package core_unix

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Functions to help test Command.

val parse_command_line : ?path:string list -> ?summary:string -> ?readme:(unit -> string) -> 'a Core.Command.Param.t -> (?on_error:(unit -> unit) -> ?on_success:('a -> unit) -> string list -> unit) Core.Staged.t

parse_command_line param returns a function which evaluates param against a string list as if those were the arguments passed to param. No shelling out takes place. However, the param is evaluated, and side effects of that evaluation do occur.

See validate_command_line below for a less accurate but generally safer test that does not evaluate the param. (Of course if your param is side-effect free, there's no reason to shy away from this one.)

If the command-line fails to parse, an error will be printed. If the command-line parsing code exits for any reason (e.g. you passed "-help"), the exit code is printed.

val validate_command : Core.Command.t -> string list -> unit Core.Or_error.t

validate_command command provides a function f s.t. f args will parse the args against command without executing the body of command if parsing succeeds.

f args will raise if args goes through an Exec _.

This will trigger any side-effects caused by parsing the args but it does guarentee the the args provided are completely valid.

validate_command command does not work in top-level expect tests.

val validate_command_line : Core.Command.Shape.t -> (string list -> unit Core.Or_error.t) Core.Or_error.t

validate_command_line shape provides a function f s.t. f args is best-effort check of args against the command described by shape, without actual execution of that command.

validate_command_line raises if any subcommand of shape would exec another command binary. This prevents us from introducing unexpected external dependencies into tests.

What we check:

1. args refers to a valid subcommand of shape.

2. args passes an acceptable number of anonymous arguments.

3. args passes flags that exist, an acceptable number of times, and with arguments where they are expected.

What we do not check:

1. Whether argument have acceptable values. E.g., it falsely accepts floats where ints are expected.

2. Side effects during argument parsing, including aborting further parsing of the command line. E.g., it does not handle -help or escape flags correctly.

3. Aliases excluded from help. E.g., --help.

4. full_flag_required. We assume every flag can be passed by prefix.

val complete : ?which_arg:int -> _ Core.Command.Param.t -> args:string list -> unit

complete ?which_arg param ~args prints the completion suggestions to stderr.

Thread safety:

complete is not in general thread-safe. It sets and then restores the environment variable COMP_CWORD. However, the cooperative multi-threading semantics of Async mean that other async jobs will not see the altered environments.

Side effects:

complete will not perform the side effects of the param proper (e.g., due to the f of a Param.map ~f).

complete will perform side effects of completion (e.g., due to the complete of Arg_type.create ~complete).

val complete_command : ?complete_subcommands: (path:string list -> part:string -> string list list -> string list option) -> ?which_arg:int -> Core.Command.t -> args:string list -> unit

As complete but applies to an intact Command.

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