Apache Comons CLI
Apache Comons CLI
Apache Comons CLI
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Usage Scenarios
The following sections describe some example scenarios on how to use CLI in applications.
Using a boolean option
A boolean option is represented on a command line by the presence of the option, i.e. if the option is found then the
option value is true, otherwise the value is false.
The DateApp utility prints the current date to standard output. If the -t option is present the current time is also printed.
Create the Options
An Options object must be created and the Option must be added to it.
// create Options object
Options options = new Options();
// add t option
options.addOption("t", false, "display current time");
The addOption method has three parameters. The first parameter is a java.lang.String that represents the option.
The second parameter is a boolean that specifies whether the option requires an argument or not. In the case of a
boolean option (sometimes referred to as a flag) an argument value is not present so false is passed. The third
parameter is the description of the option. This description will be used in the usage text of the application.
Parsing the command line arguments
The parse methods of CommandLineParser are used to parse the command line arguments. The PosixPaser is
great when you need to handle options that are one character long, like the t option in this example.
CommandLineParser parser = new PosixParser();
CommandLine cmd = parser.parse( options, args);
Now we need to check if the t option is present. To do this we will interrogate the CommandLine object. The hasOption
method takes a java.lang.String parameter and returns true if the option represented by the java.lang.String
is present, otherwise it returns false.
if(cmd.hasOption("t")) {
// print the date and time
}
else {
// print the date
}
International Time
The InternationalDateApp utility extends the DateApp utility by providing the ability to print the date and time in any
country in the world. To facilitate this a new command line option, c, has been introduced.
// add c option
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Ant Example
One of the most ubiquitous Java applications Ant
The following is the help output for Ant.
Boolean Options
Lets create the boolean options for the application as they are the easiest to create. For clarity the constructors for
Option are used here.
Option
Option
Option
Option
Option
Option
Option
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"produce logging information without adornments" );
Argument Options
The argument options are created using the OptionBuilder.
Option logfile
= OptionBuilder.withArgName( "file" )
.hasArg()
.withDescription( "use given file for log" )
.create( "logfile" );
Option logger
= OptionBuilder.withArgName( "classname" )
.hasArg()
.withDescription( "the class which it to perform "
+ "logging" )
.create( "logger" );
Option listener
= OptionBuilder.withArgName( "classname" )
.hasArg()
.withDescription( "add an instance of class as "
+ "a project listener" )
.create( "listener");
= OptionBuilder.withArgName( "file" )
.hasArg()
.withDescription( "search for buildfile towards the "
+ "root of the filesystem and use it" )
.create( "find" );
= OptionBuilder.withArgName( "property=value" )
.hasArgs(2)
.withValueSeparator()
.withDescription( "use value for given property" )
.create( "D" );
The map of properties specified by this option can later be retrieved by calling getOptionProperties("D") on the
CommandLine.
Create the Options
Now that we have created each Option we need to create the Options instance. This is achieved using the addOption
method of Options.
Options options = new Options();
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options.addOption(
options.addOption(
options.addOption(
options.addOption(
options.addOption(
options.addOption(
options.addOption(
options.addOption(
options.addOption(
options.addOption(
options.addOption(
options.addOption(
options.addOption(
http://commons.apache.org/cli/usage.html
help );
projecthelp );
version );
quiet );
verbose );
debug );
emacs );
logfile );
logger );
listener );
buildfile );
find );
property );
All the preperation is now complete and we are now ready to parse the command line arguments.
Create the Parser
We now need to create a Parser. This will parse the command line arguments, using the rules specified by the Options
and return an instance of CommandLine. This time we will use a GnuParser which is able to handle options that are more
than one character long.
public static void main( String[] args ) {
// create the parser
CommandLineParser parser = new GnuParser();
try {
// parse the command line arguments
CommandLine line = parser.parse( options, args );
}
catch( ParseException exp ) {
// oops, something went wrong
System.err.println( "Parsing failed. Reason: " + exp.getMessage() );
}
}
Usage/Help
CLI also provides the means to automatically generate usage and help information. This is achieved with the
HelpFormatter class.
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If you also require to have a usage statement printed then calling formatter.printHelp( "ant", options, true
) will generate a usage statment as well as the help information.
ls Example
One of the most widely used command line applications in the *nix world is ls. To parse a command line for an application
like this we will use the PosixParser. Due to the large number of options required for ls this example will only cover a small
proportion of the options. The following is a section of the help output.
Usage: ls [OPTION]... [FILE]...
List information about the FILEs (the current directory by default).
Sort entries alphabetically if none of -cftuSUX nor --sort.
-a, --all
-A, --almost-all
-b, --escape
--block-size=SIZE
-B, --ignore-backups
-c
-C
The following is the code that is used to create the Options for this example.
// create the command line parser
CommandLineParser parser = new PosixParser();
// create the Options
Options options = new Options();
options.addOption( "a", "all", false, "do not hide entries starting with ." );
options.addOption( "A", "almost-all", false, "do not list implied . and .." );
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options.addOption( "b", "escape", false, "print octal escapes for nongraphic "
+ "characters" );
options.addOption( OptionBuilder.withLongOpt( "block-size" )
.withDescription( "use SIZE-byte blocks" )
.hasArg()
.withArgName("SIZE")
.create() );
options.addOption( "B", "ignore-backups", false, "do not list implied entried "
+ "ending with ~");
options.addOption( "c", false, "with -lt: sort by, and show, ctime (time of last "
+ "modification of file status information) with "
+ "-l:show ctime and sort by name otherwise: sort "
+ "by ctime" );
options.addOption( "C", false, "list entries by columns" );
String[] args = new String[]{ "--block-size=10" };
try {
// parse the command line arguments
CommandLine line = parser.parse( options, args );
// validate that block-size has been set
if( line.hasOption( "block-size" ) ) {
// print the value of block-size
System.out.println( line.getOptionValue( "block-size" ) );
}
}
catch( ParseException exp ) {
System.out.println( "Unexpected exception:" + exp.getMessage() );
}
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