#!/usr/local/bin/gawk -f # @(#) fixdate.gawk 1.0 93/09/26 # 93/09/26 john h. dubois iii (john@armory.com) # # Use gawk for strftime(), /dev/stderr, and because it recognizes changes # to ARGV/ARGC BEGIN { Usage = \ "Usage: fixdate [-chiIuz] [-d datesep] [-r recsep]\n"\ " [-t fieldsep] [-y year] field-num [file ...]" ARGC = Opts("fixdate",Usage,"chiIuzd:r:t:y:",1) if ("h" in Options) { print \ "fixdate: convert date fields from month & day only to fully specified form.\n"\ Usage "\n"\ "The specified field of each record is parsed as a date and rewritten to\n"\ "include leading zeros in each field, and to include a year if none given.\n"\ "Date components must be numeric.\n"\ "The modified records are written to the standard output.\n"\ "-c: Include the century in the year. The default is to use two digits.\n"\ " A century part is also added to dates that include a year but not a\n"\ " century. If -y is given, its century part will be used for the\n"\ " expansion; if not, the current century is used.\n"\ "-d: Set the date component separator. The default is forward slash (/).\n"\ "-i: If the specified field does not look like it was intended as a date,\n"\ " the record is printed without modification. The default is to print\n"\ " an error message and discard the record.\n"\ "-I: Like -i, except fields that look like dates are also printed unmodified\n"\ " if there is a problem with them. An warning message is still printed.\n"\ "-r: Set the record separator. The default is newline.\n"\ "-t: Set the field separator. The default is tab. The separator can be a\n"\ " string, but may not contain any regular expression metacharacters.\n"\ "-u: Use US date format (month/day/year). The default is to use sorting\n"\ " format (year/month/date).\n"\ "-y: Set the year added to dates. The default is to use the current year.\n"\ "-z: Add leading zeros only; dates that do not contain a year are in error." exit(0) } if ("u" in Options) YearField = 3 else YearField = 1 ZeroOnly = "z" in Options Century = "c" in Options IgnoreErr = "i" in Options || "I" in Options IgnoreBadDate = "I" in Options if ("d" in Options) DateSep = Options["d"] else DateSep = "/" if ("t" in Options) FS = OFS = Options["t"] else FS = OFS = "\t" if ("r" in Options) RS = ORS = Options["r"] if ("y" in Options) { ExpYear = Options["y"] if ((ExpYear+0) < 100) ExpYear += int(strftime("%Y")/100) * 100 } else ExpYear = strftime("%Y") if (Century) { ExpCentury = int(ExpYear / 100) * 100 YearDig = 4 } else { ExpYear %= 100 YearDig = 2 } DateField = ARGV[1] delete ARGV[1] } { if (NF < DateField) { if (IgnoreErr) print $0 else FileErr("Not enough fields in record") next } if ((GoodDate = MakeGoodDate($DateField,DateSep)) ~ /^.$/) { if (IgnoreErr && GoodDate == 1) print $0 else { FileErr(ERRNAME) if (IgnoreBadDate) print $0 print "Record printed unmodifed." > "/dev/stderr" } next } $DateField = GoodDate print $0 } # Returns 1 if no date separators found in field. # Returns 2 if bad values found in date fields. # Otherwise returns fixed up InDate. function MakeGoodDate(InDate,DateSep, DateElem,NumElem,Month,Day,Year) { if (InDate ~ /^[ \t]*$/) { ERRNAME = "Empty date field" return 1 } if ((NumElem = split(InDate,DateElem,DateSep)) < 2) { ERRNAME = "Need at least two fields in date" return 1 } if (NumElem > 3) { ERRNAME = "Too many fields in date" return 2 } if (ZeroOnly && NumElem < 3) { ERRNAME = "No year given in date." return 2 } for (i = 1; i <= NumElem; i++) if (DateElem[i] !~ /^[0-9]+$/ || DateElem[i] + 0 < 1) { ERRNAME = "Bad field in date" return 2 } if (NumElem == 2 || YearField == 3) { Month = DateElem[1] Day = DateElem[2] } else { Month = DateElem[2] Day = DateElem[3] } if (NumElem == 3) Year = DateElem[YearField] else Year = ExpYear if (Year < 100 && Century) Year += ExpCentury # * in format doesn't work if (YearField == 3) return \ sprintf("%02d%s%02d%s%" YearDig "d",Month,DateSep,Day,DateSep,Year) else return \ sprintf("%" YearDig "d%s%02d%s%02d",Year,DateSep,Month,DateSep,Day) } ### Start of ProcArgs library # @(#) ProcArgs 1.11 96/12/08 # 92/02/29 john h. dubois iii (john@armory.com) # 93/07/18 Added "#" arg type # 93/09/26 Do not count -h against MinArgs # 94/01/01 Stop scanning at first non-option arg. Added ">" option type. # Removed meaning of "+" or "-" by itself. # 94/03/08 Added & option and *()< option types. # 94/04/02 Added NoRCopt to Opts() # 94/06/11 Mark numeric variables as such. # 94/07/08 Opts(): Do not require any args if h option is given. # 95/01/22 Record options given more than once. Record option num in argv. # 95/06/08 Added ExclusiveOptions(). # 96/01/20 Let rcfiles be a colon-separated list of filenames. # Expand $VARNAME at the start of its filenames. # Let varname=0 and -option- turn off an option. # 96/05/05 Changed meaning of 7th arg to Opts; now can specify exactly how many # of the vars should be searched for in the environment. # Check for duplicate rcfiles. # 96/05/13 Return more specific error values. Note: ProcArgs() and InitOpts() # now return various negatives values on error, not just -1, and # Opts() may set Err to various positive values, not just 1. # Added AllowUnrecOpt. # 96/05/23 Check type given for & option # 96/06/15 Re-port to awk # 96/10/01 Moved file-reading code into ReadConfFile(), so that it can be # used by other functions. # 96/10/15 Added OptChars # 96/11/01 Added exOpts arg to Opts() # 96/11/16 Added ; type # 96/12/08 Added Opt2Set() & Opt2Sets() # 96/12/27 Added CmdLineOpt() # optlist is a string which contains all of the possible command line options. # A character followed by certain characters indicates that the option takes # an argument, with type as follows: # : String argument # ; Non-empty string argument # * Floating point argument # ( Non-negative floating point argument # ) Positive floating point argument # # Integer argument # < Non-negative integer argument # > Positive integer argument # The only difference the type of argument makes is in the runtime argument # error checking that is done. # The & option is a special case used to get numeric options without the # user having to give an option character. It is shorthand for [-+.0-9]. # If & is included in optlist and an option string that begins with one of # these characters is seen, the value given to "&" will include the first # char of the option. & must be followed by a type character other than ":" # or ";". # Note that if e.g. &> is given, an option of -.5 will produce an error. # Strings in argv[] which begin with "-" or "+" are taken to be # strings of options, except that a string which consists solely of "-" # or "+" is taken to be a non-option string; like other non-option strings, # it stops the scanning of argv and is left in argv[]. # An argument of "--" or "++" also stops the scanning of argv[] but is removed. # If an option takes an argument, the argument may either immediately # follow it or be given separately. # "-" and "+" options are treated the same. "+" is allowed because most awks # take any -options to be arguments to themselves. gawk 2.15 was enhanced to # stop scanning when it encounters an unrecognized option, though until 2.15.5 # this feature had a flaw that caused problems in some cases. See the OptChars # parameter to explicitly set the option-specifier characters. # If an option that does not take an argument is given, # an index with its name is created in Options and its value is set to the # number of times it occurs in argv[]. # If an option that does take an argument is given, an index with its name is # created in Options and its value is set to the value of the argument given # for it, and Options[option-name,"count"] is (initially) set to the 1. # If an option that takes an argument is given more than once, # Options[option-name,"count"] is incremented, and the value is assigned to # the index (option-name,instance) where instance is 2 for the second occurance # of the option, etc. # In other words, the first time an option with a value is encountered, the # value is assigned to an index consisting only of its name; for any further # occurances of the option, the value index has an extra (count) dimension. # The sequence number for each option found in argv[] is stored in # Options[option-name,"num",instance], where instance is 1 for the first # occurance of the option, etc. The sequence number starts at 1 and is # incremented for each option, both those that have a value and those that # do not. Options set from a config file have a value of 0 assigned to this. # Options and their arguments are deleted from argv. # Note that this means that there may be gaps left in the indices of argv[]. # If compress is nonzero, argv[] is packed by moving its elements so that # they have contiguous integer indices starting with 0. # Option processing will stop with the first unrecognized option, just as # though -- was given except that unlike -- the unrecognized option will not be # removed from ARGV[]. Normally, an error value is returned in this case. # If AllowUnrecOpt is true, it is not an error for an unrecognized option to # be found, so the number of remaining arguments is returned instead. # If OptChars is not a null string, it is the set of characters that indicate # that an argument is an option string if the string begins with one of the # characters. A string consisting solely of two of the same option-indicator # characters stops the scanning of argv[]. The default is "-+". # argv[0] is not examined. # The number of arguments left in argc is returned. # If an error occurs, the global string OptErr is set to an error message # and a negative value is returned. # Current error values: # -1: option that required an argument did not get it. # -2: argument of incorrect type supplied for an option. # -3: unrecognized (invalid) option. function ProcArgs(argc,argv,OptList,Options,compress,AllowUnrecOpt,OptChars, ArgNum,ArgsLeft,Arg,ArgLen,ArgInd,Option,Pos,NumOpt,Value,HadValue,specGiven, NeedNextOpt,GotValue,OptionNum,Escape,dest,src,count,c,OptTerm,OptCharSet) { # ArgNum is the index of the argument being processed. # ArgsLeft is the number of arguments left in argv. # Arg is the argument being processed. # ArgLen is the length of the argument being processed. # ArgInd is the position of the character in Arg being processed. # Option is the character in Arg being processed. # Pos is the position in OptList of the option being processed. # NumOpt is true if a numeric option may be given. ArgsLeft = argc NumOpt = index(OptList,"&") OptionNum = 0 if (OptChars == "") OptChars = "-+" while (OptChars != "") { c = substr(OptChars,1,1) OptChars = substr(OptChars,2) OptCharSet[c] OptTerm[c c] } for (ArgNum = 1; ArgNum < argc; ArgNum++) { Arg = argv[ArgNum] if (length(Arg) < 2 || !((specGiven = substr(Arg,1,1)) in OptCharSet)) break # Not an option; quit if (Arg in OptTerm) { delete argv[ArgNum] ArgsLeft-- break } ArgLen = length(Arg) for (ArgInd = 2; ArgInd <= ArgLen; ArgInd++) { Option = substr(Arg,ArgInd,1) if (NumOpt && Option ~ /[-+.0-9]/) { # If this option is a numeric option, make its flag be & and # its option string flag position be the position of & in # the option string. Option = "&" Pos = NumOpt # Prefix Arg with a char so that ArgInd will point to the # first char of the numeric option. Arg = "&" Arg ArgLen++ } # Find position of flag in option string, to get its type (if any). # Disallow & as literal flag. else if (!(Pos = index(OptList,Option)) || Option == "&") { if (AllowUnrecOpt) { Escape = 1 break } else { OptErr = "Invalid option: " specGiven Option return -3 } } # Find what the value of the option will be if it takes one. # NeedNextOpt is true if the option specifier is the last char of # this arg, which means that if the option requires a value it is # the next arg. if (NeedNextOpt = (ArgInd >= ArgLen)) { # Value is the next arg if (GotValue = ArgNum + 1 < argc) Value = argv[ArgNum+1] } else { # Value is included with option Value = substr(Arg,ArgInd + 1) GotValue = 1 } if (HadValue = AssignVal(Option,Value,Options, substr(OptList,Pos + 1,1),GotValue,"",++OptionNum,!NeedNextOpt, specGiven)) { if (HadValue < 0) # error occured return HadValue if (HadValue == 2) ArgInd++ # Account for the single-char value we used. else { if (NeedNextOpt) { # option took next arg as value delete argv[++ArgNum] ArgsLeft-- } break # This option has been used up } } } if (Escape) break # Do not delete arg until after processing of it, so that if it is not # recognized it can be left in ARGV[]. delete argv[ArgNum] ArgsLeft-- } if (compress != 0) { dest = 1 src = argc - ArgsLeft + 1 for (count = ArgsLeft - 1; count; count--) { ARGV[dest] = ARGV[src] dest++ src++ } } return ArgsLeft } # Assignment to values in Options[] occurs only in this function. # Option: Option specifier character. # Value: Value to be assigned to option, if it takes a value. # Options[]: Options array to return values in. # ArgType: Argument type specifier character. # GotValue: Whether any value is available to be assigned to this option. # Name: Name of option being processed. # OptionNum: Number of this option (starting with 1) if set in argv[], # or 0 if it was given in a config file or in the environment. # SingleOpt: true if the value (if any) that is available for this option was # given as part of the same command line arg as the option. Used only for # options from the command line. # specGiven is the option specifier character use, if any (e.g. - or +), # for use in error messages. # Global variables: OptErr # Return value: negative value on error, 0 if option did not require an # argument, 1 if it did & used the whole arg, 2 if it required just one char of # the arg. # Current error values: # -1: Option that required an argument did not get it. # -2: Value of incorrect type supplied for option. # -3: Bad type given for option & function AssignVal(Option,Value,Options,ArgType,GotValue,Name,OptionNum, SingleOpt,specGiven, UsedValue,Err,NumTypes) { # If option takes a value... [ NumTypes = "*()#<>]" if (Option == "&" && ArgType !~ "[" NumTypes) { # ] OptErr = "Bad type given for & option" return -3 } if (UsedValue = (ArgType ~ "[:;" NumTypes)) { # ] if (!GotValue) { if (Name != "") OptErr = "Variable requires a value -- " Name else OptErr = "option requires an argument -- " Option return -1 } if ((Err = CheckType(ArgType,Value,Option,Name,specGiven)) != "") { OptErr = Err return -2 } # Mark this as a numeric variable; will be propogated to Options[] val. if (ArgType != ":" && ArgType != ";") Value += 0 if ((Instance = ++Options[Option,"count"]) > 1) Options[Option,Instance] = Value else Options[Option] = Value } # If this is an environ or rcfile assignment & it was given a value... else if (!OptionNum && Value != "") { UsedValue = 1 # If the value is "0" or "-" and this is the first instance of it, # do not set Options[Option]; this allows an assignment in an rcfile to # turn off an option (for the simple "Option in Options" test) in such # a way that it cannot be turned on in a later file. if (!(Option in Options) && (Value == "0" || Value == "-")) Instance = 1 else Instance = ++Options[Option] # Save the value even though this is a flag Options[Option,Instance] = Value } # If this is a command line flag and has a - following it in the same arg, # it is being turned off. else if (OptionNum && SingleOpt && substr(Value,1,1) == "-") { UsedValue = 2 if (Option in Options) Instance = ++Options[Option] else Instance = 1 Options[Option,Instance] } # If this is a flag assignment without a value, increment the count for the # flag unless it was turned off. The indicator for a flag being turned off # is that the flag index has not been set in Options[] but it has an # instance count. else if (Option in Options || !((Option,1) in Options)) # Increment number of times this flag seen; will inc null value to 1 Instance = ++Options[Option] Options[Option,"num",Instance] = OptionNum return UsedValue } # Option is the option letter # Value is the value being assigned # Name is the var name of the option, if any # ArgType is one of: # : String argument # ; Non-null string argument # * Floating point argument # ( Non-negative floating point argument # ) Positive floating point argument # # Integer argument # < Non-negative integer argument # > Positive integer argument # specGiven is the option specifier character use, if any (e.g. - or +), # for use in error messages. # Returns null on success, err string on error function CheckType(ArgType,Value,Option,Name,specGiven, Err,ErrStr) { if (ArgType == ":") return "" if (ArgType == ";") { if (Value == "") Err = "must be a non-empty string" } # A number begins with optional + or -, and is followed by a string of # digits or a decimal with digits before it, after it, or both else if (Value !~ /^[-+]?([0-9]+|[0-9]*\.[0-9]+|[0-9]+\.)$/) Err = "must be a number" else if (ArgType ~ "[#<>]" && Value ~ /\./) Err = "may not include a fraction" else if (ArgType ~ "[()<>]" && Value < 0) Err = "may not be negative" # ( else if (ArgType ~ "[)>]" && Value == 0) Err = "must be a positive number" if (Err != "") { ErrStr = "Bad value \"" Value "\". Value assigned to " if (Name != "") return ErrStr "variable " substr(Name,1,1) " " Err else { if (Option == "&") Option = Value return ErrStr "option " specGiven substr(Option,1,1) " " Err } } else return "" } # Note: only the above functions are needed by ProcArgs. # The rest of these functions call ProcArgs() and also do other # option-processing stuff. # Opts: Process command line arguments. # Opts processes command line arguments using ProcArgs() # and checks for errors. If an error occurs, a message is printed # and the program is exited. # # Input variables: # Name is the name of the program, for error messages. # Usage is a usage message, for error messages. # OptList the option description string, as used by ProcArgs(). # MinArgs is the minimum number of non-option arguments that this # program should have, non including ARGV[0] and +h. # If the program does not require any non-option arguments, # MinArgs should be omitted or given as 0. # rcFiles, if given, is a colon-seprated list of filenames to read for # variable initialization. If a filename begins with ~/, the ~ is replaced # by the value of the environment variable HOME. If a filename begins with # $, the part from the character after the $ up until (but not including) # the first character not in [a-zA-Z0-9_] will be searched for in the # environment; if found its value will be substituted, if not the filename will # be discarded. # rcfiles are read in the order given. # Values given in them will not override values given on the command line, # and values given in later files will not override those set in earlier # files, because AssignVal() will store each with a different instance index. # The first instance of each variable, either on the command line or in an # rcfile, will be stored with no instance index, and this is the value # normally used by programs that call this function. # VarNames is a comma-separated list of variable names to map to options, # in the same order as the options are given in OptList. # If EnvSearch is given and nonzero, the first EnvSearch variables will also be # searched for in the environment. If set to -1, all values will be searched # for in the environment. Values given in the environment will override # those given in the rcfiles but not those given on the command line. # NoRCopt, if given, is an additional letter option that if given on the # command line prevents the rcfiles from being read. # See ProcArgs() for a description of AllowUnRecOpt and optChars, and # ExclusiveOptions() for a description of exOpts. # Special options: # If x is made an option and is given, some debugging info is output. # h is assumed to be the help option. # Global variables: # The command line arguments are taken from ARGV[]. # The arguments that are option specifiers and values are removed from # ARGV[], leaving only ARGV[0] and the non-option arguments. # The number of elements in ARGV[] should be in ARGC. # After processing, ARGC is set to the number of elements left in ARGV[]. # The option values are put in Options[]. # On error, Err is set to a positive integer value so it can be checked for in # an END block. # Return value: The number of elements left in ARGV is returned. # Must keep OptErr global since it may be set by InitOpts(). function Opts(Name,Usage,OptList,MinArgs,rcFiles,VarNames,EnvSearch,NoRCopt, AllowUnrecOpt,optChars,exOpts, ArgsLeft,e) { if (MinArgs == "") MinArgs = 0 ArgsLeft = ProcArgs(ARGC,ARGV,OptList NoRCopt,Options,1,AllowUnrecOpt, optChars) if (ArgsLeft < (MinArgs+1) && !("h" in Options)) { if (ArgsLeft >= 0) { OptErr = "Not enough arguments" Err = 4 } else Err = -ArgsLeft printf "%s: %s.\nUse -h for help.\n%s\n", Name,OptErr,Usage > "/dev/stderr" exit 1 } if (rcFiles != "" && (NoRCopt == "" || !(NoRCopt in Options)) && (e = InitOpts(rcFiles,Options,OptList,VarNames,EnvSearch)) < 0) { print Name ": " OptErr ".\nUse -h for help." > "/dev/stderr" Err = -e exit 1 } if ((exOpts != "") && ((OptErr = ExclusiveOptions(exOpts,Options)) != "")) { printf "%s: Error: %s\n",Name,OptErr > "/dev/stderr" Err = 1 exit 1 } return ArgsLeft } # ReadConfFile(): Read a file containing var/value assignments, in the form # . # Whitespace (spaces and tabs) around a variable (leading whitespace on the # line and whitespace between the variable name and the assignment character) # is stripped. Lines that do not contain an assignment operator or which # contain a null variable name are ignored, other than possibly being noted in # the return value. If more than one assignment is made to a variable, the # first assignment is used. # Input variables: # File is the file to read. # Comment is the line-comment character. If it is found as the first non- # whitespace character on a line, the line is ignored. # Assign is the assignment string. The first instance of Assign on a line # separates the variable name from its value. # If StripWhite is true, whitespace around the value (whitespace between the # assignment char and trailing whitespace on the line) is stripped. # VarPat is a pattern that variable names must match. # Example: "^[a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9]+$" # If FlagsOK is true, variables are allowed to be "set" by being put alone on # a line; no assignment operator is needed. These variables are set in # the output array with a null value. Lines containing nothing but # whitespace are still ignored. # Output variables: # Values[] contains the assignments, with the indexes being the variable names # and the values being the assigned values. # Lines[] contains the line number that each variable occured on. A flag set # is record by giving it an index in Lines[] but not in Values[]. # Return value: # If any errors occur, a string consisting of descriptions of the errors # separated by newlines is returned. In no case will the string start with a # numeric value. If no errors occur, the number of lines read is returned. function ReadConfigFile(Values,Lines,File,Comment,Assign,StripWhite,VarPat, FlagsOK, Line,Status,Errs,AssignLen,LineNum,Var,Val) { if (Comment != "") Comment = "^" Comment AssignLen = length(Assign) if (VarPat == "") VarPat = "." # null varname not allowed while ((Status = (getline Line < File)) == 1) { LineNum++ sub("^[ \t]+","",Line) if (Line == "") # blank line continue if (Comment != "" && Line ~ Comment) continue if (Pos = index(Line,Assign)) { Var = substr(Line,1,Pos-1) Val = substr(Line,Pos+AssignLen) if (StripWhite) { sub("^[ \t]+","",Val) sub("[ \t]+$","",Val) } } else { Var = Line # If no value, var is entire line Val = "" } if (!FlagsOK && Val == "") { Errs = Errs \ sprintf("\nBad assignment on line %d of file %s: %s", LineNum,File,Line) continue } sub("[ \t]+$","",Var) if (Var !~ VarPat) { Errs = Errs sprintf("\nBad variable name on line %d of file %s: %s", LineNum,File,Var) continue } if (!(Var in Lines)) { Lines[Var] = LineNum if (Pos) Values[Var] = Val } } if (Status) Errs = Errs "\nCould not read file " File close(File) return Errs == "" ? LineNum : substr(Errs,2) # Skip first newline } # Variables: # Data is stored in Options[]. # rcFiles, OptList, VarNames, and EnvSearch are as as described for Opts(). # Global vars: # Sets OptErr. Uses ENVIRON[]. # If anything is read from any of the rcfiles, sets READ_RCFILE to 1. function InitOpts(rcFiles,Options,OptList,VarNames,EnvSearch, Line,Var,Pos,Vars,Map,CharOpt,NumVars,TypesInd,Types,Type,Ret,i,rcFile, fNames,numrcFiles,filesRead,Err,Values,retStr) { split("",filesRead,"") # make awk know this is an array NumVars = split(VarNames,Vars,",") TypesInd = Ret = 0 if (EnvSearch == -1) EnvSearch = NumVars for (i = 1; i <= NumVars; i++) { Var = Vars[i] CharOpt = substr(OptList,++TypesInd,1) if (CharOpt ~ "^[:;*()#<>&]$") CharOpt = substr(OptList,++TypesInd,1) Map[Var] = CharOpt Types[Var] = Type = substr(OptList,TypesInd+1,1) # Do not overwrite entries from environment if (i <= EnvSearch && Var in ENVIRON && (Err = AssignVal(CharOpt,ENVIRON[Var],Options,Type,1,Var,0)) < 0) return Err } numrcFiles = split(rcFiles,fNames,":") for (i = 1; i <= numrcFiles; i++) { rcFile = fNames[i] if (rcFile ~ "^~/") rcFile = ENVIRON["HOME"] substr(rcFile,2) else if (rcFile ~ /^\$/) { rcFile = substr(rcFile,2) match(rcFile,"^[a-zA-Z0-9_]*") envvar = substr(rcFile,1,RLENGTH) if (envvar in ENVIRON) rcFile = ENVIRON[envvar] substr(rcFile,RLENGTH+1) else continue } if (rcFile in filesRead) continue # rcfiles are liable to be given more than once, e.g. UHOME and HOME # may be the same filesRead[rcFile] if ("x" in Options) printf "Reading configuration file %s\n",rcFile > "/dev/stderr" retStr = ReadConfigFile(Values,Lines,rcFile,"#","=",0,"",1) if (retStr > 0) READ_RCFILE = 1 else if (ret != "") { OptErr = retStr Ret = -1 } for (Var in Lines) if (Var in Map) { if ((Err = AssignVal(Map[Var], Var in Values ? Values[Var] : "",Options,Types[Var], Var in Values,Var,0)) < 0) return Err } else { OptErr = sprintf(\ "Unknown var \"%s\" assigned to on line %d\nof file %s",Var, Lines[Var],rcFile) Ret = -1 } } if ("x" in Options) for (Var in Map) if (Map[Var] in Options) printf "(%s) %s=%s\n",Map[Var],Var,Options[Map[Var]] > \ "/dev/stderr" else printf "(%s) %s not set\n",Map[Var],Var > "/dev/stderr" return Ret } # OptSets is a semicolon-separated list of sets of option sets. # Within a list of option sets, the option sets are separated by commas. For # each set of sets, if any option in one of the sets is in Options[] AND any # option in one of the other sets is in Options[], an error string is returned. # If no conflicts are found, nothing is returned. # Example: if OptSets = "ab,def,g;i,j", an error will be returned due to # the exclusions presented by the first set of sets (ab,def,g) if: # (a or b is in Options[]) AND (d, e, or f is in Options[]) OR # (a or b is in Options[]) AND (g is in Options) OR # (d, e, or f is in Options[]) AND (g is in Options) # An error will be returned due to the exclusions presented by the second set # of sets (i,j) if: (i is in Options[]) AND (j is in Options[]). # todo: make options given on command line unset options given in config file # todo: that they conflict with. function ExclusiveOptions(OptSets,Options, Sets,SetSet,NumSets,Pos1,Pos2,Len,s1,s2,c1,c2,ErrStr,L1,L2,SetSets,NumSetSets, SetNum,OSetNum) { NumSetSets = split(OptSets,SetSets,";") # For each set of sets... for (SetSet = 1; SetSet <= NumSetSets; SetSet++) { # NumSets is the number of sets in this set of sets. NumSets = split(SetSets[SetSet],Sets,",") # For each set in a set of sets except the last... for (SetNum = 1; SetNum < NumSets; SetNum++) { s1 = Sets[SetNum] L1 = length(s1) for (Pos1 = 1; Pos1 <= L1; Pos1++) # If any of the options in this set was given, check whether # any of the options in the other sets was given. Only check # later sets since earlier sets will have already been checked # against this set. if ((c1 = substr(s1,Pos1,1)) in Options) for (OSetNum = SetNum+1; OSetNum <= NumSets; OSetNum++) { s2 = Sets[OSetNum] L2 = length(s2) for (Pos2 = 1; Pos2 <= L2; Pos2++) if ((c2 = substr(s2,Pos2,1)) in Options) ErrStr = ErrStr "\n"\ sprintf("Cannot give both %s and %s options.", c1,c2) } } } if (ErrStr != "") return substr(ErrStr,2) return "" } # The value of each instance of option Opt that occurs in Options[] is made an # index of Set[]. # The return value is the number of instances of Opt in Options. function Opt2Set(Options,Opt,Set, count) { if (!(Opt in Options)) return 0 Set[Options[Opt]] count = Options[Opt,"count"] for (; count > 1; count--) Set[Options[Opt,count]] return count } # The value of each instance of option Opt that occurs in Options[] that # begins with "!" is made an index of nSet[] (with the ! stripped from it). # Other values are made indexes of Set[]. # The return value is the number of instances of Opt in Options. function Opt2Sets(Options,Opt,Set,nSet, count,aSet,ret) { ret = Opt2Set(Options,Opt,aSet) for (value in aSet) if (substr(value,1,1) == "!") nSet[substr(value,2)] else Set[value] return ret } # Returns true if option Opt was given on the command line. function CmdLineOpt(Options,Opt, i) { for (i = 1; (Opt,"num",i) in Options; i++) if (Options[Opt,"num",i] != 0) return 1 return 0 } ### End of ProcArgs library function FileErr(S) { printf "File %s, line %d: %s.\n%s\n",FILENAME,FNR,S,$0 > "/dev/stderr" }