1 /* Hierarchical argument parsing, layered over getopt. 2 Copyright (C) 1995-2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 3 This file is part of the GNU C Library. 4 Written by Miles Bader <miles@gnu.ai.mit.edu>. 5 6 This file is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify 7 it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as 8 published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the 9 License, or (at your option) any later version. 10 11 This file is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 12 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 13 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 14 GNU Lesser General Public License for more details. 15 16 You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License 17 along with this program. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ 18 19 #ifndef _ARGP_H 20 #define _ARGP_H 21 22 #include <stdio.h> 23 #include <ctype.h> 24 #include <getopt.h> 25 #include <limits.h> 26 27 #define __need_error_t 28 #include <errno.h> 29 30 #ifndef __THROW 31 # define __THROW 32 #endif 33 #ifndef __NTH 34 # define __NTH(fct) fct __THROW 35 #endif 36 37 /* GCC 2.95 and later have "__restrict"; C99 compilers have 38 "restrict", and "configure" may have defined "restrict". 39 Other compilers use __restrict, __restrict__, and _Restrict, and 40 'configure' might #define 'restrict' to those words. */ 41 #ifndef __restrict 42 # if ! (2 < __GNUC__ || (2 == __GNUC__ && 95 <= __GNUC_MINOR__) \ 43 || __clang_major__ >= 3) 44 # if 199901L <= __STDC_VERSION__ 45 # define __restrict restrict 46 # else 47 # define __restrict 48 # endif 49 # endif 50 #endif 51 52 #ifndef __error_t_defined 53 typedef int error_t; 54 # define __error_t_defined 55 #endif 56 57 #ifdef __cplusplus 58 extern "C" { 59 #endif 60 61 /* Glibc documentation: 62 https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/Argp.html */ 63 64 /* A description of a particular option. A pointer to an array of 65 these is passed in the OPTIONS field of an argp structure. Each option 66 entry can correspond to one long option and/or one short option; more 67 names for the same option can be added by following an entry in an option 68 array with options having the OPTION_ALIAS flag set. */ 69 struct argp_option 70 { 71 /* The long option name. For more than one name for the same option, you 72 can use following options with the OPTION_ALIAS flag set. */ 73 const char *name; 74 75 /* What key is returned for this option. If > 0 and printable, then it's 76 also accepted as a short option. */ 77 int key; 78 79 /* If non-NULL, this is the name of the argument associated with this 80 option, which is required unless the OPTION_ARG_OPTIONAL flag is set. */ 81 const char *arg; 82 83 /* OPTION_ flags. */ 84 int flags; 85 86 /* The doc string for this option. If both NAME and KEY are 0, This string 87 will be printed outdented from the normal option column, making it 88 useful as a group header (it will be the first thing printed in its 89 group); in this usage, it's conventional to end the string with a ':'. 90 91 Write the initial value as N_("TEXT") if you want xgettext to collect 92 it into a POT file. */ 93 const char *doc; 94 95 /* The group this option is in. In a long help message, options are sorted 96 alphabetically within each group, and the groups presented in the order 97 0, 1, 2, ..., n, -m, ..., -2, -1. Every entry in an options array with 98 if this field 0 will inherit the group number of the previous entry, or 99 zero if it's the first one, unless its a group header (NAME and KEY both 100 0), in which case, the previous entry + 1 is the default. Automagic 101 options such as --help are put into group -1. */ 102 int group; 103 }; 104 105 /* The argument associated with this option is optional. */ 106 #define OPTION_ARG_OPTIONAL 0x1 107 108 /* This option isn't displayed in any help messages. */ 109 #define OPTION_HIDDEN 0x2 110 111 /* This option is an alias for the closest previous non-alias option. This 112 means that it will be displayed in the same help entry, and will inherit 113 fields other than NAME and KEY from the aliased option. */ 114 #define OPTION_ALIAS 0x4 115 116 /* This option isn't actually an option (and so should be ignored by the 117 actual option parser), but rather an arbitrary piece of documentation that 118 should be displayed in much the same manner as the options. If this flag 119 is set, then the option NAME field is displayed unmodified (e.g., no '--' 120 prefix is added) at the left-margin (where a *short* option would normally 121 be displayed), and the documentation string in the normal place. The NAME 122 field will be translated using gettext, unless OPTION_NO_TRANS is set (see 123 below). For purposes of sorting, any leading whitespace and punctuation is 124 ignored, except that if the first non-whitespace character is not '-', this 125 entry is displayed after all options (and OPTION_DOC entries with a leading 126 '-') in the same group. */ 127 #define OPTION_DOC 0x8 128 129 /* This option shouldn't be included in "long" usage messages (but is still 130 included in help messages). This is mainly intended for options that are 131 completely documented in an argp's ARGS_DOC field, in which case including 132 the option in the generic usage list would be redundant. For instance, 133 if ARGS_DOC is "FOO BAR\n-x BLAH", and the '-x' option's purpose is to 134 distinguish these two cases, -x should probably be marked 135 OPTION_NO_USAGE. */ 136 #define OPTION_NO_USAGE 0x10 137 138 /* Valid only in conjunction with OPTION_DOC. This option disables translation 139 of option name. */ 140 #define OPTION_NO_TRANS 0x20 141 142 struct argp; /* fwd declare this type */ 143 struct argp_state; /* " */ 144 struct argp_child; /* " */ 145 146 /* The type of a pointer to an argp parsing function. */ 147 typedef error_t (*argp_parser_t) (int __key, char *__arg, 148 struct argp_state *__state); 149 150 /* What to return for unrecognized keys. For special ARGP_KEY_ keys, such 151 returns will simply be ignored. For user keys, this error will be turned 152 into EINVAL (if the call to argp_parse is such that errors are propagated 153 back to the user instead of exiting); returning EINVAL itself would result 154 in an immediate stop to parsing in *all* cases. */ 155 #define ARGP_ERR_UNKNOWN E2BIG /* Hurd should never need E2BIG. XXX */ 156 157 /* Special values for the KEY argument to an argument parsing function. 158 ARGP_ERR_UNKNOWN should be returned if they aren't understood. 159 160 The sequence of keys to a parsing function is either (where each 161 uppercased word should be prefixed by 'ARGP_KEY_' and opt is a user key): 162 163 INIT opt... NO_ARGS END SUCCESS -- No non-option arguments at all 164 or INIT (opt | ARG)... END SUCCESS -- All non-option args parsed 165 or INIT (opt | ARG)... SUCCESS -- Some non-option arg unrecognized 166 167 The third case is where every parser returned ARGP_KEY_UNKNOWN for an 168 argument, in which case parsing stops at that argument (returning the 169 unparsed arguments to the caller of argp_parse if requested, or stopping 170 with an error message if not). 171 172 If an error occurs (either detected by argp, or because the parsing 173 function returned an error value), then the parser is called with 174 ARGP_KEY_ERROR, and no further calls are made. */ 175 176 /* This is not an option at all, but rather a command line argument. If a 177 parser receiving this key returns success, the fact is recorded, and the 178 ARGP_KEY_NO_ARGS case won't be used. HOWEVER, if while processing the 179 argument, a parser function decrements the NEXT field of the state it's 180 passed, the option won't be considered processed; this is to allow you to 181 actually modify the argument (perhaps into an option), and have it 182 processed again. */ 183 #define ARGP_KEY_ARG 0 184 /* There are remaining arguments not parsed by any parser, which may be found 185 starting at (STATE->argv + STATE->next). If success is returned, but 186 STATE->next left untouched, it's assumed that all arguments were consume, 187 otherwise, the parser should adjust STATE->next to reflect any arguments 188 consumed. */ 189 #define ARGP_KEY_ARGS 0x1000006 190 /* There are no more command line arguments at all. */ 191 #define ARGP_KEY_END 0x1000001 192 /* Because it's common to want to do some special processing if there aren't 193 any non-option args, user parsers are called with this key if they didn't 194 successfully process any non-option arguments. Called just before 195 ARGP_KEY_END (where more general validity checks on previously parsed 196 arguments can take place). */ 197 #define ARGP_KEY_NO_ARGS 0x1000002 198 /* Passed in before any parsing is done. Afterwards, the values of each 199 element of the CHILD_INPUT field, if any, in the state structure is 200 copied to each child's state to be the initial value of the INPUT field. */ 201 #define ARGP_KEY_INIT 0x1000003 202 /* Use after all other keys, including SUCCESS & END. */ 203 #define ARGP_KEY_FINI 0x1000007 204 /* Passed in when parsing has successfully been completed (even if there are 205 still arguments remaining). */ 206 #define ARGP_KEY_SUCCESS 0x1000004 207 /* Passed in if an error occurs. */ 208 #define ARGP_KEY_ERROR 0x1000005 209 210 /* An argp structure contains a set of options declarations, a function to 211 deal with parsing one, documentation string, a possible vector of child 212 argp's, and perhaps a function to filter help output. When actually 213 parsing options, getopt is called with the union of all the argp 214 structures chained together through their CHILD pointers, with conflicts 215 being resolved in favor of the first occurrence in the chain. */ 216 struct argp 217 { 218 /* An array of argp_option structures, terminated by an entry with both 219 NAME and KEY having a value of 0. */ 220 const struct argp_option *options; 221 222 /* What to do with an option from this structure. KEY is the key 223 associated with the option, and ARG is any associated argument (NULL if 224 none was supplied). If KEY isn't understood, ARGP_ERR_UNKNOWN should be 225 returned. If a non-zero, non-ARGP_ERR_UNKNOWN value is returned, then 226 parsing is stopped immediately, and that value is returned from 227 argp_parse(). For special (non-user-supplied) values of KEY, see the 228 ARGP_KEY_ definitions below. */ 229 argp_parser_t parser; 230 231 /* If non-NULL, a string describing what other arguments are wanted by this 232 program. It is only used by argp_usage to print the "Usage:" message. 233 If it contains newlines, the strings separated by them are considered 234 alternative usage patterns, and printed on separate lines (lines after 235 the first are prefix by " or: " instead of "Usage:"). */ 236 const char *args_doc; 237 238 /* If non-NULL, a string containing extra text to be printed before and 239 after the options in a long help message (separated by a vertical tab 240 '\v' character). 241 Write the initial value as N_("BEFORE-TEXT") "\v" N_("AFTER-TEXT") if 242 you want xgettext to collect the two pieces of text into a POT file. */ 243 const char *doc; 244 245 /* A vector of argp_children structures, terminated by a member with a 0 246 argp field, pointing to child argps should be parsed with this one. Any 247 conflicts are resolved in favor of this argp, or early argps in the 248 CHILDREN list. This field is useful if you use libraries that supply 249 their own argp structure, which you want to use in conjunction with your 250 own. */ 251 const struct argp_child *children; 252 253 /* If non-zero, this should be a function to filter the output of help 254 messages. KEY is either a key from an option, in which case TEXT is 255 that option's help text, or a special key from the ARGP_KEY_HELP_ 256 defines, below, describing which other help text TEXT is. The function 257 should return either TEXT, if it should be used as-is, a replacement 258 string, which should be malloced, and will be freed by argp, or NULL, 259 meaning "print nothing". The value for TEXT is *after* any translation 260 has been done, so if any of the replacement text also needs translation, 261 that should be done by the filter function. INPUT is either the input 262 supplied to argp_parse, or NULL, if argp_help was called directly. */ 263 char *(*help_filter) (int __key, const char *__text, void *__input); 264 265 /* If non-zero the strings used in the argp library are translated using 266 the domain described by this string. Otherwise the currently installed 267 default domain is used. */ 268 const char *argp_domain; 269 }; 270 271 /* Possible KEY arguments to a help filter function. */ 272 #define ARGP_KEY_HELP_PRE_DOC 0x2000001 /* Help text preceding options. */ 273 #define ARGP_KEY_HELP_POST_DOC 0x2000002 /* Help text following options. */ 274 #define ARGP_KEY_HELP_HEADER 0x2000003 /* Option header string. */ 275 #define ARGP_KEY_HELP_EXTRA 0x2000004 /* After all other documentation; 276 TEXT is NULL for this key. */ 277 /* Explanatory note emitted when duplicate option arguments have been 278 suppressed. */ 279 #define ARGP_KEY_HELP_DUP_ARGS_NOTE 0x2000005 280 #define ARGP_KEY_HELP_ARGS_DOC 0x2000006 /* Argument doc string. */ 281 282 /* When an argp has a non-zero CHILDREN field, it should point to a vector of 283 argp_child structures, each of which describes a subsidiary argp. */ 284 struct argp_child 285 { 286 /* The child parser. */ 287 const struct argp *argp; 288 289 /* Flags for this child. */ 290 int flags; 291 292 /* If non-zero, an optional header to be printed in help output before the 293 child options. As a side-effect, a non-zero value forces the child 294 options to be grouped together; to achieve this effect without actually 295 printing a header string, use a value of "". */ 296 const char *header; 297 298 /* Where to group the child options relative to the other ("consolidated") 299 options in the parent argp; the values are the same as the GROUP field 300 in argp_option structs, but all child-groupings follow parent options at 301 a particular group level. If both this field and HEADER are zero, then 302 they aren't grouped at all, but rather merged with the parent options 303 (merging the child's grouping levels with the parents). */ 304 int group; 305 }; 306 307 /* Parsing state. This is provided to parsing functions called by argp, 308 which may examine and, as noted, modify fields. */ 309 struct argp_state 310 { 311 /* The top level ARGP being parsed. */ 312 const struct argp *root_argp; 313 314 /* The argument vector being parsed. May be modified. */ 315 int argc; 316 char **argv; 317 318 /* The index in ARGV of the next arg that to be parsed. May be modified. */ 319 int next; 320 321 /* The flags supplied to argp_parse. May be modified. */ 322 unsigned flags; 323 324 /* While calling a parsing function with a key of ARGP_KEY_ARG, this is the 325 number of the current arg, starting at zero, and incremented after each 326 such call returns. At all other times, this is the number of such 327 arguments that have been processed. */ 328 unsigned arg_num; 329 330 /* If non-zero, the index in ARGV of the first argument following a special 331 '--' argument (which prevents anything following being interpreted as an 332 option). Only set once argument parsing has proceeded past this point. */ 333 int quoted; 334 335 /* An arbitrary pointer passed in from the user. */ 336 void *input; 337 /* Values to pass to child parsers. This vector will be the same length as 338 the number of children for the current parser. */ 339 void **child_inputs; 340 341 /* For the parser's use. Initialized to 0. */ 342 void *hook; 343 344 /* The name used when printing messages. This is initialized to ARGV[0], 345 or PROGRAM_INVOCATION_NAME if that is unavailable. */ 346 char *name; 347 348 /* Streams used when argp prints something. */ 349 FILE *err_stream; /* For errors; initialized to stderr. */ 350 FILE *out_stream; /* For information; initialized to stdout. */ 351 352 void *pstate; /* Private, for use by argp. */ 353 }; 354 355 /* Flags for argp_parse (note that the defaults are those that are 356 convenient for program command line parsing): */ 357 358 /* Don't ignore the first element of ARGV. Normally (and always unless 359 ARGP_NO_ERRS is set) the first element of the argument vector is 360 skipped for option parsing purposes, as it corresponds to the program name 361 in a command line. */ 362 #define ARGP_PARSE_ARGV0 0x01 363 364 /* Don't print error messages for unknown options to stderr; unless this flag 365 is set, ARGP_PARSE_ARGV0 is ignored, as ARGV[0] is used as the program 366 name in the error messages. This flag implies ARGP_NO_EXIT (on the 367 assumption that silent exiting upon errors is bad behaviour). */ 368 #define ARGP_NO_ERRS 0x02 369 370 /* Don't parse any non-option args. Normally non-option args are parsed by 371 calling the parse functions with a key of ARGP_KEY_ARG, and the actual arg 372 as the value. Since it's impossible to know which parse function wants to 373 handle it, each one is called in turn, until one returns 0 or an error 374 other than ARGP_ERR_UNKNOWN; if an argument is handled by no one, the 375 argp_parse returns prematurely (but with a return value of 0). If all 376 args have been parsed without error, all parsing functions are called one 377 last time with a key of ARGP_KEY_END. This flag needn't normally be set, 378 as the normal behavior is to stop parsing as soon as some argument can't 379 be handled. */ 380 #define ARGP_NO_ARGS 0x04 381 382 /* Parse options and arguments in the same order they occur on the command 383 line -- normally they're rearranged so that all options come first. */ 384 #define ARGP_IN_ORDER 0x08 385 386 /* Don't provide the standard long option --help, which causes usage and 387 option help information to be output to stdout, and exit (0) called. */ 388 #define ARGP_NO_HELP 0x10 389 390 /* Don't exit on errors (they may still result in error messages). */ 391 #define ARGP_NO_EXIT 0x20 392 393 /* Use the gnu getopt "long-only" rules for parsing arguments. */ 394 #define ARGP_LONG_ONLY 0x40 395 396 /* Turns off any message-printing/exiting options. */ 397 #define ARGP_SILENT (ARGP_NO_EXIT | ARGP_NO_ERRS | ARGP_NO_HELP) 398 399 /* Parse the options strings in ARGC & ARGV according to the options in ARGP. 400 FLAGS is one of the ARGP_ flags above. If ARG_INDEX is non-NULL, the 401 index in ARGV of the first unparsed option is returned in it. If an 402 unknown option is present, ARGP_ERR_UNKNOWN is returned; if some parser 403 routine returned a non-zero value, it is returned; otherwise 0 is 404 returned. This function may also call exit unless the ARGP_NO_HELP flag 405 is set. INPUT is a pointer to a value to be passed in to the parser. */ 406 extern error_t argp_parse (const struct argp *__restrict __argp, 407 int /*argc*/, char **__restrict /*argv*/, 408 unsigned __flags, int *__restrict __arg_index, 409 void *__restrict __input); 410 extern error_t __argp_parse (const struct argp *__restrict __argp, 411 int /*argc*/, char **__restrict /*argv*/, 412 unsigned __flags, int *__restrict __arg_index, 413 void *__restrict __input); 414 415 /* Global variables. */ 416 417 /* GNULIB makes sure both program_invocation_name and 418 program_invocation_short_name are available */ 419 #ifdef GNULIB_PROGRAM_INVOCATION_NAME 420 extern char *program_invocation_name; 421 # undef HAVE_DECL_PROGRAM_INVOCATION_NAME 422 # define HAVE_DECL_PROGRAM_INVOCATION_NAME 1 423 #endif 424 425 #ifdef GNULIB_PROGRAM_INVOCATION_SHORT_NAME 426 extern char *program_invocation_short_name; 427 # undef HAVE_DECL_PROGRAM_INVOCATION_SHORT_NAME 428 # define HAVE_DECL_PROGRAM_INVOCATION_SHORT_NAME 1 429 #endif 430 431 /* If defined or set by the user program to a non-zero value, then a default 432 option --version is added (unless the ARGP_NO_HELP flag is used), which 433 will print this string followed by a newline and exit (unless the 434 ARGP_NO_EXIT flag is used). Overridden by ARGP_PROGRAM_VERSION_HOOK. */ 435 extern const char *argp_program_version; 436 437 /* If defined or set by the user program to a non-zero value, then a default 438 option --version is added (unless the ARGP_NO_HELP flag is used), which 439 calls this function with a stream to print the version to and a pointer to 440 the current parsing state, and then exits (unless the ARGP_NO_EXIT flag is 441 used). This variable takes precedent over ARGP_PROGRAM_VERSION. */ 442 extern void (*argp_program_version_hook) (FILE *__restrict __stream, 443 struct argp_state *__restrict 444 __state); 445 446 /* If defined or set by the user program, it should point to string that is 447 the bug-reporting address for the program. It will be printed by 448 argp_help if the ARGP_HELP_BUG_ADDR flag is set (as it is by various 449 standard help messages), embedded in a sentence that says something like 450 "Report bugs to ADDR." */ 451 extern const char *argp_program_bug_address; 452 453 /* The exit status that argp will use when exiting due to a parsing error. 454 If not defined or set by the user program, this defaults to EX_USAGE from 455 <sysexits.h>. */ 456 extern error_t argp_err_exit_status; 457 458 /* Flags for argp_help. */ 459 #define ARGP_HELP_USAGE 0x01 /* a Usage: message. */ 460 #define ARGP_HELP_SHORT_USAGE 0x02 /* " but don't actually print options. */ 461 #define ARGP_HELP_SEE 0x04 /* a "Try ... for more help" message. */ 462 #define ARGP_HELP_LONG 0x08 /* a long help message. */ 463 #define ARGP_HELP_PRE_DOC 0x10 /* doc string preceding long help. */ 464 #define ARGP_HELP_POST_DOC 0x20 /* doc string following long help. */ 465 #define ARGP_HELP_DOC (ARGP_HELP_PRE_DOC | ARGP_HELP_POST_DOC) 466 #define ARGP_HELP_BUG_ADDR 0x40 /* bug report address */ 467 #define ARGP_HELP_LONG_ONLY 0x80 /* modify output appropriately to 468 reflect ARGP_LONG_ONLY mode. */ 469 470 /* These ARGP_HELP flags are only understood by argp_state_help. */ 471 #define ARGP_HELP_EXIT_ERR 0x100 /* Call exit(1) instead of returning. */ 472 #define ARGP_HELP_EXIT_OK 0x200 /* Call exit(0) instead of returning. */ 473 474 /* The standard thing to do after a program command line parsing error, if an 475 error message has already been printed. */ 476 #define ARGP_HELP_STD_ERR \ 477 (ARGP_HELP_SEE | ARGP_HELP_EXIT_ERR) 478 /* The standard thing to do after a program command line parsing error, if no 479 more specific error message has been printed. */ 480 #define ARGP_HELP_STD_USAGE \ 481 (ARGP_HELP_SHORT_USAGE | ARGP_HELP_SEE | ARGP_HELP_EXIT_ERR) 482 /* The standard thing to do in response to a --help option. */ 483 #define ARGP_HELP_STD_HELP \ 484 (ARGP_HELP_SHORT_USAGE | ARGP_HELP_LONG | ARGP_HELP_EXIT_OK \ 485 | ARGP_HELP_DOC | ARGP_HELP_BUG_ADDR) 486 487 /* Output a usage message for ARGP to STREAM. FLAGS are from the set 488 ARGP_HELP_*. */ 489 extern void argp_help (const struct argp *__restrict __argp, 490 FILE *__restrict __stream, 491 unsigned __flags, char *__restrict __name); 492 extern void __argp_help (const struct argp *__restrict __argp, 493 FILE *__restrict __stream, unsigned __flags, 494 char *__name); 495 496 /* The following routines are intended to be called from within an argp 497 parsing routine (thus taking an argp_state structure as the first 498 argument). They may or may not print an error message and exit, depending 499 on the flags in STATE -- in any case, the caller should be prepared for 500 them *not* to exit, and should return an appropriate error after calling 501 them. [argp_usage & argp_error should probably be called argp_state_..., 502 but they're used often enough that they should be short] */ 503 504 /* Output, if appropriate, a usage message for STATE to STREAM. FLAGS are 505 from the set ARGP_HELP_*. */ 506 extern void argp_state_help (const struct argp_state *__restrict __state, 507 FILE *__restrict __stream, 508 unsigned int __flags); 509 extern void __argp_state_help (const struct argp_state *__restrict __state, 510 FILE *__restrict __stream, 511 unsigned int __flags); 512 513 #if _LIBC 514 /* Possibly output the standard usage message for ARGP to stderr and exit. */ 515 extern void argp_usage (const struct argp_state *__state); 516 extern void __argp_usage (const struct argp_state *__state); 517 #endif 518 519 /* If appropriate, print the printf string FMT and following args, preceded 520 by the program name and ':', to stderr, and followed by a "Try ... --help" 521 message, then exit (1). */ 522 extern void argp_error (const struct argp_state *__restrict __state, 523 const char *__restrict __fmt, ...) 524 #if GNULIB_VFPRINTF_POSIX 525 _GL_ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT ((_GL_ATTRIBUTE_SPEC_PRINTF_STANDARD, 2, 3)) 526 #else 527 _GL_ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT ((_GL_ATTRIBUTE_SPEC_PRINTF_SYSTEM, 2, 3)) 528 #endif 529 ; 530 extern void __argp_error (const struct argp_state *__restrict __state, 531 const char *__restrict __fmt, ...) 532 #if GNULIB_VFPRINTF_POSIX 533 _GL_ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT ((_GL_ATTRIBUTE_SPEC_PRINTF_STANDARD, 2, 3)) 534 #else 535 _GL_ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT ((_GL_ATTRIBUTE_SPEC_PRINTF_SYSTEM, 2, 3)) 536 #endif 537 ; 538 539 /* Similar to the standard gnu error-reporting function error(), but will 540 respect the ARGP_NO_EXIT and ARGP_NO_ERRS flags in STATE, and will print 541 to STATE->err_stream. This is useful for argument parsing code that is 542 shared between program startup (when exiting is desired) and runtime 543 option parsing (when typically an error code is returned instead). The 544 difference between this function and argp_error is that the latter is for 545 *parsing errors*, and the former is for other problems that occur during 546 parsing but don't reflect a (syntactic) problem with the input. */ 547 extern void argp_failure (const struct argp_state *__restrict __state, 548 int __status, int __errnum, 549 const char *__restrict __fmt, ...) 550 #if GNULIB_VFPRINTF_POSIX 551 _GL_ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT ((_GL_ATTRIBUTE_SPEC_PRINTF_STANDARD, 4, 5)) 552 #else 553 _GL_ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT ((_GL_ATTRIBUTE_SPEC_PRINTF_SYSTEM, 4, 5)) 554 #endif 555 ; 556 extern void __argp_failure (const struct argp_state *__restrict __state, 557 int __status, int __errnum, 558 const char *__restrict __fmt, ...) 559 #if GNULIB_VFPRINTF_POSIX 560 _GL_ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT ((_GL_ATTRIBUTE_SPEC_PRINTF_STANDARD, 4, 5)) 561 #else 562 _GL_ATTRIBUTE_FORMAT ((_GL_ATTRIBUTE_SPEC_PRINTF_SYSTEM, 4, 5)) 563 #endif 564 ; 565 566 #if _LIBC 567 /* Returns true if the option OPT is a valid short option. */ 568 extern int _option_is_short (const struct argp_option *__opt) __THROW; 569 extern int __option_is_short (const struct argp_option *__opt) __THROW; 570 571 /* Returns true if the option OPT is in fact the last (unused) entry in an 572 options array. */ 573 extern int _option_is_end (const struct argp_option *__opt) __THROW; 574 extern int __option_is_end (const struct argp_option *__opt) __THROW; 575 #endif 576 577 /* Return the input field for ARGP in the parser corresponding to STATE; used 578 by the help routines. */ 579 extern void *_argp_input (const struct argp *__restrict __argp, 580 const struct argp_state *__restrict __state) 581 __THROW; 582 extern void *__argp_input (const struct argp *__restrict __argp, 583 const struct argp_state *__restrict __state) 584 __THROW; 585 586 #if !_LIBC || defined __USE_EXTERN_INLINES 587 588 # if !_LIBC 589 # define __argp_usage argp_usage 590 # define __argp_state_help argp_state_help 591 # define __option_is_short _option_is_short 592 # define __option_is_end _option_is_end 593 #ifndef _GL_INLINE_HEADER_BEGIN 594 #error "Please include config.h first." 595 #endif 596 _GL_INLINE_HEADER_BEGIN 597 # ifndef ARGP_EI 598 # define ARGP_EI _GL_INLINE 599 # endif 600 # endif 601 602 # ifndef ARGP_EI 603 # define ARGP_EI __extern_inline 604 # endif 605 606 ARGP_EI void 607 __argp_usage (const struct argp_state *__state) /* */ 608 { 609 __argp_state_help (__state, stderr, ARGP_HELP_STD_USAGE); 610 } 611 612 ARGP_EI int 613 __NTH (__option_is_short (const struct argp_option *__opt)) /* */ 614 { 615 if (__opt->flags & OPTION_DOC) 616 return 0; 617 else 618 { 619 int __key = __opt->key; 620 return __key > 0 && __key <= UCHAR_MAX && isprint (__key); 621 } 622 } 623 624 ARGP_EI int 625 __NTH (__option_is_end (const struct argp_option *__opt)) /* */ 626 { 627 return !__opt->key && !__opt->name && !__opt->doc && !__opt->group; 628 } 629 630 # if !_LIBC 631 # undef __argp_usage 632 # undef __argp_state_help 633 # undef __option_is_short 634 # undef __option_is_end 635 _GL_INLINE_HEADER_END 636 # endif 637 #endif /* Use extern inlines. */ 638 639 #ifdef __cplusplus 640 } 641 #endif 642 643 #endif /* argp.h */