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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Parsing the command line arguments Post 45284 by cbkihong on Wednesday 17th of December 2003 11:02:27 AM
Old 12-17-2003
Yes, I understand your problem. I don't know if any Unix variants have special extensions. Otherwise, from my interpretation of the getopt manpage I believe getopt doesn't expect multiple parameters to a single option, at all.

So, for example, if you invoke this as
./a.out -x abc def -a

Then argv[] is an array consisting of

-x
abc
def
-a

(not showing argv[0] above)

What getopt does is that it monotonically scans forward. It identifies '-x', associates 'abc' as optarg. It doesn't know what 'def' is, and throw it to the end. Then it identifies '-a', and so on. 'def' is left at the end and regarded as a non-option (the index of which you get with optind). Therefore, as getopt proceeds it permutes the order of arguments that appear in argv[].

I made this test program to illustrate the idea:
Code:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <getopt.h>

extern char *optarg;
extern int optind;

int main(int argc, char** argv) {
	int optchr; int i;
	while ((optchr = getopt(argc, argv, "x:a")) != -1) {
		printf("Option '%c' detected.\n", optchr);
		if (optarg) {
			printf("\tArgument: '%s'\n", optarg);
		}
	}
	printf("Other arguments:\n");
	for(i=optind; i<argc; i++) {
		printf("\t%s\n", argv[i]);
	}
	return 0;
}

./a.out -x abc def -a

gives

Code:
Option 'x' detected.
        Argument: 'abc'
Option 'a' detected.
Other arguments:
        def

I think conventional Unix tradition is that there is at most one argument for each option. I think this is because getopt allows options to be given in any order. So if you would like to break this convention you can always write your own routine to parse argv[]. Of course that will not be easy if your program has to accommodate a variety of options. Formally speaking, that requires parser construction knowledge (lexical analysis) that are beyond the scope of this forum.
 

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getopt(3C)																getopt(3C)

NAME
getopt(), optarg, opterr, optind, optopt - get option letter from argument vector SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
returns the next option letter in argv (starting from that matches a letter in optstring. argc and argv are the argument count and argu- ment array as passed to optstring is a string of recognized option characters; if a character is followed by a colon, the option takes an argument which may or may not be separated from it by whitespace. is the index of the next element of the vector to be processed. It is initialized to 1 by the system, and updates it when it finishes with each element of returns the next option character from argv that matches a character in optstring, if there is one that matches. If the option takes an argument, sets the variable to point to the option argument as follows: o If the option was the last character in the string pointed to by an element of argv, then contains the next element of argv, and is incremented by 2. If the resulting value of is greater than or equal to argc, this indicates a missing option argument, and returns an error indication. o Otherwise, points to the string following the option character in that element of argv, and is incremented by 1. If, when is called, is NULL, or the string pointed to by either does not begin with the character or consists only of the character returns -1 without changing If points to the string returns -1 after incrementing If encounters an option character that is not contained in optstring, it returns the question-mark character. If it detects a missing option argument, it returns the colon character if the first character of optstring was a colon, or a question-mark character otherwise. In either case, sets the variable to the option character that caused the error. If the application has not set the variable to zero and the first character of optstring is not a colon, also prints a diagnostic message to standard error. The special option can be used to delimit the end of the options; -1 is returned, and is skipped. RETURN VALUE
returns the next option character specified on the command line. A colon is returned if detects a missing argument and the first character of optstring was a colon A question-mark is returned if encounters an option character not in optstring or detects a missing argument and the first character of optstring was not a colon Otherwise, returns -1 when all command line options have been parsed. EXTERNAL INFLUENCES
Locale The category determines the interpretation of option letters as single and/or multi-byte characters. International Code Set Support Single- and multibyte character code sets are supported. ERRORS
fails under the following conditions: [EILSEQ] An invalid multibyte character sequence was encountered during option processing. EXAMPLES
The following code fragment shows to process arguments for a command that can take the mutually exclusive options and and the options and both of which require arguments: #include <stdio.h> #include <unistd.h> main (int argc, char *argv[]) { int c; int bflg, aflg, errflg; extern char *optarg; extern int optind, optopt; . . . while ((c = getopt(argc, argv, ":abf:o:")) != -1) switch (c) { case 'a': if (bflg) errflg++; else aflg++; break; case 'b': if (aflg) errflg++; else { bflg++; bproc( ); } break; case 'f': ifile = optarg; break; case 'o': ofile = optarg; break; case ':': /* -f or -o without arguments */ fprintf(stderr, "Option -%c requires an argument ", optopt); errflg++; break; case '?': fprintf(stderr, "Unrecognized option: - %c ", optopt); errflg++; } if (errflg) { fprintf(stderr, "usage: . . . "); exit(2); } for ( ; optind < argc; optind++) { if (access(argv[optind], 4)) { . . . } WARNINGS
Options can be any ASCII characters except colon question mark or null SEE ALSO
getopt(1), thread_safety(5). STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
getopt(3C)
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