LunarDoggo.StartOptions
1.1.0-preview.20220513
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package LunarDoggo.StartOptions --version 1.1.0-preview.20220513
NuGet\Install-Package LunarDoggo.StartOptions -Version 1.1.0-preview.20220513
<PackageReference Include="LunarDoggo.StartOptions" Version="1.1.0-preview.20220513" />
paket add LunarDoggo.StartOptions --version 1.1.0-preview.20220513
#r "nuget: LunarDoggo.StartOptions, 1.1.0-preview.20220513"
// Install LunarDoggo.StartOptions as a Cake Addin #addin nuget:?package=LunarDoggo.StartOptions&version=1.1.0-preview.20220513&prerelease // Install LunarDoggo.StartOptions as a Cake Tool #tool nuget:?package=LunarDoggo.StartOptions&version=1.1.0-preview.20220513&prerelease
StartOptions
Library for parsing commandline start options for .net and .net-core applications (.net-standard 1.3)
Terminology
A StartOption is a single commandline argument that may contain values. StartOptions can either be grouped by StartOptionGroups or be groupless and can therefore be used for global flags, such as verbose
or debug
.
A StartOptionGroup is a grouping of StartOption
s, it has a specific name associated with it. The StartOptionGroup commandline argument always is of type Switch
, it additionally requires at least one subordinate StartOption to be defined. Also note that you can only use one StartOptionGroup at once when calling your application.
A StartOptionParser takes the commandline arguments and parses them into an optional StartOptionGroup
and StartOption
s which you can use to determine the inputs from the cli. If you use either of the two approaches mentioned in the section Getting started you don't need to use this class.
AbstractApplication is a base type that creates a StartOptionParser, passes your application's commandline arguments to it and handles its output using the builder-approach mentioned below. You must override the following methods:
//Prints your help-page if the commandline arguments containes a HelpOption
protected abstract void PrintHelpPage(StartOptionParserSettings settings, IEnumerable<HelpOption> helpOptions, IEnumerable<StartOptionGroup> groups, IEnumerable<StartOption> grouplessOptions);
//Runs your application code with the parsed StartOptionGroup and groupless StartOptions
protected abstract void Run(StartOptionGroup selectedGroup, IEnumerable<StartOption> selectedGrouplessOptions);
//Gets the ApplicationStartOptions for the StartOptionParser-creation
protected abstract ApplicationStartOptions GetApplicationStartOptions();
CommandApplication is a base type that does the same thing as AbstractApplication
, but with the attribute-based approach mentioned below. You must override the following methods:
//Prints your help-page if the commandline arguments containes a HelpOption
protected abstract void PrintHelpPage(StartOptionParserSettings settings, IEnumerable<HelpOption> helpOptions, IEnumerable<StartOptionGroup> groups, IEnumerable<StartOption> grouplessOptions);
//Get the types of all commands your appllication supports
protected abstract Type[] GetCommandTypes();
ApplicationStartOptions is a container used by an AbstractApplication
or a CommandApplication
in order to provide the StartOptionParser
with its parameters. It is just a simple container for StartOptionGroups
, groupless StartOptions
, HelpOptions
and StartOptionParserSettings
Getting started
The first step to using this library is to install the lates version of the nuget package for your project, for example by using the package manager console in Visual Studio:
Install-Package LunarDoggo.StartOptions [-ProjectName <your project name>]
This library provides two distinct ways for customizing your application's command line arguments:
- by utilizing attributes
- by building the StartOptions yourself
1. Using the attribute-based approach
If you chose the attribute-based approach, first create some classes that implement the interface IApplicationCommand
, make sure to define at least one constructor per class that is decorated with the StartOptionGroupAttribute and contains parameters that are decorated with the StartOptionAttribute. If you want to add constructor parameters that aren't decorated with a StartOptionAttribute, you have to provide an IDependencyProvider. The method Execute()
contains the code that will run the command:
public class AddCommand : IApplicationCommand
{
private readonly int firstValue, secondValue;
[StartOptionGroup("add", "a", Description = "Adds two integers together")]
public AddCommand([StartOption("value-1", "1", Description = "First value", Mandatory = true, ValueType = StartOptionValueType.Single, ParserType = typeof(Int32OptionValueParser))] int firstValue,
[StartOption("value-2", "2", Description = "Second value", Mandatory = true, ValueType = StartOptionValueType.Single, ParserType = typeof(Int32OptionValueParser))] int secondValue)
{
this.secondValue = secondValue;
this.firstValue = firstValue;
}
public void Execute()
{
Console.WriteLine("{0} + {1} = {2}", this.firstValue, this.secondValue, this.firstValue + this.secondValue);
}
}
After you created all the commands you want to use, create a new class that inherits from CommandApplication
and override its abstract methods:
class DemoApplication : CommandApplication
Set the commands the application will be able to run, all available command line arguments will be extracted from:
protected override Type[] GetCommandTypes()
{
return new[] { typeof(AddCommand), typeof(ReadFileCommand) };
}
Set the IDependencyProvider to be used to resolve constructor parameters that aren't decorated with a StartOptionAttribute. If you don't want to use this feature, simply return null
. The library is shipped with the SimpleDependencyProvider, you can also use dependency injection frameworks, like Ninject, but you'll have to implement a proxy class implementing IDependencyProvider
to allow access to the dependency framework. This example will use the SimpleDependencyProvider:
protected override IDependencyProvider GetDependencyProvider()
{
//true: throw an exception if a dependency can't be resolved
SimpleDependencyProvider provider = new SimpleDependencyProvider(true);
//Add dependencies to the cache like so, keep in mind that every Type can only be registered once:
provider.AddSingleton<IDatabase>(new MySqlDatabase("connection string here"));
return provider;
}
And finally implement the method that will print the help page of your application, you can implement a custom help page printing mechanism or simply use the included class ConsoleHelpPrinter:
protected override void PrintHelpPage(StartOptionParserSettings settings, IEnumerable<HelpOption> helpOptions, IEnumerable<StartOptionGroup> groups, IEnumerable<StartOption> grouplessOptions)
{
new ConsoleHelpPrinter('\t').Print(settings, helpOptions, groups, grouplessOptions);
}
2. Using StartOptionGroup- and StartOption-builders
If you picked the builder-based approach, create a new class that inherits from AbstractApplication
and override its abstract methods:
class DemoApplication : AbstractApplication
Set your ApplicationStartOptions inside of GetApplicationStartOptions
, note that valid StartOption names must start with either a letter or a number and can only contain letters, numbers, underscores and hyphens/dashes. Also note, that you can also provide custom HelpOptions and StartOptionParserSettings in this method (see Demo-Project):
protected override ApplicationStartOptions GetApplicationStartOptions()
{
StartOptionGroup[] groups = new StartOptionGroup[]
{
new StartOptionGroupBuilder("add", "a").SetDescription("Adds two integers together")
.AddOption("value-1", "1", (_option) => _option.SetDescription("First value").SetValueType(StartOptionValueType.Single).SetValueParser(new Int32OptionValueParser()).SetRequired())
.AddOption("value-2", "2", (_option) => _option.SetDescription("Second value").SetValueType(StartOptionValueType.Single).SetValueParser(new Int32OptionValueParser()).SetRequired())
.Build()
};
StartOption[] grouplessOptions = new StartOption[]
{
new StartOptionBuilder("verbose", "v").SetDescription("Enable verbose output").Build()
};
return new ApplicationStartOptions(groups, grouplessOptions);
}
Set the logic for printing help-pages inside of PrintHelpPage
. You can use the predefined class ConsoleHelpPrinter
or define your own method of displaying a help page to your user:
protected override void PrintHelpPage(StartOptionParserSettings settings, IEnumerable<HelpOption> helpOptions, IEnumerable<StartOptionGroup> groups, IEnumerable<StartOption> grouplessOptions)
{
new ConsoleHelpPrinter('\t').Print(settings, helpOptions, groups, grouplessOptions);
}
Set the logic of the execution of your application inside of Run
:
protected override void Run(StartOptionGroup selectedGroup, IEnumerable<StartOption> selectedGrouplessOptions)
{
if(selectedGrouplessOptions.Any(_option => _option.ShortName.Equals("v")))
{
Console.WriteLine("Verbose option was toggled");
}
switch(selectedGroup.ShortName)
{
case "a":
StartOption firstOption = group.GetOptionByShortName("1");
StartOption secondOption = group.GetOptionByShortName("2");
if (firstOption.HasValue && secondOption.HasValue)
{
int first = firstOption.GetValue<int>();
int second = secondOption.GetValue<int>();
Console.WriteLine("{0} + {1} = {2}", first, second, first + second);
}
else
{
if (!firstOption.HasValue)
{
Console.WriteLine("Please provide the first number for the addition");
}
if(!secondOption.HasValue)
{
Console.WriteLine("Please provide the second number for the addition");
}
}
break;
default: throw new NotImplementedException();
}
}
Regardless of whether you chose the attribute-based or builder-based approach, you must finally instantiate your application class in the Main(string[] args)
-method and call the Run(string[] args)
-method on your application class:
static void Main(string[] args)
{
DemoApplication application = new DemoApplication();
application.Run(args);
}
Afterwards you will be able to call your application from the commandline like so:
/> .\DemoApplication.exe --add -1=10 -2=5 --verbose -h
In this example, your application will be using the "add"-StartOptionGroup with the subordinate StartOptions "value-1" (value = 10) and "value-2" (value = 5), the verbose-flag is set. As the HelpOption "h" is also used, your application will display the help-page for the provided commandline arguments without actually executing the operation, in order to run the addition, just omit the "-h" option.
Final notes and hints
- Please note, that the help printer by default only displays all options if your commandline arguments only contained HelpOptions if they contained StartOptions or StartOptionGroups, the help page will only contain descriptions to the provided options. To change this behaviour, override the following Method in your Application-class:
protected override void PrintHelpPage(ParsedStartOptions parsed)
{
//The following four lines assume, that you defined methods for getting your StartOptionParserSettings, StartOptionGroups, StartOptions and HelpOptions
StartOptionParserSettings settings = this.GetStartOptionParserSettings();
IEnumerable<StartOptionGroup> groups = this.GetStartOptionGroups();
IEnumerable<HelpOption> helpOptions = this.getHelpOptions();
IEnumerable<StartOption> options = this.GetStartOptions();
this.PrintHelpPage(settings, helpOptions, groups, options);
}
- If you wish to parse command line arguments in the command-based approach that are not of type
string
, you must specify the parser aStartOption
should use to parse its values:
[StartOptionGroup("add", "a", Description = "Adds two integers together")]
public AddCommand([StartOption("value-1", "1", Description = "First value", Mandatory = true, ValueType = StartOptionValueType.Single, ParserType = typeof(Int32OptionValueParser))] int firstValue,
[StartOption("value-2", "2", Description = "Second value", Mandatory = true, ValueType = StartOptionValueType.Single, ParserType = typeof(Int32OptionValueParser))] int secondValue)
{
this.secondValue = secondValue;
this.firstValue = firstValue;
}
- If you wish to implement a custom
IStartOptionValueParser
with the command-based approach you must register your custom parser in theStartOptionValueParserRegistry
before using it:
class CustomOptionValueParser : AbstractStartOptionValueParser
{
...
}
static void Main(string[] args)
{
StartOptionValueParserRegistry.Register(new CustomOptionValueParser());
DemoApplication application = new DemoApplication();
application.Run(args);
}
- If you wish to use the same groupless
StartOption
with the command-based approach across multiple different constructors or classes, make sure that theStartOptionAttribute
of each instance of the same parameter is defined in exactly the same way (every value specified in the attribute has to be exactly the same!):
class FirstCommand : ApplicationCommand
{
[StartOptionGroup("first", "f")]
public FirstCommand(..., [StartOption("verbose", "v", Description = "Enable verbose output", IsGrouplessOption = true)]bool verbose)
{
...
}
...
}
class SecondCommand : ApplicationCommand
{
[StartOptionGroup("second", "s")]
public SecondCommand(..., [StartOption("verbose", "v", Description = "Enable verbose output", IsGrouplessOption = true)]bool verbose)
{
...
}
...
}
Product | Versions Compatible and additional computed target framework versions. |
---|---|
.NET | net5.0 was computed. net5.0-windows was computed. net6.0 was computed. net6.0-android was computed. net6.0-ios was computed. net6.0-maccatalyst was computed. net6.0-macos was computed. net6.0-tvos was computed. net6.0-windows was computed. net7.0 was computed. net7.0-android was computed. net7.0-ios was computed. net7.0-maccatalyst was computed. net7.0-macos was computed. net7.0-tvos was computed. net7.0-windows was computed. net8.0 was computed. net8.0-android was computed. net8.0-browser was computed. net8.0-ios was computed. net8.0-maccatalyst was computed. net8.0-macos was computed. net8.0-tvos was computed. net8.0-windows was computed. |
.NET Core | netcoreapp1.0 was computed. netcoreapp1.1 was computed. netcoreapp2.0 was computed. netcoreapp2.1 was computed. netcoreapp2.2 was computed. netcoreapp3.0 was computed. netcoreapp3.1 was computed. |
.NET Standard | netstandard1.3 is compatible. netstandard1.4 was computed. netstandard1.5 was computed. netstandard1.6 was computed. netstandard2.0 was computed. netstandard2.1 was computed. |
.NET Framework | net46 was computed. net461 was computed. net462 was computed. net463 was computed. net47 was computed. net471 was computed. net472 was computed. net48 was computed. net481 was computed. |
MonoAndroid | monoandroid was computed. |
MonoMac | monomac was computed. |
MonoTouch | monotouch was computed. |
Tizen | tizen30 was computed. tizen40 was computed. tizen60 was computed. |
Universal Windows Platform | uap was computed. uap10.0 was computed. |
Xamarin.iOS | xamarinios was computed. |
Xamarin.Mac | xamarinmac was computed. |
Xamarin.TVOS | xamarintvos was computed. |
Xamarin.WatchOS | xamarinwatchos was computed. |
-
.NETStandard 1.3
- NETStandard.Library (>= 1.6.1)
- System.Collections.Immutable (>= 5.0.0)
NuGet packages
This package is not used by any NuGet packages.
GitHub repositories
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Version | Downloads | Last updated |
---|---|---|
1.1.0 | 503 | 6/30/2022 |
1.1.0-preview.20220622 | 122 | 6/22/2022 |
1.1.0-preview.20220605 | 139 | 6/5/2022 |
1.1.0-preview.20220513 | 143 | 5/13/2022 |
1.1.0-preview.20220417 | 133 | 4/17/2022 |
1.1.0-preview.20220411 | 136 | 4/11/2022 |
1.1.0-preview.20220410 | 141 | 4/10/2022 |
1.0.2 | 475 | 4/1/2022 |
1.0.1 | 446 | 4/1/2022 |
1.0.0 | 631 | 7/12/2020 |
Added possibility for start option groups to have values; note: the new parts of the library may contain undiscovered major bugs