pacman/scripts/library
Dave Reisner b58489d29a scripts/library: add human_to_size
This is a bash wrapper around an awk function that parses human readable
sizes and returns their representative values in bytes, as a string. A
small test harness is added to validate the functionality.

Signed-off-by: Dave Reisner <dreisner@archlinux.org>
2012-06-25 23:39:12 -05:00
..
README scripts/library: add human_to_size 2012-06-25 23:39:12 -05:00
human_to_size.sh scripts/library: add human_to_size 2012-06-25 23:39:12 -05:00
output_format.sh scripts: refactor output formatting functions 2011-06-15 09:18:05 -05:00
parseopts.sh scripts/library: introduce parseopts 2012-04-24 08:38:36 -05:00

README

This folder contains code snippets that can be reused by multiple
scripts.  A brief description of each file follows.

output_format.sh:
Provides basic output formatting functions with levels 'msg', 'msg2',
'warning' and 'error'.  The 'msg' amd 'msg2' functions print to stdout
and can be silenced by defining 'QUIET'.  The 'warning' and 'error'
functions print to stderr with the appropriate prefix added to the
message.

parseopts.sh:
A getopt_long-like parser which portably supports longopts and shortopts
with some GNU extensions. It does not allow for options with optional
arguments. For both short and long opts, options requiring an argument
should be suffixed with a colon. After the first argument containing
the short opts, any number of valid long opts may be be passed. The end
of the options delimiter must then be added, followed by the user arguments
to the calling program.

Reccommended Usage:
  OPT_SHORT='fb:z'
  OPT_LONG=('foo' 'bar:' 'baz')
  if ! parseopts "$OPT_SHORT" "${OPT_LONG[@]}" -- "$@"; then
    exit 1
  fi
  set -- "${OPTRET[@]}"
Returns:
  0: parse success
  1: parse failure (error message supplied)

human_to_size.sh:
A function to convert human readable sizes (such as "5.3 GiB") to raw byte
equivalents. base10 and base2 suffixes are supported, case sensitively. If
successful, the converted byte value is written to stdout and the function
returns 0. If an error occurs, nothing in written and the function returns 1.
Results may be inaccurate when using a broken implementation of awk, such
as mawk or busybox awk.