noms-optconfig 1.5.3
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- data/bin/bash-showconfig +53 -0
- data/bin/optconfig.sh +128 -0
- data/bin/ruby-showconfig +50 -0
- data/lib/bashon.rb +346 -0
- data/lib/longopt.rb +239 -0
- data/lib/optconfig/version.rb +5 -0
- data/lib/optconfig.rb +182 -0
- metadata +103 -0
data/bin/bash-showconfig
ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,53 @@
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#!/bin/bash
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#
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# Copyright 2014 Evernote Corp. All rights reserved.
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#
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# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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# You may obtain a copy of the License at
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#
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# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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#
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# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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# limitations under the License.
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#
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domain="$1"
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shift 1
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SCRIPT_VERSION=$(ruby -rubygems -e 'require "optconfig/version"; puts Optconfig::VERSION')
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echo -n "Using "; which optconfig.sh
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. optconfig.sh
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opt_new_gen $domain "$@"
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:<<EOF
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=head1 NAME
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bash_showconfig - Display the standard configuration resulting from given options
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=head1 SYNOPSIS
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bash_showconfig domain optspec [options]
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38
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=head1 DESCRIPTION
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The standard Optconfig system provides a way to configure program execution
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in the context specified by domain. Optionally the "perl" or "ruby" languages
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can be specified to use those code paths.
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The optspec is a JSON-serialized option specifier (see L<Optconfig>). Other
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arguments are passed to the optconfig module (perl or ruby) to determine the
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final configuration.
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=head1 AUTHOR
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Jeremy Brinkley, E<lt>jbrinkley@evernote.comE<gt>
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=cut
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EOF
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data/bin/optconfig.sh
ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,128 @@
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1
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#!bash
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# Copyright 2013 Proofpoint, Inc. All rights reserved.
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# Copyright 2014 Evernote Corp. All rights reserved.
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#
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# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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# You may obtain a copy of the License at
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#
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# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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#
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# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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# limitations under the License.
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#
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# TODO:
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# * --version doesn't really work, calling script continues after printing
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# version.
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# * --help doesn't work (because a) it prints the help on the stdout
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# which is what gets eval'd, and b) it'll never find "-e"
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# opt_new doesn't work, you have to eval it yourself, because otherwise
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# the 'set' command which rearranges the script arguments doesn't work
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# -jdb/20100921
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opt_new_gen()
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{
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local domain optspec
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domain="$1"
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shift 1
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optspec="$1"
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shift 1
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ruby -rubygems \
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-e 'require "optconfig"' \
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-e 'require "json"' \
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-e 'require "bashon"' \
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-e '$VERSION = "'$SCRIPT_VERSION'"' \
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-e '$0 = "'"$0"'"' \
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-e 'd = ARGV.shift' \
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-e 'opttext = ARGV.shift' \
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-e 'optspec = JSON.load(opttext)' \
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-e 'opt = Optconfig.new(d, optspec)' \
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-e 'puts opt.map { |k,v| v.to_bashon("opt", d, k) }.join(";") + ";" +' \
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-e ' "opt_#{d}_vrb() { local l=\"$1\"; shift 1; test $l -le $(opt_#{d}_verbose) && echo $*; };" + ' \
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-e ' "opt_#{d}_dbg() { local l=\"$1\"; shift 1; test $l -le $(opt_#{d}_debug) && echo \"DBG(#{d}):\" $*; };" + ' \
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48
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-e ' "opt_#{d}_dry() { if opt_#{d}_dry_run; then echo $*; else \"$@\"; fi; };" + ' \
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-e ' "opt_#{d}() { c=\"${1//[^a-zA-Z0-9]/_}\"; shift 1; opt_#{d}_$c \"$@\"; };" + ' \
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-e ' "set -- #{ARGV.map {|a| 39.chr + a + 39.chr}.join(%q( ))}"' \
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"$domain" "$optspec" "$@"
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}
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53
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json2bashon_gen()
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{
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ruby -rubygems \
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-e 'require "bashon"' \
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-e 'require "json"' \
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-e 'name = ARGV.shift' \
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-e 'json_text = ARGV.shift' \
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-e 'obj = JSON.load(json_text)' \
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-e 'puts obj.to_bashon(name)' "$@"
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}
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64
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json2bashon()
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{
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eval `json2bashon_gen "$@"`
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}
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69
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opt_new()
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{
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# This doesn't work, but this is how it should work
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eval `opt_new_gen "$@"`
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echo opt_$1
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}
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:<<'EOF'
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=head1 NAME
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optconfig - Bash functions for option parsing
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=head1 SYNOPSIS
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. optconfig.sh
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domain=domain
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optspec='{ "force!": false,
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"logfile=s": "/var/log/foo",
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"define=s%": { } }'
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# opt=`opt_new $domain $optspec`
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eval `opt_new_gen $domain "$optspec" "$@"`
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opt=opt_$domain
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if $opt force
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then
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rm -f $filefoo
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fi
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echo "Message" >>`$opt logfile`
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for key in `$opt define`
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do
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valfun=`$opt define $key`
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val=`$valfun` # Note this call--all hash values are funs
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echo "$key = $val"
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done
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=head1 DESCRIPTION
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108
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109
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This bash "module" implements a common config file and command-line option
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parsing interface, including Optconfig standard options, that is shared with
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the Optconfig Perl module. See that module for details.
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112
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The initial call is a wrapper around the Ruby optconfig option and config
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parsing library, and the results are serialized using the L<bashon> module.
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=head1 NOTES
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117
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Pay careful attention to how L<bashon> serializes values, especially
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119
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collections. In particular the "leaf" value of a collection is always itself a
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120
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function. If the leaf is itself a collection, this will result in many command
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121
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invocations before you reach a simple value.
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=head1 AUTHOR
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Jeremy Brinkley, E<lt>jbrinkley@evernote.comE<gt>
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=cut
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EOF
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data/bin/ruby-showconfig
ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,50 @@
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#!/usr/bin/env ruby
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2
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# Copyright 2014 Evernote Corp. All rights reserved.
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3
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#
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4
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# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
|
5
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# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
|
6
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# You may obtain a copy of the License at
|
7
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+
#
|
8
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# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
|
9
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+
#
|
10
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+
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
|
11
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+
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
|
12
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+
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
|
13
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+
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
|
14
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# limitations under the License.
|
15
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#
|
16
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+
|
17
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require 'optconfig'
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18
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+
|
19
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$VERSION = Optconfig::VERSION
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20
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+
|
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lib_location = $LOADED_FEATURES.find { |f| f =~ /optconfig.rb$/ }
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|
23
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puts "Using #{lib_location}"
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24
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|
25
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domain = ARGV.shift
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optspec = JSON.load(ARGV.shift)
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opt = Optconfig.new(domain, optspec)
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28
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puts opt.to_json
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29
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30
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# = NAME
|
31
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#
|
32
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# showconfig - Display the standard configuration resulting from given options
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33
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#
|
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# = SYNOPSIS
|
35
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#
|
36
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# ruby-showconfig domain optspec [options]
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37
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#
|
38
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# = DESCRIPTION
|
39
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#
|
40
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# The standard Optconfig system provides a way to configure program execution
|
41
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# in the context specified by domain.
|
42
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+
#
|
43
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# The optspec is a JSON-serialized option specifier (see Optconfig). Other
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44
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# arguments are passed to the optconfig module to determine the
|
45
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+
# final configuration.
|
46
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+
#
|
47
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# = AUTHOR
|
48
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+
#
|
49
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# Jeremy Brinkley, <jbrinkley@evernote.com>
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50
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#
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data/lib/bashon.rb
ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,346 @@
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#!ruby
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2
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# /* Copyright 2013 Proofpoint, Inc. All rights reserved.
|
3
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# Copyright 2014 Evernote Corp. All rights reserved.
|
4
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+
#
|
5
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# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
|
6
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# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
|
7
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# You may obtain a copy of the License at
|
8
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#
|
9
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+
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
|
10
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+
#
|
11
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# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
|
12
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+
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
|
13
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+
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
|
14
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+
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
|
15
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# limitations under the License.
|
16
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# */
|
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|
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module BashOn
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def name_key(name)
|
20
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name.join('_').gsub(/[^a-zA-Z0-9\_]/, '_')
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21
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+
end
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22
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+
|
23
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@@manpage = <<EOF
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24
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=head1 NAME
|
25
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+
|
26
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+
bashon - Serialization library for bash object notation
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27
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+
|
28
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=head1 SYNOPSIS
|
29
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+
|
30
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+
require 'bashon'
|
31
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+
|
32
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puts var.to_bashon('var')
|
33
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+
|
34
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+
=head1 DESCRIPTION
|
35
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+
|
36
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+
This module enables you to serialize some ruby objects as "bashon" objects
|
37
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+
("bashon meaning bash object notation"). Mostly, this means that bash code is
|
38
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+
emitted that creates functions returning (echoing) the proper value.
|
39
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+
|
40
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+
The name that is passed to the B<to_bashon> method is the name of the function
|
41
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+
that will output the serialized value. It also forms the root of a hierarchy of
|
42
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+
function names that are used for serializing complex (array and hash) types.
|
43
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+
|
44
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+
The output is expected to be evaluated using the L<eval> command in bash.
|
45
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+
|
46
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+
=head2 Types
|
47
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+
|
48
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+
=head3 Nils
|
49
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+
|
50
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An unset command is emitted.
|
51
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+
|
52
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+
=head3 Booleans
|
53
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+
|
54
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+
A function is created with the specified name that can be used as a truth
|
55
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+
test. That is, the function exits with a true value when serializing the
|
56
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+
C<true> literal and with a false value when serializing the C<false>
|
57
|
+
literal. This enables you to use the resulting functions directly in
|
58
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+
conditionals in bash.
|
59
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+
|
60
|
+
=head3 Other simple types
|
61
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+
|
62
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+
A function is created with the specified name that outputs the value of the
|
63
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+
type using B<to_s>.
|
64
|
+
|
65
|
+
=head3 Complex types
|
66
|
+
|
67
|
+
The important thing to note about complex types (hashes and arrays) is that
|
68
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+
the values in the collection are always the I<names of functions> that, when
|
69
|
+
invoked, will yield a bashon-serialized value. This is especially important
|
70
|
+
to remember when the value of a hash entry or array element is itself a
|
71
|
+
complex type.
|
72
|
+
|
73
|
+
=head4 Arrays
|
74
|
+
|
75
|
+
A function is created with the specified name that outputs a space-separated,
|
76
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+
ordered list of function names. Each function name is also created; when the
|
77
|
+
function is invoked, it will yield the value of that element.
|
78
|
+
|
79
|
+
head4 Hashes
|
80
|
+
|
81
|
+
A function is created with the specified name that outputs a space-separated
|
82
|
+
list of hash keys. When the same function is invoked with a hash key as an
|
83
|
+
argument, it outputs the name of a function. That function, when invoked,
|
84
|
+
will yield the value of that element.
|
85
|
+
|
86
|
+
=head1 EXAMPLES
|
87
|
+
|
88
|
+
In the following example, each example is shown with three blocks: the ruby
|
89
|
+
code snippet emitting the serialization, its standard output, and a shell
|
90
|
+
session in which the resulting code has been eval'd
|
91
|
+
|
92
|
+
This shows how a boolean value is serialized:
|
93
|
+
|
94
|
+
puts true.to_bashon('var')
|
95
|
+
|
96
|
+
function var { return 0; }
|
97
|
+
|
98
|
+
$ if var; then echo got it; fi
|
99
|
+
got it
|
100
|
+
|
101
|
+
This shows how a nil value is serialized:
|
102
|
+
|
103
|
+
puts nil.to_bashon('var')
|
104
|
+
|
105
|
+
unset var
|
106
|
+
|
107
|
+
$ if [ -z "$(var)" ]; then echo No var; fi
|
108
|
+
No var
|
109
|
+
|
110
|
+
This shows how a string is serialized and used:
|
111
|
+
|
112
|
+
puts "catalog data".to_bashon('var')
|
113
|
+
|
114
|
+
function var { echo catalog data; }
|
115
|
+
|
116
|
+
$ string=$(var)
|
117
|
+
$ echo $string
|
118
|
+
catalago data
|
119
|
+
|
120
|
+
This shows how an array of strings is serialized:
|
121
|
+
|
122
|
+
puts ["file1", "file2", "file3"].to_bashon('var')
|
123
|
+
|
124
|
+
function var { echo var_0 var_1 var_2; } ; function var_0 { echo file1; };function var_1 { echo file2; };function var_2 { echo file3; }
|
125
|
+
|
126
|
+
$ for filefun in $(var); do file=$($filefun); touch $file; done; ls file*
|
127
|
+
file1 file2 file3
|
128
|
+
|
129
|
+
And a hash of strings:
|
130
|
+
|
131
|
+
var = { "log" => "logfile.txt",
|
132
|
+
"err" => "errfile.txt",
|
133
|
+
"input" => "data.txt" }
|
134
|
+
puts var.to_bashon('var')
|
135
|
+
|
136
|
+
function var { case "$1" in log) echo var_log;; err) echo var_err;; input) echo var_input;; '') echo log err input;; esac; }; function var_log { echo logfile.txt; };function var_err { echo errfile.txt; };function var_input { echo data.txt; }
|
137
|
+
|
138
|
+
$ for key in $(var); do valfun=$(var $key); val=$($valfun); echo $key=$val; done
|
139
|
+
log=logfile.txt
|
140
|
+
err=errfile.txt
|
141
|
+
input=data.txt
|
142
|
+
$ echo "Error message" >>$($(var err))
|
143
|
+
|
144
|
+
This shows how to deal with a heterogeneous array:
|
145
|
+
|
146
|
+
var = ['one', { 'type' => 'number', 'value' => 2 }, false]
|
147
|
+
puts var.to_bashon('var')
|
148
|
+
|
149
|
+
function var { echo var_0 var_1 var_2; } ; function var_0 { echo one; };function var_1 { case "$1" in value) echo var_1_value;; type) echo var_1_type;; '') echo value type;; esac; }; function var_1_value { echo 2; };function var_1_type { echo number; };function var_2 { return 1; }
|
150
|
+
|
151
|
+
$ for elfun $(var)
|
152
|
+
> do
|
153
|
+
> $elfun
|
154
|
+
|
155
|
+
A deeply nested hash:
|
156
|
+
|
157
|
+
cfg = { "prod" => { "db" => { "host" => "dbhost001",
|
158
|
+
"port" => 3389 },
|
159
|
+
"url" => "https://api/",
|
160
|
+
"log" => { "file" => "/var/log/app.log",
|
161
|
+
"debug" => false },
|
162
|
+
"notify" => [ "www", "ops" ] },
|
163
|
+
"qa" => { "db" => { "host" => "qa02",
|
164
|
+
"port" => 18009 },
|
165
|
+
"url" => "https://qa02:18008/v2/",
|
166
|
+
"log" => { "file" => "~qa/build9/log/app.log",
|
167
|
+
"debug" => true },
|
168
|
+
"notify" => [ "build", "test" ] }
|
169
|
+
}
|
170
|
+
puts cfg.to_bashon('cfg')
|
171
|
+
|
172
|
+
function cfg { case "$1" in prod) echo cfg_prod;; qa) echo cfg_qa;; '') echo prod qa;; esac; }; function cfg_prod { case "$1" in notify) echo cfg_prod_notify;; log) echo cfg_prod_log;; url) echo cfg_prod_url;; db) echo cfg_prod_db;; '') echo notify log url db;; esac; }; function cfg_prod_notify { echo cfg_prod_notify_0 cfg_prod_notify_1; } ; function cfg_prod_notify_0 { echo www; };function cfg_prod_notify_1 { echo ops; };function cfg_prod_log { case "$1" in debug) echo cfg_prod_log_debug;; file) echo cfg_prod_log_file;; '') echo debug file;; esac; }; function cfg_prod_log_debug { return 1; };function cfg_prod_log_file { echo /var/log/app.log; };function cfg_prod_url { echo https://api/; };function cfg_prod_db { case "$1" in port) echo cfg_prod_db_port;; host) echo cfg_prod_db_host;; '') echo port host;; esac; }; function cfg_prod_db_port { echo 3389; };function cfg_prod_db_host { echo dbhost001; };function cfg_qa { case "$1" in notify) echo cfg_qa_notify;; log) echo cfg_qa_log;; url) echo cfg_qa_url;; db) echo cfg_qa_db;; '') echo notify log url db;; esac; }; function cfg_qa_notify { echo cfg_qa_notify_0 cfg_qa_notify_1; } ; function cfg_qa_notify_0 { echo build; };function cfg_qa_notify_1 { echo test; };function cfg_qa_log { case "$1" in debug) echo cfg_qa_log_debug;; file) echo cfg_qa_log_file;; '') echo debug file;; esac; }; function cfg_qa_log_debug { return 0; };function cfg_qa_log_file { echo ~qa/build9/log/app.log; };function cfg_qa_url { echo https://qa02:18008/v2/; };function cfg_qa_db { case "$1" in port) echo cfg_qa_db_port;; host) echo cfg_qa_db_host;; '') echo port host;; esac; }; function cfg_qa_db_port { echo 18009; };function cfg_qa_db_host { echo qa02; }
|
173
|
+
|
174
|
+
$ env=prod
|
175
|
+
$ curl $($(cfg $env) url)/report.sql | \
|
176
|
+
> mysql -h $($($(cfg $env) db) host) -p $($($(cfg $env) db) port) | \
|
177
|
+
> tee -a $($($(cfg $env) log) file) | \
|
178
|
+
> mailx -s "Report" `for m in $($($(cfg $env) notify)); do echo $($m); done`
|
179
|
+
$ $($($(cfg $env) log) debug) && echo `date` `whoami`>>$($($(cfg $env) log) file)
|
180
|
+
|
181
|
+
=head1 BUGS
|
182
|
+
|
183
|
+
Right now string serialization makes no attempt to quote strings. If the
|
184
|
+
string contains a shell metacharacter, results can be unexpected. In fact,
|
185
|
+
results can be a bit unexpected anyway. I've tried different quoting schemes
|
186
|
+
and they all get real ugly real fast. In fact, things can be unexpected with
|
187
|
+
just a run of spaces or a newline.
|
188
|
+
|
189
|
+
You can't have a space in hash keys, but there's no helpful error message
|
190
|
+
until you eval the result. The problem is that it's really hard to return a
|
191
|
+
list of things that is useful for a 'for' loop where the list of things might
|
192
|
+
contain a space.
|
193
|
+
|
194
|
+
There's no good way of determining the "type" of something you encounter. You
|
195
|
+
can test the output of a function, and if each of the words in it is itself a
|
196
|
+
function, it's an array. However, if they're not, there's no way to
|
197
|
+
distinguish between a string that has multiple words and a list of hash keys.
|
198
|
+
|
199
|
+
Possibly arrays should work exactly like hashes, returning a list of indexes
|
200
|
+
instead of keys. Right now you can't access an array by index at all.
|
201
|
+
|
202
|
+
=head1 NOTES
|
203
|
+
|
204
|
+
Why not use variables instead of functions? I went down that road, but the
|
205
|
+
problem is that even bash 4, with its associative arrays, doesn't provide
|
206
|
+
enough flexibility to do nested structures, and you run into all kinds of
|
207
|
+
quoting difficulties and whatnot when you try to serialize to variables.
|
208
|
+
|
209
|
+
For example, you can serialize an array of strings in bash like this:
|
210
|
+
|
211
|
+
declare -a var
|
212
|
+
var=([0]=one [1]=two [2]=three)
|
213
|
+
|
214
|
+
But what if the values in the array are themselves arrays? Or associative
|
215
|
+
arrays? Bash can't handle that. Also, all your quoting has to be right in
|
216
|
+
order for that assignment to work, which is really difficult to get right
|
217
|
+
in a general solution with the possibility of arbitrarily nested structures.
|
218
|
+
|
219
|
+
Also, I'll note that arrays and associative arrays aren't really that
|
220
|
+
convenient in bash. I'm not sure that $(var key1) is really any harder to use
|
221
|
+
or read than ${var[key1]}.
|
222
|
+
|
223
|
+
So, I went with functions, and for consistency's sake serialized everything as
|
224
|
+
functions. That way you always know that when you get something back from
|
225
|
+
fetching a hash entry, you have to call it, there's no ambiguity about whether
|
226
|
+
it's a raw value or a hash.
|
227
|
+
|
228
|
+
There's another approach to this, which is to serialize everything into some
|
229
|
+
kind of text structure and then provide bash functions/commands to operate on
|
230
|
+
this blob of text. For example:
|
231
|
+
|
232
|
+
puts var.to_json
|
233
|
+
|
234
|
+
var='{"key1":"val1","key2":["val2one","val2two"],"key3":{"subkey1":1,"subkey2":2}}'
|
235
|
+
|
236
|
+
$ json_get "$var" key1
|
237
|
+
val1
|
238
|
+
$ json_get "$var" key2
|
239
|
+
["val2one","val2two"]
|
240
|
+
$ json_get "$var" key2 0
|
241
|
+
val2one
|
242
|
+
$ json_get "$var" key3
|
243
|
+
{"subkey1":1,"subkey2":2}
|
244
|
+
$ json_keys "$var"
|
245
|
+
key1
|
246
|
+
key2
|
247
|
+
key3
|
248
|
+
$ json_keys "$var" key3
|
249
|
+
subkey1
|
250
|
+
subkey2
|
251
|
+
$ json_keys "$var" key3 subkey2
|
252
|
+
2
|
253
|
+
|
254
|
+
This is viable but I think it's less convenient to use from bash.
|
255
|
+
|
256
|
+
=head1 AUTHOR
|
257
|
+
|
258
|
+
Jeremy Brinkley, E<lt>jbrinkley@evernote.comE<gt>
|
259
|
+
|
260
|
+
=cut
|
261
|
+
EOF
|
262
|
+
end
|
263
|
+
|
264
|
+
class Object
|
265
|
+
include BashOn
|
266
|
+
def to_bashon(*name)
|
267
|
+
if name.empty?
|
268
|
+
"#{self.to_s}"
|
269
|
+
else
|
270
|
+
"function #{name_key(name)} { echo #{self.to_bashon()}; }"
|
271
|
+
end
|
272
|
+
end
|
273
|
+
end
|
274
|
+
|
275
|
+
class TrueClass
|
276
|
+
include BashOn
|
277
|
+
def to_bashon(*name)
|
278
|
+
if name.empty?
|
279
|
+
"true"
|
280
|
+
else
|
281
|
+
"function #{name_key(name)} { return 0; }"
|
282
|
+
end
|
283
|
+
end
|
284
|
+
end
|
285
|
+
|
286
|
+
class FalseClass
|
287
|
+
include BashOn
|
288
|
+
def to_bashon(*name)
|
289
|
+
if name.empty?
|
290
|
+
"false"
|
291
|
+
else
|
292
|
+
"function #{name_key(name)} { return 1; }"
|
293
|
+
end
|
294
|
+
end
|
295
|
+
end
|
296
|
+
|
297
|
+
class NilClass
|
298
|
+
include BashOn
|
299
|
+
def to_bashon(*name)
|
300
|
+
if name.empty?
|
301
|
+
""
|
302
|
+
else
|
303
|
+
"unset #{name_key(name)}"
|
304
|
+
end
|
305
|
+
end
|
306
|
+
end
|
307
|
+
|
308
|
+
class String
|
309
|
+
include BashOn
|
310
|
+
|
311
|
+
def bq
|
312
|
+
self.gsub("'", "'\''")
|
313
|
+
end
|
314
|
+
|
315
|
+
def to_bashon(*name)
|
316
|
+
if name.empty?
|
317
|
+
self
|
318
|
+
else
|
319
|
+
"function #{name_key(name)} { echo '#{self.to_bashon.bq}'; }"
|
320
|
+
end
|
321
|
+
end
|
322
|
+
end
|
323
|
+
|
324
|
+
# Enumerable?
|
325
|
+
class Array
|
326
|
+
include BashOn
|
327
|
+
def to_bashon(*name)
|
328
|
+
"function #{name_key(name)} { echo " +
|
329
|
+
(0 .. (self.nitems-1)).map { |i|
|
330
|
+
name_key(name + [i.to_s]) }.join(' ') + "; } " +
|
331
|
+
(self.empty? ? ' ' : '; ') +
|
332
|
+
(0 .. (self.nitems-1)).map { |i|
|
333
|
+
self[i].to_bashon(*(name + [i.to_s])) }.join(';')
|
334
|
+
end
|
335
|
+
end
|
336
|
+
|
337
|
+
class Hash
|
338
|
+
include BashOn
|
339
|
+
def to_bashon(*name)
|
340
|
+
"function #{name_key(name)} { case \"$1\" in " +
|
341
|
+
self.map { |k, v| "#{k}) echo '#{name_key(name + [k])}';;" }.join(' ') +
|
342
|
+
" '') echo '#{self.keys.join(' ')}';;" +
|
343
|
+
" esac; }" + (self.empty? ? ' ' : '; ') +
|
344
|
+
self.map { |k, v| self[k].to_bashon(*(name + [k])) }.join(';')
|
345
|
+
end
|
346
|
+
end
|
data/lib/longopt.rb
ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,239 @@
|
|
1
|
+
#!ruby
|
2
|
+
# /* Copyright 2013 Proofpoint, Inc. All rights reserved.
|
3
|
+
# Copyright 2014 Evernote Corp. All rights reserved.
|
4
|
+
#
|
5
|
+
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
|
6
|
+
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
|
7
|
+
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
|
8
|
+
#
|
9
|
+
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
|
10
|
+
#
|
11
|
+
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
|
12
|
+
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
|
13
|
+
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
|
14
|
+
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
|
15
|
+
# limitations under the License.
|
16
|
+
# */
|
17
|
+
|
18
|
+
require 'getoptlong'
|
19
|
+
|
20
|
+
class Longopt < Hash
|
21
|
+
|
22
|
+
attr_accessor :optspec
|
23
|
+
|
24
|
+
def Longopt.new_with_args(argv, *optspecs)
|
25
|
+
obj = Longopt.allocate
|
26
|
+
obj.getopts_with_argv(argv, *optspecs)
|
27
|
+
obj
|
28
|
+
end
|
29
|
+
|
30
|
+
def getopts_with_args(argv, *optspeclist)
|
31
|
+
saveargv = ARGV.dup
|
32
|
+
# produces warning
|
33
|
+
ARGV.replace(argv)
|
34
|
+
getopts(*optspeclist)
|
35
|
+
ARGV.replace(saveargv)
|
36
|
+
self
|
37
|
+
end
|
38
|
+
|
39
|
+
def Longopt.default(opth)
|
40
|
+
obj = Longopt.allocate
|
41
|
+
obj.merge(opth)
|
42
|
+
end
|
43
|
+
|
44
|
+
def initialize(*optspecs)
|
45
|
+
getopts(*optspecs)
|
46
|
+
end
|
47
|
+
|
48
|
+
def getopts(*optspecs)
|
49
|
+
@optspec = { }
|
50
|
+
|
51
|
+
if optspecs.size == 1 and optspecs[0].respond_to? :to_ary
|
52
|
+
optspecs = optspecs[0]
|
53
|
+
end
|
54
|
+
|
55
|
+
optspecs.each do |optspec|
|
56
|
+
if m = /^([\w_\-]+)([=:!+].*)/.match(optspec)
|
57
|
+
opt = m[1]
|
58
|
+
@optspec[opt] = { }
|
59
|
+
|
60
|
+
act, typ, collect_typ = m[2].split('')
|
61
|
+
|
62
|
+
case act
|
63
|
+
|
64
|
+
when '='
|
65
|
+
@optspec[opt]['gol-argument-type'] =
|
66
|
+
GetoptLong::REQUIRED_ARGUMENT
|
67
|
+
@optspec[opt]['type-letter'] = typ
|
68
|
+
@optspec[opt]['collection-type'] = collect_typ
|
69
|
+
|
70
|
+
when ':'
|
71
|
+
@optspec[opt]['gol-argument-type'] =
|
72
|
+
GetoptLong::OPTIONAL_ARGUMENT
|
73
|
+
@optspec[opt]['type-letter'] = typ
|
74
|
+
@optspec[opt]['collection-type'] = collect_typ
|
75
|
+
|
76
|
+
when '!'
|
77
|
+
@optspec[opt]['gol-argument-type'] = GetoptLong::NO_ARGUMENT
|
78
|
+
@optspec[opt]['type-letter'] = 'b'
|
79
|
+
@optspec['no' + opt] = { }
|
80
|
+
@optspec['no' + opt]['gol-argument-type'] =
|
81
|
+
GetoptLong::NO_ARGUMENT
|
82
|
+
|
83
|
+
when '+'
|
84
|
+
@optspec[opt]['gol-argument-type'] = GetoptLong::NO_ARGUMENT
|
85
|
+
@optspec[opt]['type-letter'] = 'a'
|
86
|
+
|
87
|
+
end
|
88
|
+
else
|
89
|
+
@optspec[optspec] = { }
|
90
|
+
@optspec[optspec]['gol-argument-type'] = GetoptLong::NO_ARGUMENT
|
91
|
+
@optspec[optspec]['type-letter'] = 'b'
|
92
|
+
end
|
93
|
+
end
|
94
|
+
|
95
|
+
gol_arguments = @optspec.map { |opt, optspec|
|
96
|
+
['--' + opt,
|
97
|
+
optspec['gol-argument-type']]
|
98
|
+
}
|
99
|
+
|
100
|
+
GetoptLong.new(*gol_arguments).each do |k, v|
|
101
|
+
k = k.sub(/^--/, '')
|
102
|
+
|
103
|
+
case k
|
104
|
+
|
105
|
+
when *booleans
|
106
|
+
self[k] = true
|
107
|
+
|
108
|
+
when *nobooleans
|
109
|
+
self[k[2..-1]] = false
|
110
|
+
|
111
|
+
when *simples
|
112
|
+
self[k] = simple_value(k, v)
|
113
|
+
|
114
|
+
when *lists
|
115
|
+
self[k] = [ ] unless key? k
|
116
|
+
self[k].push(simple_value(k, v))
|
117
|
+
|
118
|
+
when *mappings
|
119
|
+
self[k] = { } unless key? k
|
120
|
+
mkey, mvalue = v.split(/=/, 2)
|
121
|
+
self[k][mkey] = simple_value(k, mvalue)
|
122
|
+
|
123
|
+
end
|
124
|
+
end
|
125
|
+
|
126
|
+
end
|
127
|
+
|
128
|
+
def simple_value(opt, optarg)
|
129
|
+
case @optspec[opt]['type-letter']
|
130
|
+
when 's'
|
131
|
+
optarg
|
132
|
+
when 'i'
|
133
|
+
Integer(optarg)
|
134
|
+
when 'f'
|
135
|
+
Float(optarg)
|
136
|
+
when 'a'
|
137
|
+
if key? opt
|
138
|
+
rv = self[opt] + 1
|
139
|
+
else
|
140
|
+
rv = 1
|
141
|
+
end
|
142
|
+
rv
|
143
|
+
else
|
144
|
+
nil
|
145
|
+
end
|
146
|
+
end
|
147
|
+
|
148
|
+
def booleans
|
149
|
+
@optspec.reject { |k, v| v['type-letter'] != 'b' }.keys
|
150
|
+
end
|
151
|
+
|
152
|
+
def nobooleans
|
153
|
+
@optspec.reject { |k, v| v['type-letter'] != 'b' }.keys.map { |el| 'no' + el }
|
154
|
+
end
|
155
|
+
|
156
|
+
def simples
|
157
|
+
@optspec.reject { |k, v| ! v['collection-type'].nil? ||
|
158
|
+
v['type-letter'].nil? ||
|
159
|
+
v['type-letter'] == 'b' }.keys
|
160
|
+
end
|
161
|
+
|
162
|
+
def lists
|
163
|
+
@optspec.reject { |k, v| v['collection-type'] != '@' }.keys
|
164
|
+
end
|
165
|
+
|
166
|
+
def mappings
|
167
|
+
@optspec.reject { |k, v| v['collection-type'] != '%' }.keys
|
168
|
+
end
|
169
|
+
|
170
|
+
@@manpage = <<'EOF'
|
171
|
+
=head1 NAME
|
172
|
+
|
173
|
+
Longopt - Convenience class similar to Perl Getopt::Long
|
174
|
+
|
175
|
+
=head1 SYNOPSIS
|
176
|
+
|
177
|
+
require 'longoopt'
|
178
|
+
|
179
|
+
opt = Longopt.new('verbose', 'force!', 'logfile=s',
|
180
|
+
'define=s%', 'user=s@')
|
181
|
+
|
182
|
+
print "Verbose enabled" if opt['verbose']
|
183
|
+
|
184
|
+
unlink(filefoo) if opt['force']
|
185
|
+
|
186
|
+
File.open(opt['logfile'], 'w') { |fh| fh << "Log message" }
|
187
|
+
|
188
|
+
opt['user'].each { |user| notify_user(user) }
|
189
|
+
|
190
|
+
opt['define'].each { |key, value| puts "#{key} = #{value}" }
|
191
|
+
|
192
|
+
=head1 DESCRIPTION
|
193
|
+
|
194
|
+
The Longopt class wraps GetoptLong so that you can use option specifiers
|
195
|
+
similar to the Perl Getopt::Long module.
|
196
|
+
|
197
|
+
Longopt is a Hash subclass.
|
198
|
+
|
199
|
+
=head2 Class Methods
|
200
|
+
|
201
|
+
=over 4
|
202
|
+
|
203
|
+
=item new(*optspecs)
|
204
|
+
|
205
|
+
Parse ARGV for options and set options according to provided optspecs.
|
206
|
+
|
207
|
+
=item new_with_args(args, *optspecs)
|
208
|
+
|
209
|
+
Like new(), but use provided arguments rather than ARGV.
|
210
|
+
|
211
|
+
=item default(opthash)
|
212
|
+
|
213
|
+
Create a Longopt object using the provided default option values in the
|
214
|
+
opthash. Use getopts(), below, to parse arguments.
|
215
|
+
|
216
|
+
=back
|
217
|
+
|
218
|
+
=head2 Object Methods
|
219
|
+
|
220
|
+
=item getopts(*optspecs)
|
221
|
+
|
222
|
+
Parse ARGV to set option values according to provided optspecs.
|
223
|
+
|
224
|
+
=item getopts_with_args(args, *optspecs)
|
225
|
+
|
226
|
+
Parse args to set option values according to provided optspecs.
|
227
|
+
|
228
|
+
=back
|
229
|
+
|
230
|
+
=head1 AUTHOR
|
231
|
+
|
232
|
+
Jeremy Brinkley, E<lt>jbrinkley@evernote.comE<gt>
|
233
|
+
|
234
|
+
=cut
|
235
|
+
|
236
|
+
EOF
|
237
|
+
|
238
|
+
end
|
239
|
+
|
data/lib/optconfig.rb
ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,182 @@
|
|
1
|
+
#!ruby
|
2
|
+
# /* Copyright 2013 Proofpoint, Inc. All rights reserved.
|
3
|
+
# Copyright 2014 Evernote Corp. All rights reserved.
|
4
|
+
#
|
5
|
+
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
|
6
|
+
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
|
7
|
+
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
|
8
|
+
#
|
9
|
+
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
|
10
|
+
#
|
11
|
+
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
|
12
|
+
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
|
13
|
+
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
|
14
|
+
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
|
15
|
+
# limitations under the License.
|
16
|
+
# */
|
17
|
+
|
18
|
+
# = NAME
|
19
|
+
#
|
20
|
+
# Optconfig - Parse options and config files
|
21
|
+
#
|
22
|
+
# = DESCRIPTION
|
23
|
+
#
|
24
|
+
# This module implements the Optconfig standardized approach to
|
25
|
+
# command-line option parsing and JSON-based configuration file
|
26
|
+
# interpretation. See the reference documentation in the
|
27
|
+
# Optconfig master distribution for details.
|
28
|
+
#
|
29
|
+
|
30
|
+
require 'rubygems'
|
31
|
+
require 'longopt'
|
32
|
+
require 'json'
|
33
|
+
|
34
|
+
class Optconfig < Hash
|
35
|
+
|
36
|
+
require 'optconfig/version'
|
37
|
+
|
38
|
+
attr_accessor :domain, :optspec, :config, :default
|
39
|
+
|
40
|
+
def add_standard_opts(submitted_optspec)
|
41
|
+
optspec = submitted_optspec
|
42
|
+
standard_opts = {
|
43
|
+
'config=s' => nil,
|
44
|
+
'debug+' => 0,
|
45
|
+
'verbose+' => 0,
|
46
|
+
'version' => false,
|
47
|
+
'help' => false,
|
48
|
+
'dry-run!' => false }
|
49
|
+
standard_opts.each_pair do |opt, defval|
|
50
|
+
if ! optspec.has_key? opt
|
51
|
+
optspec[opt] = defval
|
52
|
+
end
|
53
|
+
end
|
54
|
+
optspec
|
55
|
+
end
|
56
|
+
|
57
|
+
def initialize(domain, submitted_optspec, version=nil)
|
58
|
+
@domain = domain
|
59
|
+
@optspec = add_standard_opts(submitted_optspec)
|
60
|
+
@caller_version = version || $VERSION || 'Unknown version'
|
61
|
+
|
62
|
+
submitted_optspec.each_pair do |optspec, val|
|
63
|
+
opt, dummy = optspec.split(/[\=\+\!]/, 2)
|
64
|
+
self[opt] = val
|
65
|
+
end
|
66
|
+
|
67
|
+
cfgfilepath = [ '/usr/local/etc/' + domain + '.conf',
|
68
|
+
'/etc/' + domain + '.conf' ]
|
69
|
+
|
70
|
+
if ENV.has_key? 'HOME' and ! ENV['HOME'].nil?
|
71
|
+
cfgfilepath.unshift(ENV['HOME'] + '/.' + domain)
|
72
|
+
end
|
73
|
+
@config = nil
|
74
|
+
|
75
|
+
cmdlineopt = Longopt.new(optspec.keys)
|
76
|
+
|
77
|
+
if cmdlineopt.has_key? 'config'
|
78
|
+
@config = cmdlineopt['config']
|
79
|
+
raise "File not found: #{cmdlineopt['config']}" unless
|
80
|
+
File.exist? cmdlineopt['config']
|
81
|
+
read_config(cmdlineopt['config'])
|
82
|
+
else
|
83
|
+
cfgfilepath.each do |file|
|
84
|
+
if File.readable? file
|
85
|
+
@config = file
|
86
|
+
read_config(file)
|
87
|
+
break
|
88
|
+
end
|
89
|
+
end
|
90
|
+
end
|
91
|
+
|
92
|
+
cmdlineopt.each_pair do |opt, val|
|
93
|
+
merge_cmdlineopt(opt, val)
|
94
|
+
end
|
95
|
+
|
96
|
+
if self.has_key? 'version' and self['version']
|
97
|
+
puts @caller_version
|
98
|
+
Process.exit(0)
|
99
|
+
end
|
100
|
+
|
101
|
+
if self.has_key? 'help' and self['help']
|
102
|
+
help_pattern = /(?:^=head1 +SYNOPSIS|^# *=+ *SYNOPSIS)(.*?)(?:^=head1|^# *=+)/m
|
103
|
+
myscript = File.expand_path($0)
|
104
|
+
begin
|
105
|
+
script_text = File.open(myscript, 'r') { |fh| fh.read }
|
106
|
+
if /This file was generated by RubyGems/.match script_text
|
107
|
+
# Well, thank you RubyGems. Now I have to guess where
|
108
|
+
# my code ended up.
|
109
|
+
#
|
110
|
+
# The ruby gems wrapper for these scripts has some
|
111
|
+
# special way of restricting versions here; I'm hoping
|
112
|
+
# that since that has been done (and I no longer have
|
113
|
+
# access to the special first argument that overrides
|
114
|
+
# the version) that the fact that the 'gem' call has
|
115
|
+
# already been called with that version will help
|
116
|
+
# the following work correctly. Because there's no
|
117
|
+
# real other alternative.
|
118
|
+
#
|
119
|
+
# This 'parsing' is really a load of crap. Sure hope
|
120
|
+
# Rubygems never changes anything.
|
121
|
+
# -jdb/20141010
|
122
|
+
if m = /^\s*load +(.*)$/.match(script_text)
|
123
|
+
script_file = eval("version = nil\n" + m[1])
|
124
|
+
script_text = File.open(script_file, 'r') { |fh| fh.read }
|
125
|
+
end
|
126
|
+
end
|
127
|
+
m = help_pattern.match(script_text)
|
128
|
+
if m
|
129
|
+
puts m[1].gsub(/^# ?/m, '').strip
|
130
|
+
else
|
131
|
+
puts 'No help'
|
132
|
+
end
|
133
|
+
rescue Errno::ENOENT
|
134
|
+
puts "No help (could not search #{myscript})"
|
135
|
+
end
|
136
|
+
Process.exit(0)
|
137
|
+
end
|
138
|
+
end
|
139
|
+
|
140
|
+
def read_config(file)
|
141
|
+
fileconfig = File.open(file) { |fh| JSON.load(fh) }
|
142
|
+
fileconfig.each_pair do |opt, val|
|
143
|
+
self[opt] = val
|
144
|
+
end
|
145
|
+
end
|
146
|
+
|
147
|
+
def merge_cmdlineopt(opt, val)
|
148
|
+
if self.has_key? opt
|
149
|
+
if self[opt].respond_to? :keys
|
150
|
+
if val.respond_to? :keys
|
151
|
+
# Both hashes, merge
|
152
|
+
val.each_pair { |k, v| self[opt][k] = v }
|
153
|
+
else
|
154
|
+
self[opt] = val
|
155
|
+
end
|
156
|
+
elsif self[opt].respond_to? :unshift
|
157
|
+
if val.respond_to? :each and val.respond_to? :reverse
|
158
|
+
val.reverse.each { |v| self[opt].unshift(v) }
|
159
|
+
else
|
160
|
+
self[opt] = val
|
161
|
+
end
|
162
|
+
else
|
163
|
+
self[opt] = val
|
164
|
+
end
|
165
|
+
else
|
166
|
+
self[opt] = val
|
167
|
+
end
|
168
|
+
|
169
|
+
self[opt]
|
170
|
+
end
|
171
|
+
|
172
|
+
def vrb(level, *msg)
|
173
|
+
puts msg.join("\n") if self['verbose'] >= level
|
174
|
+
end
|
175
|
+
|
176
|
+
def dbg(level, *msg)
|
177
|
+
if self['debug'] >= level
|
178
|
+
puts "DBG(#{@domain}): " + msg.join("DBG(#{@domain}): ")
|
179
|
+
end
|
180
|
+
end
|
181
|
+
|
182
|
+
end
|
metadata
ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,103 @@
|
|
1
|
+
--- !ruby/object:Gem::Specification
|
2
|
+
name: noms-optconfig
|
3
|
+
version: !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
4
|
+
version: 1.5.3
|
5
|
+
prerelease:
|
6
|
+
platform: ruby
|
7
|
+
authors:
|
8
|
+
- Jeremy Brinkley
|
9
|
+
autorequire:
|
10
|
+
bindir: bin
|
11
|
+
cert_chain: []
|
12
|
+
date: 2016-02-03 00:00:00.000000000 Z
|
13
|
+
dependencies:
|
14
|
+
- !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
|
15
|
+
name: bundler
|
16
|
+
requirement: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
|
17
|
+
none: false
|
18
|
+
requirements:
|
19
|
+
- - ~>
|
20
|
+
- !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
21
|
+
version: '1.7'
|
22
|
+
type: :development
|
23
|
+
prerelease: false
|
24
|
+
version_requirements: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
|
25
|
+
none: false
|
26
|
+
requirements:
|
27
|
+
- - ~>
|
28
|
+
- !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
29
|
+
version: '1.7'
|
30
|
+
- !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
|
31
|
+
name: rake
|
32
|
+
requirement: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
|
33
|
+
none: false
|
34
|
+
requirements:
|
35
|
+
- - ~>
|
36
|
+
- !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
37
|
+
version: '10.0'
|
38
|
+
type: :development
|
39
|
+
prerelease: false
|
40
|
+
version_requirements: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
|
41
|
+
none: false
|
42
|
+
requirements:
|
43
|
+
- - ~>
|
44
|
+
- !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
45
|
+
version: '10.0'
|
46
|
+
- !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
|
47
|
+
name: rspec
|
48
|
+
requirement: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
|
49
|
+
none: false
|
50
|
+
requirements:
|
51
|
+
- - ~>
|
52
|
+
- !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
53
|
+
version: '2.11'
|
54
|
+
type: :development
|
55
|
+
prerelease: false
|
56
|
+
version_requirements: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
|
57
|
+
none: false
|
58
|
+
requirements:
|
59
|
+
- - ~>
|
60
|
+
- !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
61
|
+
version: '2.11'
|
62
|
+
description: Optconfig presents a standardized way to parse configuration files and
|
63
|
+
command-line arguments
|
64
|
+
email:
|
65
|
+
- jbrinkley@evernote.com
|
66
|
+
executables:
|
67
|
+
- ruby-showconfig
|
68
|
+
extensions: []
|
69
|
+
extra_rdoc_files: []
|
70
|
+
files:
|
71
|
+
- lib/optconfig.rb
|
72
|
+
- lib/optconfig/version.rb
|
73
|
+
- lib/longopt.rb
|
74
|
+
- lib/bashon.rb
|
75
|
+
- bin/ruby-showconfig
|
76
|
+
- bin/optconfig.sh
|
77
|
+
- bin/bash-showconfig
|
78
|
+
homepage: http://github.com/evernote/optconfig
|
79
|
+
licenses:
|
80
|
+
- Apache-2
|
81
|
+
post_install_message:
|
82
|
+
rdoc_options: []
|
83
|
+
require_paths:
|
84
|
+
- lib
|
85
|
+
required_ruby_version: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
|
86
|
+
none: false
|
87
|
+
requirements:
|
88
|
+
- - ! '>='
|
89
|
+
- !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
90
|
+
version: '0'
|
91
|
+
required_rubygems_version: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
|
92
|
+
none: false
|
93
|
+
requirements:
|
94
|
+
- - ! '>='
|
95
|
+
- !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
96
|
+
version: '0'
|
97
|
+
requirements: []
|
98
|
+
rubyforge_project:
|
99
|
+
rubygems_version: 1.8.23
|
100
|
+
signing_key:
|
101
|
+
specification_version: 3
|
102
|
+
summary: Parse commmand-line options and config files
|
103
|
+
test_files: []
|