1Getopt::Lucid(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Getopt::Lucid(3)
2
3
4
6 Getopt::Lucid - Clear, readable syntax for command line processing
7
9 version 1.10
10
12 use Getopt::Lucid qw( :all );
13
14 # basic option specifications with aliases
15
16 @specs = (
17 Switch("version|V"),
18 Counter("verbose|v"),
19 Param("config|C"),
20 List("lib|l|I"),
21 Keypair("define"),
22 Switch("help|h")
23 );
24
25 $opt = Getopt::Lucid->getopt( \@specs )->validate;
26
27 $verbosity = $opt->get_verbose;
28 @libs = $opt->get_lib;
29 %defs = $opt->get_define;
30
31 %all_options = $opt->options;
32
33 # advanced option specifications
34
35 @adv_spec = (
36 Param("input"),
37 Param("mode")->default("tcp"), # defaults
38 Param("host")->needs("port"), # dependencies
39 Param("port")->valid(qr/\d+/), # regex validation
40 Param("config")->valid(sub { -r }),# custom validation
41 Param("help")->anycase, # case insensitivity
42 );
43 $opt = Getopt::Lucid->getopt( \@adv_spec );
44 $opt->validate({ 'requires' => ['input'] });
45
46 # example with a config file
47
48 $opt = Getopt::Lucid->getopt( \@adv_spec );
49 use Config::Std;
50 if ( -r $opt->get_config ) {
51 read_config( $opt->get_config() => my %config_hash );
52 $opt->merge_defaults( $config_hash{''} );
53 }
54
56 The goal of this module is providing good code readability and clarity
57 of intent for command-line option processing. While readability is a
58 subjective standard, Getopt::Lucid relies on a more verbose, plain-
59 English option specification as compared against the more symbolic
60 approach of Getopt::Long. Key features include:
61
62 • Five option types: switches, counters, parameters, lists, and key
63 pairs
64
65 • Three option styles: long, short (including bundled), and bare
66 (without dashes)
67
68 • Specification of defaults, required options and option dependencies
69
70 • Validation of options with regexes or subroutines
71
72 • Negation of options on the command line
73
74 • Support for parsing any array, not just the default @ARGV
75
76 • Incorporation of external defaults (e.g. from a config file) with
77 user control of precedence
78
80 Option Styles, Naming and "Strictness"
81 Getopt::Lucid support three kinds of option styles: long-style
82 ("--foo"), short-style ("-f") and bareword style ("foo"). Short-style
83 options are automatically unbundled during command line processing if a
84 single dash is followed by more than one letter (e.g. "-xzf" becomes
85 "-x -z -f" ).
86
87 Each option is identified in the specification with a string consisting
88 of the option "name" followed by zero or more "aliases", with any alias
89 (and each subsequent alias) separated by a vertical bar character.
90 E.g.:
91
92 "lib|l|I" means name "lib", alias "l" and alias "I"
93
94 Names and aliases must begin with an alphanumeric character, but
95 subsequently may also include both underscore and dash. (E.g. both
96 "input-file" and "input_file" are valid.) While names and aliases are
97 interchangeable when provided on the command line, the "name" portion
98 is used with the accessors for each option (see "Accessors and
99 Mutators").
100
101 Any of the names and aliases in the specification may be given in any
102 of the three styles. By default, Getopt::Lucid works in "magic" mode,
103 in which option names or aliases may be specified with or without
104 leading dashes, and will be parsed from the command line whether or not
105 they have corresponding dashes. Single-character names or aliases may
106 be read with no dash, one dash or two dashes. Multi-character names or
107 aliases must have either no dashes or two dashes. E.g.:
108
109 • Both "foo" and "--foo" as names in the specification may be read
110 from the command line as either "--foo" or "foo"
111
112 • The specification name "f" may be read from the command line as
113 "--f", "-f", or just "f"
114
115 In practice, this means that the specification need not use dashes, but
116 if used on the command line, they will be treated appropriately.
117
118 Alternatively, Getopt::Lucid can operate in "strict" mode by setting
119 the C<strict> parameter to a true value. In strict mode, option names
120 and aliases may still be specified in any of the three styles, but they
121 will only be parsed from the command line if they are used in exactly
122 the same style. E.g., given the name and alias "--help|-h", only
123 "--help" and "-h" are valid for use on the command line.
124
125 Option Specification Constructors
126 Options specifications are provided to Getopt::Lucid in an array.
127 Entries in the array must be created with one of several special
128 constructor functions that return a specification object. These
129 constructor functions may be imported either individually or as a group
130 using the import tag ":all" (e.g. "use Getopt::Lucid qw(:all);").
131
132 The form of the constructor is:
133
134 TYPE( NAME_ARGUMENT );
135
136 The constructor function name indicates the type of option. The name
137 argument is a string with the names and aliases separated by vertical
138 bar characters.
139
140 The five option specification constructors are:
141
142 Switch()
143
144 A true/false value. Defaults to false. The appearance of an option of
145 this type on the command line sets it to true.
146
147 Counter()
148
149 A numerical counter. Defaults to 0. The appearance of an option of
150 this type on the command line increments the counter by one.
151
152 Param()
153
154 A variable taking an argument. Defaults to "" (the empty string).
155 When an option of this type appears on the command line, the value of
156 the option is set in one of two ways -- appended with an equals sign or
157 from the next argument on the command line:
158
159 --name=value
160 --name value
161
162 In the case where white space is used to separate the option name and
163 the value, if the value looks like an option, an exception will be
164 thrown:
165
166 --name --value # throws an exception
167
168 List()
169
170 This is like "Param()" but arguments are pushed onto a list. The
171 default list is empty.
172
173 Keypair()
174
175 A variable taking an argument pair, which are added to a hash.
176 Arguments are handled as with "Param()", but the argument itself must
177 have a key and value joined by an equals sign.
178
179 --name=key=value
180 --name key=value
181
182 Option modifiers
183 An option specification can be further modified with the following
184 methods, each of which return the object modified so that modifier
185 chaining is possible. E.g.:
186
187 @spec = (
188 Param("input")->default("/dev/random")->needs("output"),
189 Param("output")->default("/dev/null"),
190 );
191
192 valid()
193
194 Sets the validation parameter(s) for an option.
195
196 @spec = (
197 Param("port")->valid(qr/\d+/), # regex validation
198 Param("config")->valid(sub { -r }), # custom validation
199 Keypair("define")
200 ->valid(\&_valid_key, \&valid_value), # keypairs take two
201 );
202
203 See the "Validation" section, below, for more.
204
205 default()
206
207 Changes the default for the option to the argument(s) of "default()".
208 List and hashes can take either a list or a reference to an array or
209 hash, respectively.
210
211 @spec = (
212 Switch("debug")->default(1),
213 Counter("verbose")->default(3),
214 Param("config")->default("/etc/profile"),
215 List("dirs")->default(qw( /var /home )),
216 Keypair("define")->default( arch => "i386" ),
217 );
218
219 needs()
220
221 Takes as an argument a list of option names or aliases of dependencies.
222 If the option this modifies appears on the command line, each of the
223 options given as an argument must appear on the command line as well or
224 an exception is thrown.
225
226 @spec = (
227 Param("input")->needs("output"),
228 Param("output"),
229 );
230
231 anycase()
232
233 Indicates that the associated option names/aliases may appear on the
234 command line in lowercase, uppercase, or any mixture of the two. No
235 argument is needed.
236
237 @spec = (
238 Switch("help|h")->anycase(), # "Help", "HELP", etc.
239 );
240
241 doc()
242
243 Sets the documentation string for an option.
244
245 @spec = (
246 Param("output")->doc("write output to the specified file"),
247 );
248
249 This string shows up in the "usage" method.
250
251 Validation
252 Validation happens in two stages. First, individual parameters may
253 have validation criteria added to them. Second, the parsed options
254 object may be validated by checking that all requirements collectively
255 are met.
256
257 Parameter validation
258
259 The Param, List, and Keypair option types may be provided an optional
260 validation specification. Values provided on the command line will be
261 validated according to the specification or an exception will be
262 thrown.
263
264 A validation specification can be either a regular expression, or a
265 reference to a subroutine. Keypairs take up to two validation
266 specifiers. The first is applied to keys and the second is applied to
267 values; either can be left undef to ignore validation. (More complex
268 validation of specific values for specific keys must be done manually.)
269
270 Validation is also applied to default values provided via the
271 "default()" modifier or later modified with "append_defaults",
272 "merge_defaults", or "replace_defaults". This ensures internal
273 consistency.
274
275 If no default is explicitly provided, validation is only applied if the
276 option appears on the command line. (In other words, the built-in
277 defaults are always considered valid if the option does not appear.)
278 If this is not desired, the "required" option to the "validate" method
279 should be used to force users to provide an explicit value.
280
281 # Must be provided and is thus always validated
282 @spec = ( Param("width")->valid(qr/\d+/) );
283 $opt = Getopt::Lucid->getopt(\@spec);
284 $opt->validate( {requires => ['width']} );
285
286 For validation subroutines, the value found on the command line is
287 passed as the first element of @_, and $_ is also set equal to the
288 first element. (N.B. Changing $_ will not change the value that is
289 captured.) The value validates if the subroutine returns a true value.
290
291 For validation with regular expressions, consider using Regexp::Common
292 for a ready library of validation options.
293
294 Older versions of Getopt::Lucid used validation arguments provided in
295 the Spec constructor. This is still supported, but is deprecated and
296 discouraged. It may be removed in a future version of Getopt::Lucid.
297
298 # deprecated
299 Param("height", qr/\d+/)
300
301 Options object validation
302
303 The "validate" method should be called on the result of "getopt". This
304 will check that all parameter prerequisites defined by "needs" have
305 been met. It also takes a hashref of arguments. The optional
306 "requires" argument gives an arrayref of parameters that must exist.
307
308 The reason that object validation is done separate from "getopt" is to
309 allow for better control over different options that might be required
310 or to allow some dependencies (i.e. from "needs") to be met via a
311 configuration file.
312
313 @spec = (
314 Param("action")->needs(qw/user password/),
315 Param("user"),
316 Param("password"),
317 );
318 $opt = Getopt::Lucid->getopt(\@spec);
319 $opt->merge_defaults( read_config() ); # provides 'user' & 'password'
320 $opt->validate({requires => ['action']});
321
322 Parsing the Command Line
323 Technically, Getopt::Lucid scans an array for command line options, not
324 a command-line string. By default, this array is @ARGV (though other
325 arrays can be used -- see "new()"), which is typically provided by the
326 operating system according to system-specific rules.
327
328 When Getopt::Lucid processes the array, it scans the array in order,
329 removing any specified command line options and any associated
330 arguments, and leaving behind any unrecognized elements in the array.
331 If an element consisting solely of two-dashes ("--") is found, array
332 scanning is terminated at that point. Any options found during
333 scanning are applied in order. E.g.:
334
335 @ARGV = qw( --lib /tmp --lib /var );
336 my $opt = Getopt::Lucid->getopt( [ List("lib") ] );
337 print join ", " $opt->lib;
338 # prints "/tmp, /var"
339
340 If an element encountered in processing begins with a dash, but is not
341 recognized as a short-form or long-form option name or alias, an
342 exception will be thrown.
343
344 Negation
345 Getopt::Lucid also supports negating options. Options are negated if
346 the option is specified with "no-" or "--no-" prefixed to a name or
347 alias. By default, negation clears the option: Switch and Counter
348 options are set to zero; Param options are set to ""; List and Keypair
349 options are set to an empty list and empty hash, respectively. For List
350 and Keypair options, it is also possible to negate a specific list
351 element or hash key by placing an equals sign and the list element or
352 key immediately after the option name:
353
354 --no-lib=/tmp --no-define=arch
355 # removes "/tmp" from lib and the "arch" key from define
356
357 As with all options, negation is processed in order, allowing a "reset"
358 in the middle of command line processing. This may be useful for those
359 using command aliases who wish to "switch off" options in the alias.
360 E.g, in Unix:
361
362 $ alias wibble = wibble.pl --verbose
363 $ wibble --no-verbose
364
365 # @ARGV would contain ( "--verbose", "--no-verbose" )
366
367 This also may have applications in post-processing configuration files
368 (see "Managing Defaults and Config Files").
369
370 Accessors and Mutators
371 After processing the command-line array, the values of the options may
372 be read or modified using accessors/mutators of the form "get_NAME" and
373 "set_NAME", where NAME represents the option name in the specification
374 without any leading dashes. E.g.
375
376 @spec = (
377 Switch("--test|-t"),
378 List("--lib|-L"),
379 Keypair("--define|-D"),
380 );
381
382 $opt = Getopt::Lucid->getopt( \@spec );
383 print $opt->get_test ? "True" : "False";
384 $opt->set_test(1);
385
386 For option names with dashes, underscores should be substituted in the
387 accessor calls. E.g.
388
389 @spec = (
390 Param("--input-file|-i")
391 );
392
393 $opt = Getopt::Lucid->getopt( \@spec );
394 print $opt->get_input_file;
395
396 This can create an ambiguous case if a similar option exists with
397 underscores in place of dashes. (E.g. "input_file" and "input-file".)
398 Users can safely avoid these problems by choosing to use either dashes
399 or underscores exclusively and not mixing the two styles.
400
401 List and Keypair options are returned as flattened lists:
402
403 my @lib = $opt->get_lib;
404 my %define = $opt->get_define;
405
406 Using the "set_NAME" mutator is not recommended and should be used with
407 caution. No validation is performed and changes will be lost if the
408 results of processing the command line array are recomputed (e.g, such
409 as occurs if new defaults are applied). List and Keypair options
410 mutators take a list, not references.
411
412 Managing Defaults and Config Files
413 A typical problem for command-line option processing is the precedence
414 relationship between default option values specified within the
415 program, default option values stored in a configuration file or in
416 environment variables, and option values specified on the command-line,
417 particularly when the command-line specifies an alternate configuration
418 file.
419
420 Getopt::Lucid takes the following approach to this problem:
421
422 • Initial default values may be specified as part of the option
423 specification (using the "default()" modifier)
424
425 • Default values from the option specification may be modified or
426 replaced entirely with default values provided in an external hash
427 (such as from a standard config file or environment variables)
428
429 • When the command-line array is processed, options and their
430 arguments are stored in the order they appeared in the command-line
431 array
432
433 • The stored options are applied in-order to modify or replace the
434 set of "current" default option values
435
436 • If default values are subsequently changed (such as from an
437 alternative configuration file), the stored options are re-applied
438 in-order to the new set of default option values
439
440 With this approach, the resulting option set is always the result of
441 applying options (or negations) from the command-line array to a set of
442 default-values. Users have complete freedom to apply whatever
443 precedence rules they wish to the default values and may even change
444 default values after the command-line array is processed without losing
445 the options given on the command line.
446
447 Getopt::Lucid provides several functions to assist in manipulating
448 default values:
449
450 • "merge_defaults()" -- new defaults overwrite any matching, existing
451 defaults. KeyPairs hashes and List arrays are replaced entirely
452 with new defaults
453
454 • "append_defaults()" -- new defaults overwrite any matching,
455 existing defaults, except for Counter and List options, which have
456 the new defaults added and appended, respectively, and KeyPair
457 options, which are flattened into any existing default hash
458
459 • "replace_defaults()" -- new defaults replace existing defaults; any
460 options not provided in the new defaults are reset to zero/empty,
461 ignoring any default given in the option specification
462
463 • "reset_defaults()" -- returns defaults to values given in the
464 options specification
465
466 Exceptions and Error Handling
467 Getopt::Lucid uses Exception::Class for exceptions. When a major error
468 occurs, Getopt::Lucid will die and throw one of three Exception::Class
469 subclasses:
470
471 • "Getopt::Lucid::Exception::Usage" -- thrown when Getopt::Lucid
472 methods are called incorrectly
473
474 • "Getopt::Lucid::Exception::Spec" -- thrown when the specification
475 array contains incorrect or invalid data
476
477 • "Getopt::Lucid::Exception::ARGV" -- thrown when the command-line is
478 processed and fails to pass specified validation, requirements, or
479 is otherwise determined to be invalid
480
481 These exceptions may be caught using an "eval" block and allow the
482 calling program to respond differently to each class of exception.
483
484 Ambiguous Cases and Gotchas
485 One-character aliases and "anycase"
486
487 @spec = (
488 Counter("verbose|v")->anycase,
489 Switch("version|V")->anycase,
490 );
491
492 Consider the spec above. By specifying "anycase" on these, "verbose",
493 "Verbose", "VERBOSE" are all acceptable, as are "version", "Version"
494 and so on. (Including long-form versions of these, too, if "magic"
495 mode is used.) However, what if the command line has "-v" or even "-v
496 -V"? In this case, the rule is that exact case matches are used before
497 case-insensitive matches are searched. Thus, "-v" can only match
498 "verbose", despite the "anycase" modification, and likewise "-V" can
499 only match "version".
500
501 Identical names except for dashes and underscores
502
503 @spec = (
504 Param("input-file"),
505 Switch("input_file"),
506 );
507
508 Consider the spec above. These are two, separate, valid options, but a
509 call to the accessor "get_input_file" is ambiguous and may return
510 either option, depending on which first satisfies a "fuzzy-matching"
511 algorithm inside the accessor code. Avoid identical names with mixed
512 dash and underscore styles.
513
515 new()
516 $opt = Getopt::Lucid->new( \@option_spec );
517 $opt = Getopt::Lucid->new( \@option_spec, \%parameters );
518 $opt = Getopt::Lucid->new( \@option_spec, \@option_array );
519 $opt = Getopt::Lucid->new( \@option_spec, \@option_array, \%parameters );
520
521 Creates a new Getopt::Lucid object. An array reference to an option
522 spec is required as an argument. (See "USAGE" for a description of the
523 object spec). By default, objects will be set to read @ARGV for
524 command line options. An optional second argument with a reference to
525 an array will use that array for option processing instead. The final
526 argument may be a hashref of parameters. The only valid parameter
527 currently is:
528
529 • strict -- enables strict mode when true
530
531 For typical cases, users will likely prefer to call "getopt" instead,
532 which creates a new object and parses the command line with a single
533 function call.
534
535 validate()
536 $opt->validate();
537 $opt->validate( \%arguments );
538
539 Takes an optional argument hashref, validates that all requirements and
540 prerequisites are met or throws an error. Valid argument keys are:
541
542 • "requires" -- an arrayref of options that must exist in the options
543 object.
544
545 This method returns the object for convenient chaining:
546
547 $opt = Getopt::Lucid->getopt(\@spec)->validate;
548
549 append_defaults()
550 %options = append_defaults( %config_hash );
551 %options = append_defaults( \%config_hash );
552
553 Takes a hash or hash reference of new default values, modifies the
554 stored defaults, recalculates the result of processing the command line
555 with the revised defaults, and returns a hash with the resulting
556 options. Each key/value pair in the passed hash is added to the stored
557 defaults. For Switch and Param options, the value in the passed hash
558 will overwrite any preexisting value. For Counter options, the value
559 is added to any preexisting value. For List options, the value (or
560 values, if the value is an array reference) will be pushed onto the end
561 of the list of existing values. For Keypair options, the key/value
562 pairs will be added to the existing hash, overwriting existing
563 key/value pairs (just like merging two hashes). Keys which are not
564 valid names from the options specification will be ignored.
565
566 defaults()
567 %defaults = $opt->defaults();
568
569 Returns a hash containing current default values. Keys are names from
570 the option specification (without any leading dashes). These defaults
571 represent the baseline values that are modified by the parsed command
572 line options.
573
574 getopt()
575 $opt = Getopt::Lucid->getopt( \@option_spec );
576 $opt = Getopt::Lucid->getopt( \@option_spec, \@option_array );
577 $opt->getopt();
578
579 Parses the command line array (@ARGV by default). When called as a
580 class function, "getopt" takes the same arguments as "new", calls "new"
581 to create an object before parsing the command line, and returns the
582 new object. When called as an object method, it takes no arguments and
583 returns itself.
584
585 For convenience, C<getopts()> is a alias for C<getopt()>.
586
587 merge_defaults()
588 %options = merge_defaults( %config_hash );
589 %options = merge_defaults( \%config_hash );
590
591 Takes a hash or hash reference of new default values, modifies the
592 stored defaults, recalculates the result of processing the command line
593 with the revised defaults, and returns a hash with the resulting
594 options. Each key/value pair in the passed hash is added to the stored
595 defaults, overwriting any preexisting value. Keys which are not valid
596 names from the options specification will be ignored.
597
598 names()
599 @names = $opt->names();
600
601 Returns the list of names in the options specification. Each name
602 represents a key in the hash of options provided by "options".
603
604 options()
605 %options = $opt->options();
606
607 Returns a deep copy of the options hash. Before "getopt" is called,
608 its behavior is undefined. After "getopt" is called, this will return
609 the result of modifying the defaults with the results of command line
610 processing.
611
612 replace_defaults()
613 %options = replace_defaults( %config_hash );
614 %options = replace_defaults( \%config_hash );
615
616 Takes a hash or hash reference of new default values, replaces the
617 stored defaults, recalculates the result of processing the command line
618 with the revised defaults, and returns a hash with the resulting
619 options. Each key/value pair in the passed hash replaces existing
620 defaults, including those given in the option specifications. Keys
621 which are not valid names from the option specification will be
622 ignored.
623
624 reset_defaults()
625 %options = reset_defaults();
626
627 Resets the stored defaults to the original values from the options
628 specification, recalculates the result of processing the command line
629 with the restored defaults, and returns a hash with the resulting
630 options. This undoes the effect of a "merge_defaults" or
631 "add_defaults" call.
632
633 usage()
634 Returns a string of usage information derived from the options spec,
635 including any "doc" modifiers. Because invalid options throw
636 exceptions, if you want to provide usage, you should separately invoke
637 "new" and "getopt"
638
639 my $opt = Getopt::Lucid->new( \@spec );
640 eval { $opt->getopt() };
641 if ($@) {
642 print "$@\n" && print $opt->usage and exit 1
643 if ref $@ eq 'Getopt::Lucid::Exception::ARGV';
644 ref $@ ? $@->rethrow : die $@;
645 }
646
648 In 1.00, the following API changes have been made:
649
650 • "new()" now takes an optional hashref of parameters as the last
651 argument
652
653 • The global $STRICT variable has been replaced with a per-object
654 parameter "strict"
655
656 • The "required" modifier has been removed and a new "validate"
657 method has been added to facilitate late/custom checks of required
658 options
659
661 • Config::Tiny
662
663 • Config::Simple
664
665 • Config::Std
666
667 • Getopt::Long
668
669 • Regexp::Common
670
672 Please report any bugs or feature using the CPAN Request Tracker. Bugs
673 can be submitted through the web interface at
674 <http://rt.cpan.org/Dist/Display.html?Queue=Getopt-Lucid>
675
676 When submitting a bug or request, please include a test-file or a patch
677 to an existing test-file that illustrates the bug or desired feature.
678
680 Bugs / Feature Requests
681 Please report any bugs or feature requests through the issue tracker at
682 <https://github.com/dagolden/Getopt-Lucid/issues>. You will be
683 notified automatically of any progress on your issue.
684
685 Source Code
686 This is open source software. The code repository is available for
687 public review and contribution under the terms of the license.
688
689 <https://github.com/dagolden/Getopt-Lucid>
690
691 git clone https://github.com/dagolden/Getopt-Lucid.git
692
694 David Golden <dagolden@cpan.org>
695
697 • Chris White <cxwembedded@gmail.com>
698
699 • David Golden <xdg@xdg.me>
700
701 • David Precious <davidp@preshweb.co.uk>
702
703 • James E Keenan <jkeenan@cpan.org>
704
705 • Kevin McGrath <kmcgrath@cpan.org>
706
707 • Nova Patch <patch@cpan.org>
708
709 • Robert Bohne <rbo@cpan.org>
710
711 • thilp <thilp@thilp.net>
712
714 This software is Copyright (c) 2019 by David Golden.
715
716 This is free software, licensed under:
717
718 The Apache License, Version 2.0, January 2004
719
720
721
722perl v5.32.1 2021-01-27 Getopt::Lucid(3)