I want to call myscript file in this way:
$ ./myscript -s 45 -p any_string
or
$ ./myscript -h #should display
Use getopt
Why getopt?
To parse elaborated command-line arguments to avoid confusion and clarify the options we are parsing so that reader of the commands can understand what's happening.
What is getopt?
getopt is used to break up (parse) options in command lines for easy parsing by shell procedures, and to check for legal options. It uses the GNU getopt(3) routines to do this.
getopt can have following types of options.
Note: In this document, during explaining syntax:
HOW TO USE getopt?
Syntax: First Form
getopt optstring parameters
Examples:
# This is correct
getopt "hv:t::" "-v 123 -t123"
getopt "hv:t::" "-v123 -t123" # -v and 123 doesn't have whitespace
# -h takes no value.
getopt "hv:t::" "-h -v123"
# This is wrong. after -t can't have whitespace.
# Only optional params cannot have whitespace between key and value
getopt "hv:t::" "-v 123 -t 123"
# Multiple arguments that takes value.
getopt "h:v:t::g::" "-h abc -v 123 -t21"
# Multiple arguments without value
# All of these are correct
getopt "hvt" "-htv"
getopt "hvt" "-h -t -v"
getopt "hvt" "-tv -h"
Here h,v,t are the options and -h -v -t is how options should be given in command-line.
In optional param, value cannot have whitespace separation with the option. So, in "-t123" example, -t is option 123 is value.
Syntax: Second Form
getopt [getopt_options] [--] [optstring] [parameters]
Here after getopt is split into five parts
Examples
getopt -l "name:,version::,verbose" -- "n:v::V" "--name=Karthik -version=5.2 -verbose"
Syntax: Third Form
getopt [getopt_options] [-o options] [--] [optstring] [parameters]
Here after getopt is split into five parts
Examples
getopt -l "name:,version::,verbose" -a -o "n:v::V" -- "-name=Karthik -version=5.2 -verbose"
GETOPT_OPTIONS
getopt_options changes the way command-line params are parsed.
Below are some of the getopt_options
Option: -l or --longoptions
Means getopt command should allow multi-character options to be recognised. Multiple options are separated by comma.
For example, --name=Karthik is a long option sent in command line. In getopt, usage of long options are like
getopt "name:,version" "--name=Karthik"
Since name: is specified, the option should contain a value
Option: -a or --alternative
Means getopt command should allow long option to have a single dash '-' rather than double dash '--'.
Example, instead of --name=Karthik you could use just -name=Karthik
getopt "name:,version" "-name=Karthik"
A complete script example with the code:
#!/bin/bash
# filename: commandLine.sh
# author: @theBuzzyCoder
showHelp() {
# `cat << EOF` This means that cat should stop reading when EOF is detected
cat << EOF
Usage: ./installer -v [-hrV]
Install Pre-requisites for EspoCRM with docker in Development mode
-h, -help, --help Display help
-v, -espo-version, --espo-version Set and Download specific version of EspoCRM
-r, -rebuild, --rebuild Rebuild php vendor directory using composer and compiled css using grunt
-V, -verbose, --verbose Run script in verbose mode. Will print out each step of execution.
EOF
# EOF is found above and hence cat command stops reading. This is equivalent to echo but much neater when printing out.
}
export version=0
export verbose=0
export rebuilt=0
# $@ is all command line parameters passed to the script.
# -o is for short options like -v
# -l is for long options with double dash like --version
# the comma separates different long options
# -a is for long options with single dash like -version
options=$(getopt -l "help,version:,verbose,rebuild,dryrun" -o "hv:Vrd" -a -- "$@")
# set --:
# If no arguments follow this option, then the positional parameters are unset. Otherwise, the positional parameters
# are set to the arguments, even if some of them begin with a ‘-’.
eval set -- "$options"
while true
do
case $1 in
-h|--help)
showHelp
exit 0
;;
-v|--version)
shift
export version=$1
;;
-V|--verbose)
export verbose=1
set -xv # Set xtrace and verbose mode.
;;
-r|--rebuild)
export rebuild=1
;;
--)
shift
break;;
esac
shift
done
Running this script file:
# With short options grouped together and long option
# With double dash '--version'
bash commandLine.sh --version=1.0 -rV
# With short options grouped together and long option
# With single dash '-version'
bash commandLine.sh -version=1.0 -rV
# OR with short option that takes value, value separated by whitespace
# by key
bash commandLine.sh -v 1.0 -rV
# OR with short option that takes value, value without whitespace
# separation from key.
bash commandLine.sh -v1.0 -rV
# OR Separating individual short options
bash commandLine.sh -v1.0 -r -V