A library to parse command line arguments and print the help for Rust application.
This library provides the following functionalities:
- Supports POSIX & GNU like short and long options.
- This library supports
--
option. - This library doesn't support numeric short option.
- This library supports not
-ofoo
but-o=foo
as an alternative to-o foo
for short option.
- This library supports
- Supports parsing with option configurations.
- Supports parsing with option configurations made from struct fields and attributes, and setting the option values to them.
- Supports parsing command line arguments including sub commands.
- Generates help text from option configurations.
In Cargo.toml
, write this crate as a dependency.
[dependencies]
cliargs = "0.6.0"
This crate provides the Cmd
struct to parse command line arguments.
The usage of this Cmd
struct is as follows:
The Cmd::new
function creates a Cmd
instance with original command line arguments.
This function uses std::env::args_os
and OsString#into_string
to read command line arguments in order to avoid panic!
call that the user cannot control.
use cliargs::Cmd;
use cliargs::errors::InvalidOsArg;
let cmd = match Cmd::new() {
Ok(cmd) => cmd,
Err(InvalidOsArg::OsArgsContainInvalidUnicode { index, os_arg }) => {
panic!("Invalid Unicode data: {:?} (index: {})", os_arg, index);
}
};
The Cmd::with_strings
function creates a Cmd
instance with the specified String
array.
use cliargs::Cmd;
use std::env;
let cmd = Cmd::with_strings(env::args());
The Cmd::with_os_strings
function creates a Cmd
instance with the specified OsString
array.
use cliargs::Cmd;
use cliargs::errors::InvalidOsArg;
use std::env;
let cmd = match Cmd::with_os_strings(env::args_os()) {
Ok(cmd) => cmd,
Err(InvalidOsArg::OsArgsContainInvalidUnicode { index, os_arg }) => {
panic!("Invalid Unicode data: {:?} (index: {})", os_arg, index);
}
};
The Cmd
struct has the method which parses command line arguments without configurations.
This method automatically divides command line arguments to command arguments, options, and option arguments.
Command line arguments starts with -
or --
are options, and others are command arguments.
If you want to specify a value to an option, follows "="
and the value after the option, like foo=123
.
All command line arguments after --
are command arguments, even they starts with -
or --
.
use cliargs::Cmd;
use cliargs::errors::InvalidOption;
let mut cmd = Cmd::with_strings(vec![ /* ... */ ]);
match cmd.parse() {
Ok(_) => { /* ... */ },
Err(InvalidOption::OptionContainsInvalidChar { option }) => {
panic!("Option contains invalid character: {option}");
},
Err(err) => panic!("Invalid option: {}", err.option()),
}
The Cmd
struct has the method parse_with
which parses command line arguments with configurations.
This method takes an array of option configurations: OptCfg
, and divides command line arguments to options and command arguments according to this configurations..
An option configuration has fields: store_key
, names
, has_arg
, is_array
, defaults
, desc
, arg_in_help
, and validator
.
store_key
field is specified the key name to store the option value to the option map in the Cmd
instance.
If this field is not specified, the first element of names
field is used instead.
names
field is a string array and specified the option names, that are both long options and short options.
The order of elements in this field is used in a help text.
If you want to prioritize the output of short option name first in the help text, like -f, --foo-bar
, but use the long option name as the key in the option map, write store_key
and names
fields as follows: OptCfg::with([store_key("foo-bar"), names(&["f", "foo-bar"])])
.
has_arg
field indicates the option requires one or more values.
is_array
field indicates the option can have multiple values.
defaults
field is an array of string which is used as default one or more option arguments if the option is not specified.
desc
is a description of the option for help text.
arg_n_help
field is a text which is output after option name and aliases as an option value in help text.
validator
field is to set a function pointer which validates an option argument.
This crate provides the validator cliargs::validators::validate_number<T>
which validates whether an option argument is valid format as a number.
The ownership of the vector of option configurations which is passed as an argument of this method
is moved to this method and set to the public field cfgs
of Cmd
instance.
If you want to access the option configurations after parsing, get them from this field.
In addition,the help printing for an array of OptCfg
is generated with Help
.
use cliargs::{Cmd, OptCfg};
use cliargs::OptCfgParam::{names, has_arg, defaults, validator, desc, arg_in_help};
use cliargs::validators::validate_number;
use cliargs::errors::InvalidOption;
let mut cmd = Cmd::with_strings(vec![ /* ... */ ]);
let opt_cfgs = vec![
OptCfg::with([
names(&["foo-bar"]),
desc("This is description of foo-bar."),
]),
OptCfg::with([
names(&["baz", "z"]),
has_arg(true),
defaults(&["1"]),
desc("This is description of baz."),
arg_in_help("<num>"),
validator(validate_number::<u32>),
]),
];
match cmd.parse_with(opt_cfgs) {
Ok(_) => { /* ... */ },
Err(InvalidOption::OptionContainsInvalidChar { option }) => { /* ... */ },
Err(InvalidOption::UnconfiguredOption { option }) => { /* ... */ },
Err(InvalidOption::OptionNeedsArg { option, .. }) => { /* ... */ },
Err(InvalidOption::OptionTakesNoArg { option, .. }) => { /* ... */ },
Err(InvalidOption::OptionIsNotArray { option, .. }) => { /* ... */ },
Err(InvalidOption::OptionArgIsInvalid { option, opt_arg, details, .. }) => { /* ... */ },
Err(err) => panic!("Invalid option: {}", err.option()),
}
let opt_cfgs = cmd.opt_cfgs();
let mut help = Help::new();
help.add_text("This is the usage description.".to_string());
help.add_opts_with_margins(opt_cfgs, 2, 0);
help.print();
// (stdout)
// This is the usage description.
// --foo-bar, -f This is description of foo-bar.
// --bar, -z <num> This is description of baz.
The Cmd
struct has the method parse_for
which parses command line arguments and set their
option values to the option store which is passed as an argument.
This method divides command line arguments to command arguments and options, then sets each option value to a curresponding field of the option store.
Within this method, a vector of OptCfg
is made from the fields of the option store.
This OptCfg
vector is set to the public field cfgs
of the Cmd
instance.
If you want to access this option configurations, get them from this field.
An option configuration corresponding to each field of an option store is determined by
its type and opt
field attribute.
If the type is bool, the option takes no argument.
If the type is integer, floating point number or string, the option can takes single option
argument, therefore it can appear once in command line arguments.
If the type is a vector, the option can takes multiple option arguments, therefore it can
appear multiple times in command line arguments.
A opt
field attribute can have the following pairs of name and value: one is cfg
to
specify names
and defaults
fields of OptCfg
struct, another is desc
to specify
desc
field, and yet another is arg
to specify arg_in_help
field.
The format of cfg
is like cfg="f,foo=123"
.
The left side of the equal sign is the option name(s), and the right side is the default
value(s).
If there is no equal sign, it is determined that only the option name is specified.
If you want to specify multiple option names, separate them with commas.
If you want to specify multiple default values, separate them with commas and round them
with square brackets, like [1,2,3]
.
If you want to use your favorite carachter as a separator, you can use it by putting it on
the left side of the open square bracket, like /[1/2/3]
.
NOTE: A default value of empty string array option in a field attribute is []
, like
#[opt(cfg="=[]")]
, but it doesn't represent an array which contains only one empty
string.
If you want to specify an array which contains only one emtpy string, write nothing after
=
symbol, like #[opt(cfg="=")]
.
use cliargs::Cmd;
use cliargs::errors::InvalidOption;
#[derive(cliargs::OptStore)]
struct MyOptions {
#[opt(cfg = "f,foo-bar", desc="The description of foo_bar.")]
foo_bar: bool,
#[opt(cfg = "b,baz", desc="The description of baz.", arg="<s>")]
baz: String,
}
let mut my_options = MyOptions::with_defaults();
let mut cmd = Cmd::with_strings(vec![ /* ... */ ]);
match cmd.parse_for(&mut my_options) {
Ok(_) => { /* ... */ },
Err(InvalidOption::OptionContainsInvalidChar { option }) => { /* ... */ },
Err(InvalidOption::UnconfiguredOption { option }) => { /* ... */ },
Err(InvalidOption::OptionNeedsArg { option, .. }) => { /* ... */ },
Err(InvalidOption::OptionTakesNoArg { option, .. }) => { /* ... */ },
Err(InvalidOption::OptionIsNotArray { option, .. }) => { /* ... */ },
Err(InvalidOption::OptionArgIsInvalid { option, opt_arg, details, .. }) => { /* ... */ },
Err(err) => panic!("Invalid option: {}", err.option()),
}
let opt_cfgs = cmd.opt_cfgs();
let mut help = Help::new();
help.add_text("This is the usage description.".to_string());
help.add_opts_with_margins(opt_cfgs, 2, 0);
help.print();
// (stdout)
// This is the usage description.
// -f, --foo-bar This is description of foo_bar.
// -z, --baz <s> This is description of baz.
This crate provides methods Cmd#parse_until_sub_cmd
, Cmd#parse_until_sub_cmd_with
, and Cmd#parse_until_sub_cmd_for
for parsing command line arguments including sub commands.
These methods correspond to Cmd#parse
, Cmd#parse_with
, and Cmd#parse_for
, respectively, and behave the same except that they stop parsing before the first command argument (= sub command) and return a Cmd
instance containing the arguments starting from the the sub command.
The folowing is an example code using Cmd#parse_until_sub_cmd
:
use cliargs::Cmd;
use cliargs::errors::InvalidOption;
let mut cmd = Cmd::with_strings([ /* ... */ ]);
match cmd.parse_until_sub_cmd() {
Ok(Some(mut sub_cmd)) => {
let sub_cmd_name = sub_cmd.name();
match sub_cmd.parse() {
Ok(_) => { /* ... */ },
Err(err) => panic!("Invalid option: {}", err.option()),
}
},
Ok(None) => { /* ... */ },
Err(InvalidOption::OptionContainsInvalidChar { option }) => {
panic!("Option contains invalid character: {option}");
},
Err(err) => panic!("Invalid option: {}", err.option()),
}
This crate supports Rust 1.74.1 or later.
% cargo msrv --no-check-feedback
Fetching index
Determining the Minimum Supported Rust Version (MSRV) for toolchain x86_64-apple-darwin
Using check command cargo check
Finished The MSRV is: 1.74.1 ████████████████████████████████████████████ 00:00:04
Copyright (C) 2024 Takayuki Sato
This program is free software under MIT License.
See the file LICENSE in this distribution for more details.