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
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- |
-- Module : System.Console.GetOpt
-- Copyright : (c) Sven Panne Oct. 1996 (small changes Feb. 2003)
-- License : BSD-style (see the file libraries/base/LICENSE)
--
-- Maintainer : libraries@haskell.org
-- Stability : experimental
-- Portability : portable
--
-- This library provides facilities for parsing the command-line options
-- in a standalone program. It is essentially a Haskell port of the GNU
-- @getopt@ library.
--
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
{-
Sven Panne <Sven.Panne@informatik.uni-muenchen.de> Oct. 1996 (small
changes Dec. 1997)
Two rather obscure features are missing: The Bash 2.0 non-option hack
(if you don't already know it, you probably don't want to hear about
it...) and the recognition of long options with a single dash
(e.g. '-help' is recognised as '--help', as long as there is no short
option 'h').
Other differences between GNU's getopt and this implementation:
* To enforce a coherent description of options and arguments, there
are explanation fields in the option/argument descriptor.
* Error messages are now more informative, but no longer POSIX
compliant... :-(
And a final Haskell advertisement: The GNU C implementation uses well
over 1100 lines, we need only 195 here, including a 46 line example!
:-)
-}
module System.Console.GetOpt (
-- * GetOpt
getOpt,
usageInfo,
ArgOrder(..),
OptDescr(..),
ArgDescr(..),
-- * Example
-- $example
) where
import Prelude
import Data.List ( isPrefixOf )
-- |What to do with options following non-options
data ArgOrder a
= RequireOrder -- ^ no option processing after first non-option
| Permute -- ^ freely intersperse options and non-options
| ReturnInOrder (String -> a) -- ^ wrap non-options into options
{-|
Each 'OptDescr' describes a single option.
The arguments to 'Option' are:
* list of short option characters
* list of long option strings (without \"--\")
* argument descriptor
* explanation of option for user
-}
data OptDescr a = -- description of a single options:
Option [Char] -- list of short option characters
[String] -- list of long option strings (without "--")
(ArgDescr a) -- argument descriptor
String -- explanation of option for user
-- |Describes whether an option takes an argument or not, and if so
-- how the argument is injected into a value of type @a@.
data ArgDescr a
= NoArg a -- ^ no argument expected
| ReqArg (String -> a) String -- ^ option requires argument
| OptArg (Maybe String -> a) String -- ^ optional argument
data OptKind a -- kind of cmd line arg (internal use only):
= Opt a -- an option
| NonOpt String -- a non-option
| EndOfOpts -- end-of-options marker (i.e. "--")
| OptErr String -- something went wrong...
-- | Return a string describing the usage of a command, derived from
-- the header (first argument) and the options described by the
-- second argument.
usageInfo :: String -- header
-> [OptDescr a] -- option descriptors
-> String -- nicely formatted decription of options
usageInfo header optDescr = unlines (header:table)
where (ss,ls,ds) = (unzip3 . map fmtOpt) optDescr
table = zipWith3 paste (sameLen ss) (sameLen ls) ds
paste x y z = " " ++ x ++ " " ++ y ++ " " ++ z
sameLen xs = flushLeft ((maximum . map length) xs) xs
flushLeft n xs = [ take n (x ++ repeat ' ') | x <- xs ]
fmtOpt :: OptDescr a -> (String,String,String)
fmtOpt (Option sos los ad descr) = (sepBy ',' (map (fmtShort ad) sos),
sepBy ',' (map (fmtLong ad) los),
descr)
where sepBy _ [] = ""
sepBy _ [x] = x
sepBy ch (x:xs) = x ++ ch:' ':sepBy ch xs
fmtShort :: ArgDescr a -> Char -> String
fmtShort (NoArg _ ) so = "-" ++ [so]
fmtShort (ReqArg _ ad) so = "-" ++ [so] ++ " " ++ ad
fmtShort (OptArg _ ad) so = "-" ++ [so] ++ "[" ++ ad ++ "]"
fmtLong :: ArgDescr a -> String -> String
fmtLong (NoArg _ ) lo = "--" ++ lo
fmtLong (ReqArg _ ad) lo = "--" ++ lo ++ "=" ++ ad
fmtLong (OptArg _ ad) lo = "--" ++ lo ++ "[=" ++ ad ++ "]"
{-|
Process the command-line, and return the list of values that matched
(and those that didn\'t). The arguments are:
* The order requirements (see 'ArgOrder')
* The option descriptions (see 'OptDescr')
* The actual command line arguments (presumably got from
'System.Environment.getArgs').
'getOpt' returns a triple, consisting of the argument values, a list
of options that didn\'t match, and a list of error messages.
-}
getOpt :: ArgOrder a -- non-option handling
-> [OptDescr a] -- option descriptors
-> [String] -- the commandline arguments
-> ([a],[String],[String]) -- (options,non-options,error messages)
getOpt _ _ [] = ([],[],[])
getOpt ordering optDescr (arg:args) = procNextOpt opt ordering
where procNextOpt (Opt o) _ = (o:os,xs,es)
procNextOpt (NonOpt x) RequireOrder = ([],x:rest,[])
procNextOpt (NonOpt x) Permute = (os,x:xs,es)
procNextOpt (NonOpt x) (ReturnInOrder f) = (f x :os, xs,es)
procNextOpt EndOfOpts RequireOrder = ([],rest,[])
procNextOpt EndOfOpts Permute = ([],rest,[])
procNextOpt EndOfOpts (ReturnInOrder f) = (map f rest,[],[])
procNextOpt (OptErr e) _ = (os,xs,e:es)
(opt,rest) = getNext arg args optDescr
(os,xs,es) = getOpt ordering optDescr rest
-- take a look at the next cmd line arg and decide what to do with it
getNext :: String -> [String] -> [OptDescr a] -> (OptKind a,[String])
getNext ('-':'-':[]) rest _ = (EndOfOpts,rest)
getNext ('-':'-':xs) rest optDescr = longOpt xs rest optDescr
getNext ('-': x :xs) rest optDescr = shortOpt x xs rest optDescr
getNext a rest _ = (NonOpt a,rest)
-- handle long option
longOpt :: String -> [String] -> [OptDescr a] -> (OptKind a,[String])
longOpt ls rs optDescr = long ads arg rs
where (opt,arg) = break (=='=') ls
getWith p = [ o | o@(Option _ ls _ _) <- optDescr, l <- ls, opt `p` l ]
exact = getWith (==)
options = if null exact then getWith isPrefixOf else exact
ads = [ ad | Option _ _ ad _ <- options ]
optStr = ("--"++opt)
long (_:_:_) _ rest = (errAmbig options optStr,rest)
long [NoArg a ] [] rest = (Opt a,rest)
long [NoArg _ ] ('=':_) rest = (errNoArg optStr,rest)
long [ReqArg _ d] [] [] = (errReq d optStr,[])
long [ReqArg f _] [] (r:rest) = (Opt (f r),rest)
long [ReqArg f _] ('=':xs) rest = (Opt (f xs),rest)
long [OptArg f _] [] rest = (Opt (f Nothing),rest)
long [OptArg f _] ('=':xs) rest = (Opt (f (Just xs)),rest)
long _ _ rest = (errUnrec optStr,rest)
-- handle short option
shortOpt :: Char -> String -> [String] -> [OptDescr a] -> (OptKind a,[String])
shortOpt x xs rest optDescr = short ads xs rest
where options = [ o | o@(Option ss _ _ _) <- optDescr, s <- ss, x == s ]
ads = [ ad | Option _ _ ad _ <- options ]
optStr = '-':[x]
short (_:_:_) _ rest = (errAmbig options optStr,rest)
short (NoArg a :_) [] rest = (Opt a,rest)
short (NoArg a :_) xs rest = (Opt a,('-':xs):rest)
short (ReqArg _ d:_) [] [] = (errReq d optStr,[])
short (ReqArg f _:_) [] (r:rest) = (Opt (f r),rest)
short (ReqArg f _:_) xs rest = (Opt (f xs),rest)
short (OptArg f _:_) [] rest = (Opt (f Nothing),rest)
short (OptArg f _:_) xs rest = (Opt (f (Just xs)),rest)
short [] [] rest = (errUnrec optStr,rest)
short [] xs rest = (errUnrec optStr,('-':xs):rest)
-- miscellaneous error formatting
errAmbig :: [OptDescr a] -> String -> OptKind a
errAmbig ods optStr = OptErr (usageInfo header ods)
where header = "option `" ++ optStr ++ "' is ambiguous; could be one of:"
errReq :: String -> String -> OptKind a
errReq d optStr = OptErr ("option `" ++ optStr ++ "' requires an argument " ++ d ++ "\n")
errUnrec :: String -> OptKind a
errUnrec optStr = OptErr ("unrecognized option `" ++ optStr ++ "'\n")
errNoArg :: String -> OptKind a
errNoArg optStr = OptErr ("option `" ++ optStr ++ "' doesn't allow an argument\n")
{-
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- and here a small and hopefully enlightening example:
data Flag = Verbose | Version | Name String | Output String | Arg String deriving Show
options :: [OptDescr Flag]
options =
[Option ['v'] ["verbose"] (NoArg Verbose) "verbosely list files",
Option ['V','?'] ["version","release"] (NoArg Version) "show version info",
Option ['o'] ["output"] (OptArg out "FILE") "use FILE for dump",
Option ['n'] ["name"] (ReqArg Name "USER") "only dump USER's files"]
out :: Maybe String -> Flag
out Nothing = Output "stdout"
out (Just o) = Output o
test :: ArgOrder Flag -> [String] -> String
test order cmdline = case getOpt order options cmdline of
(o,n,[] ) -> "options=" ++ show o ++ " args=" ++ show n ++ "\n"
(_,_,errs) -> concat errs ++ usageInfo header options
where header = "Usage: foobar [OPTION...] files..."
-- example runs:
-- putStr (test RequireOrder ["foo","-v"])
-- ==> options=[] args=["foo", "-v"]
-- putStr (test Permute ["foo","-v"])
-- ==> options=[Verbose] args=["foo"]
-- putStr (test (ReturnInOrder Arg) ["foo","-v"])
-- ==> options=[Arg "foo", Verbose] args=[]
-- putStr (test Permute ["foo","--","-v"])
-- ==> options=[] args=["foo", "-v"]
-- putStr (test Permute ["-?o","--name","bar","--na=baz"])
-- ==> options=[Version, Output "stdout", Name "bar", Name "baz"] args=[]
-- putStr (test Permute ["--ver","foo"])
-- ==> option `--ver' is ambiguous; could be one of:
-- -v --verbose verbosely list files
-- -V, -? --version, --release show version info
-- Usage: foobar [OPTION...] files...
-- -v --verbose verbosely list files
-- -V, -? --version, --release show version info
-- -o[FILE] --output[=FILE] use FILE for dump
-- -n USER --name=USER only dump USER's files
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-}
{- $example
To hopefully illuminate the role of the different data
structures, here\'s the command-line options for a (very simple)
compiler:
> module Opts where
>
> import System.Console.GetOpt
> import Data.Maybe ( fromMaybe )
>
> data Flag
> = Verbose | Version
> | Input String | Output String | LibDir String
> deriving Show
>
> options :: [OptDescr Flag]
> options =
> [ Option ['v'] ["verbose"] (NoArg Verbose) "chatty output on stderr"
> , Option ['V','?'] ["version"] (NoArg Version) "show version number"
> , Option ['o'] ["output"] (OptArg outp "FILE") "output FILE"
> , Option ['c'] [] (OptArg inp "FILE") "input FILE"
> , Option ['L'] ["libdir"] (ReqArg LibDir "DIR") "library directory"
> ]
>
> inp,outp :: Maybe String -> Flag
> outp = Output . fromMaybe "stdout"
> inp = Input . fromMaybe "stdout"
>
> compilerOpts :: [String] -> IO ([Flag], [String])
> compilerOpts argv =
> case (getOpt Permute options argv) of
> (o,n,[] ) -> return (o,n)
> (_,_,errs) -> ioError (userError (concat errs ++ usageInfo header options))
> where header = "Usage: ic [OPTION...] files..."
-}
|