xref: /freebsd/usr.bin/getopt/getopt.1 (revision 59e2ff550c448126b988150ce800cdf73bb5103e)
1.\" $FreeBSD$
2.\"
3.Dd August 1, 2015
4.Dt GETOPT 1
5.Os
6.Sh NAME
7.Nm getopt
8.Nd parse command options
9.Sh SYNOPSIS
10.Nm args=\`getopt Ar optstring $*\`
11; errcode=$?; set \-\- $args
12.Sh DESCRIPTION
13The
14.Nm
15utility is used to break up options in command lines for easy parsing by
16shell procedures, and to check for legal options.
17.Ar Optstring
18is a string of recognized option letters (see
19.Xr getopt 3 ) ;
20if a letter is followed by a colon, the option
21is expected to have an argument which may or may not be
22separated from it by white space.
23The special option
24.Ql \-\-
25is used to delimit the end of the options.
26The
27.Nm
28utility will place
29.Ql \-\-
30in the arguments at the end of the options,
31or recognize it if used explicitly.
32The shell arguments
33(\fB$1 $2\fR ...) are reset so that each option is
34preceded by a
35.Ql \-
36and in its own shell argument;
37each option argument is also in its own shell argument.
38.Sh EXIT STATUS
39The
40.Nm
41utility prints an error message on the standard error output and exits with
42status > 0 when it encounters an option letter not included in
43.Ar optstring .
44.Sh EXAMPLES
45The following code fragment shows how one might process the arguments
46for a command that can take the options
47.Fl a
48and
49.Fl b ,
50and the option
51.Fl o ,
52which requires an argument.
53.Bd -literal -offset indent
54args=\`getopt abo: $*\`
55# you should not use \`getopt abo: "$@"\` since that would parse
56# the arguments differently from what the set command below does.
57if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
58	echo 'Usage: ...'
59	exit 2
60fi
61set \-\- $args
62# You cannot use the set command with a backquoted getopt directly,
63# since the exit code from getopt would be shadowed by those of set,
64# which is zero by definition.
65while :; do
66	case "$1" in
67	\-a|\-b)
68		echo "flag $1 set"; sflags="${1#-}$sflags"
69		shift
70		;;
71	\-o)
72		echo "oarg is '$2'"; oarg="$2"
73		shift; shift
74		;;
75	\-\-)
76		shift; break
77		;;
78	esac
79done
80echo "single-char flags: '$sflags'"
81echo "oarg is '$oarg'"
82.Ed
83.Pp
84This code will accept any of the following as equivalent:
85.Bd -literal -offset indent
86cmd \-aoarg file1 file2
87cmd \-a \-o arg file1 file2
88cmd \-oarg -a file1 file2
89cmd \-a \-oarg \-\- file1 file2
90.Ed
91.Sh SEE ALSO
92.Xr getopts 1 ,
93.Xr sh 1 ,
94.Xr getopt 3
95.Sh HISTORY
96Written by
97.An Henry Spencer ,
98working from a Bell Labs manual page.
99Behavior believed identical to the Bell version.
100Example changed in
101.Fx
102version 3.2 and 4.0.
103.Sh BUGS
104Whatever
105.Xr getopt 3
106has.
107.Pp
108Arguments containing white space or embedded shell metacharacters
109generally will not survive intact; this looks easy to fix but
110is not.
111People trying to fix
112.Nm
113or the example in this manpage should check the history of this file
114in
115.Fx .
116.Pp
117The error message for an invalid option is identified as coming
118from
119.Nm
120rather than from the shell procedure containing the invocation
121of
122.Nm ;
123this again is hard to fix.
124.Pp
125The precise best way to use the
126.Nm set
127command to set the arguments without disrupting the value(s) of
128shell options varies from one shell version to another.
129.Pp
130Each shellscript has to carry complex code to parse arguments halfway
131correctly (like the example presented here).
132A better getopt-like tool
133would move much of the complexity into the tool and keep the client
134shell scripts simpler.
135