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A couple of functions declared in ‘cmdline.h’ can be used to do all the necessary parsing of command lines and environment variables needed by virtual code applications.
The purpose of this function is to build most of the data structure used by parameter mode applications, as described in Input Data Structure, by parsing the command line according to Command Line Syntax. The parameters have these interpretations.
argcis the number elements in the array referenced by argv
argvis the address of an array of pointers to null terminated character strings holding command line arguments
indexis the position of the first element of argv to be
considered. Those preceding it are ignored.
extensionis the address of a string that will be appended to input file names
given in argv in an effort to find the associated files
pathsis the address of a null terminated character string containing a colon separated list of directory names that will be searched for input files
default_to_stdin_modeis set to a non-zero value by the caller if the contents of standard input should be read in the absence of input files
force_text_input_modeis set to a non-zero value by the caller to indicate that input files
should be read as text, using avm_load (rather than
avm_preamble_and_contents, which would allow them to be either
text or data). The preamble field of the returned file
specifications will always be empty when this flag is set.
file_ordinalis set to a pointer to an integer by the caller if only one file is to be loaded during each call. The value of the integer indicates the which one it will be.
The result returned by this function is a list whose head is a list
of file specifications and whose tail is a list of command line options
intended for input to a virtual code application.
The list of file specifications returned in the head of the
result follows the same conventions as the data parameter
to the function avm_output_as_directed, except that the
head of the head of each item is a list representing the
time stamp of the file as given by avm_date_representation. If
the file is standard input, then it holds the current system date and
time.
If the file_ordinal parameter is NULL, then all
files on the command line are loaded, but if it points to an integer
n, then only the nth file is loaded, and n is
incremented. If there is no nth file, a NULL value is
returned as the entire result of the function. For a series of calls,
the integer should be initialized to zero by the caller before the first
call.
If standard input is indicated as one of the files on the command line
(by a dash), then it is also loaded regardless of the
file_ordinal, but a cached copy of it is used on subsequent
calls after the first, so that the function does not actually attempt to
reread it. If standard input is to be loaded, it must be finite for this
function to work properly.
The search strategy for files is described in Environment, and
makes use of the extension and paths parameters.
In the list of command line options returned in the tail of the
result, each item is a list with a non-empty head and
tail, and is interpreted as follows.
head of the head is a list representing a
natural number, as given by avm_natural, indicating the position
of the option on the command line relative to the initial value of the
index parameter.
tail of the head is a list which is NULL
in the case of a “short form” option, written with a single
dash on the command line, but is a list whose head and
tail are NULL in the case of a “long form” option,
written with two dashes.
head of the tail is a list representing a
character string for the keyword of an option, for example foo in
the case of an option written --foo=bar,baz.
tail of the tail is a list of lists representing
character strings, with one item for each parameter associated with the
option, for example, bar and baz.
If multiple calls to the function are made with differing values of
*file_ordinal but other parameters unchanged, the same list of
options will be returned each time, except insofar as the position
numbers in the head of the head of each item are adjusted
as explained in Input for Mapped Applications.
Any of the i/o errors or fatal errors associated with other file input operations are possible with this function as well. This non-fatal warning message is also possible.
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This error occurs if the library has been built on a platform that
doesn’t have the ‘argz.h’ header file and the paths
parameter is non-NULL.
This function takes the address of a null terminated array of pointers
to null terminated character strings of the form
"variable=value". The result returned is a list of lists, with
one item for each element of the array. The head of each item is
a representation of the left side of the corresponding string, and the
tail is a representation of the right.
This function is therefore useful along with
avm_default_command_line for building the remainder of the data
structure described in Parameter Mode Interface. For example, a
virtual machine emulator for non-interactive parameter mode applications
with no bells and whistles could have the following form.
int
main(argc,argv,env)
…
{
FILE *virtual_code_file;
…
avm_initialize_lists();
avm_initialize_apply();
avm_initialize_rawio();
avm_initialize_formout();
avm_initialize_cmdline();
virtual_code_file = fopen(argv[1],"rb");
operator = avm_received_list(
virtual_code_file,argv[1]);
fclose(virtual_code_file);
command = avm_default_command_line(argc,
argv,2,NULL,NULL,0,0,NULL);
environs = avm_environment(env);
operand = avm_join(command,environs);
result = avm_apply(operator,operand);
avm_output_as_directed(result,0,0);
avm_dispose(result);
…
}
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The avm_environment function could cause the program to abort due
to a memory overflow. For security reasons, it will also abort with an
error message if any non-printing characters are detected in its
argument. (See Other Diagnostics and Warnings.)
This function initializes some local variables and should be called before any of the other functions in this section is called, or else their results are unpredictable.
This function should be called after the last call to any of the other
functions in this section, as it reclaims some locally allocated
storage. If the avm_count_lists function is used, it should be
called after this one.
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