/* Getopt for GNU. Copyright (C) 1987, 1989, 1992 Free Software Foundation, Inc. (Modified by Douglas C. Schmidt for use with GNU G++.) This file is part of the GNU C++ Library. This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Library General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */ /* This version of `getopt' appears to the caller like standard Unix `getopt' but it behaves differently for the user, since it allows the user to intersperse the options with the other arguments. As `getopt' works, it permutes the elements of `argv' so that, when it is done, all the options precede everything else. Thus all application programs are extended to handle flexible argument order. Setting the environment variable _POSIX_OPTION_ORDER disables permutation. Then the behavior is completely standard. GNU application programs can use a third alternative mode in which they can distinguish the relative order of options and other arguments. */ #ifndef GetOpt_h #ifdef __GNUG__ #pragma interface #endif #define GetOpt_h 1 #include #include class GetOpt { private: /* The next char to be scanned in the option-element in which the last option character we returned was found. This allows us to pick up the scan where we left off. If this is zero, or a null string, it means resume the scan by advancing to the next ARGV-element. */ static char *nextchar; /* Describe how to deal with options that follow non-option ARGV-elements. UNSPECIFIED means the caller did not specify anything; the default is then REQUIRE_ORDER if the environment variable _OPTIONS_FIRST is defined, PERMUTE otherwise. REQUIRE_ORDER means don't recognize them as options. Stop option processing when the first non-option is seen. This is what Unix does. PERMUTE is the default. We permute the contents of `argv' as we scan, so that eventually all the options are at the end. This allows options to be given in any order, even with programs that were not written to expect this. RETURN_IN_ORDER is an option available to programs that were written to expect options and other ARGV-elements in any order and that care about the ordering of the two. We describe each non-option ARGV-element as if it were the argument of an option with character code zero. Using `-' as the first character of the list of option characters requests this mode of operation. The special argument `--' forces an end of option-scanning regardless of the value of `ordering'. In the case of RETURN_IN_ORDER, only `--' can cause `getopt' to return EOF with `optind' != ARGC. */ enum OrderingEnum { REQUIRE_ORDER, PERMUTE, RETURN_IN_ORDER }; OrderingEnum ordering; /* Handle permutation of arguments. */ /* Describe the part of ARGV that contains non-options that have been skipped. `first_nonopt' is the index in ARGV of the first of them; `last_nonopt' is the index after the last of them. */ static int first_nonopt; static int last_nonopt; void exchange (char **argv); public: /* For communication from `getopt' to the caller. When `getopt' finds an option that takes an argument, the argument value is returned here. Also, when `ordering' is RETURN_IN_ORDER, each non-option ARGV-element is returned here. */ char *optarg; /* Index in ARGV of the next element to be scanned. This is used for communication to and from the caller and for communication between successive calls to `getopt'. On entry to `getopt', zero means this is the first call; initialize. When `getopt' returns EOF, this is the index of the first of the non-option elements that the caller should itself scan. Otherwise, `optind' communicates from one call to the next how much of ARGV has been scanned so far. */ int optind; /* Callers store zero here to inhibit the error message for unrecognized options. */ int opterr; int nargc; char **nargv; const char *noptstring; GetOpt (int argc, char **argv, const char *optstring); int operator () (void); }; #endif