diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'lib/command.h')
-rw-r--r-- | lib/command.h | 193 |
1 files changed, 184 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/lib/command.h b/lib/command.h index 2d708d8e..e47c4255 100644 --- a/lib/command.h +++ b/lib/command.h @@ -138,18 +138,32 @@ struct cmd_element int (*func) (struct cmd_element *, struct vty *, int, const char *[]); const char *doc; /* Documentation of this command. */ int daemon; /* Daemon to which this command belong. */ - vector strvec; /* Pointing out each description vector. */ - unsigned int cmdsize; /* Command index count. */ - char *config; /* Configuration string */ - vector subconfig; /* Sub configuration string */ + vector tokens; /* Vector of cmd_tokens */ u_char attr; /* Command attributes */ }; + +enum cmd_token_type +{ + TOKEN_TERMINAL = 0, + TOKEN_MULTIPLE, + TOKEN_KEYWORD, +}; + /* Command description structure. */ -struct desc +struct cmd_token { + enum cmd_token_type type; + + /* Used for type == MULTIPLE */ + vector multiple; /* vector of cmd_token, type == FINAL */ + + /* Used for type == KEYWORD */ + vector keyword; /* vector of vector of cmd_tokens */ + + /* Used for type == TERMINAL */ char *cmd; /* Command string. */ - char *str; /* Command's description. */ + char *desc; /* Command's description. */ }; /* Return value of the commands. */ @@ -192,7 +206,170 @@ struct desc int argc __attribute__ ((unused)), \ const char *argv[] __attribute__ ((unused)) ) -/* DEFUN for vty command interafce. Little bit hacky ;-). */ +/* DEFUN for vty command interafce. Little bit hacky ;-). + * + * DEFUN(funcname, cmdname, cmdstr, helpstr) + * + * funcname + * ======== + * + * Name of the function that will be defined. + * + * cmdname + * ======= + * + * Name of the struct that will be defined for the command. + * + * cmdstr + * ====== + * + * The cmdstr defines the command syntax. It is used by the vty subsystem + * and vtysh to perform matching and completion in the cli. So you have to take + * care to construct it adhering to the following grammar. The names used + * for the production rules losely represent the names used in lib/command.c + * + * cmdstr = cmd_token , { " " , cmd_token } ; + * + * cmd_token = cmd_terminal + * | cmd_multiple + * | cmd_keyword ; + * + * cmd_terminal_fixed = fixed_string + * | variable + * | range + * | ipv4 + * | ipv4_prefix + * | ipv6 + * | ipv6_prefix ; + * + * cmd_terminal = cmd_terminal_fixed + * | option + * | vararg ; + * + * multiple_part = cmd_terminal_fixed ; + * cmd_multiple = "(" , multiple_part , ( "|" | { "|" , multiple_part } ) , ")" ; + * + * keyword_part = fixed_string , { " " , ( cmd_terminal_fixed | cmd_multiple ) } ; + * cmd_keyword = "{" , keyword_part , { "|" , keyword_part } , "}" ; + * + * lowercase = "a" | ... | "z" ; + * uppercase = "A" | ... | "Z" ; + * digit = "0" | ... | "9" ; + * number = digit , { digit } ; + * + * fixed_string = (lowercase | digit) , { lowercase | digit | uppercase | "-" | "_" } ; + * variable = uppercase , { uppercase | "_" } ; + * range = "<" , number , "-" , number , ">" ; + * ipv4 = "A.B.C.D" ; + * ipv4_prefix = "A.B.C.D/M" ; + * ipv6 = "X:X::X:X" ; + * ipv6_prefix = "X:X::X:X/M" ; + * option = "[" , variable , "]" ; + * vararg = "." , variable ; + * + * To put that all in a textual description: A cmdstr is a sequence of tokens, + * separated by spaces. + * + * Terminal Tokens: + * + * A very simple cmdstring would be something like: "show ip bgp". It consists + * of three Terminal Tokens, each containing a fixed string. When this command + * is called, no arguments will be passed down to the function implementing it, + * as it only consists of fixed strings. + * + * Apart from fixed strings, Terminal Tokens can also contain variables: + * An example would be "show ip bgp A.B.C.D". This command expects an IPv4 + * as argument. As this is a variable, the IP address entered by the user will + * be passed down as an argument. Apart from two exceptions, the other options + * for Terminal Tokens behave exactly as we just discussed and only make a + * difference for the CLI. The two exceptions will be discussed in the next + * paragraphs. + * + * A Terminal Token can contain a so called option match. This is a simple + * string variable that the user may omit. An example would be: + * "show interface [IFNAME]". If the user calls this without an interface as + * argument, no arguments will be passed down to the function implementing + * this command. Otherwise, the interface name will be provided to the function + * as a regular argument. + + * Also, a Terminal Token can contain a so called vararg. This is used e.g. in + * "show ip bgp regexp .LINE". The last token is a vararg match and will + * consume all the arguments the user inputs on the command line and append + * those to the list of arguments passed down to the function implementing this + * command. (Therefore, it doesn't make much sense to have any tokens after a + * vararg because the vararg will already consume all the words the user entered + * in the CLI) + * + * Multiple Tokens: + * + * The Multiple Token type can be used if there are multiple possibilities what + * arguments may be used for a command, but it should map to the same function + * nonetheless. An example would be "ip route A.B.C.D/M (reject|blackhole)" + * In that case both "reject" and "blackhole" would be acceptable as last + * arguments. The words matched by Multiple Tokens are always added to the + * argument list, even if they are matched by fixed strings. Such a Multiple + * Token can contain almost any type of token that would also be acceptable + * for a Terminal Token, the exception are optional variables and varag. + * + * There is one special case that is used in some places of Quagga that should be + * pointed out here shortly. An example would be "password (8|) WORD". This + * construct is used to have fixed strings communicated as arguments. (The "8" + * will be passed down as an argument in this case) It does not mean that + * the "8" is optional. Another historic and possibly surprising property of + * this construct is that it consumes two parts of helpstr. (Help + * strings will be explained later) + * + * Keyword Tokens: + * + * There are commands that take a lot of different and possibly optional arguments. + * An example from ospf would be the "default-information originate" command. This + * command takes a lot of optional arguments that may be provided in any order. + * To accomodate such commands, the Keyword Token has been implemented. + * Using the keyword token, the "default-information originate" command and all + * its possible options can be represented using this single cmdstr: + * "default-information originate \ + * {always|metric <0-16777214>|metric-type (1|2)|route-map WORD}" + * + * Keywords always start with a fixed string and may be followed by arguments. + * Except optional variables and vararg, everything is permitted here. + * + * For the special case of a keyword without arguments, either NULL or the + * keyword itself will be pushed as an argument, depending on whether the + * keyword is present. + * For the other keywords, arguments will be only pushed for + * variables/Multiple Tokens. If the keyword is not present, the arguments that + * would have been pushed will be substituted by NULL. + * + * A few examples: + * "default information originate metric-type 1 metric 1000" + * would yield the following arguments: + * { NULL, "1000", "1", NULL } + * + * "default information originate always route-map RMAP-DEFAULT" + * would yield the following arguments: + * { "always", NULL, NULL, "RMAP-DEFAULT" } + * + * helpstr + * ======= + * + * The helpstr is used to show a short explantion for the commands that + * are available when the user presses '?' on the CLI. It is the concatenation + * of the helpstrings for all the tokens that make up the command. + * + * There should be one helpstring for each token in the cmdstr except those + * containing other tokens, like Multiple or Keyword Tokens. For those, there + * will only be the helpstrings of the contained tokens. + * + * The individual helpstrings are expected to be in the same order as their + * respective Tokens appear in the cmdstr. They should each be terminated with + * a linefeed. The last helpstring should be terminated with a linefeed as well. + * + * Care should also be taken to avoid having similar tokens with different + * helpstrings. Imagine e.g. the commands "show ip ospf" and "show ip bgp". + * they both contain a helpstring for "show", but only one will be displayed + * when the user enters "sh?". If those two helpstrings differ, it is not + * defined which one will be shown and the behavior is therefore unpredictable. + */ #define DEFUN(funcname, cmdname, cmdstr, helpstr) \ DEFUN_CMD_FUNC_DECL(funcname) \ DEFUN_CMD_ELEMENT(funcname, cmdname, cmdstr, helpstr, 0, 0) \ @@ -330,7 +507,6 @@ struct desc extern void install_node (struct cmd_node *, int (*) (struct vty *)); extern void install_default (enum node_type); extern void install_element (enum node_type, struct cmd_element *); -extern void sort_node (void); /* Concatenates argv[shift] through argv[argc-1] into a single NUL-terminated string with a space between each element (allocated using @@ -346,7 +522,6 @@ extern int config_from_file (struct vty *, FILE *); extern enum node_type node_parent (enum node_type); extern int cmd_execute_command (vector, struct vty *, struct cmd_element **, int); extern int cmd_execute_command_strict (vector, struct vty *, struct cmd_element **); -extern void config_replace_string (struct cmd_element *, char *, ...); extern void cmd_init (int); extern void cmd_terminate (void); |