "-T");
-- The resulting command line can be iterated over to get all its switches,
-- There are two modes for this iteration: either you want to get the
-- shortest possible command line, which would be:
-- -bar -gnatwaAB
-- or on the other hand you want each individual switch (so that your own
-- tool does not have to do further complex processing), which would be:
-- -bar -gnatwu -gnatwv -gnatwA -gnatwB
-- Of course, we can assume that the tool you want to spawn would understand
-- both of these, since they are both compatible with the description we gave
-- above. However, the first result is useful if you want to show the user
-- what you are spawning (since that keeps the output shorter), and the second
-- output is more useful for a tool that would check whether -gnatwu was
-- passed (which isn't obvious in the first output). Likewise, the second
-- output is more useful if you have a graphical interface since each switch
-- can be associated with a widget, and you immediately know whether -gnatwu
-- was selected.
--
-- Some command line arguments can have parameters, which on a command line
-- appear as a separate argument that must immediately follow the switch.
-- Since the subprograms in this package will reorganize the switches to group
-- them, you need to indicate what is a command line parameter, and what is a
-- switch argument.
-- This is done by passing an extra argument to Add_Switch, as in:
-- Add_Switch (Cmd, "-foo", Parameter => "arg1");
-- This ensures that "arg1" will always be treated as the argument to -foo,
-- and will not be grouped with other parts of the command line.
with Ada.Command_Line;
with GNAT.Directory_Operations;
with GNAT.OS_Lib;
with GNAT.Regexp;
with GNAT.Strings;
package GNAT.Command_Line is
-------------
-- Parsing --
-------------
type Opt_Parser is private;
Command_Line_Parser : constant Opt_Parser;
-- This object is responsible for parsing a list of arguments, which by
-- default are the standard command line arguments from Ada.Command_Line.
-- This is really a pointer to actual data, which must therefore be
-- initialized through a call to Initialize_Option_Scan, and must be freed
-- with a call to Free.
--
-- As a special case, Command_Line_Parser does not need to be either
-- initialized or free-ed.
procedure Initialize_Option_Scan
(Switch_Char : Character := '-';
Stop_At_First_Non_Switch : Boolean := False;
Section_Delimiters : String := "");
procedure Initialize_Option_Scan
(Parser : out Opt_Parser;
Command_Line : GNAT.OS_Lib.Argument_List_Access;
Switch_Char : Character := '-';
Stop_At_First_Non_Switch : Boolean := False;
Section_Delimiters : String := "");
-- The first procedure resets the internal state of the package to prepare
-- to rescan the parameters. It does not need to be called before the
-- first use of Getopt (but it could be), but it must be called if you
-- want to start rescanning the command line parameters from the start.
-- The optional parameter Switch_Char can be used to reset the switch
-- character, e.g. to '/' for use in DOS-like systems.
--
-- The second subprogram initializes a parser that takes its arguments
-- from an array of strings rather than directly from the command line. In
-- this case, the parser is responsible for freeing the strings stored in
-- Command_Line. If you pass null to Command_Line, this will in fact create
-- a second parser for Ada.Command_Line, which doesn't share any data with
-- the default parser. This parser must be free'ed.
--
-- The optional parameter Stop_At_First_Non_Switch indicates if Getopt is
-- to look for switches on the whole command line, or if it has to stop as
-- soon as a non-switch argument is found.
--
-- Example:
--
-- Arguments: my_application file1 -c
--
-- If Stop_At_First_Non_Switch is False, then -c will be considered
-- as a switch (returned by getopt), otherwise it will be considered
-- as a normal argument (returned by Get_Argument).
--
-- If Section_Delimiters is set, then every following subprogram
-- (Getopt and Get_Argument) will only operate within a section, which
-- is delimited by any of these delimiters or the end of the command line.
--
-- Example:
-- Initialize_Option_Scan (Section_Delimiters => "largs bargs cargs");
--
-- Arguments on command line : my_application -c -bargs -d -e -largs -f
-- This line contains three sections, the first one is the default one
-- and includes only the '-c' switch, the second one is between -bargs
-- and -largs and includes '-d -e' and the last one includes '-f'.
procedure Free (Parser : in out Opt_Parser);
-- Free the memory used by the parser. Calling this is not mandatory for
-- the Command_Line_Parser
procedure Goto_Section
(Name : String := "";
Parser : Opt_Parser := Command_Line_Parser);
-- Change the current section. The next Getopt or Get_Argument will start
-- looking at the beginning of the section. An empty name ("") refers to
-- the first section between the program name and the first section
-- delimiter. If the section does not exist in Section_Delimiters, then
-- Invalid_Section is raised. If the section does not appear on the command
-- line, then it is treated as an empty section.
function Full_Switch
(Parser : Opt_Parser := Command_Line_Parser) return String;
-- Returns the full name of the last switch found (Getopt only returns the
-- first character). Does not include the Switch_Char ('-' by default),
-- unless the "*" option of Getopt is used (see below).
function Current_Section
(Parser : Opt_Parser := Command_Line_Parser) return String;
-- Return the name of the current section.
-- The list of valid sections is defined through Initialize_Option_Scan
function Getopt
(Switches : String;
Concatenate : Boolean := True;
Parser : Opt_Parser := Command_Line_Parser) return Character;
-- This function moves to the next switch on the command line (defined as
-- switch character followed by a character within Switches, casing being
-- significant). The result returned is the first character of the switch
-- that is located. If there are no more switches in the current section,
-- returns ASCII.NUL. If Concatenate is True (the default), the switches do
-- not need to be separated by spaces (they can be concatenated if they do
-- not require an argument, e.g. -ab is the same as two separate arguments
-- -a -b).
--
-- Switches is a string of all the possible switches, separated by
-- spaces. A switch can be followed by one of the following characters:
--
-- ':' The switch requires a parameter. There can optionally be a space
-- on the command line between the switch and its parameter.
--
-- '=' The switch requires a parameter. There can either be a '=' or a
-- space on the command line between the switch and its parameter.
--
-- '!' The switch requires a parameter, but there can be no space on the
-- command line between the switch and its parameter.
--
-- '?' The switch may have an optional parameter. There can be no space
-- between the switch and its argument.
--
-- e.g. if Switches has the following value : "a? b",
-- The command line can be:
--
-- -afoo : -a switch with 'foo' parameter
-- -a foo : -a switch and another element on the
-- command line 'foo', returned by Get_Argument
--
-- Example: if Switches is "-a: -aO:", you can have the following
-- command lines:
--
-- -aarg : 'a' switch with 'arg' parameter
-- -a arg : 'a' switch with 'arg' parameter
-- -aOarg : 'aO' switch with 'arg' parameter
-- -aO arg : 'aO' switch with 'arg' parameter
--
-- Example:
--
-- Getopt ("a b: ac ad?")
--
-- accept either 'a' or 'ac' with no argument,
-- accept 'b' with a required argument
-- accept 'ad' with an optional argument
--
-- If the first item in switches is '*', then Getopt will catch
-- every element on the command line that was not caught by any other
-- switch. The character returned by GetOpt is '*', but Full_Switch
-- contains the full command line argument, including leading '-' if there
-- is one. If this character was not returned, there would be no way of
-- knowing whether it is there or not.
--
-- Example
-- Getopt ("* a b")
-- If the command line is '-a -c toto.o -b', Getopt will return
-- successively 'a', '*', '*' and 'b', with Full_Switch returning
-- "a", "-c", "toto.o", and "b".
--
-- When Getopt encounters an invalid switch, it raises the exception
-- Invalid_Switch and sets Full_Switch to return the invalid switch.
-- When Getopt cannot find the parameter associated with a switch, it
-- raises Invalid_Parameter, and sets Full_Switch to return the invalid
-- switch.
--
-- Note: in case of ambiguity, e.g. switches a ab abc, then the longest
-- matching switch is returned.
--
-- Arbitrary characters are allowed for switches, although it is
-- strongly recommended to use only letters and digits for portability
-- reasons.
--
-- When Concatenate is False, individual switches need to be separated by
-- spaces.
--
-- Example
-- Getopt ("a b", Concatenate => False)
-- If the command line is '-ab', exception Invalid_Switch will be
-- raised and Full_Switch will return "ab".
function Get_Argument
(Do_Expansion : Boolean := False;
Parser : Opt_Parser := Command_Line_Parser) return String;
-- Returns the next element on the command line that is not a switch. This
-- function should not be called before Getopt has returned ASCII.NUL.
--
-- If Do_Expansion is True, then the parameter on the command line will
-- be considered as a filename with wild cards, and will be expanded. The
-- matching file names will be returned one at a time. This is useful in
-- non-Unix systems for obtaining normal expansion of wild card references.
-- When there are no more arguments on the command line, this function
-- returns an empty string.
function Parameter
(Parser : Opt_Parser := Command_Line_Parser) return String;
-- Returns parameter associated with the last switch returned by Getopt.
-- If no parameter was associated with the last switch, or no previous call
-- has been made to Get_Argument, raises Invalid_Parameter. If the last
-- switch was associated with an optional argument and this argument was
-- not found on the command line, Parameter returns an empty string.
function Separator
(Parser : Opt_Parser := Command_Line_Parser) return Character;
-- The separator that was between the switch and its parameter. This is
-- useful if you want to know exactly what was on the command line. This
-- is in general a single character, set to ASCII.NUL if the switch and
-- the parameter were concatenated. A space is returned if the switch and
-- its argument were in two separate arguments.
Invalid_Section : exception;
-- Raised when an invalid section is selected by Goto_Section
Invalid_Switch : exception;
-- Raised when an invalid switch is detected in the command line
Invalid_Parameter : exception;
-- Raised when a parameter is missing, or an attempt is made to obtain a
-- parameter for a switch that does not allow a parameter.
-----------------------------------------
-- Expansion of command line arguments --
-----------------------------------------
-- These subprograms take care of expanding globbing patterns on the
-- command line. On Unix, such expansion is done by the shell before your
-- application is called. But on Windows you must do this expansion
-- yourself.
type Expansion_Iterator is limited private;
-- Type used during expansion of file names
procedure Start_Expansion
(Iterator : out Expansion_Iterator;
Pattern : String;
Directory : String := "";
Basic_Regexp : Boolean := True);
-- Initialize a wild card expansion. The next calls to Expansion will
-- return the next file name in Directory which match Pattern (Pattern
-- is a regular expression, using only the Unix shell and DOS syntax if
-- Basic_Regexp is True). When Directory is an empty string, the current
-- directory is searched.
--
-- Pattern may contain directory separators (as in "src/*/*.ada").
-- Subdirectories of Directory will also be searched, up to one
-- hundred levels deep.
--
-- When Start_Expansion has been called, function Expansion should
-- be called repeatedly until it returns an empty string, before
-- Start_Expansion can be called again with the same Expansion_Iterator
-- variable.
function Expansion (Iterator : Expansion_Iterator) return String;
-- Returns the next file in the directory matching the parameters given
-- to Start_Expansion and updates Iterator to point to the next entry.
-- Returns an empty string when there are no more files.
--
-- If Expansion is called again after an empty string has been returned,
-- then the exception GNAT.Directory_Operations.Directory_Error is raised.
-----------------
-- Configuring --
-----------------
-- The following subprograms are used to manipulate a command line
-- represented as a string (for instance "-g -O2"), as well as parsing
-- the switches from such a string. They provide high-level configurations
-- to define aliases (a switch is equivalent to one or more other switches)
-- or grouping of switches ("-gnatyac" is equivalent to "-gnatya" and
-- "-gnatyc").
-- See the top of this file for examples on how to use these subprograms
type Command_Line_Configuration is private;
procedure Define_Section
(Config : in out Command_Line_Configuration;
Section : String);
-- Indicates a new switch section. All switches belonging to the same
-- section are ordered together, preceded by the section. They are placed
-- at the end of the command line (as in "gnatmake somefile.adb -cargs -g")
--
-- The section name should not include the leading '-'. So for instance in
-- the case of gnatmake we would use:
--
-- Define_Section (Config, "cargs");
-- Define_Section (Config, "bargs");
procedure Define_Alias
(Config : in out Command_Line_Configuration;
Switch : String;
Expanded : String;
Section : String := "");
-- Indicates that whenever Switch appears on the command line, it should
-- be expanded as Expanded. For instance, for the GNAT compiler switches,
-- we would define "-gnatwa" as an alias for "-gnatwcfijkmopruvz", ie some
-- default warnings to be activated.
--
-- This expansion is only done within the specified section, which must
-- have been defined first through a call to [Define_Section].
procedure Define_Prefix
(Config : in out Command_Line_Configuration;
Prefix : String);
-- Indicates that all switches starting with the given prefix should be
-- grouped. For instance, for the GNAT compiler we would define "-gnatw" as
-- a prefix, so that "-gnatwu -gnatwv" can be grouped into "-gnatwuv" It is
-- assumed that the remainder of the switch ("uv") is a set of characters
-- whose order is irrelevant. In fact, this package will sort them
-- alphabetically.
--
-- When grouping switches that accept arguments (for instance "-gnatyL!"
-- as the definition, and "-gnatyaL12b" as the command line), only
-- numerical arguments are accepted. The above is equivalent to
-- "-gnatya -gnatyL12 -gnatyb".
procedure Define_Switch
(Config : in out Command_Line_Configuration;
Switch : String := "";
Long_Switch : String := "";
Help : String := "";
Section : String := "";
Argument : String := "ARG");
-- Indicates a new switch. The format of this switch follows the getopt
-- format (trailing ':', '?', etc for defining a switch with parameters).
--
-- Switch should also start with the leading '-' (or any other characters).
-- If this character is not '-', you need to call Initialize_Option_Scan to
-- set the proper character for the parser.
--
-- The switches defined in the command_line_configuration object are used
-- when ungrouping switches with more that one character after the prefix.
--
-- Switch and Long_Switch (when specified) are aliases and can be used
-- interchangeably. There is no check that they both take an argument or
-- both take no argument. Switch can be set to "*" to indicate that any
-- switch is supported (in which case Getopt will return '*', see its
-- documentation).
--
-- Help is used by the Display_Help procedure to describe the supported
-- switches.
--
-- In_Section indicates in which section the switch is valid (you need to
-- first define the section through a call to Define_Section).
--
-- Argument is the name of the argument, as displayed in the automatic
-- help message. It is always capitalized for consistency.
procedure Define_Switch
(Config : in out Command_Line_Configuration;
Output : access Boolean;
Switch : String := "";
Long_Switch : String := "";
Help : String := "";
Section : String := "";
Value : Boolean := True);
-- See Define_Switch for a description of the parameters.
-- When the switch is found on the command line, Getopt will set
-- Output.all to Value.
--
-- Output is always initially set to "not Value", so that if the switch is
-- not found on the command line, Output still has a valid value.
-- The switch must not take any parameter.
--
-- Output must exist at least as long as Config, otherwise an erroneous
-- memory access may occur.
procedure Define_Switch
(Config : in out Command_Line_Configuration;
Output : access Integer;
Switch : String := "";
Long_Switch : String := "";
Help : String := "";
Section : String := "";
Initial : Integer := 0;
Default : Integer := 1;
Argument : String := "ARG");
-- See Define_Switch for a description of the parameters. When the
-- switch is found on the command line, Getopt will set Output.all to the
-- value of the switch's parameter. If the parameter is not an integer,
-- Invalid_Parameter is raised.
-- Output is always initialized to Initial. If the switch has an optional
-- argument which isn't specified by the user, then Output will be set to
-- Default. The switch must accept an argument.
procedure Define_Switch
(Config : in out Command_Line_Configuration;
Output : access GNAT.Strings.String_Access;
Switch : String := "";
Long_Switch : String := "";
Help : String := "";
Section : String := "";
Argument : String := "ARG");
-- Set Output to the value of the switch's parameter when the switch is
-- found on the command line. Output is always initialized to the empty
-- string if it does not have a value already (otherwise it is left as is
-- so that you can specify the default value directly in the declaration
-- of the variable). The switch must accept an argument.
procedure Set_Usage
(Config : in out Command_Line_Configuration;
Usage : String := "[switches] [arguments]";
Help : String := "";
Help_Msg : String := "");
-- Defines the general format of the call to the application, and a short
-- help text. These are both displayed by Display_Help. When a non-empty
-- Help_Msg is given, it is used by Display_Help instead of the
-- automatically generated list of supported switches.
procedure Display_Help (Config : Command_Line_Configuration);
-- Display the help for the tool (ie its usage, and its supported switches)
function Get_Switches
(Config : Command_Line_Configuration;
Switch_Char : Character := '-';
Section : String := "") return String;
-- Get the switches list as expected by Getopt, for a specific section of
-- the command line. This list is built using all switches defined
-- previously via Define_Switch above.
function Section_Delimiters
(Config : Command_Line_Configuration) return String;
-- Return a string suitable for use in Initialize_Option_Scan
procedure Free (Config : in out Command_Line_Configuration);
-- Free the memory used by Config
type Switch_Handler is access procedure
(Switch : String;
Parameter : String;
Section : String);
-- Called when a switch is found on the command line. Switch includes
-- any leading '-' that was specified in Define_Switch. This is slightly
-- different from the functional version of Getopt above, for which
-- Full_Switch omits the first leading '-'.
Exit_From_Command_Line : exception;
-- Emitted when the program should exit. This is called when Getopt below
-- has seen -h, --help or an invalid switch.
procedure Getopt
(Config : Command_Line_Configuration;
Callback : Switch_Handler := null;
Parser : Opt_Parser := Command_Line_Parser;
Concatenate : Boolean := True);
-- Similar to the standard Getopt function. For each switch found on the
-- command line, this calls Callback, if the switch is not handled
-- automatically.
--
-- The list of valid switches are the ones from the configuration. The
-- switches that were declared through Define_Switch with an Output
-- parameter are never returned (and result in a modification of the Output
-- variable). This function will in fact never call [Callback] if all
-- switches were handled automatically and there is nothing left to do.
--
-- The option Concatenate is identical to the one of the standard Getopt
-- function.
--
-- This procedure automatically adds -h and --help to the valid switches,
-- to display the help message and raises Exit_From_Command_Line.
-- If an invalid switch is specified on the command line, this procedure
-- will display an error message and raises Invalid_Switch again.
--
-- This function automatically expands switches:
--
-- If Define_Prefix was called (for instance "-gnaty") and the user
-- specifies "-gnatycb" on the command line, then Getopt returns
-- "-gnatyc" and "-gnatyb" separately.
--
-- If Define_Alias was called (for instance "-gnatya = -gnatycb") then
-- the latter is returned (in this case it also expands -gnaty as per
-- the above.
--
-- The goal is to make handling as easy as possible by leaving as much
-- work as possible to this package.
--
-- As opposed to the standard Getopt, this one will analyze all sections
-- as defined by Define_Section, and automatically jump from one section to
-- the next.
------------------------------
-- Generating command lines --
------------------------------
-- Once the command line configuration has been created, you can build your
-- own command line. This will be done in general because you need to spawn
-- external tools from your application.
-- Although it could be done by concatenating strings, the following
-- subprograms will properly take care of grouping switches when possible,
-- so as to keep the command line as short as possible. They also provide a
-- way to remove a switch from an existing command line.
-- For instance:
-- declare
-- Config : Command_Line_Configuration;
-- Line : Command_Line;
-- Args : Argument_List_Access;
-- begin
-- Define_Switch (Config, "-gnatyc");
-- Define_Switch (Config, ...); -- for all valid switches
-- Define_Prefix (Config, "-gnaty");
-- Set_Configuration (Line, Config);
-- Add_Switch (Line, "-O2");
-- Add_Switch (Line, "-gnatyc");
-- Add_Switch (Line, "-gnatyd");
--
-- Build (Line, Args);
-- -- Args is now ["-O2", "-gnatycd"]
-- end;
type Command_Line is private;
procedure Set_Configuration
(Cmd : in out Command_Line;
Config : Command_Line_Configuration);
function Get_Configuration
(Cmd : Command_Line) return Command_Line_Configuration;
-- Set or retrieve the configuration used for that command line. The Config
-- must have been initialized first, by calling one of the Define_Switches
-- subprograms.
procedure Set_Command_Line
(Cmd : in out Command_Line;
Switches : String;
Getopt_Description : String := "";
Switch_Char : Character := '-');
-- Set the new content of the command line, by replacing the current
-- version with Switches.
--
-- The parsing of Switches is done through calls to Getopt, by passing
-- Getopt_Description as an argument. (A "*" is automatically prepended so
-- that all switches and command line arguments are accepted). If a config
-- was defined via Set_Configuration, the Getopt_Description parameter will
-- be ignored.
--
-- To properly handle switches that take parameters, you should document
-- them in Getopt_Description. Otherwise, the switch and its parameter will
-- be recorded as two separate command line arguments as returned by a
-- Command_Line_Iterator (which might be fine depending on your
-- application).
--
-- If the command line has sections (such as -bargs -cargs), then they
-- should be listed in the Sections parameter (as "-bargs -cargs").
--
-- This function can be used to reset Cmd by passing an empty string
--
-- If an invalid switch is found on the command line (ie wasn't defined in
-- the configuration via Define_Switch), and the configuration wasn't set
-- to accept all switches (by defining "*" as a valid switch), then an
-- exception Invalid_Switch is raised. The exception message indicates the
-- invalid switch.
procedure Add_Switch
(Cmd : in out Command_Line;
Switch : String;
Parameter : String := "";
Separator : Character := ASCII.NUL;
Section : String := "";
Add_Before : Boolean := False);
-- Add a new switch to the command line, and combine/group it with existing
-- switches if possible. Nothing is done if the switch already exists with
-- the same parameter.
--
-- If the Switch takes a parameter, the latter should be specified
-- separately, so that the association between the two is always correctly
-- recognized even if the order of switches on the command line changes.
-- For instance, you should pass "--check=full" as ("--check", "full") so
-- that Remove_Switch below can simply take "--check" in parameter. That
-- will automatically remove "full" as well. The value of the parameter is
-- never modified by this package.
--
-- On the other hand, you could decide to simply pass "--check=full" as
-- the Switch above, and then pass no parameter. This means that you need
-- to pass "--check=full" to Remove_Switch as well.
--
-- A Switch with a parameter will never be grouped with another switch to
-- avoid ambiguities as to what the parameter applies to.
--
-- If the switch is part of a section, then it should be specified so that
-- the switch is correctly placed in the command line, and the section
-- added if not already present. For example, to add the -g switch into the
-- -cargs section, you need to call (Cmd, "-g", Section => "-cargs").
--
-- [Separator], if specified, overrides the separator that was defined
-- through Define_Switch. For instance, if the switch was defined as
-- "-from:", the separator defaults to a space. But if your application
-- uses unusual separators not supported by GNAT.Command_Line (for instance
-- it requires ":"), you can specify this separator here.
--
-- For instance,
-- Add_Switch(Cmd, "-from", "bar", ':')
--
-- results in
-- -from:bar
--
-- rather than the default
-- -from bar
--
-- Note however that Getopt doesn't know how to handle ":" as a separator.
-- So the recommendation is to declare the switch as "-from!" (ie no
-- space between the switch and its parameter). Then Getopt will return
-- ":bar" as the parameter, and you can trim the ":" in your application.
--
-- Invalid_Section is raised if Section was not defined in the
-- configuration of the command line.
--
-- Add_Before allows insertion of the switch at the beginning of the
-- command line.
procedure Add_Switch
(Cmd : in out Command_Line;
Switch : String;
Parameter : String := "";
Separator : Character := ASCII.NUL;
Section : String := "";
Add_Before : Boolean := False;
Success : out Boolean);
-- Same as above, returning the status of the operation
procedure Remove_Switch
(Cmd : in out Command_Line;
Switch : String;
Remove_All : Boolean := False;
Has_Parameter : Boolean := False;
Section : String := "");
-- Remove Switch from the command line, and ungroup existing switches if
-- necessary.
--
-- The actual parameter to the switches are ignored. If for instance
-- you are removing "-foo", then "-foo param1" and "-foo param2" can
-- be removed.
--
-- If Remove_All is True, then all matching switches are removed, otherwise
-- only the first matching one is removed.
--
-- If Has_Parameter is set to True, then only switches having a parameter
-- are removed.
--
-- If the switch belongs to a section, then this section should be
-- specified: Remove_Switch (Cmd_Line, "-g", Section => "-cargs") called
-- on the command line "-g -cargs -g" will result in "-g", while if
-- called with (Cmd_Line, "-g") this will result in "-cargs -g".
-- If Remove_All is set, then both "-g" will be removed.
procedure Remove_Switch
(Cmd : in out Command_Line;
Switch : String;
Remove_All : Boolean := False;
Has_Parameter : Boolean := False;
Section : String := "";
Success : out Boolean);
-- Same as above, reporting the success of the operation (Success is False
-- if no switch was removed).
procedure Remove_Switch
(Cmd : in out Command_Line;
Switch : String;
Parameter : String;
Section : String := "");
-- Remove a switch with a specific parameter. If Parameter is the empty
-- string, then only a switch with no parameter will be removed.
procedure Free (Cmd : in out Command_Line);
-- Free the memory used by Cmd
---------------
-- Iteration --
---------------
-- When a command line was created with the above, you can then iterate
-- over its contents using the following iterator.
type Command_Line_Iterator is private;
procedure Start
(Cmd : in out Command_Line;
Iter : in out Command_Line_Iterator;
Expanded : Boolean := False);
-- Start iterating over the command line arguments. If Expanded is true,
-- then the arguments are not grouped and no alias is used. For instance,
-- "-gnatwv" and "-gnatwu" would be returned instead of "-gnatwuv".
--
-- The iterator becomes invalid if the command line is changed through a
-- call to Add_Switch, Remove_Switch or Set_Command_Line.
function Current_Switch (Iter : Command_Line_Iterator) return String;
function Is_New_Section (Iter : Command_Line_Iterator) return Boolean;
function Current_Section (Iter : Command_Line_Iterator) return String;
function Current_Separator (Iter : Command_Line_Iterator) return String;
function Current_Parameter (Iter : Command_Line_Iterator) return String;
-- Return the current switch and its parameter (or the empty string if
-- there is no parameter or the switch was added through Add_Switch
-- without specifying the parameter.
--
-- Separator is the string that goes between the switch and its separator.
-- It could be the empty string if they should be concatenated, or a space
-- for instance. When printing, you should not add any other character.
function Has_More (Iter : Command_Line_Iterator) return Boolean;
-- Return True if there are more switches to be returned
procedure Next (Iter : in out Command_Line_Iterator);
-- Move to the next switch
procedure Build
(Line : in out Command_Line;
Args : out GNAT.OS_Lib.Argument_List_Access;
Expanded : Boolean := False;
Switch_Char : Character := '-');
-- This is a wrapper using the Command_Line_Iterator. It provides a simple
-- way to get all switches (grouped as much as possible), and possibly
-- create an Opt_Parser.
--
-- Args must be freed by the caller.
--
-- Expanded has the same meaning as in Start.
procedure Try_Help;
-- Output a message on standard error to indicate how to get the usage for
-- the executable. This procedure should only be called when the executable
-- accepts switch --help. When this procedure is called by executable xxx,
-- the following message is displayed on standard error:
-- try "xxx --help" for more information.
private
Max_Depth : constant := 100;
-- Maximum depth of subdirectories
Max_Path_Length : constant := 1024;
-- Maximum length of relative path
type Depth is range 1 .. Max_Depth;
type Level is record
Name_Last : Natural := 0;
Dir : GNAT.Directory_Operations.Dir_Type;
end record;
type Level_Array is array (Depth) of Level;
type Section_Number is new Natural range 0 .. 65534;
for Section_Number'Size use 16;
type Parameter_Type is record
Arg_Num : Positive;
First : Positive;
Last : Natural;
Extra : Character;
end record;
type Is_Switch_Type is array (Natural range <>) of Boolean;
pragma Pack (Is_Switch_Type);
type Section_Type is array (Natural range <>) of Section_Number;
pragma Pack (Section_Type);
type Expansion_Iterator is limited record
Start : Positive := 1;
-- Position of the first character of the relative path to check against
-- the pattern.
Dir_Name : String (1 .. Max_Path_Length);
Current_Depth : Depth := 1;
Levels : Level_Array;
Regexp : GNAT.Regexp.Regexp;
-- Regular expression built with the pattern
Maximum_Depth : Depth := 1;
-- The maximum depth of directories, reflecting the number of directory
-- separators in the pattern.
end record;
type Opt_Parser_Data (Arg_Count : Natural) is record
Arguments : GNAT.OS_Lib.Argument_List_Access;
-- null if reading from the command line
The_Parameter : Parameter_Type;
The_Separator : Character;
The_Switch : Parameter_Type;
-- This type and this variable are provided to store the current switch
-- and parameter.
Is_Switch : Is_Switch_Type (1 .. Arg_Count) := (others => False);
-- Indicates wich arguments on the command line are considered not be
-- switches or parameters to switches (leaving e.g. filenames,...)
Section : Section_Type (1 .. Arg_Count) := (others => 1);
-- Contains the number of the section associated with the current
-- switch. If this number is 0, then it is a section delimiter, which is
-- never returned by GetOpt.
Current_Argument : Natural := 1;
-- Number of the current argument parsed on the command line
Current_Index : Natural := 1;
-- Index in the current argument of the character to be processed
Current_Section : Section_Number := 1;
Expansion_It : aliased Expansion_Iterator;
-- When Get_Argument is expanding a file name, this is the iterator used
In_Expansion : Boolean := False;
-- True if we are expanding a file
Switch_Character : Character := '-';
-- The character at the beginning of the command line arguments,
-- indicating the beginning of a switch.
Stop_At_First : Boolean := False;
-- If it is True then Getopt stops at the first non-switch argument
end record;
Command_Line_Parser_Data : aliased Opt_Parser_Data
(Ada.Command_Line.Argument_Count);
-- The internal data used when parsing the command line
type Opt_Parser is access all Opt_Parser_Data;
Command_Line_Parser : constant Opt_Parser :=
Command_Line_Parser_Data'Access;
type Switch_Type is (Switch_Untyped,
Switch_Boolean,
Switch_Integer,
Switch_String);
type Switch_Definition (Typ : Switch_Type := Switch_Untyped) is record
Switch : GNAT.OS_Lib.String_Access;
Long_Switch : GNAT.OS_Lib.String_Access;
Section : GNAT.OS_Lib.String_Access;
Help : GNAT.OS_Lib.String_Access;
Argument : GNAT.OS_Lib.String_Access;
-- null if "ARG".
-- Name of the argument for this switch.
case Typ is
when Switch_Untyped =>
null;
when Switch_Boolean =>
Boolean_Output : access Boolean;
Boolean_Value : Boolean; -- will set Output to that value
when Switch_Integer =>
Integer_Output : access Integer;
Integer_Initial : Integer;
Integer_Default : Integer;
when Switch_String =>
String_Output : access GNAT.Strings.String_Access;
end case;
end record;
type Switch_Definitions is array (Natural range <>) of Switch_Definition;
type Switch_Definitions_List is access all Switch_Definitions;
-- [Switch] includes the leading '-'
type Alias_Definition is record
Alias : GNAT.OS_Lib.String_Access;
Expansion : GNAT.OS_Lib.String_Access;
Section : GNAT.OS_Lib.String_Access;
end record;
type Alias_Definitions is array (Natural range <>) of Alias_Definition;
type Alias_Definitions_List is access all Alias_Definitions;
type Command_Line_Configuration_Record is record
Prefixes : GNAT.OS_Lib.Argument_List_Access;
-- The list of prefixes
Sections : GNAT.OS_Lib.Argument_List_Access;
-- The list of sections
Star_Switch : Boolean := False;
-- Whether switches not described in this configuration should be
-- returned to the user (True). If False, an exception Invalid_Switch
-- is raised.
Aliases : Alias_Definitions_List;
Usage : GNAT.OS_Lib.String_Access;
Help : GNAT.OS_Lib.String_Access;
Help_Msg : GNAT.OS_Lib.String_Access;
Switches : Switch_Definitions_List;
-- List of expected switches (Used when expanding switch groups)
end record;
type Command_Line_Configuration is access Command_Line_Configuration_Record;
type Command_Line is record
Config : Command_Line_Configuration;
Expanded : GNAT.OS_Lib.Argument_List_Access;
Params : GNAT.OS_Lib.Argument_List_Access;
-- Parameter for the corresponding switch in Expanded. The first
-- character is the separator (or ASCII.NUL if there is no separator).
Sections : GNAT.OS_Lib.Argument_List_Access;
-- The list of sections
Coalesce : GNAT.OS_Lib.Argument_List_Access;
Coalesce_Params : GNAT.OS_Lib.Argument_List_Access;
Coalesce_Sections : GNAT.OS_Lib.Argument_List_Access;
-- Cached version of the command line. This is recomputed every time
-- the command line changes. Switches are grouped as much as possible,
-- and aliases are used to reduce the length of the command line. The
-- parameters are not allocated, they point into Params, so they must
-- not be freed.
end record;
type Command_Line_Iterator is record
List : GNAT.OS_Lib.Argument_List_Access;
Sections : GNAT.OS_Lib.Argument_List_Access;
Params : GNAT.OS_Lib.Argument_List_Access;
Current : Natural;
end record;
end GNAT.Command_Line;
|