SH-ARG(1)SH-ARG(1)NAMEarg - shell command-line argument parsing
SYNOPSIS
load arg
arg [ opts command ]... - args
DESCRIPTION
Arg is a loadable module for sh(1) that parses command-line arguments
in the same form as arg(2). It accepts a list of (opts, command)
pairs, where each character in opts is an acceptable option, and com‐
mand is a shell command to be run if any character in opts is found.
Any trailing plus (+) characters in opts cause arg to extract the same
number of arguments associated with the option before running command.
For the duration of command, the environment variable $opt will be set
to the option that has been found, and $arg will be set to the option's
arguments (if the correct number of arguments have been extracted; oth‐
erwise a message will be printed, and a usage exception raised). The
option character asterisk (*) matches any option letter (this must be
quoted, to avoid the usual special interpretation by the shell). Only
one command will be run for any option found; if there is no matching
option letter, then a default error message will be printed, and a
usage exception raised.
The list of option specifications is terminated with a single minus
(-); the arguments to be parsed follow this. When the argument parsing
has finished the environment variable $* is set to the remaining list
of arguments.
EXAMPLE
The following shell script, script, takes options b, c and f, where f
takes a file name argument.
#!/dis/sh
load arg
bflag := cflag := 0
file := ()
args := $*
(arg
bc {$opt^flag = 1}
f+ {file=$arg}
r++++ {rect=$arg}
'*' {echo unknown option $opt}
- $args
)
echo $0 $bflag $cflag $file
echo rect $rect
echo arguments are $*
When invoked as follows:
script -bc -r 0 10 50 100 -ffile a b c
the output is:
./script 1 1 file
rect 0 10 50 100
arguments are a b c
and when invoked by:
script -b -f file -z -- -bc
the output is:
unknown option z
./script 1 0 file
arguments are -bc
SOURCE
/appl/cmd/sh/arg.b
SEE ALSOsh(1), arg(2), sh-std(1)SH-ARG(1)