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Argp provides a number of functions available to the user of argp (see Argp Parser Functions), mostly for producing error messages. These take as their first argument the state argument to the parser function. See Argp Parsing State.
Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:argpbuf env locale | AS-Unsafe heap i18n corrupt | AC-Unsafe mem corrupt lock | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
Outputs the standard usage message for the argp parser referred to by
state to state->err_stream
and terminates the program
with exit (argp_err_exit_status)
. See Argp Global Variables.
Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:argpbuf env locale | AS-Unsafe heap i18n corrupt | AC-Unsafe mem corrupt lock | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
Prints the printf format string fmt and following args, preceded
by the program name and ‘:’, and followed by a ‘Try … --help’ message, and terminates the program with an exit status of
argp_err_exit_status
. See Argp Global Variables.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe corrupt heap | AC-Unsafe lock corrupt mem | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
Similar to the standard GNU error-reporting function error
, this
prints the program name and ‘:’, the printf format string
fmt, and the appropriate following args. If it is non-zero, the
standard unix error text for errnum is printed. If status is
non-zero, it terminates the program with that value as its exit status.
The difference between argp_failure
and argp_error
is that
argp_error
is for parsing errors, whereas
argp_failure
is for other problems that occur during parsing but
don’t reflect a syntactic problem with the input, such as illegal values
for options, bad phase of the moon, etc.
Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:argpbuf env locale | AS-Unsafe heap i18n corrupt | AC-Unsafe mem corrupt lock | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
Outputs a help message for the argp parser referred to by state, to stream. The flags argument determines what sort of help message is produced. See Argp Help Flags.
Error output is sent to state->err_stream
, and the program
name printed is state->name
.
The output or program termination behavior of these functions may be
suppressed if the ARGP_NO_EXIT
or ARGP_NO_ERRS
flags are
passed to argp_parse
. See Argp Flags.
This behavior is useful if an argp parser is exported for use by other programs (e.g., by a library), and may be used in a context where it is not desirable to terminate the program in response to parsing errors. In argp parsers intended for such general use, and for the case where the program doesn’t terminate, calls to any of these functions should be followed by code that returns the appropriate error code:
if (bad argument syntax) { argp_usage (state); return EINVAL; }
If a parser function will only be used when ARGP_NO_EXIT
is not set, the return may be omitted.
Previous: Argp Parsing State, Up: Argp Parser Functions [Contents][Index]