/* * Copyright 2019-2022 the Pacemaker project contributors * * The version control history for this file may have further details. * * This source code is licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public License * version 2.1 or later (LGPLv2.1+) WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY. */ #ifndef PCMK__CMDLINE_INTERNAL__H #define PCMK__CMDLINE_INTERNAL__H #ifdef __cplusplus extern "C" { #endif #include typedef struct { char *summary; char *output_as_descr; gboolean version; gboolean quiet; unsigned int verbosity; char *output_ty; char *output_dest; } pcmk__common_args_t; /*! * \internal * \brief Allocate a new common args object * * \param[in] summary Summary description of tool for man page * * \return Newly allocated common args object * \note This function will immediately exit the program if memory allocation * fails, since the intent is to call it at the very beginning of a * program, before logging has been set up. */ pcmk__common_args_t * pcmk__new_common_args(const char *summary); /*! * \internal * \brief Create and return a GOptionContext containing the command line options * supported by all tools. * * \note Formatted output options will be added unless fmts is NULL. This allows * for using this function in tools that have not yet been converted to * formatted output. It should not be NULL in any tool that calls * pcmk__register_formats() as that function adds its own command line * options. * * \param[in,out] common_args A ::pcmk__common_args_t structure where the * results of handling command options will be written. * \param[in] fmts The help string for which formats are supported. * \param[in,out] output_group A ::GOptionGroup that formatted output related * command line arguments should be added to. * \param[in] param_string A string describing any remaining command line * arguments. */ GOptionContext * pcmk__build_arg_context(pcmk__common_args_t *common_args, const char *fmts, GOptionGroup **output_group, const char *param_string); /*! * \internal * \brief Clean up after pcmk__build_arg_context(). This should be called * instead of ::g_option_context_free at program termination. * * \param[in,out] context Argument context to free */ void pcmk__free_arg_context(GOptionContext *context); /*! * \internal * \brief Add options to the main application options * * \param[in,out] context Argument context to add options to * \param[in] entries Option entries to add * * \note This is simply a convenience wrapper to reduce duplication */ void pcmk__add_main_args(GOptionContext *context, const GOptionEntry entries[]); /*! * \internal * \brief Add an option group to an argument context * * \param[in,out] context Argument context to add group to * \param[in] name Option group name (to be used in --help-NAME) * \param[in] header Header for --help-NAME output * \param[in] desc Short description for --help-NAME option * \param[in] entries Array of options in group * * \note This is simply a convenience wrapper to reduce duplication */ void pcmk__add_arg_group(GOptionContext *context, const char *name, const char *header, const char *desc, const GOptionEntry entries[]); /*! * \internal * \brief Prepare the command line for being added to a pcmk__output_t as the * request * * This performs various transformations on the command line arguments, such * as surrounding arguments containing spaces with quotes and escaping any * single quotes in the string. * * \param[in,out] argv Command line (typically from pcmk__cmdline_preproc()) */ gchar *pcmk__quote_cmdline(gchar **argv); /*! * \internal * \brief Pre-process command line arguments to preserve compatibility with * getopt behavior. * * getopt and glib have slightly different behavior when it comes to processing * single command line arguments. getopt allows this: -x, while glib will * try to handle like it is additional single letter arguments. glib * prefers -x instead. * * This function scans argv, looking for any single letter command line options * (indicated by the 'special' parameter). When one is found, everything after * that argument to the next whitespace is converted into its own value. Single * letter command line options can come in a group after a single dash, but * this function will expand each group into many arguments. * * Long options and anything after "--" is preserved. The result of this function * can then be passed to ::g_option_context_parse_strv for actual processing. * * In pseudocode, this: * * pcmk__cmdline_preproc(4, ["-XbA", "--blah=foo", "-aF", "-Fval", "--", "--extra", "-args"], "aF") * * Would be turned into this: * * ["-X", "-b", "-A", "--blah=foo", "-a", "F", "-F", "val", "--", "--extra", "-args"] * * This function does not modify argv, and the return value is built of copies * of all the command line arguments. It is up to the caller to free this memory * after use. * * \note This function calls g_set_prgname assuming it wasn't previously set and * assuming argv is not NULL. It is not safe to call g_set_prgname more * than once so clients should not do so after calling this function. * * \param[in] argv The command line arguments. * \param[in] special Single-letter command line arguments that take a value. * These letters will all have pre-processing applied. */ gchar ** pcmk__cmdline_preproc(char *const *argv, const char *special); /*! * \internal * \brief Process extra arguments as if they were provided by the user on the * command line. * * \param[in,out] context The command line option processing context. * \param[out] error A place for errors to be collected. * \param[in] format The command line to be processed, potentially with * format specifiers. * \param[in] ... Arguments to be formatted. * * \note The first item in the list of arguments must be the name of the * program, exactly as if the format string were coming from the * command line. Otherwise, the first argument will be ignored. * * \return TRUE if processing succeeded, or FALSE otherwise. If FALSE, error * should be checked and displayed to the user. */ G_GNUC_PRINTF(3, 4) gboolean pcmk__force_args(GOptionContext *context, GError **error, const char *format, ...); #ifdef __cplusplus } #endif #endif