/* * getopt.c * * Simple POSIX getopt(), no GNU extensions... */ #include #include #include char *optarg; int optind, opterr, optopt; static struct getopt_private_state { const char *optptr; const char *last_optstring; char *const *last_argv; } pvt; int getopt(int argc, char *const *argv, const char *optstring) { const char *carg; const char *osptr; int opt; /* getopt() relies on a number of different global state variables, which can make this really confusing if there is more than one use of getopt() in the same program. This attempts to detect that situation by detecting if the "optstring" or "argv" argument have changed since last time we were called; if so, reinitialize the query state. */ if (optstring != pvt.last_optstring || argv != pvt.last_argv || optind < 1 || optind > argc) { /* optind doesn't match the current query */ pvt.last_optstring = optstring; pvt.last_argv = argv; optind = 1; pvt.optptr = NULL; } carg = argv[optind]; /* First, eliminate all non-option cases */ if (!carg || carg[0] != '-' || !carg[1]) { return -1; } if (carg[1] == '-' && !carg[2]) { optind++; return -1; } if ((uintptr_t) (pvt.optptr - carg) > (uintptr_t) strlen(carg)) { /* Someone frobbed optind, change to new opt. */ pvt.optptr = carg + 1; } opt = *pvt.optptr++; if (opt != ':' && (osptr = strchr(optstring, opt))) { if (osptr[1] == ':') { if (*pvt.optptr) { /* Argument-taking option with attached argument */ optarg = (char *)pvt.optptr; optind++; } else { /* Argument-taking option with non-attached argument */ if (argv[optind + 1]) { optarg = (char *)argv[optind+1]; optind += 2; } else { /* Missing argument */ optind++; return (optstring[0] == ':') ? ':' : '?'; } } return opt; } else { /* Non-argument-taking option */ /* pvt.optptr will remember the exact position to resume at */ if (!*pvt.optptr) optind++; return opt; } } else { /* Unknown option */ optopt = opt; if (!*pvt.optptr) optind++; return '?'; } }