An high level argument parsing library for bash.
The purpose is to replace the option-parsing and usage-describing functions commonly rewritten in all scripts.
This library is implemented for bash version 4. Prior versions of bash will fail at interpreting that code.
Doxygen documentation is available online here.
Though Bash Argsparse is hosted at github, you can download tarballs at the following URL: http://argsparse.livna.org/
The argsparse library offers to script developpers the following features:
- Automatic help message generation
- Simple option declarations
- Different option types: simple, with value, with cumulative (uniq or not) values
- User-input checkings (either by type, enumerations or custom checking)
- Hook settings
- Option properties making them excluding each other, aliasing other options, or (sic) non-optional.
A basic argsparse run requires no external commands except the quite-common "getopt" command. Some argsparse-built-in type checkings may require some other (like "host" and "getent") but you do not have to use those types.
Argsparse relies on a lot of bash built-in commands ("printf", "[", "read", ...) and internal features such as arrays, associative arrays, extended (ksh-like) globbing.
The "extglob" shell option is automatically enabled when loading the argsparse library.
The code has been tested on bash 4.1 and 4.2 and is definitely not POSIX-compliant.
- argsparse.sh: the library.
- tutorial: a bunch of small demonstration scripts for new users.
- bash-argsparse.spec: a spec file to build RPM packages.
- debian: the directory required to build deb packages.
- Doxyfile: doxygen configuration file.
- doxygen-bash.sed: bash-doxygen doxygen input filter.
- unittest: a test script to validate most of argsparse features.
Here are the topics covered by scripts in tutorial directory:
- 1-basics: Bash Argsparse basics
- 2-values: Options accepting values
- 3-cumulative-options: How to keep all user-given values
- 4-types: Type-checking
- 5-custom-types: User-defined types
- 6-properties: Option properties
- 7-value-checking: Advanced value checking using argsparse
- 8-setting-hook: Changing the way options are set
- 9-misc: Other misc argsparse features.
Invoke each script without parameter or with --help to obtain usage message.
- You cannot have a short option without a long option.
- Too few verifications about property values are made.
- Compliance against some bash settings like nounset and errexit has not (yet) been proved, but is wished.
- Compliance with Non-bind versions of the "host" command has not been tested.