#ifndef NOTMUCH_OPTS_H #define NOTMUCH_OPTS_H #include "notmuch.h" enum notmuch_opt_type { NOTMUCH_OPT_END = 0, NOTMUCH_OPT_BOOLEAN, /* --verbose */ NOTMUCH_OPT_INT, /* --frob=8 */ NOTMUCH_OPT_KEYWORD, /* --format=raw|json|text */ NOTMUCH_OPT_STRING, /* --file=/tmp/gnarf.txt */ NOTMUCH_OPT_POSITION /* notmuch dump pos_arg */ }; /* * Describe one of the possibilities for a keyword option * 'value' will be copied to the output variable */ typedef struct notmuch_keyword { const char *name; int value; } notmuch_keyword_t; /* * Describe one option. * * First two parameters are mandatory. * * name is mandatory _except_ for positional arguments. * * arg_id is currently unused, but could define short arguments. * * keywords is a (possibly NULL) pointer to an array of keywords */ typedef struct notmuch_opt_desc { enum notmuch_opt_type opt_type; void *output_var; const char *name; int arg_id; const struct notmuch_keyword *keywords; } notmuch_opt_desc_t; /* This is the main entry point for command line argument parsing. Parse command line arguments according to structure options, starting at position opt_index. All output of parsed values is via pointers in options. Parsing stops at -- (consumed) or at the (k+1)st argument not starting with -- (a "positional argument") if options contains k positional argument descriptors. Returns the index of first non-parsed argument, or -1 in case of error. */ int parse_arguments (int argc, char **argv, const notmuch_opt_desc_t *options, int opt_index); /* * If the argument parsing loop provided by parse_arguments is not * flexible enough, then the user might be interested in the following * routines, but note that the API to parse_option might have to * change. See command-line-arguments.c for descriptions of these * functions. */ notmuch_bool_t parse_option (const char *arg, const notmuch_opt_desc_t* options); notmuch_bool_t parse_position_arg (const char *arg, int position_arg_index, const notmuch_opt_desc_t* options); #endif