Command line parameters and environment variables
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Overview
When a program is started a user can give command line parameters and setup environment variables. For example the FreePascal compiler gets most of its parameters via command line options:
fpc -Fudirectory -gh unit1.pas
Command line parameters
The basics
A pascal program can access the parameters via ParamStr and ParamCount. ParamStr(0) is the program name itself (and path _IF_ the operating system supports it) . ParamStr(1) is the first parameter. ParamCount is the number of parameters.
program Project1;
{$mode objfpc}{$H+}
var
I: Integer;
begin
WriteLn('Program: ', ParamStr(0));
for I := 1 to ParamCount do
WriteLn('Param ', I, ': ', ParamStr(I));
end.
For example:
$ /tmp/project1 -a Program: /tmp/project1 Param 1: -a
User friendly
A good program should give a help message when invoked with the wrong parameters and it should follow a common way of giving parameters. The unit custapp that comes with FPC provides the TCustomApplication class, which provides functions to easily check and read parameters. Of course you can still access the parameters directly via ParamStr and ParamCount.
Every LCL application uses this automatically. The Application object is a TCustomApplication.
If you want to write a non LCL program, then create in lazarus a new project of type 'Console Application'. This will create a project1.lpr with some nice goodies, that almost all programs need. Go to the DoRun method.
Check for a parameter
With TCustomApplication you can access parameters by name. For example your program should print a help text when the user gave the common help parameter -h. The -h is a short option. The long form is the --help. To test whether the user called the program with -h or --help you can use
if HasOption('h', 'help') then begin
WriteHelp;
Halt;
end;
Note: In an LCL form you must prepend Application. in front of HasOption. For example:
if Application.HasOption('h', 'help') then begin
WriteHelp;
Halt;
end;
// If you only want to support the short option use:
if HasOption('h', '') then ...
// If you only want to support the long option use:
if HasOption('help') then ...
Read the parameter value
Each parameter can be given a value. For example:
project1 -f filename
or with the long form:
project1 --file=filename
WriteLn('f=', GetOptionValue('f', 'file'));
Note: if you get the error message Option at position 1 needs an argument : f. then you forgot to add the option in the CheckOptions call.
Checking parameters for validity
Command line parameters are free text, so the user can easily type errors. Checking the syntax of the parameters is therefore mandatory. You can use the CheckOptions method for this:
You can define, what parameters are allowed, which ones ones need a parameter and in case of a syntax error you can get an error message plus the options that were wrong to print helpful and detailed errors.
Examples:
ErrorMsg := CheckOptions('hf:', 'help file:');
This allows passing short options -f value and -h. It allows passing long options --help or --file=filename. It does not allow --help with a value, nor --file without a value.
Environment variables
Three basic functions are provided for working with environment variables.
Example:
var
I: Integer;
begin
WriteLn('PATH = ' + GetEnvironmentVariable('PATH'));
WriteLn('All environment variables:');
for I := 0 to GetEnvironmentVariableCount - 1 do
WriteLn(GetEnvironmentString(I));
end.
It is also possible to load all environment variables to TStringList object and access to name-value pair easily. String list automatically handle char separator which is by default character '='.
var
I: Integer;
EnvVars: TStringList;
begin
EnvVars := TStringList.Create;
try
// Load all variables to string list
for I := 0 to GetEnvironmentVariableCount - 1 do
EnvVars.Add(GetEnvironmentString(I));
WriteLn('PATH = ' + EnvVars.Values['PATH']);
WriteLn('All environment variables:');
for I := 0 to EnvVars.Count - 1 do
WriteLn(EnvVars.Names[I] + ' = ' + EnvVars.ValueFromIndex[I]);
finally
EnvVars.Free;
end;
end.