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HP-UX Reference > Ggetopts(1)HP-UX 11i Version 3: February 2007 |
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NAMEgetopts — parse utility (command) options DESCRIPTIONgetopts is used to retrieve options and option-arguments from a list of parameters. Each time it is invoked, getopts places the value of the next option in the shell variable specified by the name operand and the index of the next argument to be processed in the shell variable OPTIND. Whenever the shell is invoked, OPTIND is initialized to 1. When the option requires an option-argument, getopts places it in the shell variable OPTARG. If no option was found, or if the option that was found does not have an option-argument, OPTARG is unset. If an option character not contained in the optstring operand is found where an option character is expected, the shell variable specified by name is set to the question-mark (?) character. In this case, if the first character in optstring is a colon (:), the shell variable OPTARG is set to the option character found, but no output is written to standard error; otherwise, the shell variable OPTARG is unset and a diagnostic message is written to standard error. This condition is considered to be an error detected in the way arguments were presented to the invoking application, but is not an error in getopts processing. If an option-argument is missing:
When the end of options is encountered, getopts exits with a return value greater than zero. The shell variable OPTIND is set to the index of the first nonoption-argument, where the first -- argument is considered to be an option argument if there are no other non-option arguments appearing before it, or the value $# + 1 if there are no nonoption-arguments; the name variable is set to the question-mark character. Any of the following identifies the end of options: the special option --, finding an argument that does not begin with a -, or encountering an error. The shell variables OPTIND and OPTARG are local to the caller of getopts and are not exported by default. The shell variable specified by the name operand, OPTIND, and OPTARG affect the current shell execution environment. OperandsThe following operands are supported:
getopts by default parses positional parameters passed to the invoking shell procedures. If args are given, they are parsed instead of the positional parameters. ERRORSWhenever an error is detected and the first character in the optstring operand is not a colon (:), a diagnostic message will be written to standard error with the following information in an unspecified format:
EXAMPLESSince getopts affects the current shell execution environment, it is generally provided as a shell regular built-in. If it is called in a subshell or separate utility execution environment such as one of the following: (getopts abc value "$@") nohup getopts ... find -exec getopts ...\; it does not affect the shell variables in the caller's environment. Note that shell functions share OPTIND with the calling shell even though the positional parameters are changed. Functions that use getopts to parse their arguments should save the value of OPTIND on entry and restore it before returning. However, there will be cases when a function must change OPTIND for the calling shell. The following example script parses and displays its arguments: aflag= bflag= while getopts ab: name do case $name in a) aflag=1;; b) bflag=1 bval="$OPTARG";; ?) printf "Usage: %s: [-a] [-b value] args\n" $0 exit 2;; esac done if [ ! -z "$aflag" ] ; then printf "Option -a specified\n" fi if [ ! -z "$bflag" ] ; then printf "Option -b "%s" specified\n" "$bval" fi shift $(($OPTIND -1)) printf "Remaining arguments are: %s\n" "$*" |
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