391
Comment:
|
1223
|
Deletions are marked like this. | Additions are marked like this. |
Line 2: | Line 2: |
== How do I process options in a bash script? == | == Common utility functions (warn, die) == (If you were looking for option processing, see [[BashFAQ/035]].) |
Line 4: | Line 5: |
For example, how do I code my bash script to accept a bunch of options like | The following functions are frequently asked for in #bash, so we hope you find them useful. |
Line 7: | Line 8: |
foobar -a --busy --include something | ## # warn: Print a message to stderr. # Usage: warn "message" # warn() { printf '%s\n' "$@" >&2 } ### ### The following three "die" functions ### depend on the above "warn" function. ### ## # die (simple version): Print a message to stderr # and exit with the exit status of the most recent # command. # Usage: some_command || die "message" # die () { local st="$?" warn "$@" exit "$st" } ## # die (explicit status version): Print a message to # stderr and exit with the exit status given. # Usage: if blah; then die "message" status_code; fi # die() { local st="$2" warn "$1" exit "$st" } ## # die (optional status version): Print a message to # stderr and exit with either the given status or # that of the most recent command. # Usage: some_command || die "message" [status code] # die() { local st="$?" case "$2" in *[^0-9]*) :;; *) st="$2";; esac warn "$1" exit "$st" } |
Line 9: | Line 60: |
First up, there are some [[http://www.gnu.org/software/libtool/manual/libc/Argument-Syntax.html|GNU and POSIX standards]] for how to do this. ... work in progress |
Common utility functions (warn, die)
(If you were looking for option processing, see BashFAQ/035.)
The following functions are frequently asked for in #bash, so we hope you find them useful.
## # warn: Print a message to stderr. # Usage: warn "message" # warn() { printf '%s\n' "$@" >&2 } ### ### The following three "die" functions ### depend on the above "warn" function. ### ## # die (simple version): Print a message to stderr # and exit with the exit status of the most recent # command. # Usage: some_command || die "message" # die () { local st="$?" warn "$@" exit "$st" } ## # die (explicit status version): Print a message to # stderr and exit with the exit status given. # Usage: if blah; then die "message" status_code; fi # die() { local st="$2" warn "$1" exit "$st" } ## # die (optional status version): Print a message to # stderr and exit with either the given status or # that of the most recent command. # Usage: some_command || die "message" [status code] # die() { local st="$?" case "$2" in *[^0-9]*) :;; *) st="$2";; esac warn "$1" exit "$st" }