###################################################################### ## File: $Id: README,v 1.4 2005/05/14 14:14:01 spadkins Exp $ ###################################################################### 1. What is the App-Options distribution? You might say App-Options distribution is "yet another command line option processor." However, it was created for maximum ease of use with the needs of the Perl 5 Enterprise Environment in mind (more on that later). The distribution consists of one Perl module and one shell script. App::Options - a perl module which combines command line parameters, environment variables, and configuration files to produce a hash of option values. prefix - a shell script which works for ksh (Korn shell) or bash (Bourne Again Shell) which allows you to change a family of environment variables (PATH, LD_LIBRARY_PATH, MANPATH, etc.) necessary for running programs out of a directory in which software has been installed. (This script is useful but not necessary, and non-Unix users may safely ignore it.) 2. What are the features? FEATURES OF App::Options o Flexible command line syntax Parse long (--whatever) and short (-w) command line options (with [--verbose=3] or without [--verbose] arguments) and just put the values in %App::options (or some other hash that you may specify). o Automatic boolean command line switches An option like "--help" is equivalent to "--help=1". o Combines options with Environment Variables The --whatever=value option can be supplied with the APP_WHATEVER environment variable. o Combines options with variables in global and local config files The --whatever=value option can be supplied in config files with the "whatever = value" statement. Initialization searches "$HOME/.app/$prog.conf", "$HOME/.app/app.conf", "$progdir/$prog.conf", "$progdir/app.conf", "$prefix/etc/app/$prog.conf", "$prefix/etc/app/app.conf", and "/etc/app.conf" in order to find the option values. o Import other files with "import = filename" statement Config files can, in essence, include other config files. o Stop importing other files with "flush_imports = 1" statement A config file can use this statement to tell the program to stop searching for other config files it was planning on searching. o Option values undergo variable expansion This means that some values may rely on other values. i.e. "prefix = /usr/mycompany/3.2.1" and "logdir = ${prefix}/log" o Config files can have conditional sections A section specifier "[cleanup]" begins a section only valid for the program "cleanup" (or "cleanup.exe" or cleanup.pl, etc.). A section specifier "[ALL]" (or just "[]") begins another unconditional section. In fact, "[cleanup]" is just a synonym for "[app=cleanup]". Sections can be made conditional on the current values of any variables. i.e. "[country=US;city=LAX]" would begin a section of variables only valid if the two specified variables have the required values. o Config files can have conditional lines Any section specifier can apply only to a single line by putting a statement after it. "[city=LAX] state = CA" o Modify @INC variable with the "perlinc = path1,path2" statement This allows the person deploying the software to set up the Perl include path so that a particular version of the software installed on the system is used. Subsequent uses of "use" and "require" will load modules from the configured locations. o Validate that "required" options are provided Certain options can be identified as required. Otherwise the program will not run. o Validate option values against types Certain options can be identified as to their type or pattern (integer, int, float, number, date, datetime, string, regexp). If the option value is provided and it does not match the type or pattern, the program will not run. o Provide automatic "-?" and "--help" messages Adds user-friendliness to programs with no extra effort. 3. What were the design goals that make this distribution unique? #1 Support multiple installations of a complex suite of software. This is useful for development and deployment of large systems, where multiple versions may be in varying states of development, testing, or production. #2 Support a suite of programs all using a common set of configuration files. Large systems have many programs. We don't want to repeat the database name, username, and password in a separate config file for each program. #3 Make it so easy to use that a developer would be silly not to use it in even his smallest and simplest of scripts. However, it should be powerful enough to support advanced features as the developer needs them. #4 Support conditions where the environment variables are not easy to control. i.e. CGI programs or cron jobs. These were important design goals to support the App-Context variant of the Perl 5 Enterprise Environment (P5EE). See the P5EE website (http://www.officevision.com/pub/p5ee) for more details. 4. Why another module? Why not use Getopt::Long or others? There are many configuration modules on CPAN. See http://search.cpan.org/modlist/Option_Parameter_Config_Processing The most important feature was to be able to run it within a BEGIN block to modify the Perl include path (@INC). This is most of design goal #1. This means very few dependencies and only on core modules. I started by writing a few lines of code in a BEGIN block. Then it got to be a lot of lines of code in a BEGIN block. Then I moved it out to a module so I could reuse it easily. Then it grew into a full-fledged command line, environment variable, and config file value option processor. I did try Getopt::Long, but it wasn't that easy to use, you had to code your own "--help" feature, and it didn't incorporate environment variables or config files. I wanted something more high-level and full-featured, so I wrote App::Options. The description of the AppConfig distribution sounds similar to what is described here. However, the following are the key differences. * App::Options does its option processing in the BEGIN block. This allows for the @INC variable to be modified in time for subsequent "use" and "require" statements. This met design goal #1. * App::Options consults a cascading set of option files. These files include those which are system global, project global, and user private. This allows for system administrators, project developers, and in individual users to all have complementary roles on defining the configuration values. This met design goal #2. * App::Options "sections" (i.e. "[cleanup]") are conditional. It is conditional in App::Options, allowing you to use one set of option files to configure an entire suite of programs and scripts. In AppConfig, the section name is simply a prefix which gets prepended to subsequest option names. This also helped to meet design goal #2. * App::Options is not a toolkit but a standardized way of doing option processing. With AppConfig, you still have to decide where to put config files, you still have to code the "--help" feature, etc. With App::Options, you simply "use App::Options;" and all the hard work is done. Advanced options can be added later as necessary as args to the "use" statement. This met design goal #3. Design goal #4 required the autodetection of the ${prefix} variable. Thus, the App::Options module can be integrated with the discipline of choosing a root directory for your software installation (i.e. PREFIX=/usr/mycompany/2.0.12). 5. You say it's so easy. Show me. #!/usr/bin/perl use App::Options; # now use the %App::options hash print "yada yada\n" if ($App::options{verbose}); It's that easy. And it automatically has "-?" and "--help" support without you having to code a thing. Read the man page (or the code) if you want more power. 6. How do I install it? To install this module, cd to the directory that contains this README file and type the following (as usual). perl Makefile.PL make make test make install