Issue
I want to call myscript
file in this way:
$ ./myscript -s 45 -p any_string
or
$ ./myscript -h #should display help
$ ./myscript #should display help
My requirements are:
getopt
here to get the input arguments- check that
-s
exists, if not return an error - check that the value after the
-s
is 45 or 90 - check that the
-p
exists and there is an input string after - if the user enters
./myscript -h
or just./myscript
then display help
I tried so far this code:
#!/bin/bash
while getopts "h:s:" arg; do
case $arg in
h)
echo "usage"
;;
s)
strength=$OPTARG
echo $strength
;;
esac
done
But with that code I get errors. How to do it with Bash and getopt
?
Solution
#!/bin/bash
usage() { echo "Usage: $0 [-s <45|90>] [-p <string>]" 1>&2; exit 1; }
while getopts ":s:p:" o; do
case "${o}" in
s)
s=${OPTARG}
((s == 45 || s == 90)) || usage
;;
p)
p=${OPTARG}
;;
*)
usage
;;
esac
done
shift $((OPTIND-1))
if [ -z "${s}" ] || [ -z "${p}" ]; then
usage
fi
echo "s = ${s}"
echo "p = ${p}"
Example runs:
$ ./myscript.sh
Usage: ./myscript.sh [-s <45|90>] [-p <string>]
$ ./myscript.sh -h
Usage: ./myscript.sh [-s <45|90>] [-p <string>]
$ ./myscript.sh -s "" -p ""
Usage: ./myscript.sh [-s <45|90>] [-p <string>]
$ ./myscript.sh -s 10 -p foo
Usage: ./myscript.sh [-s <45|90>] [-p <string>]
$ ./myscript.sh -s 45 -p foo
s = 45
p = foo
$ ./myscript.sh -s 90 -p bar
s = 90
p = bar
Answered By - Adrian Frühwirth