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/flags.go | 263 +++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 263 insertions(+) create mode 100644 dependencies/pkg/mod/github.com/jessevdk/go-flags@v1.5.0/flags.go (limited to 'dependencies/pkg/mod/github.com/jessevdk/go-flags@v1.5.0/flags.go') diff --git a/dependencies/pkg/mod/github.com/jessevdk/go-flags@v1.5.0/flags.go b/dependencies/pkg/mod/github.com/jessevdk/go-flags@v1.5.0/flags.go new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ac2157d --- /dev/null +++ b/dependencies/pkg/mod/github.com/jessevdk/go-flags@v1.5.0/flags.go @@ -0,0 +1,263 @@ +// Copyright 2012 Jesse van den Kieboom. All rights reserved. +// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style +// license that can be found in the LICENSE file. + +/* +Package flags provides an extensive command line option parser. +The flags package is similar in functionality to the go built-in flag package +but provides more options and uses reflection to provide a convenient and +succinct way of specifying command line options. + + +Supported features + +The following features are supported in go-flags: + + 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 + Option default values from ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLES, including slice and map 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 + +Additional features specific to Windows: + Options with short names (/v) + Options with long names (/verbose) + Windows-style options with arguments use a colon as the delimiter + Modify generated help message with Windows-style / options + Windows style options can be disabled at build time using the "forceposix" + build tag + + +Basic usage + +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: + + 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]}. + +Slice options work exactly the same as primitive type options, except that +whenever the option is encountered, a value is appended to the slice. + +Map options from string to primitive type are also supported. On the command +line, you specify the value for such an option as key:value. For example + + type Options struct { + AuthorInfo string[string] `short:"a"` + } + +Then, the AuthorInfo map can be filled with something like +-a name:Jesse -a "surname:van den Kieboom". + +Finally, for full control over the conversion between command line argument +values and options, user defined types can choose to implement the Marshaler +and Unmarshaler interfaces. + + +Available field tags + +The following is a list of tags for struct fields supported by go-flags: + + short: the short name of the option (single character) + long: the long name of the option + required: if non empty, makes the option required to appear on the command + line. If a required option is not present, the parser will + return ErrRequired (optional) + description: the description of the option (optional) + long-description: the long description of the option. Currently only + displayed in generated man pages (optional) + no-flag: if non-empty, this field is ignored as an option (optional) + + optional: if non-empty, makes the argument of the option optional. When an + argument is optional it can only be specified using + --option=argument (optional) + optional-value: the value of an optional option when the option occurs + without an argument. This tag can be specified multiple + times in the case of maps or slices (optional) + default: the default value of an option. This tag can be specified + multiple times in the case of slices or maps (optional) + default-mask: when specified, this value will be displayed in the help + instead of the actual default value. This is useful + mostly for hiding otherwise sensitive information from + showing up in the help. If default-mask takes the special + value "-", then no default value will be shown at all + (optional) + env: the default value of the option is overridden from the + specified environment variable, if one has been defined. + (optional) + env-delim: the 'env' default value from environment is split into + multiple values with the given delimiter string, use with + slices and maps (optional) + value-name: the name of the argument value (to be shown in the help) + (optional) + choice: limits the values for an option to a set of values. + Repeat this tag once for each allowable value. + e.g. `long:"animal" choice:"cat" choice:"dog"` + hidden: if non-empty, the option is not visible in the help or man page. + + base: a base (radix) used to convert strings to integer values, the + default base is 10 (i.e. decimal) (optional) + + ini-name: the explicit ini option name (optional) + no-ini: if non-empty this field is ignored as an ini option + (optional) + + group: when specified on a struct field, makes the struct + field a separate group with the given name (optional) + namespace: when specified on a group struct field, the namespace + gets prepended to every option's long name and + subgroup's namespace of this group, separated by + the parser's namespace delimiter (optional) + env-namespace: when specified on a group struct field, the env-namespace + gets prepended to every option's env key and + subgroup's env-namespace of this group, separated by + the parser's env-namespace delimiter (optional) + command: when specified on a struct field, makes the struct + field a (sub)command with the given name (optional) + subcommands-optional: when specified on a command struct field, makes + any subcommands of that command optional (optional) + alias: when specified on a command struct field, adds the + specified name as an alias for the command. Can be + be specified multiple times to add more than one + alias (optional) + positional-args: when specified on a field with a struct type, + uses the fields of that struct to parse remaining + positional command line arguments into (in order + of the fields). If a field has a slice type, + then all remaining arguments will be added to it. + Positional arguments are optional by default, + unless the "required" tag is specified together + with the "positional-args" tag. The "required" tag + can also be set on the individual rest argument + fields, to require only the first N positional + arguments. If the "required" tag is set on the + rest arguments slice, then its value determines + the minimum amount of rest arguments that needs to + be provided (e.g. `required:"2"`) (optional) + positional-arg-name: used on a field in a positional argument struct; name + of the positional argument placeholder to be shown in + the help (optional) + +Either the `short:` tag or the `long:` must be specified to make the field eligible as an +option. + + +Option groups + +Option groups are a simple way to semantically separate your options. All +options in a particular group are shown together in the help under the name +of the group. Namespaces can be used to specify option long names more +precisely and emphasize the options affiliation to their group. + +There are currently three ways to specify option groups. + + 1. Use NewNamedParser specifying the various option groups. + 2. Use AddGroup to add a group to an existing parser. + 3. Add a struct field to the top-level options annotated with the + group:"group-name" tag. + + + +Commands + +The flags package also has basic support for commands. Commands are often +used in monolithic applications that support various commands or actions. +Take git for example, all of the add, commit, checkout, etc. are called +commands. Using commands you can easily separate multiple functions of your +application. + +There are currently two ways to specify a command. + + 1. Use AddCommand on an existing parser. + 2. Add a struct field to your options struct annotated with the + command:"command-name" tag. + +The most common, idiomatic way to implement commands is to define a global +parser instance and implement each command in a separate file. These +command files should define a go init function which calls AddCommand on +the global parser. + +When parsing ends and there is an active command and that command implements +the Commander interface, then its Execute method will be run with the +remaining command line arguments. + +Command structs can have options which become valid to parse after the +command has been specified on the command line, in addition to the options +of all the parent commands. I.e. considering a -v flag on the parser and an +add command, the following are equivalent: + + ./app -v add + ./app add -v + +However, if the -v flag is defined on the add command, then the first of +the two examples above would fail since the -v flag is not defined before +the add command. + + +Completion + +go-flags has builtin support to provide bash completion of flags, commands +and argument values. To use completion, the binary which uses go-flags +can be invoked in a special environment to list completion of the current +command line argument. It should be noted that this `executes` your application, +and it is up to the user to make sure there are no negative side effects (for +example from init functions). + +Setting the environment variable `GO_FLAGS_COMPLETION=1` enables completion +by replacing the argument parsing routine with the completion routine which +outputs completions for the passed arguments. The basic invocation to +complete a set of arguments is therefore: + + GO_FLAGS_COMPLETION=1 ./completion-example arg1 arg2 arg3 + +where `completion-example` is the binary, `arg1` and `arg2` are +the current arguments, and `arg3` (the last argument) is the argument +to be completed. If the GO_FLAGS_COMPLETION is set to "verbose", then +descriptions of possible completion items will also be shown, if there +are more than 1 completion items. + +To use this with bash completion, a simple file can be written which +calls the binary which supports go-flags completion: + + _completion_example() { + # All arguments except the first one + args=("${COMP_WORDS[@]:1:$COMP_CWORD}") + + # Only split on newlines + local IFS=$'\n' + + # Call completion (note that the first element of COMP_WORDS is + # the executable itself) + COMPREPLY=($(GO_FLAGS_COMPLETION=1 ${COMP_WORDS[0]} "${args[@]}")) + return 0 + } + + complete -F _completion_example completion-example + +Completion requires the parser option PassDoubleDash and is therefore enforced if the environment variable GO_FLAGS_COMPLETION is set. + +Customized completion for argument values is supported by implementing +the flags.Completer interface for the argument value type. An example +of a type which does so is the flags.Filename type, an alias of string +allowing simple filename completion. A slice or array argument value +whose element type implements flags.Completer will also be completed. +*/ +package flags -- cgit v1.2.3