Argument Aggregator
Branch | Build | Coverage |
---|---|---|
master |
||
dev |
This is yet another C++ command line argument/option parser. It was written as a simple and idiomatic alternative to other frameworks like getopt, Boost program options, TCLAP, and others. The goal is to achieve the majority of argument parsing needs in a simple manner with an easy to use API. It operates as a single pass over all arguments, recognizing flags prefixed by -
(short) or --
(long) and aggregating them into easy to access structures with lots of convenience functions. It defers processing types until you access them, so the result structures end up just being pointers into the original command line argument C-strings.
argagg
supports POSIX recommended argument syntax conventions:
- Options (short) start with a hyphen (
-
) and long options start with two hyphens (--
) - Multiple short options can be grouped following a single hyphen
-a -b -c
can also be written-abc
or-bac
, etc.
- Option names are alpha numeric but long options may include hyphens
-v
is valid,--ftest-coverage
is valid-#
is not valid,--bad$option
is not valid
- Short options can be provided arguments with or without whitespace delimiters
-I /usr/local/include
and-I/usr/local/include
are equally valid
- Long options can be provided arguments with whitespace or equal sign delimiters
--output test.txt
and--output=test.txt
are equivalent
- Options and positional arguments can be interleaved
--
can be specified to treat all following arguments as positional arguments (i.e. not options)
Help message formatting is provided via the fmt
utility on {Li,U}nix systems.
Introduction
To use just create an argagg::parser
object. The struct doesn't provide any explicit methods for defining options. Instead we define the options using initialization lists.
argagg::parser argparser {{
{ "help", {"-h", "--help"},
"shows this help message", 0},
{ "delim", {"-d", "--delim"},
"delimiter (default: ,)", 1},
{ "num", {"-n", "--num"},
"number", 1},
}};
An option is specified by four things: the name of the option, the strings that activate the option (flags), the option's help message, and the number of arguments the option expects.
With the parser defined you actually parse the arguments by calling the argagg::parser::parse()
method. If there are any problems an exception is thrown.
argagg::parser_results args;
try {
args = argparser.parse(argc, argv);
} catch (const std::exception& e) {
std::cerr << e.what() << std::endl;
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
You can check if an option shows up in the command line arguments by accessing the option by name from the parser results and using the implicit boolean conversion. You can write out a simplistic option help message by streaming the argagg::parser
instance itself.
if (args["help"]) {
std::cerr << argparser;
// -h, --help
// shows this help message
// -d, --delim
// delimiter (default: ,)
// -n, --num
// number
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
That help message is only for the flags. If you want a usage message it's up to you to provide it.
if (args["help"]) {
std::cerr << "Usage: program [options] ARG1 ARG2" << std::endl
<< argparser;
// Usage: program [options] ARG1 ARG2
// -h, --help
// shows this help message
// -d, --delim
// delimiter (default: ,)
// -n, --num
// number
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
A special output stream, argagg::fmt_ostream
, is provided that will run the usage and help through fmt
for nice word wrapping (see ./examples/joinargs.cpp
for a better example).
if (args["help"]) {
argagg::fmt_ostream fmt(std::cerr);
fmt << "Usage: program [options] ARG1 ARG2" << std::endl
<< argparser;
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
Generally argagg
tries to do a minimal amount of work to leave most of the control with the user.
If you want to get an option argument but fallback on a default value if it doesn't exist then you can use the argagg::option_results::as()
API and provide a default value.
auto delim = args["delim"].as<std::string>(",");
If you don't mind being implicit an implicit conversion operator is provided allowing you to write simple assignments.
int x = 0;
if (args["num"]) {
x = args["num"];
}
Finally, you can get all of the positional arguments as an std::vector
using the argagg::parser_results::pos
member. You can alternatively convert individual positional arguments using the same conversion functions as the option argument conversion methods.
auto y = 0.0;
if (args.pos.size() > 0) {
y = args.as<double>(0);
}
One can also specify --
on the command line in order to treat all following arguments as not options.
For a more detailed treatment take a look at the examples or test cases.
Mental Model
The parser just returns a structure of pointers to the C-strings in the original argv
array. The parse()
method returns a parser_results
object which has two things: position arguments and option results. The position arguments are just a std::vector
of const char*
. The option results are a mapping from option name (std::string
) to option_results
objects. The option_results
objects are just an std::vector
of option_result
objects. Each instance of an option_result
represents the option showing up on the command line. If there was an argument associated with it then the option_result
's arg
member will not be nullptr
.
Consider the following command:
gcc -g -I/usr/local/include -I. -o test main.o foo.o -L/usr/local/lib -lz bar.o -lpng
This would produce a structure like follows, written in psuedo-YAML, where each string is actually a const char*
pointing to some part of a string in the original argv
array:
parser_results:
program: "gcc"
pos: ["main.o", "foo.o", "bar.o"]
options:
version:
debug:
all:
- arg: null
include_path:
all:
- arg: "/usr/local/include"
- arg: "."
library_path:
all:
- arg: "/usr/local/lib"
library:
all:
- arg: "z"
- arg: "png"
output:
all:
- arg: "test"
Conversion to types occurs at the very end when the as<T>()
API is used. Up to that point argagg
is just dealing with C-strings.
API Reference
Doxygen documentation can be found here.
Quick Reference
Structs
option_result
const char* arg
option_results
std::vector<option_result> all
parser_results
const char* program
std::unordered_map<std::string, option_results> options
std::vector<const char*> pos
definition
const char* name
std::vector<std::string> flag
std::string help
unsigned int num_args
parser_map
std::array<const definition*, 256> short_map
std::unordered_map<std::string, const definition*> long_map
parser
std::vector<definition> definitions
Exceptions
unexpected_argument_error
unexpected_option_error
option_lacks_argument_error
invalid_flag
Installation
There is just a single header file (argagg.hpp
) so you can copy that whereever you want. If you want to properly install it you can use the CMake script. The CMake script exists primarily to build the tests and documentation, but an install target for the header is provided.
The standard installation dance using CMake and make
is as follows:
mkdir build
cd build
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr/local ..
make install
ctest -V # optionally run tests
Override CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX
to change the installation location. By default (on UNIX variants) it will install to /usr/local
resulting in the header being copied to /usr/local/include/argagg/argagg.hpp
.
If you have Doxygen it should build and install documentation as well.
There are no dependencies other than the standard library.
Edge Cases
There are some interesting edge cases that show up in option parsing. I used the behavior of gcc
as my target reference in these cases.
Greedy Arguments
Remember that options that require arguments will greedily process arguments.
Say we have the following options: -a
, -b
, -c
, and -o
. They all don't accept arguments except -o
. Below is a list of permutations for short flag grouping and the results:
-abco foo
:-o
's argument isfoo
-aboc foo
:-o
's argument isc
,foo
is a positional argument-aobc foo
:-o
's argument isbc
,foo
is a positional argument-oabc foo
:-o
's argument isabc
,foo
is a positional argument
For whitespace delimited arguments the greedy processing means the next argument element (in argv
) will be treated as an argument for the previous option, regardless of whether or not it looks like a flag or some other special entry. That means you get behavior like below:
--output=foo -- --bar
:--output
's argument isfoo
,--bar
is a positional argument--output -- --bar
:--output
's argument is--
,--bar
is treated as a flag--output --bar
:--output
's argument is--bar