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Most utilities on POSIX-compatible systems take options on
the command line that can be used to change the way a program behaves.
awk is an example of such a program
(see section Command-Line Options).
Often, options take arguments (i.e., data that the program needs to
correctly obey the command-line option).  For example, awk’s
-F option requires a string to use as the field separator.
The first occurrence on the command line of either -- or a
string that does not begin with ‘-’ ends the options.
Modern Unix systems provide a C function named getopt() for processing
command-line arguments.  The programmer provides a string describing the
one-letter options. If an option requires an argument, it is followed in the
string with a colon.  getopt() is also passed the
count and values of the command-line arguments and is called in a loop.
getopt() processes the command-line arguments for option letters.
Each time around the loop, it returns a single character representing the
next option letter that it finds, or ‘?’ if it finds an invalid option.
When it returns -1, there are no options left on the command line.
When using getopt(), options that do not take arguments can be
grouped together.  Furthermore, options that take arguments require that the
argument be present.  The argument can immediately follow the option letter,
or it can be a separate command-line argument.
Given a hypothetical program that takes three command-line options, -a, -b, and -c, where -b requires an argument, all of the following are valid ways of invoking the program:
prog -a -b foo -c data1 data2 data3 prog -ac -bfoo -- data1 data2 data3 prog -acbfoo data1 data2 data3
Notice that when the argument is grouped with its option, the rest of the argument is considered to be the option’s argument. In this example, -acbfoo indicates that all of the -a, -b, and -c options were supplied, and that ‘foo’ is the argument to the -b option.
getopt() provides four external variables that the programmer can use:
optindThe index in the argument value array (argv) where the first
nonoption command-line argument can be found.
optargThe string value of the argument to an option.
opterrUsually getopt() prints an error message when it finds an invalid
option.  Setting opterr to zero disables this feature.  (An
application might want to print its own error message.)
optoptThe letter representing the command-line option.
The following C fragment shows how getopt() might process command-line
arguments for awk:
int
main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
    …
    /* print our own message */
    opterr = 0;
    while ((c = getopt(argc, argv, "v:f:F:W:")) != -1) {
        switch (c) {
        case 'f':    /* file */
            …
            break;
        case 'F':    /* field separator */
            …
            break;
        case 'v':    /* variable assignment */
            …
            break;
        case 'W':    /* extension */
            …
            break;
        case '?':
        default:
            usage();
            break;
        }
    }
    …
}
As a side point, gawk actually uses the GNU getopt_long()
function to process both normal and GNU-style long options
(see section Command-Line Options).
The abstraction provided by getopt() is very useful and is quite
handy in awk programs as well.  Following is an awk
version of getopt().  This function highlights one of the
greatest weaknesses in awk, which is that it is very poor at
manipulating single characters.  Repeated calls to substr() are
necessary for accessing individual characters
(see section String-Manipulation Functions).72
The discussion that follows walks through the code a bit at a time:
# getopt.awk --- Do C library getopt(3) function in awk # External variables: # Optind -- index in ARGV of first nonoption argument # Optarg -- string value of argument to current option # Opterr -- if nonzero, print our own diagnostic # Optopt -- current option letter # Returns: # -1 at end of options # "?" for unrecognized option # <c> a character representing the current option # Private Data: # _opti -- index in multiflag option, e.g., -abc
The function starts out with comments presenting a list of the global variables it uses, what the return values are, what they mean, and any global variables that are “private” to this library function. Such documentation is essential for any program, and particularly for library functions.
The getopt() function first checks that it was indeed called with
a string of options (the options parameter).  If options
has a zero length, getopt() immediately returns -1:
function getopt(argc, argv, options,    thisopt, i)
{
    if (length(options) == 0)    # no options given
        return -1
    if (argv[Optind] == "--") {  # all done
        Optind++
        _opti = 0
        return -1
    } else if (argv[Optind] !~ /^-[^:[:space:]]/) {
        _opti = 0
        return -1
    }
The next thing to check for is the end of the options.  A --
ends the command-line options, as does any command-line argument that
does not begin with a ‘-’.  Optind is used to step through
the array of command-line arguments; it retains its value across calls
to getopt(), because it is a global variable.
The regular expression that is used, /^-[^:[:space:]/,
checks for a ‘-’ followed by anything
that is not whitespace and not a colon.
If the current command-line argument does not match this pattern,
it is not an option, and it ends option processing. Continuing on:
    if (_opti == 0)
        _opti = 2
    thisopt = substr(argv[Optind], _opti, 1)
    Optopt = thisopt
    i = index(options, thisopt)
    if (i == 0) {
        if (Opterr)
            printf("%c -- invalid option\n", thisopt) > "/dev/stderr"
        if (_opti >= length(argv[Optind])) {
            Optind++
            _opti = 0
        } else
            _opti++
        return "?"
    }
The _opti variable tracks the position in the current command-line
argument (argv[Optind]).  If multiple options are
grouped together with one ‘-’ (e.g., -abx), it is necessary
to return them to the user one at a time.
If _opti is equal to zero, it is set to two, which is the index in
the string of the next character to look at (we skip the ‘-’, which
is at position one).  The variable thisopt holds the character,
obtained with substr().  It is saved in Optopt for the main
program to use.
If thisopt is not in the options string, then it is an
invalid option.  If Opterr is nonzero, getopt() prints an error
message on the standard error that is similar to the message from the C
version of getopt().
Because the option is invalid, it is necessary to skip it and move on to the
next option character.  If _opti is greater than or equal to the
length of the current command-line argument, it is necessary to move on
to the next argument, so Optind is incremented and _opti is reset
to zero. Otherwise, Optind is left alone and _opti is merely
incremented.
In any case, because the option is invalid, getopt() returns "?".
The main program can examine Optopt if it needs to know what the
invalid option letter actually is. Continuing on:
    if (substr(options, i + 1, 1) == ":") {
        # get option argument
        if (length(substr(argv[Optind], _opti + 1)) > 0)
            Optarg = substr(argv[Optind], _opti + 1)
        else
            Optarg = argv[++Optind]
        _opti = 0
    } else
        Optarg = ""
If the option requires an argument, the option letter is followed by a colon
in the options string.  If there are remaining characters in the
current command-line argument (argv[Optind]), then the rest of that
string is assigned to Optarg.  Otherwise, the next command-line
argument is used (‘-xFOO’ versus ‘-x FOO’). In either case,
_opti is reset to zero, because there are no more characters left to
examine in the current command-line argument. Continuing:
    if (_opti == 0 || _opti >= length(argv[Optind])) {
        Optind++
        _opti = 0
    } else
        _opti++
    return thisopt
}
Finally, if _opti is either zero or greater than the length of the
current command-line argument, it means this element in argv is
through being processed, so Optind is incremented to point to the
next element in argv.  If neither condition is true, then only
_opti is incremented, so that the next option letter can be processed
on the next call to getopt().
The BEGIN rule initializes both Opterr and Optind to one.
Opterr is set to one, because the default behavior is for getopt()
to print a diagnostic message upon seeing an invalid option.  Optind
is set to one, because there’s no reason to look at the program name, which is
in ARGV[0]:
BEGIN {
    Opterr = 1    # default is to diagnose
    Optind = 1    # skip ARGV[0]
    # test program
    if (_getopt_test) {
        while ((_go_c = getopt(ARGC, ARGV, "ab:cd")) != -1)
            printf("c = <%c>, Optarg = <%s>\n",
                                       _go_c, Optarg)
        printf("non-option arguments:\n")
        for (; Optind < ARGC; Optind++)
            printf("\tARGV[%d] = <%s>\n",
                                    Optind, ARGV[Optind])
    }
}
The rest of the BEGIN rule is a simple test program.  Here are the
results of two sample runs of the test program:
$ awk -f getopt.awk -v _getopt_test=1 -- -a -cbARG bax -x -| c = <a>, Optarg = <> -| c = <c>, Optarg = <> -| c = <b>, Optarg = <ARG> -| non-option arguments: -| ARGV[3] = <bax> -| ARGV[4] = <-x> $ awk -f getopt.awk -v _getopt_test=1 -- -a -x -- xyz abc -| c = <a>, Optarg = <> error→ x -- invalid option -| c = <?>, Optarg = <> -| non-option arguments: -| ARGV[4] = <xyz> -| ARGV[5] = <abc>
In both runs, the first -- terminates the arguments to
awk, so that it does not try to interpret the -a,
etc., as its own options.
NOTE: After
getopt()is through, user-level code must clear out all the elements ofARGVfrom 1 toOptind, so thatawkdoes not try to process the command-line options as file names.
Using ‘#!’ with the -E option may help avoid
conflicts between your program’s options and gawk’s options,
as -E causes gawk to abandon processing of
further options
(see section Executable awk Programs and
see section Command-Line Options).
Several of the sample programs presented in
Practical awk Programs,
use getopt() to process their arguments.
This
function was written before gawk acquired the ability to
split strings into single characters using "" as the separator.
We have left it alone, as using substr() is more portable.
Next: Passwd Functions, Previous: Data File Management, Up: Library Functions [Contents][Index]