I am currently using Apache's common CLI library to parse command line options and I was wondering if there's an easy way for conditional requirements.
For example, in the example below I have two required options -a
and -b
as well as an optional -h
, which should show some description. The way the parser works right now is that it expected to throw a ParserException whenever one of the required options is missing. So far so good. My question is if there is a way to not look for required options when -h
is specified. Since this it's common that -h
should only print help and not actually starting my app, I'd like to skip checking other command line options.
import org.apache.commons.cli.*;
public class MyClass {
...
public static void main(String[] parameters)
{
Options options = new Options();
Option opt_a = Option.builder("a")
.argName("A Option")
.required(true)
.longOpt("a-option")
.desc("First option")
.build();
Option opt_b = Option.builder("b")
.argName("B Option")
.required(true)
.longOpt("b-option")
.desc("Second option")
.build();
Option opt_h = Option.builder("h")
.argName("Help")
.longOpt("help")
.desc("Shows this help")
.build();
options.addOption(opt_a);
options.addOption(opt_b);
options.addOption(opt_h);
CommandLineParser parser = new DefaultParser();
try {
CommandLine cmd = parser.parse(options, args);
...
} catch (ParseException e) {
System.err.println("Error parsing command line options");
System.err.println(e.getMessage());
usage(options);
System.exit(1);
}
}
public static void usage(Options options) {
String header = "My application\n\n";
String footer = "\nPlease report issues at http://github.com/user/repo/issues";
HelpFormatter formatter = new HelpFormatter();
formatter.printHelp("MyApp", header, options, footer, true);
}
}