getsubopt(3C) getsubopt(3C)
NAME
getsubopt - parse suboption arguments from a string
SYNOPSIS
#include <stdlib.h>
int getsubopt(char **optionp, char * const *keylistp, char **valuep);
The getsubopt() function parses suboption arguments in a flag argument. Such options often result from the use of getopt(3C).
The getsubopt() argument optionp is a pointer to a pointer to the option argument string. The suboption arguments are separated by commas
and each can consist of either a single token or a token-value pair separated by an equal sign.
The keylistp argument is a pointer to a vector of strings. The end of the vector is identified by a null pointer. Each entry in the vector
is one of the possible tokens that might be found in *optionp. Since commas delimit suboption arguments in optionp, they should not appear
in any of the strings pointed to by keylistp. Similarly, because an equal sign separates a token from its value, the application should not
include an equal sign in any of the strings pointed to by keylistp.
The valuep argument is the address of a value string pointer.
If a comma appears in optionp, it is interpreted as a suboption separator. After commas have been processed, if there are one or more equal
signs in a suboption string, the first equal sign in any suboption string is interpreted as a separator between a token and a value. Sub-
sequent equal signs in a suboption string are interpreted as part of the value.
If the string at *optionp contains only one suboption argument (equivalently, no commas), getsubopt() updates *optionp to point to the null
character at the end of the string. Otherwise, it isolates the suboption argument by replacing the comma separator with a null character
and updates *optionp to point to the start of the next suboption argument. If the suboption argument has an associated value (equivalently,
contains an equal sign), getsubopt() updates *valuep to point to the value's first character. Otherwise, it sets *valuep to a null pointer.
The calling application can use this information to determine whether the presence or absence of a value for the suboption is an error.
Additionally, when getsubopt() fails to match the suboption with a token in the keylistp array, the calling application should decide if
this is an error or if the unrecognized option should be processed in another way.
The getsubopt() function returns the index of the matched token string or -1 if no token strings were matched.
No errors are defined.
Example 1: Use getsubopt() to process options.
The following example demonstrates the processing of options to the mount(1M) utility using getsubopt().
#include <stdlib.h>
char *myopts[] = {
#define READONLY 0
"ro",
#define READWRITE 1
"rw",
#define WRITESIZE 2
"wsize",
#define READSIZE 3
"rsize",
NULL};
main(argc, argv)
int argc;
char **argv;
{
int sc, c, errflag;
char *options, *value;
extern char *optarg;
extern int optind;
.
.
.
while((c = getopt(argc, argv, "abf:o:")) != -1) {
switch (c) {
case 'a': /* process a option */
break;
case 'b': /* process b option */
break;
case 'f':
ofile = optarg;
break;
case '?':
errflag++;
break;
case 'o':
options = optarg;
while (*options != '