Argp is an interface for parsing unix-style argument vectors. See Program Arguments.
Argp provides features unavailable in the more commonly used
getopt
interface. These features include automatically producing
output in response to the ‘--help’ and ‘--version’ options, as
described in the GNU coding standards. Using argp makes it less likely
that programmers will neglect to implement these additional options or
keep them up to date.
Argp also provides the ability to merge several independently defined option parsers into one, mediating conflicts between them and making the result appear seamless. A library can export an argp option parser that user programs might employ in conjunction with their own option parsers, resulting in less work for the user programs. Some programs may use only argument parsers exported by libraries, thereby achieving consistent and efficient option-parsing for abstractions implemented by the libraries.
The header file <argp.h> should be included to use argp.
argp_parse
Functionargp_parse
argp_help
Functionargp_help
Functionargp_parse
FunctionThe main interface to argp is the argp_parse
function. In many
cases, calling argp_parse
is the only argument-parsing code
needed in main
.
See Program Arguments.
error_t
argp_parse (const struct argp *argp, int argc, char **argv, unsigned flags, int *arg_index, void *input)
¶Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:argpbuf locale env | AS-Unsafe heap i18n lock corrupt | AC-Unsafe mem lock corrupt | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The argp_parse
function parses the arguments in argv, of
length argc, using the argp parser argp. See Specifying Argp Parsers. Passing a null pointer for argp is the same as using
a struct argp
containing all zeros.
flags is a set of flag bits that modify the parsing behavior.
See Flags for argp_parse
. input is passed through to the argp parser
argp, and has meaning defined by argp. A typical usage is
to pass a pointer to a structure which is used for specifying
parameters to the parser and passing back the results.
Unless the ARGP_NO_EXIT
or ARGP_NO_HELP
flags are included
in flags, calling argp_parse
may result in the program
exiting. This behavior is true if an error is detected, or when an
unknown option is encountered. See Program Termination.
If arg_index is non-null, the index of the first unparsed option in argv is returned as a value.
The return value is zero for successful parsing, or an error code
(see Error Codes) if an error is detected. Different argp parsers
may return arbitrary error codes, but the standard error codes are:
ENOMEM
if a memory allocation error occurred, or EINVAL
if
an unknown option or option argument is encountered.