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Automated arg-parsing & --help for POSIX sh / bash / zsh scripts

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bashaaparse

Automated arg-parsing / --help generation for POSIX sh / bash / zsh

There are currently three argument parsers, all of which generate --help usage messages compatible with bash completion (complete -F _longopt mytool):

  • min-template.sh: compact POSIX sh / bash / zsh parser (see testing / portability) that automatically reads --long-opt=value and generates --help for expected options ('-?' shows defaults too). Least coding required (see usage); best option for scripts not limited by existing contract. Other syntaxes can be implemented, but won't show up in the auto-generated help.
  • simple-template.sh: scaffolding for Bash scripts; includes auto-help for more complex options, and various utilities that most scripts require
  • bashaap: not currently documented or maintained.

Notes

min-template

Setup

If you source min-template.sh (downloadable link), override __main() (the default prints positional and option arguments), and call __parse_args "$@", it works out of the box in sh / bash / zsh.

To generate a (possibly optimized and stripped) shell-specific version, to be checked in a repo and sourced (or pasted into code directly), run

bash -euc '. /original/min-template.sh ----gen={bash|sh}[-strip]' >./min-t.sh

## pure sh:
s=/original/min-template.sh
(. "$s";  __parse_args ----gen={bash|sh}[-strip] --src="$s") >./min-t.sh

## from the web, no separate download:
mt=$(curl -s 'https://gitlab.com/kstr0k/bashaaparse/-/raw/master/min-template.sh')
(eval "$mt"; __parse_args --src="$mt" ----gen=sh-strip >./min-t.sh)

## sh/bash used to generate doesn't affect result, but may save keystrokes
## gen=bash result works in zsh too
## --src can be source code, file, '-', 'http://', or full URL

Incorporating

min-template must be either copy/pasted into, or sourced from scripts that use it. If sourcing, see the wiki for why this is a non-trivial task. Some choices:

  • hard-code a path in the user's cache directory ("${XDG_CACHE_HOME:-$HOME/.cache}"/mypkg/min-t.sh, or similarly under ${XDG_DATA_HOME:-$HOME/.local/share}/); either download if missing, or copy as an installation step.
  • install min-template under a predictable system path beforehand
  • accept $(dirname "$0") if the cost is negligible
  • copy/paste min-template.sh into scripts to squeeze every bit of performance and avoid usage hassles (but deal with updates manually).
  • it's possible (but involved) to download min-template on the fly, strip it, and save it next to a script that needs it, only if missing. See examples/get-min-template.sh --help for ideas.

Usage

  • all option arguments have the form --long-opt=value (with --my_opt silently translated to --my-opt), and must come before any positional arguments (-- stops option processing). You don't need any code to parse these: all options are stored in globals of the form _O_long_opt (intuitive, and easy to type / search for)
  • --no-some-opt is interpreted as --some-opt=false and --some-opt (if not covered by previous cases) as --some-opt=true (see note on shell booleans)
  • if you predeclare defaults for the _O_globals (even empty strings, e.g. _O_dir=), then --help will automatically list the corresponding flags ( -? will also show their values).

To initiate parsing and execution

  • call __parse_args "$@", which processes one argument at a time and calls itself recursively
  • when __parse_args exhausts option arguments, it calls __main with the remaining (if any) positional arguments
  • don't place any code after calling __parse_args — it probably won't return anything usable. If the script is a wrapper for some other program, it might as well exec it at the end of __main(), to avoid a dangling shell waiting for nothing.

Extra processing, such as separated / short versions of the longopts (e.g. -f as an alias for --force, -b branch etc), sanity / security checks, or setting the --help header and footer, can be defined by overriding __process_arg().

More details on the min-template wiki.

Testing and portability

min-template has been tested with several shells (dash, bash, FreeBSD sh, busybox sh, zsh + its emulations) and sed implementations (GNU / BSD sed, perl psed). Tests (see mintemplate.t) use the t3st framework.

simple-template

If you follow some simple conventions, this script generates a usage message directly from argument parsing code (which should be structured as a big case statement). It uses bash's introspection capabilities (declare -f) to inspect the function that parses arguments and extract the command-line switches. You'll need to copy and modify usage() and parse_args() from the template, which already provide boilerplate to loop over arguments comortably.

You might want to have a look at the structure of the code to undertand the following details.

This script is ready-to-run (and contains self-testing1, if enabled); copy it to scaffold new scripts and add options / modify as desired. Out of the box:

$ ./simple-template.sh --help
Usage: simple-template.sh [OPTION...]
Options:
  -h | --help
  -v | --verbose
  --version
Defaults:

$ ./simple-template.sh --version  # GIT last
7eff9c4:1621930881

Adding options

Adding a simple action argument inside the parse_args loop is as easy as the builtin (admittedly rudimentary) default:

-v|--verbose) set -x ;;

That's it2 — the framework takes care of shifting out the current argument and listing it in the usage. In most cases, of course, flags need to set an internal variable to be acted upon later — either a boolean or a string. Option values are stored in corresponding globals _O_* (initialize them at the top of parse_args). Adding either boolean or valued arguments is also trivial, if you only use longopts (or see below):

## go to section 3 of parse_args; add
--use-git) ;& --no-use-git) ;& --file=*)
## uncomment the parsing code

# ... later on in your code ...
if $_O_USE_GIT; then git --log >"$_O_FILE"; fi

Again, that's it. All the listed arguments will show up in --help, and their values will be available as _O_USE_GIT (true or false, if you call the script with --use-git / --no-use-git) and $_O_FILE (if you supply --file="$HOME/My Video.mp4").

If you stick to long options and --arg=value (not --arg value), you have it this easy. To combine long- and short-options, or handle separate-valued arguments, see section 2 inside parse_args. It's not much more difficult or verbose, but for maximum efficiency and maintainability (as in DRY), it's easier to not use those.

Shell booleans

An interesting trick for testing booleans is to evaluate them directly (that is, if "$_O_USE_GIT" ... without test or [ ... ]). This works because true and false are actual shell commands (builtins, even — no performance loss) that set success / failure exit codes, which can be acted on by conditionals.

Positional arguments

… (starting at the first non-option, or after --) are left in the ARGV array. The script calls main() with these arguments (which become $1, $2 etc inside the function), but if you're modifying an existing script (e.g. to replace an existing parser), you can discard the main call and do

set -- "${ARGV[@]}"

right after parse_args. This will set the global $1, $2 to the remaining args, as most hand-rolled scripts expect after handling flags.

Copyright

Alin Mr. <[email protected]> / MIT license

See also

Footnotes

  1. if you run the sed command shown at the top of the simple-template.sh, the embedded test code will be uncommented, bash will run the modified script from stdin, and various sample arguments (or the --help, if requested) will be shown in the terminal.

  2. you might object to this definition of "verbose", but the goal here is to get up and running as quickly as possible — you're welcome to change this default to something more elaborate (OTOH, your script will have debugging capabilities without writing a single line of code).

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