Most command-line programs have to parse options, so there are a lot of different solutions to this problem. Some offer many features, while others are more basic.
One of the simpler solutions for C is the getopt function, and its
extension getopt_long
. They iterate over the options in argv
, returning
them one at a time on successive calls.
One nice thing about them is that they are available on most Unix-like operating systems (and usually accompany GCC elsewhere, like Windows). Unfortunately, some implementation details vary between platforms.
A potential question is what license the version you get when you include
them is available under. Some are GPL, others LGPL. There are also ports of
getopt
that use more liberal licenses.
parg
is a parser for argv
that works similarly to getopt
, but does not
aim to be a direct replacement. It attempts to make some choices about how to
handle the extensions and idiosyncrasies of other getopt
implementations,
and document them.
It consists of a single source and include file, written in portable ANSI C. It is made available under the MIT No Attribution License (MIT-0).
The include file parg.h
contains documentation in the form of doxygen
comments. A configuration file is included, run doxygen
to generate
documentation in HTML format.
You can add the source files parg.c
and parg.h
to your own projects.
For CI, parg
uses CMake to provide an easy way to build and test across
various platforms and toolsets. To create a build system for the tools on your
platform, and build parg
, use something along the lines of:
mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..
cmake --build .
Here is an example that parses command-line options using parg_getopt()
:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include "parg.h"
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
struct parg_state ps;
int c;
parg_init(&ps);
while ((c = parg_getopt(&ps, argc, argv, "hs:v")) != -1) {
switch (c) {
case 1:
printf("nonoption '%s'\n", ps.optarg);
break;
case 'h':
printf("Usage: testparg [-h] [-v] [-s STRING]\n");
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
break;
case 's':
printf("option -s with argument '%s'\n", ps.optarg);
break;
case 'v':
printf("testparg 1.0.0\n");
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
break;
case '?':
if (ps.optopt == 's') {
printf("option -s requires an argument\n");
}
else {
printf("unknown option -%c\n", ps.optopt);
}
return EXIT_FAILURE;
break;
default:
printf("error: unhandled option -%c\n", c);
return EXIT_FAILURE;
break;
}
}
for (c = ps.optind; c < argc; ++c) {
printf("nonoption '%s'\n", argv[c]);
}
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
getopt
uses global variables to store its state between calls. parg
uses
a struct parg_state
, which you must pass with each call.
POSIX and BSD getopt
return -1
on the first nonoption argument. GNU
getopt
by default reorders argv
(even though it is passed as const), so
all options come first.
parg
does not change argv
, and returns each nonoption as the option
argument of an option with value 1
(like GNU getopt
, if optstring
were
prefixed by '-
').
If you wish to process all options first, and have the nonoptions ordered at
the end of argv
, you can use parg_reorder()
:
optend = parg_reorder(argc, argv, optstring, NULL);
while ((c = parg_getopt(&ps, optend, argv, optstring)) != -1) {
/* ... */
}
/* elements of argv[] from optend to argc are nonoptions */
When there are multiple short options in one argument, getopt
does not
increment optind
until the last one is processed. This makes it harder to
tell which argument an unknown option came from (if a
is an unknown option,
-a
and -ab
will return '?
' with different values in optind
).
parg
always increments the optind
value in it's state so it points to the
next argv
element to be processed. So when parg
returns '?
' (or ':
'),
the element that contains the error is argv[optind - 1]
.
With getopt_long
, it varies what the values of optopt
and longindex
are
when an error is found with option arguments of long options. Sometimes these
values are not documented.
parg
sets optopt
to val
if flag
is NULL
, and 0
otherwise (which
equals the return value on successful match), and longindex
is set to the
index of the entry in longopts
that matched.
When the first character of optstring
is ':
', it varies what getopt
returns on extraneous option arguments.
In this case, parg
returns '?
' if no option match is found, and ':
' if
a match is found, but is missing a required argument, or has an extraneous
argument.
Some ports of getopt
:
Other command-line parsing libraries that support C:
A few C++ command-line parsing libraries: