Mercurial > libpst
view src/XGetopt.c @ 60:97b7706bdda2
Work around bogus 7c.b5 blocks in some messages that have been read.
They appear to have attachments, but of some unknown format.
Before the message was read, it did not have any attachments.
Use autoscan to cleanup our autoconf system.
Use autoconf to detect when we need to use our XGetopt files
and other header files.
More fields, including BCC.
Fix missing LE32_CPU byte swapping for FILETIME types.
author | Carl Byington <carl@five-ten-sg.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 16 Feb 2008 12:26:35 -0800 |
parents | c508ee15dfca |
children | 0f1492b7fe8b |
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// XGetopt.cpp Version 1.1 // // Author: Hans Dietrich // hdietrich2@hotmail.com // // Modified: David Smith // dave.s@earthcorp.com // Moved two char declarations from body of function so // that it can compile as a C function. // Thanks so much Hans // // This software is released into the public domain. // You are free to use it in any way you like. // // This software is provided "as is" with no expressed // or implied warranty. I accept no liability for any // damage or loss of business that this software may cause. // /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// #include <stdio.h> #include <string.h> #include "XGetopt.h" /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// // // X G e t o p t . c p p // // // NAME // getopt -- parse command line options // // SYNOPSIS // int getopt(int argc, char *argv[], char *optstring) // // extern char *optarg; // extern int optind; // // DESCRIPTION // The getopt() function parses the command line arguments. Its // arguments argc and argv are the argument count and array as // passed into the application on program invocation. In the case // of Visual C++ programs, argc and argv are available via the // variables __argc and __argv (double underscores), respectively. // getopt returns the next option letter in argv that matches a // letter in optstring. // // optstring is a string of recognized option letters; if a letter // is followed by a colon, the option is expected to have an argument // that may or may not be separated from it by white space. optarg // is set to point to the start of the option argument on return from // getopt. // // Option letters may be combined, e.g., "-ab" is equivalent to // "-a -b". Option letters are case sensitive. // // getopt places in the external variable optind the argv index // of the next argument to be processed. optind is initialized // to 0 before the first call to getopt. // // When all options have been processed (i.e., up to the first // non-option argument), getopt returns EOF, optarg will point // to the argument, and optind will be set to the argv index of // the argument. If there are no non-option arguments, optarg // will be set to NULL. // // The special option "--" may be used to delimit the end of the // options; EOF will be returned, and "--" (and everything after it) // will be skipped. // // RETURN VALUE // For option letters contained in the string optstring, getopt // will return the option letter. getopt returns a question mark (?) // when it encounters an option letter not included in optstring. // EOF is returned when processing is finished. // // BUGS // 1) Long options are not supported. // 2) The GNU double-colon extension is not supported. // 3) The environment variable POSIXLY_CORRECT is not supported. // 4) The + syntax is not supported. // 5) The automatic permutation of arguments is not supported. // 6) This implementation of getopt() returns EOF if an error is // encountered, instead of -1 as the latest standard requires. // // EXAMPLE // BOOL CMyApp::ProcessCommandLine(int argc, char *argv[]) // { // int c; // // while ((c = getopt(argc, argv, "aBn:")) != EOF) // { // switch (c) // { // case 'a': // TRACE(_T("option a\n")); // // // // set some flag here // // // break; // // case 'B': // TRACE( _T("option B\n")); // // // // set some other flag here // // // break; // // case 'n': // TRACE(_T("option n: value=%d\n"), atoi(optarg)); // // // // do something with value here // // // break; // // case '?': // TRACE(_T("ERROR: illegal option %s\n"), argv[optind-1]); // return FALSE; // break; // // default: // TRACE(_T("WARNING: no handler for option %c\n"), c); // return FALSE; // break; // } // } // // // // check for non-option args here // // // return TRUE; // } // /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// char *optarg; // global argument pointer int optind = 0; // global argv index int getopt(int argc, char *argv[], char *optstring) { static char *next = NULL; char c, *cp; if (optind == 0) next = NULL; optarg = NULL; if (next == NULL || *next == '\0') { if (optind == 0) optind++; if (optind >= argc || argv[optind][0] != '-' || argv[optind][1] == '\0') { optarg = NULL; if (optind < argc) optarg = argv[optind]; return EOF; } if (strcmp(argv[optind], "--") == 0) { optind++; optarg = NULL; if (optind < argc) optarg = argv[optind]; return EOF; } next = argv[optind]+1; optind++; } c = *next++; cp = strchr(optstring, c); if (cp == NULL || c == ':') return '?'; cp++; if (*cp == ':') { if (*next != '\0') { optarg = next; next = NULL; } else if (optind < argc) { optarg = argv[optind]; optind++; } else { return '?'; } } return c; }