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The Free Software Foundation, when they were developing the GNU project,
decided that single-letter
flags weren't friendly enough, so they invented 'long' flags. These use
a double minus sign followed by a
word. To give a value, you'd say something like --language=french .
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Getopt::Long provides the GetOptions() function which provides sophisicated parsing of command line including but not limited to the capability of handle long options. It provides support for:
Additional controls include:
Recipe 15.1 in the Perl Cookbook shows how to use
these. The basic idea is as follows:
use Getopt::Long;
die "Usage: $0 [-b] [-user name]\n" unless @ARGV;
my( $binary, $username );
GetOptions( "b" => \$binary,
"user=s" => \$username );
Let's convert the above program to GNU options:
#!/usr/bin/perl
# hellolong.plx
# Hello World (Deluxe) - with long flags
use warnings;
use strict;
use Getopt::Long;
my %options;
GetOptions(%options, "language:s", "help", "version");
if ($options{version}) {
print "Hello World, version 3.n";
exit;
} elsif ($options{help}) {
print <<EOF;
$0: Typical Hello World program
Syntax: $0 [–-help|--version|--language=<language>]
--help : This help message
--version : Print version on standard output and exit
--language : Turn on international language support.
EOF
exit;
} elsif ($options{language}) {
if ($options{language} eq "french") {
print "Bonjour, tout le monde.n";
} else {
die "$0: unsupported languagen";
}
} else {
print "Hello, world.n";
}
We can still use the previous syntax, but now we can also say:
> perl hellolong.plx --language=french
Bonjour, tout le monde.
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Programs need input, and for many programs, input begins on the command line. For example, a program to print files might be invoked aspr -l -n -a 10:00 foo barpris the name of the program; it is followed here by six arguments. The arguments are of two sorts: options and file names.
-l,-n, and-a 10:00are options. They control the manner in which the program executes. In this case,-ltellsprto print in landscape orientation,-ntells it to print page numbers, and-a 10:00tells it to print after 10:00. Options are sometimes called options or switches.fooandbarare file names.prwill read these files to obtain the actual text to print.Parsing the Command Line
In Perl, command line arguments are made available to the program in the global@ARGVarray. This happens automatically: you don't have to declare anything or do anything to get them. If you wroteprin Perl and entered the command line shown above, then at the beginning of program execution@ARGVwould have six elements:$ARGV[0] '-l' $ARGV[1] '-n' $ARGV[2] '-a' $ARGV[3] '10:00' $ARGV[4] 'foo' $ARGV[5] 'bar'Now the fun starts. Given@ARGVas shown, the program has to identify-l,-n, and-aas options, associate10:00with-a, and identifyfooandbaras file names. This is called parsing the command line.Easy to be Hard.
Parsing the command line is a problem. The problem isn't that it is so hard, but rather that it is so easy: for many programs, it can be done in under 20 lines of code. Because parsing the command line seems easy, it is often not identified as a distinct function of the program. It never gets a functional specification, or a design, or even the considered attention of the programmer. This leads to many bad things:
- Design by accretion. As the program evolves, parsing features are added on an ad-hoc basis.
- Open code. The command line is parsed in open code, scattered across the program. The parsing code isn't contained in any subroutine, module, or class.
- Non-standard interfaces. Different programs are liable to parse the command line in slightly different ways. This confuses users.
- Sub-standard interfaces. Programmers tend to implement only what they need-or think they need. Features such as switch clustering, abbreviations, and help text, for example, may be omitted.
- Bugs. When every program has its own parsing code, every program can have its own parsing bugs.
- Duplication. You keep writing that same 50 lines of code, over and over again, in every program.
The Eightfold Path
In Perl, there is a better way. In fact, there are many better ways. In 00modlist.long.html, we findGetopt::Declare An easy-to-use WYSIWYG command-line parser Getopt::EvaP Long/short options, multilevel help Getopt::Long Advanced option handling Getopt::Mixed Supports both long and short options Getopt::Regex Option handling using regular expressions Getopt::Simple A simplified interface to Getopt::Long Getopt::Std Implements basic getopt and getopts Getopt::Tabular Table-driven argument parsing with help textEach of these is a Perl module for parsing the command line. They have been designed, written, debugged, and encapsulated. You don't have to write them again. They support standard interfaces.If the list above seems daunting, start with
Getopt::StdGetopt::Std.Getopt::Stdsupports a good, simple command line style that is adequate for many programs. It automatically handles options given in any of these forms:pr -l -n -a 10:30 foo bar pr -lna 10:30 foo bar pr -lna10:30 foo barTo useGetopt::Std, writeuse Getopt::Std; my %Options; getopt('a', \%Options);Getopt::Stdexports thegetopt()routine.getopt()takes two parameters: a string and a hash reference. The string lists all the options that take arguments. The hash receives the options found on the command line.
getopt()removes the options from@ARGVand parses them. Upon return, each option appears as a hash key in%Options. For each key, the hash value is the argument of the option if it takes one, and1if it does not. Finally, any file names that follow the options are left in@ARGVfor the program to process. For any of the command lines shown above,getopt()would set%Optionsand@ARGVto%Options = (l => 1, n => 1, a => '10:30') @ARGV = qw(foo bar)Getopt::Stdalso has another interface:$ok = getopts('a:ln', \%Options);Likegetopt(),getopts()takes a string and a hash reference. The string includes all the option letters: both those that take arguments and those that do not. Option letters that take an argument are marked with a trailing colon. Becausegetopts()has a list of all the valid options, it can do some simple error checking:getopts()returns false if there are invalid options on the command line, and true otherwise.If you need more power that
Getopt::LongGetopt::Stdprovides, consider usingGetopt::Long. The name::Longrefers to an option style that uses two dashes and the complete option name, rather than a single character:pr --landscape --numbers --after 10:30 foo barHowever,Getopt::Longis not merelyGetopt::Stdwith a facelift. It provides a large-some would say bewildering-assortment of facilities for parsing the command line in different ways. In addition,Getopt::Longhas evolved over the last ten years, reflecting changes in the underlying Perl language, changes in programming style, and changes in interface style. At the same time, it maintains backward compatibility with previous versions.All this makes the programming interface to
Getopt::Longlarge and complex. For a complete description, you should read the documentation that is contained within the module itself. Here, I'll give just a brief survey, illustrating the simpler features, and reflecting current style.Basic Facilities
Conceptually, the interface toGetopt::Longis similar to that ofGetopt::Std. It exports a routine namedGetOptions().GetOptions()takes a series of option specifiers, which tell it how to parse the command line, and a hash reference, where it stores the results. It returns true if there are no errors.$ok = GetOptions(\%Options, "landscape", "numbers!", "after=s");Each option specifier gives the name of an option, possibly followed by an argument specifier. The name will become a hash key. The argument specifier tells how to parse the argument to that option.In the example above,
landscapehas no argument specifier. This means that it takes no argument, and$Options{landscape}will be1or0according as--landscapedoes or does not appear on the command line.numbers!also takes no argument, but the!means that it may be explicitly negated by prefixing it withnoon the command line:pr --nonumbersafter=stakes a string argument; the argument will become the value of$Options{after}.after:salso takes a string argument, but the colon means that the argument is optional. Other argument specifiers are=ifor integer arguments and=ffor floating point arguments.A double dash on the command line terminates the option list.
Hairy Stuff
If an argument specifier is suffixed with an@, then the option may be given multiple times on the command line, and the corresponding value in%Optionsbecomes a reference to an array containing all the values supplied for that option. For example:GetOptions(\%Options, "x=f@", "y=f@")will parsegraph --x 1 --x 2 --x 3 --y 1 --y 4 --y 9resulting in%Options = (x => [1, 2, 3], y => [1, 4, 9])Similarly, if an argument specifier is suffixed with a%, then the option takes key=value pairs, and the corresponding value in%Optionsbecomes a reference to a hash of those pairs. SoGetOptions(\%Options, "define=s%")will parse Stroustrup's examplecc --define sqrt=rand --define exit=abort hello.ccresulting in%Options = (define => { sqrt => 'rand', exit => 'abort' })The Kitchen Sink
The empty string is a valid option. It is written on the command line as a single dash, and results in the null key being entered into%Optionswith a value of1. This form is conventionally used to specify that the program should take input fromSTDIN, rather than from a named file:cat -You don't have to store all the options in%Options. Each option can have its own linkage specification, which may be a scalar ref, an array ref, a hash ref, or a code ref. For scalar, array, and hash refs, the option is stored in the referenced variable. If the linkage specification is a code ref, the option isn't stored anywhere; instead, the option name and value are passed to the referenced subroutine.Option names can have aliases, and can be abbreviated to uniqueness. You can configure
Getopt::Longfor compatibility with GNU, or POSIX. You can control case sensitivity. You can cluster options. You can pass options through to called programs. You can intersperse options and non-option arguments on the command line. This allows different files to be processed with different options:pr --numbers foo --nonumbers barFinally, you can specify a code ref to process arguments that aren't options. This allowsGetOptions()to process the entire command line, and potentially reduces your program to a singleGetOptions(...);call, plus subroutines.The Rest of the Pack
Getopt::StdandGetopt::Longare both supplied with the standard Perl distribution. There are currently six otherGetopt::modules available on CPAN. Here is a quick tour.
Getopt::SimpleGetopt::Simpledescribes itself as a simple wrapper aroundGetopt::Long. However, nothing that supports the functionality ofGetopt::Longcan be entirely simple. In fact,Getopt::Simpleis an object-oriented wrapper aroundGetopt::Long. Rather than coding option descriptions into strings,Getopt::Simplelays them out in hash tables:$descriptions = { landscape => { type => '' }, numbers => { type => '' }, after => { type => '=s' } }getOptions()is invoked as a method on aGetopt::Simpleobject:$options = new Getopt::Simple; $options->getOptions($descriptions, "Usage: pr -landscape -numbers -after time");and options are retrieved through the $options object:$option->{switch}{landscape} and ... $option->{switch}{after } and ...
Getopt::TabularGetopt::Tabularuses a table to describe options, and then parses the command line through a procedural interface:@options = (['-landscape', 'boolean', 0, \$landscape', 'print in landscape orientation'], ['-numbers' , 'boolean', 0, \$numbers' , 'print page numbers' ], ['-after' , 'string' , 1, \$time' , 'print after time' ], ); GetOptions(\@options, \@ARGV) or exit 1;Each line in the table describes a single option, and specifies the option name, type, number of arguments, action to take, and help text. The simplest action is to set a scalar;Getopt::Tabularcan also collect arguments from the command line and assign them to an array, or pass them to a subroutine.If anything goes wrong,
GetOptions()automatically formats an error message, based on the help text supplied in@options.Getopt::Tabularalso supplies an entry point calledSpoofGetOptions().SpoofGetOptions(\@options, \@ARGV)parses the command line and checks it for errors, but doesn't take any action. This is particularly useful for programs that use subroutines to process arguments, because subroutines can do expensive or irreversible things.
Getopt::MixedGetopt::Mixedsupports both long and short options: long because they are easy to remember; short because they are easy to type. Long options are introduced on the command line with two dashes; short options with one:pr --landscape -a 12:00 foo barThe programming interface is similar toGetopt::Long:Getopt::Mixed::getOptions(@option_descriptions)There is also an iterative form, which allows the program to process options one at a time:Getopt::Mixed::init(@option_descriptions); while (($option, $value) = Getopt::Mixed::nextOption()) { ... } Getopt::Mixed::cleanup();The results are stored in global variables. Given the command line shown above,Getopt::Mixedwould set$opt_landscape = 1 $opt_a = '12:00'Non-options arguments are left in@ARGV.
Getopt::DeclareGetopt::Declaredoesn't parse anything directly. Rather, it builds and runs a parser. Options and their arguments are laid out in a single specification string:$spec = q(-l Print in landscape mode { $landscape = 1 } -n Print page numbers { $numbers = 1 } -a <time:s> Print after time { Queue($time) });The string describes each option, along with help text and a BLOCK to be executed when the option is found.Getopt::Declare::newcreates a parser object from a specification string:$parser = new Getopt::Declare $spec;As written, this builds a parser and runs it on the command line; with additional arguments, it can parse strings or configuration files. Options and their values can be retrieved from$parser, but this is typically unnecessary, because the BLOCKs in the specification string contain arbitrary Perl code. There are powerful facilities for specifying and checking option syntax and arguments. Options can be required, and groups of options can be made mutually exclusive. Usage lines are automatically generated from the help text. The parser object can be saved and later run on different input.
Getopt::EvaPGetopt::EvaPis broadly similar toGetopt::SimpleandGetopt::Declare. Options and help text are specified in tables. A call toEvaP()parses the command line according to the tables and returns the results in an%Optionshash:EvaP \@option_specs, \@help_text, \%optionsPerhaps the most interesting feature ofGetopt::EvaPis that it has been implemented for Perl, Perl/Tk, Tcl and C. If you are developing in multiple languages,EvaPcan provide a consistent user interface across all your applications.
Getopt::RegexGetopt::Regextakes a different approach to managing the potential complexity of command line syntax. Rather than implementing sophisticated parsing facilities of its own, it relies on the Perl regular expression engine.GetOptions(\@ARGV, [$regex, \$scalar , $takesarg], [$regex, sub {...} , $takesarg], ...);For each option, the user passes an array ref. The first element is a regular expression, the second is either a scalar ref or a code ref, and the third indicates whether the option takes an argument. An element of@ARGVis recognized as an option if it matches a$regex. When an option is found,GetOptions()sets$scalaror callssub {...}, as appropriate. If the option takes an argument, the argument is assigned to$scalar, or passed tosub {...}.The Importance of Being Lazy
One of the principal virtues of a programmer is Laziness, and these modules provide a wonderful opportunity to be Lazy. Before parsing your own command line, look to see if there isn't aGetopt::module that will do what you need. If there is, use it. If there isn't, encapsulate your parsing code in a newGetopt::module, and consider submitting it to CPAN. Then other programmers can be Lazy, even if you can't.
Option and Configuration Processing Made Easy
By Jon Allen
July 12, 2007When you first fire up your editor and start writing a program, it's tempting to hardcode any settings or configuration so you can focus on the real task of getting the thing working. But as soon as you have users, even if the user is only yourself, you can bet there will be things they want to choose for themselves.
A search on CPAN reveals almost 200 different modules dedicated to option processing and handling configuration files. By anyone's standards that's quite a lot, certainly too many to evaluate each one.
Luckily, you already have a great module right in front of you for handling options given on the command line:
Getopt::Long, which is a core module included as standard with Perl. This lets you use the standard double-dash style of option names:myscript --source-directory "/var/log/httpd" --verbose \ --username=JJUsing Getopt::Long
When your program runs, any command-line arguments will be in the
@ARGVarray.Getopt::Longexports a function,GetOptions(), which processes@ARGVto do something useful with these arguments, such as set variables or run blocks of code. To allow specific option names, pass a list of option specifiers in the call toGetOptions()together with references to the variables in which you want the option values to be stored.As an example, the following code defines two options,
--runand--verbose. The call toGetOptions()will then assign the value1to the variables$runand$verboserespectively if the relevant option is present on the command line.use Getopt::Long; my ($run,$verbose); GetOptions( 'run' => \$run, 'verbose' => \$verbose );When
Getopt::Longhas finished processing options, any remaining arguments will remain in@ARGVfor your script to handle (for example, specified filenames). If you use this example code and call your script as:myscript --run --verbose file1 file2 file3then after
GetOptions()has been called the@ARGVarray will contain the valuesfile1,file2, andfile3.Types of Command-Line Options
The option specifier provided to
GetOptions()controls not only the option name, but also the option type.Getopt::Longgives a lot of flexibility in the types of option you can use. It supports Boolean switches, incremental switches, options with single values, options with multiple values, and even options with hash values.Some of the most common specifiers are:
name # Presence of the option will set $name to 1 name! # Allows negation, e.g. --name will set $name to 1, # --noname will set $name to 0 name+ # Increments the variable each time the option is found, e.g. # if $name = 0 then --name --name --name will set $name to 3 name=s # String value required # --name JJ or --name=JJ will set $name to JJ # Spaces need to be quoted # --name="Jon Allen" or --name "Jon Allen"So, to create an option that requires a string value, format the call to
GetOptions()like this:my $name; GetOptions( 'name=s' => \$name );The value is required. If the user omits it, as in:
myscript --namethen the call to
GetOptions()willdie()with an appropriate error message.Options with Multiple Values
The option specifier consists of four components: the option name; data type (Boolean, string, integer, etc.); whether to expect a single value, a list, or a hash; and the minimum and maximum number of values to accept. To require a list of string values, build up the option specifier:
Option name: name Option value: =s (string) Option type: @ (array) Value counter: {1,} (at least 1 value required, no upper limit)Putting these all together gives:
my $name; GetOptions('name=s@{1,}' => \$name);Now invoking the script as:
myscript --name Barbie Brian Stevewill set
$nameto the array reference['Barbie','Brian','Steve'].Giving a hash value to an option is very similar. Replace
@with%and on the command line give arguments as key=value pairs:my $name; GetOptions('name=s%{1,}',\$name);Running the script as:
myscript --name Barbie=Director JJ=Memberwill store the hash reference
{ Barbie => 'Director', JJ => 'Member' }in$name.Storing Options in a Hash
By passing a hash reference as the first argument to
GetOptions, you can store the complete set of option values in a hash instead of defining a separate variable for each one.my %options; GetOptions( \%options, 'name=s', 'verbose' );Option names will be hash keys, so you can refer to the
namevalue as$options{name}. If an option is not present on the command line, then the corresponding hash key will not be present.Options that Invoke Subroutines
A nice feature of
Getopt::Longis that, as an alternative to simply setting a variable when an option is found, you can tell the module to run any code of your choosing. Instead of givingGetOptions()a variable reference to store the option value, pass either a subroutine reference or an anonymous code reference. This will then be executed if the relevant option is found.GetOptions( version => sub{ print "This is myscript, version 0.01\n"; exit; } help => \&display_help );When used in this way,
Getopt::Longalso passes the option name and value as arguments to the subroutine:GetOptions( name => sub{ my ($opt,$value) = @_; print "Hello, $value\n"; } );You can still include code references in the call to
GetOptions()even if you use a hash to store the option values:my %options; GetOptions( \%options, 'name=s', 'verbose', 'dest=s', 'version' => sub{ print "This is myscript, version 0.01\n"; exit; } );Dashes or Underscores?
If you need to have option names that contain multiple words, such as a setting for "Source directory," you have a few different ways to write them:
--source-directory --source_directory --sourcedirectoryTo give a better user experience,
Getopt::Longallows option aliases to allow either format. Define an alias by using the pipe character (|) in the option specifier:my %options; GetOptions( \%options, 'source_directory|source-directory|sourcedirectory=s' );Note that if you're storing the option values in a hash, the first option name (in this case,
source_directory) will be the hash key, even if your user gave an alias on the command line.If you have a lot of options, it might be helpful to generate the aliases using a function:
use strict; use warnings; use Data::Dumper; use Getopt::Long; my %specifiers = ( 'source-directory' => '=s', 'verbose' => '' ); my %options; GetOptions( \%options, optionspec(%specifiers) ); print Dumper(\%options); sub optionspec { my %option_specs = @_; my @getopt_list; while (my ($option_name,$spec) = each %option_specs) { (my $variable_name = $option_name) =~ tr/-/_/; (my $nospace_name = $option_name) =~ s/-//g; my $getopt_name = ($variable_name ne $option_name) ? "$variable_name|$option_name|$nospace_name" : $option_name; push @getopt_list,"$getopt_name$spec"; } return @getopt_list; }Running this script with each format in turn shows that they are all valid:
varos:~/writing/argvfile jj$ ./optionspec.pl --source-directory /var/spool $VAR1 = { 'source_directory' => '/var/spool' }; varos:~/writing/argvfile jj$ ./optionspec.pl --source_directory /var/spool $VAR1 = { 'source_directory' => '/var/spool' }; varos:~/writing/argvfile jj$ ./optionspec.pl --sourcedirectory /var/spool $VAR1 = { 'source_directory' => '/var/spool' };Additionally,
Getopt::Longis case-insensitive by default (for option names, not values), so your users can also use--SourceDirectory,--sourceDirectory, etc., as well:varos:~/writing/argvfile jj$ ./optionspec.pl --SourceDirectory /var/spool $VAR1 = { 'source_directory' => '/var/spool' };Configuration Files
The next stage on from command-line options is to let your users save their settings into config files. After all, if your program expands to have numerous options it's going to be a real pain to type them in every time.
When it comes to the format of a configuration file, there are a lot of choices, such as XML, INI files, and the Apache httpd.conf format. However, all of these formats share a couple of problems. First, your users now have two things to learn: the command-line options and the configuration file syntax. Second, even though many CPAN modules are available to parse the various config file formats, you still must write the code in your program to interact with your chosen module's API to set whatever variables you use internally to store user settings.
Getopt::ArgvFile to the Rescue
Fortunately, someone out there in CPAN-land has the answer (you can always count on the Perl community to come up with innovative solutions).
Getopt::ArgvFiletackles both of these problems, simplifying the file format and the programming interface in one fell swoop.To start with, the file format used by
Getopt::ArgvFileis extremely easy for users to understand. Config settings are stored in a plain text file that holds exactly the same directives that a user would type on the command line. Instead of typing:myscript --source-directory /usr/local/src --verbose --logval=alertyour user can use the config file:
--source-directory /usr/local/src --verbose --logval=alertand then run
myscriptfor instant user gratification with no steep learning curve.Now to the clever part.
Getopt::ArgvFileitself doesn't actually care about the contents of the config file. Instead, it makes it appear to your program that all the settings were actually options typed on the command line--the processing of which you've already covered withGetopt::Long. As well as saving your users time by not making them learn a new syntax, you've also saved yourself time by not needing to code against a different API.The most straightforward method of using
Getopt::ArgvFileinvolves simply including the module in ausestatement:use Getopt::ArgvFile home=>1;A program called myscript that contains this code will search the user's home directory (whatever the environment variable
HOMEis set to) for a config file called .myscript and extract the contents ready for processing byGetopt::Long.Here's a complete example:
use strict; use warnings; use Getopt::ArgvFile home=>1; use Getopt::Long; my %config; GetOptions( \%config, 'name=s' ); if ($config{name}) { print "Hello, $config{name}\n"; } else { print "Who am I talking to?\n"; }Save this as hello, then run the script with and without a command-line option:
varos:~/writing/argvfile jj$ ./hello Who am I talking to? varos:~/writing/argvfile jj$ ./hello --name JJ Hello, JJNow, create a settings file called .hello in your home directory containing the
--nameoption. Remember to double quote the value if you want to include spaces.varos:~/writing/argvfile jj$ cat ~/.hello --name "Jon Allen"Running the script without any arguments on the command line will show that it loaded the config file, but you can also override the saved settings by giving the option on the command line as normal.
varos:~/writing/argvfile jj$ ./hello Hello, Jon Allen varos:~/writing/argvfile jj$ ./hello --name JJ Hello, JJAdvanced Usage
In many cases the default behaviour invoked by loading the module will be all you need, but
Getopt::ArgvFilecan also cater to more specific requirements.User-Specified Config Files
Suppose your users want to save different sets of options and specify which one to use when they run your program. This is possible using the
@directive on the command line:varos:~/writing/argvfile jj$ cat jj.conf --name JJ varos:~/writing/argvfile jj$ ./hello Hello, Jon Allen varos:~/writing/argvfile jj$ ./hello @jj.conf Hello, JJNote that there's no extra programming required to use this feature; handling
@options is native toGetopt::ArgvFile.Changing the Default Config Filename or Location
Depending on your target audience, the naming convention offered by
Getopt::ArgvFilefor config files might not be appropriate. Using a dotfile (.myscript) will render your user's config file invisible in his file manager or when listing files at the command prompt, so you may wish to use a name like myscript.conf instead.Again, it may also be helpful to allow for default configuration files to appear somewhere other than the user's home directory, for example, if you need to allow system-wide configuration.
A further consideration here is PAR , the tool for creating standalone executables from Perl programs. PAR lets you include data files as well as Perl code, so you can bundle a default settings file using a command such as:
pp hello -o hello.exe -a hello.confwhich will be available to your script as
$ENV{PAR_TEMP}/inc/hello.conf.I mentioned earlier that
Getopt::ArgvFilecan load arbitrary config files if the filename appears with the@directive on the command line. Essentially, what the module does when loaded with:use Getopt::ArgvFile home=>1;is to prepend
@ARGVwith@$ENV{HOME}/.scriptname, then resolve all@directives, leaving@ARGVwith the contents of the files. This means that running the script as:myscript --name=JJis basically equivalent to writing:
myscript @$ENV{HOME}/.myscript --name-JJTo load other config files,
Getopt::ArgvFilesupports disabling the automatic@ARGVprocessing and triggering it later. With a little manipulation of@ARGVfirst, you can make:myscript --name=JJequivalent to:
myscript @/path/to/default.conf @/path/to/system.conf @/path/to/user.conf \ --name=JJwhich will load the set of config files in the correct priority order.
All you need to do to enable this feature is change the
usestatement to read:use Getopt::ArgvFile qw/argvFile/;Loading the module in this way tells
Getopt::ArgvFileto export the functionargvFile(), which your program needs to call to process the@directives, and also prevents any automated processing from occurring.Here's an example that first loads a config file from the application bundle (if packaged by PAR) and then from the directory containing the application binary:
use File::Basename qw/basename/; use FindBin qw/$Bin/; use Getopt::ArgvFile qw/argvFile/; # Define config filename as <application_name>.conf (my $configfile = basename($0)) =~ s/^(.*?)(?:\..*)?$/$1.conf/; # Include config file from the same directory as the application binary if (-e "$Bin/$configfile") { unshift @ARGV,'@'."$Bin/$configfile"; } # If we have been packaged with PAR, include the config file from the # application bundle if ($ENV{PAR_TEMP} and -e "$ENV{PAR_TEMP}/inc/$configfile") { unshift @ARGV,'@'."$ENV{PAR_TEMP}/inc/$configfile"; } argvFile(); # Process @ARGV to load specified config filesYou can also use this technique together with
File::HomeDirto access the user's application data directory in a cross-platform manner, so that the location of the config file conforms to the conventions set by the user's operating system.Summary
Getopt::Longprovides an easy to use, extensible system for processing command-line options. With the addition ofGetopt::ArgvFile, you can seamlessly handle configuration files with almost no extra coding. Together, these modules should be first on your list when writing scripts that need any amount of configuration.
Society
Groupthink : Two Party System as Polyarchy : Corruption of Regulators : Bureaucracies : Understanding Micromanagers and Control Freaks : Toxic Managers : Harvard Mafia : Diplomatic Communication : Surviving a Bad Performance Review : Insufficient Retirement Funds as Immanent Problem of Neoliberal Regime : PseudoScience : Who Rules America : Neoliberalism : The Iron Law of Oligarchy : Libertarian Philosophy
Quotes
War and Peace : Skeptical Finance : John Kenneth Galbraith :Talleyrand : Oscar Wilde : Otto Von Bismarck : Keynes : George Carlin : Skeptics : Propaganda : SE quotes : Language Design and Programming Quotes : Random IT-related quotes : Somerset Maugham : Marcus Aurelius : Kurt Vonnegut : Eric Hoffer : Winston Churchill : Napoleon Bonaparte : Ambrose Bierce : Bernard Shaw : Mark Twain Quotes
Bulletin:
Vol 25, No.12 (December, 2013) Rational Fools vs. Efficient Crooks The efficient markets hypothesis : Political Skeptic Bulletin, 2013 : Unemployment Bulletin, 2010 : Vol 23, No.10 (October, 2011) An observation about corporate security departments : Slightly Skeptical Euromaydan Chronicles, June 2014 : Greenspan legacy bulletin, 2008 : Vol 25, No.10 (October, 2013) Cryptolocker Trojan (Win32/Crilock.A) : Vol 25, No.08 (August, 2013) Cloud providers as intelligence collection hubs : Financial Humor Bulletin, 2010 : Inequality Bulletin, 2009 : Financial Humor Bulletin, 2008 : Copyleft Problems Bulletin, 2004 : Financial Humor Bulletin, 2011 : Energy Bulletin, 2010 : Malware Protection Bulletin, 2010 : Vol 26, No.1 (January, 2013) Object-Oriented Cult : Political Skeptic Bulletin, 2011 : Vol 23, No.11 (November, 2011) Softpanorama classification of sysadmin horror stories : Vol 25, No.05 (May, 2013) Corporate bullshit as a communication method : Vol 25, No.06 (June, 2013) A Note on the Relationship of Brooks Law and Conway Law
History:
Fifty glorious years (1950-2000): the triumph of the US computer engineering : Donald Knuth : TAoCP and its Influence of Computer Science : Richard Stallman : Linus Torvalds : Larry Wall : John K. Ousterhout : CTSS : Multix OS Unix History : Unix shell history : VI editor : History of pipes concept : Solaris : MS DOS : Programming Languages History : PL/1 : Simula 67 : C : History of GCC development : Scripting Languages : Perl history : OS History : Mail : DNS : SSH : CPU Instruction Sets : SPARC systems 1987-2006 : Norton Commander : Norton Utilities : Norton Ghost : Frontpage history : Malware Defense History : GNU Screen : OSS early history
Classic books:
The Peter Principle : Parkinson Law : 1984 : The Mythical Man-Month : How to Solve It by George Polya : The Art of Computer Programming : The Elements of Programming Style : The Unix Hater’s Handbook : The Jargon file : The True Believer : Programming Pearls : The Good Soldier Svejk : The Power Elite
Most popular humor pages:
Manifest of the Softpanorama IT Slacker Society : Ten Commandments of the IT Slackers Society : Computer Humor Collection : BSD Logo Story : The Cuckoo's Egg : IT Slang : C++ Humor : ARE YOU A BBS ADDICT? : The Perl Purity Test : Object oriented programmers of all nations : Financial Humor : Financial Humor Bulletin, 2008 : Financial Humor Bulletin, 2010 : The Most Comprehensive Collection of Editor-related Humor : Programming Language Humor : Goldman Sachs related humor : Greenspan humor : C Humor : Scripting Humor : Real Programmers Humor : Web Humor : GPL-related Humor : OFM Humor : Politically Incorrect Humor : IDS Humor : "Linux Sucks" Humor : Russian Musical Humor : Best Russian Programmer Humor : Microsoft plans to buy Catholic Church : Richard Stallman Related Humor : Admin Humor : Perl-related Humor : Linus Torvalds Related humor : PseudoScience Related Humor : Networking Humor : Shell Humor : Financial Humor Bulletin, 2011 : Financial Humor Bulletin, 2012 : Financial Humor Bulletin, 2013 : Java Humor : Software Engineering Humor : Sun Solaris Related Humor : Education Humor : IBM Humor : Assembler-related Humor : VIM Humor : Computer Viruses Humor : Bright tomorrow is rescheduled to a day after tomorrow : Classic Computer Humor
The Last but not Least Technology is dominated by two types of people: those who understand what they do not manage and those who manage what they do not understand ~Archibald Putt. Ph.D
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Last modified: March 12, 2019