From b09c6d56832eb1718c07d74abf3bc6ae3fe4e030 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Sun, 28 Apr 2024 14:36:04 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 1.1.0. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- .../github.com/jessevdk/go-flags@v1.5.0/README.md | 139 +++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 139 insertions(+) create mode 100644 dependencies/pkg/mod/github.com/jessevdk/go-flags@v1.5.0/README.md (limited to 'dependencies/pkg/mod/github.com/jessevdk/go-flags@v1.5.0/README.md') diff --git a/dependencies/pkg/mod/github.com/jessevdk/go-flags@v1.5.0/README.md b/dependencies/pkg/mod/github.com/jessevdk/go-flags@v1.5.0/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f22650b --- /dev/null +++ b/dependencies/pkg/mod/github.com/jessevdk/go-flags@v1.5.0/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,139 @@ +go-flags: a go library for parsing command line arguments +========================================================= + +[![GoDoc](https://godoc.org/github.com/jessevdk/go-flags?status.png)](https://godoc.org/github.com/jessevdk/go-flags) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/jessevdk/go-flags.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/jessevdk/go-flags) [![Coverage Status](https://img.shields.io/coveralls/jessevdk/go-flags.svg)](https://coveralls.io/r/jessevdk/go-flags?branch=master) + +This library provides similar functionality to the builtin flag library of +go, but provides much more functionality and nicer formatting. From the +documentation: + +Package flags provides an extensive command line option parser. +The flags package is similar in functionality to the go builtin flag package +but provides more options and uses reflection to provide a convenient and +succinct way of specifying command line options. + +Supported features: +* Options with short names (-v) +* Options with long names (--verbose) +* Options with and without arguments (bool v.s. other type) +* Options with optional arguments and default values +* Multiple option groups each containing a set of options +* Generate and print well-formatted help message +* Passing remaining command line arguments after -- (optional) +* Ignoring unknown command line options (optional) +* Supports -I/usr/include -I=/usr/include -I /usr/include option argument specification +* Supports multiple short options -aux +* Supports all primitive go types (string, int{8..64}, uint{8..64}, float) +* Supports same option multiple times (can store in slice or last option counts) +* Supports maps +* Supports function callbacks +* Supports namespaces for (nested) option groups + +The flags package uses structs, reflection and struct field tags +to allow users to specify command line options. This results in very simple +and concise specification of your application options. For example: + +```go +type Options struct { + Verbose []bool `short:"v" long:"verbose" description:"Show verbose debug information"` +} +``` + +This specifies one option with a short name -v and a long name --verbose. +When either -v or --verbose is found on the command line, a 'true' value +will be appended to the Verbose field. e.g. when specifying -vvv, the +resulting value of Verbose will be {[true, true, true]}. + +Example: +-------- +```go +var opts struct { + // Slice of bool will append 'true' each time the option + // is encountered (can be set multiple times, like -vvv) + Verbose []bool `short:"v" long:"verbose" description:"Show verbose debug information"` + + // Example of automatic marshalling to desired type (uint) + Offset uint `long:"offset" description:"Offset"` + + // Example of a callback, called each time the option is found. + Call func(string) `short:"c" description:"Call phone number"` + + // Example of a required flag + Name string `short:"n" long:"name" description:"A name" required:"true"` + + // Example of a flag restricted to a pre-defined set of strings + Animal string `long:"animal" choice:"cat" choice:"dog"` + + // Example of a value name + File string `short:"f" long:"file" description:"A file" value-name:"FILE"` + + // Example of a pointer + Ptr *int `short:"p" description:"A pointer to an integer"` + + // Example of a slice of strings + StringSlice []string `short:"s" description:"A slice of strings"` + + // Example of a slice of pointers + PtrSlice []*string `long:"ptrslice" description:"A slice of pointers to string"` + + // Example of a map + IntMap map[string]int `long:"intmap" description:"A map from string to int"` +} + +// Callback which will invoke callto: to call a number. +// Note that this works just on OS X (and probably only with +// Skype) but it shows the idea. +opts.Call = func(num string) { + cmd := exec.Command("open", "callto:"+num) + cmd.Start() + cmd.Process.Release() +} + +// Make some fake arguments to parse. +args := []string{ + "-vv", + "--offset=5", + "-n", "Me", + "--animal", "dog", // anything other than "cat" or "dog" will raise an error + "-p", "3", + "-s", "hello", + "-s", "world", + "--ptrslice", "hello", + "--ptrslice", "world", + "--intmap", "a:1", + "--intmap", "b:5", + "arg1", + "arg2", + "arg3", +} + +// Parse flags from `args'. Note that here we use flags.ParseArgs for +// the sake of making a working example. Normally, you would simply use +// flags.Parse(&opts) which uses os.Args +args, err := flags.ParseArgs(&opts, args) + +if err != nil { + panic(err) +} + +fmt.Printf("Verbosity: %v\n", opts.Verbose) +fmt.Printf("Offset: %d\n", opts.Offset) +fmt.Printf("Name: %s\n", opts.Name) +fmt.Printf("Animal: %s\n", opts.Animal) +fmt.Printf("Ptr: %d\n", *opts.Ptr) +fmt.Printf("StringSlice: %v\n", opts.StringSlice) +fmt.Printf("PtrSlice: [%v %v]\n", *opts.PtrSlice[0], *opts.PtrSlice[1]) +fmt.Printf("IntMap: [a:%v b:%v]\n", opts.IntMap["a"], opts.IntMap["b"]) +fmt.Printf("Remaining args: %s\n", strings.Join(args, " ")) + +// Output: Verbosity: [true true] +// Offset: 5 +// Name: Me +// Ptr: 3 +// StringSlice: [hello world] +// PtrSlice: [hello world] +// IntMap: [a:1 b:5] +// Remaining args: arg1 arg2 arg3 +``` + +More information can be found in the godocs: -- cgit v1.2.3