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                                                               getopts(1)



        _________________________________________________________________
        getopts, getoptcvt                                        Command
        parse command options
        _________________________________________________________________


        SYNTAX

        getopts optstring name [arg ...]

        /usr/lib/getoptcvt [-b] file


        DESCRIPTION

        getopts is used by shell procedures to parse positional
        parameters and to check for legal options.  It supports all
        applicable rules of the command syntax standard (see Rules 3-10,
        intro(1)).  It should be used in place of the getopt(1) command.
        (See the WARNING, below.)

        optstring must contain the option letters the command using
        getopts will recognize; if a letter is followed by a colon, the
        option is expected to have an argument, or group of arguments,
        which must be separated from the option letter by white space.

        Each time it is invoked, getopts will place the next option in
        the shell variable name and the index of the next argument to be
        processed in the shell variable OPTIND.  Whenever the shell or a
        shell procedure is invoked, OPTIND is initialized to 1.

        When an option requires an option-argument, getopts places it in
        the shell variable OPTARG.

        If an illegal option is encountered, ? will be placed in name.

        When the end of options is encountered, getopts exits with a
        non-zero exit status.  The special option ``--'' may be used to
        delimit the end of the options in optstring.

        By default, getopts parses the positional parameters.  If extra
        arguments (arg ...) are given on the getopts command line,
        getopts will parse them instead.

        /usr/lib/getoptcvt reads the shell script in file, converts it to
        use getopts(1) instead of getopt(1), and writes the results on
        the standard output.

        -b   the results obtained by running /usr/lib/getoptcvt will be
             portable to earlier releases of the DG/UX system.
             /usr/lib/getoptcvt modifies the shell script in file so that



        DG/UX 4.00                                                 Page 1
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                                                               getopts(1)



             when the resulting shell script is executed, it determines
             at run time whether to invoke getopts(1) or getopt(1).

        So all new commands will adhere to the command syntax standard
        described in intro(1), they should use getopts(1) or getopt(3C)
        to parse positional parameters and check for options that are
        legal for that command (see WARNINGS, below).


        EXAMPLE

        The following fragment of a shell program shows how one might
        process the arguments for a command that can take the options a
        or b, as well as the option o, which requires an option-argument:

             while getopts abo: c
             do
                  case $c in
                  a | b)    FLAG=$c;;
                  o)        OARG=$OPTARG;;
                  \?)       echo $USAGE
                            exit 2;;
                  esac
             done
             shift "expr $OPTIND - 1"

        This code will accept any of the following as equivalent:

             cmd -a -b -o "xxx z yy" file
             cmd -a -b -o "xxx z yy" -- file
             cmd -ab -o xxx,z,yy file
             cmd -ab -o "xxx z yy" file
             cmd -o xxx,z,yy -b -a file


        SEE ALSO

        intro(1), sh(1).
        getopt(3C) in the Programmer's Reference for the DG/UX System.


        WARNING

        Although the following command syntax rule (see intro(1))
        exceptions are permitted under the current implementation, they
        should not be used because they may not be supported in future
        releases of the operating system.  As in the EXAMPLE section
        above, a and b are options, and the option o requires an option-
        argument:

             cmd -aboxxx file  (Rule 5 violation:  options with



        DG/UX 4.00                                                 Page 2
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                                                               getopts(1)



                   option-arguments must not be grouped with other options)
             cmd -ab -oxxx file  (Rule 6 violation:  there must be
                   white space after an option that takes an option-argument)

        Changing the value of the shell variable OPTIND or parsing
        different sets of arguments may lead to unexpected results.


        DIAGNOSTICS

        getopts prints an error message on the standard error when it
        encounters an option letter not included in optstring.










































        DG/UX 4.00                                                 Page 3
               Licensed material--property of copyright holder(s)



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