blob: db8bf6b59410e69b45b19330fe86cb537554b8bc [file] [log] [blame]
#!/bin/bash
# A small example script for using the getopt(1) program.
# This script will only work with bash(1).
# A similar script using the tcsh(1) language can be found
# as getopt-parse.tcsh.
# Example input and output (from the bash prompt):
#
# ./getopt-parse.bash -a par1 'another arg' --c-long 'wow!*\?' -cmore -b " very long "
# Option a
# Option c, no argument
# Option c, argument 'more'
# Option b, argument ' very long '
# Remaining arguments:
# --> 'par1'
# --> 'another arg'
# --> 'wow!*\?'
# Note that we use "$@" to let each command-line parameter expand to a
# separate word. The quotes around "$@" are essential!
# We need TEMP as the 'eval set --' would nuke the return value of getopt.
TEMP=$(getopt -o 'ab:c::' --long 'a-long,b-long:,c-long::' -n 'example.bash' -- "$@")
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
echo 'Terminating...' >&2
exit 1
fi
# Note the quotes around "$TEMP": they are essential!
eval set -- "$TEMP"
unset TEMP
while true; do
case "$1" in
'-a'|'--a-long')
echo 'Option a'
shift
continue
;;
'-b'|'--b-long')
echo "Option b, argument '$2'"
shift 2
continue
;;
'-c'|'--c-long')
# c has an optional argument. As we are in quoted mode,
# an empty parameter will be generated if its optional
# argument is not found.
case "$2" in
'')
echo 'Option c, no argument'
;;
*)
echo "Option c, argument '$2'"
;;
esac
shift 2
continue
;;
'--')
shift
break
;;
*)
echo 'Internal error!' >&2
exit 1
;;
esac
done
echo 'Remaining arguments:'
for arg; do
echo "--> '$arg'"
done