+Introduction
+------------
+gsu is a small library of bash functions intended to ease the task of
+writing and documenting large shell scripts with multiple subcommands,
+each providing different functionality. gsu is known to work on Linux,
+FreeBSD, NetBSD and MacOS.
+
+This document describes how to install and use the gsu library.
+
+Setting up gsu
+--------------
+gsu is very easy to install:
+
+___Requirements___
+
+gsu is implemented in bash, and thus gsu depends on bash. Bash version
+3 is required, version 4 is recommended. Besides bash, gsu depends
+only on programs which are usually installed on any Unix system (awk,
+grep, sort, ...). Care has been taken to not rely on GNU specific
+behavior of these programs, so it should work on non GNU systems
+(MacOS, FreeBSD, NetBSD) as well. The gui module depends on the dialog utility.
+
+___Download___
+
+All gsu modules are contained in a git repository. Get a copy with
+
+ git clone git://git.tuebingen.mpg.de/gsu.git
+
+There is also a [gitweb](http://git.tuebingen.mpg.de/gsu.git) page.
+
+___Installation___
+
+gsu consists of several independent modules which are all located
+at the top level directory of the git repository. gsu requires no
+installation beyond downloading. In particular it is not necessary
+to make the downloaded files executable. The library modules can
+be sourced directly, simply tell your application where to find
+it. The examples of this document assume that gsu is installed in
+`/usr/local/lib/gsu` but this is not mandatory. `~/.gsu` is another
+reasonable choice.
+
+Conventions
+-----------
+___Public and private functions and variables___
+
+Although there is no way in bash to annotate symbols (functions
+and variables) as private or public, gsu distinguishes between the
+two. The `gsu_*` name space is reserved for public symbols while all
+private symbols start with `_gsu`.
+
+Private symbols are meant for internal use only. Applications should
+never use them directly because name and semantics might change
+between gsu versions.
+
+The public symbols, on the other hand, define the gsu API. This API
+must not change in incompatible ways that would break existing
+applications.
+
+___`$ret` and `$result`___
+
+All public gsu functions set the $ret variable to an integer value
+to indicate success or failure. As a convention, `$ret < 0` means
+failure while a non-negative value indicates success.
+
+The `$result` variable contains either the result of a function (if any)
+or further information in the error case. A negative value of `$ret` is
+in fact an error code similar to the errno variable used in C programs.
+It can be turned into a string that describes the error. The public
+`gsu_err_msg()` function can be used to pretty-print a suitable error
+message provided `$ret` and `$result` are set appropriately.
+
+The subcommand module
+---------------------
+This gsu module provides helper functions to ease the repetitious task
+of writing applications which operate in several related modes, where
+each mode of operation corresponds to a subcommand of the application.
+
+With gsu, for each subcommand one must only write a _command handler_
+which is simply a function that implements the subcommand. All
+processing is done by the gsu library. Functions starting with the
+string `com_` are automatically recognized as subcommand handlers.
+
+The startup part of the script has to source the subcommand file of
+gsu and must then call
+
+ gsu "$@"
+
+Minimal example:
+
+ #!/bin/bash
+ com_world()
+ {
+ echo 'hello world'
+ }
+ . /usr/local/lib/gsu/subcommand || exit 1
+ gsu "$@"
+
+Save this code in a file called `hello` (adjusting the installation
+directory if necessary), make it executable (`chmod +x hello`) and try
+
+ ./hello
+ ./hello world
+ ./hello invalid
+
+Here, we have created a bash script (`hello`) that has a single "mode"
+of operation, specified by the subcommand `world`.
+
+gsu automatically generates several reserved subcommands, which should
+not be specified: `help, man, prefs, complete`.
+
+___Command handler structure___
+
+For the automatically generated help and man subcommands to work
+properly, all subcommand handlers must be documented. In order to be
+recognized as subcommand help text, comments must be prefixed with
+two `#` characters and the subcommand documentation must be located
+between the function "declaration", `com_world()` in the example above,
+and the opening brace that starts the function body.
+
+Example:
+
+ com_world()
+ ##
+ ##
+ ##
+ {
+ echo 'hello world'
+ }
+
+The subcommand documentation consists of three parts:
+
+- The summary. One line of text,
+- the usage/synopsis string,
+- free text section.
+
+The three parts should be separated by lines consisting of two `#` characters
+only. Example:
+
+ com_world()
+ ##
+ ## Print the string "hello world" to stdout.
+ ##
+ ## Usage: world
+ ##
+ ## Any arguments to this function are ignored.
+ ##
+ ## Warning: This subcommand may cause the top most line of your terminal to
+ ## disappear and may cause DATA LOSS in your scrollback buffer. Use with
+ ## caution.
+ {
+ echo 'hello world'
+ }
+
+Replace `hello` with the above and try:
+
+ ./hello help
+ ./hello help world
+ ./hello help invalid
+ ./hello man
+
+to check the automatically generated help and man subcommands.
+
+___Error codes___
+
+As mentioned above, all public functions of gsu return an error code
+in the `$ret` variable. A negative value indicates failure, and in this
+case `$result` contains more information about the error. The same
+convention applies for subcommand handlers: gsu will automatically
+print an error message to stderr if a subcommand handler returns with
+`$ret` set to a negative value.
+
+To allow for error codes defined by the application, the
+`$gsu_errors` variable must be set before calling `gsu()`. Each
+non-empty line in this variable should contain an identifier and error
+string. Identifiers are written in upper case and start with `E_`. For
+convenience the `$GSU_SUCCESS` variable is defined to non-negative
+value. Subcommand handlers should set `$ret` to `$GSU_SUCCESS` on
+successful return.
+
+To illustrate the `$gsu_errors` variable, assume the task is to
+print all mount points which correspond to an ext3 file system in
+`/etc/fstab`. We'd like to catch two possible errors: (a) the file
+does not exist or is not readable, and (b) it contains no ext3 entry.
+A possible implementation of the ext3 subcommand could look like this
+(documentation omitted):
+
+ #!/bin/bash
+
+ gsu_errors='
+ E_NOENT No such file or directory
+ E_NOEXT3 No ext3 file system detected
+ '
+
+ com_ext3()
+ {
+ local f='/etc/fstab'
+ local ext3_lines
+
+ if [[ ! -r "$f" ]]; then
+ ret=-$E_NOENT
+ result="$f"
+ return
+ fi
+ ext3_lines=$(awk '{if ($3 == "ext3") print $2}' "$f")
+ if [[ -z "$ext3_lines" ]]; then
+ ret=-$E_NOEXT3
+ result="$f"
+ return
+ fi
+ printf 'ext3 mount points:\n%s\n' "$ext3_lines"
+ ret=$GSU_SUCCESS
+ }
+
+___Printing diagnostic output___
+
+gsu provides a couple of convenience functions for output. All
+functions write to stderr.
+
+- `gsu_msg()`. Writes the name of the application and the given text.
+
+- `gsu_short_msg()`. Like `gsu_msg()`, but does not print the application name.
+
+- `gsu_date_msg()`. Writes application name, date, and the given text.
+
+- `gsu_err_msg()`. Prints an error message according to `$ret` and `$result`.
+
+___Subcommands with options___
+
+Bash's getopts builtin provides a way to define and parse command line
+options, but it is cumbersome to use because one must loop over all
+given arguments and check the `OPTIND` and `OPTARG` variables during
+each iteration. The `gsu_getopts()` function makes this repetitive
+task easier.
+
+`gsu_getopts()` takes a single argument: the optstring which contains
+the option characters to be recognized. As usual, if a character is
+followed by a colon, the option is expected to have an argument. On
+return `$result` contains bash code that should be eval'ed to parse
+the position parameters `$1`, `$2`, ... of the subcommand according
+to the optstring.
+
+The shell code returned by `gsu_getopts()` creates a local variable
+`$o_x` for each defined option `x`. It contains `true/false` for
+options without argument and either the empty string or the given
+argument for options that take an argument.
+
+To illustrate `gsu_getopts()`, assume the above `com_ext3()` subcommand
+handler is to be extended to allow for arbitrary file systems, and
+that it should print either only the mount point as before or the
+full line of `/etc/fstab`, depending on whether the verbose switch
+`-v` was given at the command line.
+
+Hence our new subcommand handler must recognize two options: `-t` for
+the file system type and `-v`. Note that `-t` takes an argument but
+`-v` does not. Hence we shall use the optstring `t:v` as the argument
+for `gsu_getopts()` as follows:
+
+ com_fs()
+ {
+ local f='/etc/fstab'
+ local fstype fstab_lines
+ local -i awk_field=2
+
+ gsu_getopts 't:v'
+ eval "$result"
+ (($ret < 0)) && return
+
+ [[ -z "$o_t" ]] && o_t='ext3' # default to ext3 if -t is not given
+ [[ "$o_v" == 'true' ]] && awk_field=0 # $0 is the whole line
+ fstab_lines=$(awk -v fstype="$o_t" -v n="$awk_field" \
+ '{if ($3 == fstype) print $n}' "$f")
+ printf '%s entries:\n%s\n' "$o_t" "$fstab_lines"
+ ret=$GSU_SUCCESS
+ }
+
+Another repetitive task is to check the number of non-option arguments
+and to report an error if this number turns out to be invalid for the
+subcommand in question. The `gsu_check_arg_count()` function performs
+this check and sets `$ret` and `$result` as appropriate. This function
+takes three arguments: the actual argument count and the minimal and
+maximal number of non-option arguments allowed. The last argument may
+be omitted in which case any number of arguments is considered valid.
+
+Our `com_world()` subcommand handler above ignored any given
+arguments. Let's assume we'd like to handle this case and
+print an error message if one or more arguments are given. With
+`gsu_check_arg_count()` this can be achieved as follows:
+
+ com_world()
+ {
+ gsu_check_arg_count $# 0 0 # no arguments allowed
+ (($ret < 0)) && return
+ echo 'hello world'
+ }
+
+___Global documentation___
+
+Besides the documentation for subcommands, one might also want to
+include an overall description of the application which provides
+general information that is not related to any particular subcommand.
+
+If such a description is included at the top of the script, the
+automatically generated man subcommand will print it. gsu recognizes
+the description only if it is enclosed by two lines consisting of at
+least 70 # characters.
+
+Example:
+
+ #/bin/bash
+
+ #######################################################################
+ # gsu-based hello - a cumbersome way to write a hello world program
+ # -----------------------------------------------------------------
+ # It not only requires one to download and install some totally weird
+ # git repo, it also takes about 50 lines of specially written code
+ # to perform what a simple echo 'hello world' would do equally well.
+ #######################################################################
+
+___HTML output___
+
+The output of the auto-generated man subcommand is a suitable input for the
+grutatxt plain text to html converter. Hence
+
+ ./hello man | grutatxt > index.html
+
+is all it takes to produce an html page for your application.
+
+___Interactive completion___
+
+The auto-generated `complete` subcommand provides interactive bash
+completion. To activate completion for the hello program, it is
+enough to put the following into your `~/.bashrc`:
+
+ _hello()
+ {
+ eval $(hello complete 2>/dev/null)
+ }
+ complete -F _hello hello
+
+This will give you completion for the first argument of the hello
+program: the subcommand.
+
+In order to get subcommand-sensitive completion you must provide a
+_completer_ in your application for each subcommand that is to support
+completion. Like subcommand handlers, completers are recognized by name:
+If a function `xxx_complete()` is defined, gsu will call it on the
+attempt to complete the `xxx` subcommand at the subcommand line. gsu
+has a few functions to aid you in writing a completer.
+
+Let's have a look at the completer for the above `fs` subcommand.
+
+ complete_fs()
+ {
+ local f='/etc/fstab'
+ local optstring='t:v'
+
+ gsu_complete_options $optstring "$@"
+ (($ret > 0)) && return
+
+ gsu_cword_is_option_parameter $optstring "$@"
+ [[ "$result" == 't' ]] && awk '{print $3}' "$f"
+ }
+
+Completers are always called with `$1` set to the index into the array
+of words in the current command line when tab completion was attempted
+(see `COMP_CWORD` in the bash manual). These words are passed to the
+completer as `$2`, `$3`,...
+
+`gsu_complete_options()` receives the option string as `$1`, the word
+index as `$2` and the individual words as `$3`, `$4`,... Hence we
+may simply pass the `$optstring` and `"$@"`. `gsu_complete_options()`
+checks if the current word begins with `-`, i.e., whether an attempt
+to complete an option was performed. If yes `gsu_complete_options()`
+prints all possible command line options and sets `$ret` to a
+positive value.
+
+The last two lines of `complete_fs()` check whether the word preceding
+the current word is an option that takes an argument. If it is,
+that option is returned in `$result`, otherwise `$result` is the empty
+string. Hence, if we are completing the argument to `-t`, the awk
+command is executed to print all file system types of `/etc/fstab` as
+the possible completions.
+
+See the comments to `gsu_complete_options()`,
+`gsu_cword_is_option_parameter()` and `gsu_get_unnamed_arg_num()`
+(which was not covered here) in the `subcommand` file for a more
+detailed description.
+
+The gui module
+--------------
+This module can be employed to create interactive dialog boxes from a
+bash script. It depends on the dialog(1) utility which is available on
+all Unix systems. On Debian and Ubuntu Linux it can be installed with
+
+ apt-get install dialog
+
+The core of the gui module is the `gsu_gui()` function which receives
+a _menu tree_ as its single argument. The menu tree defines a tree
+of menus for the user to navigate with the cursor keys. As for a
+file system tree, internal tree nodes represent folders. Leaf nodes,
+on the other hand, correspond to _actions_. Pressing enter activates a
+node. On activation, for internal nodes a new menu with the contents of
+the subfolder is shown. For leaf nodes the associated _action handler_
+is executed.
+
+Hence the application has to provide a menu tree and an action handler
+for each leaf node defined in the tree. The action handler is simply a
+function which is named according to the node. In most cases the action
+handler will run dialog(1) to show some dialog box on its own. Wrappers
+for some widgets of dialog are provided by the gui module, see below.
+
+___Menu trees___
+
+The concept of a menu tree is best illustrated by an example. Assume
+we'd like to write a system utility for the not-so-commandline-affine
+Linux sysadmin next door. For the implementation we confine ourselves
+with giving some insight in the system by running lean system commands
+like `df` to show the list of file system, or `dmesg` to print the
+contents of the kernel log buffer. Bash code which defines the menu
+tree could look like this:
+
+ menu_tree='
+ load_average
+ processes
+ hardware/
+ cpu
+ scsi
+ storage/
+ df
+ mdstat
+ log/
+ syslog
+ dmesg
+ '
+
+In this tree, `hardware/`, `block_devices/` and `log/` are the only
+internal nodes. Note that these are written with a trailing slash
+character while the leaf nodes have no slash at the end. All entries
+of the menu tree must be indented by tab characters.
+
+___Action handlers___
+
+Action handlers are best explained via example:
+
+Our application, let's call it `lsi` for _lean system information_,
+must provide action handlers for all leaf nodes. Here is the action
+handler for the `df` node:
+
+ lsi_df()
+ {
+ gsu_msgbox "$(df -h)"
+ }
+
+The function name `lsi_df` is derived from the name of the script
+(`lsi`) and the name of the leaf node (`df`). The function simply
+passes the output of the `df(1)` command as the first argument to the
+public gsu function `gsu_msgbox()` which runs dialog(1) to display
+a message box that shows the given text.
+
+`gsu_msgbox()` is suitable for small amounts of output. For essentially
+unbounded output like log files that can be arbitrary large, it is
+better to use `gsu_textbox()` instead which takes a path to the file
+that contains the text to show.
+
+To illustrate `gsu_input_box()` function, assume the action handler
+for the `processes` leaf node should ask for a username, and display
+all processes owned by the given user. This could be implemented
+as follows.
+
+ lsi_processes()
+ {
+ local username
+
+ gsu_inputbox 'Enter username' "$LOGNAME"
+ (($ret != 0)) && return
+ username="$result"
+ gsu_msgbox "$(pgrep -lu "$username")"
+ }
+
+Once all other action handlers have been defined, the only thing left
+to do is to source the gsu gui module and to call `gsu_gui()`:
+
+ . /usr/local/lib/gsu/gui || exit 1
+ gsu_gui "$menu_tree"
+
+___Example___
+
+The complete lsi script below can be used as a starting point
+for your own gsu gui application. If you cut and paste it, be
+sure to not turn tab characters into space characters.
+
+ #!/bin/bash
+
+ menu_tree='
+ load_average
+ processes
+ hardware/
+ cpu
+ scsi
+ storage/
+ df
+ mdstat
+ log/
+ syslog
+ dmesg
+ '
+
+ lsi_load_average()
+ {
+ gsu_msgbox "$(cat /proc/loadavg)"
+ }
+
+ lsi_processes()
+ {
+ local username
+
+ gsu_inputbox 'Enter username' "$LOGNAME"
+ (($ret < 0)) && return
+ username="$result"
+ gsu_msgbox "$(pgrep -lu "$username")"
+ }
+
+ lsi_cpu()
+ {
+ gsu_msgbox "$(lscpu)"
+ }
+
+ lsi_scsi()
+ {
+ gsu_msgbox "$(lsscsi)"
+ }
+
+ lsi_df()
+ {
+ gsu_msgbox "$(df -h)"
+ }
+
+ lsi_mdstat()
+ {
+ gsu_msgbox "$(cat /proc/mdstat)"
+ }
+
+ lsi_dmesg()
+ {
+ local tmp="$(mktemp)" || exit 1
+
+ trap "rm -f $tmp" EXIT
+ dmesg > $tmp
+ gsu_textbox "$tmp"
+ }
+
+ lsi_syslog()
+ {
+ gsu_textbox '/var/log/syslog'
+ }
+
+ . /usr/local/lib/gsu/gui || exit 1
+ gsu_gui "$menu_tree"
+
+The config module
+-----------------
+Some applications need config options which are not related to
+any particular subcommand, like the URL of a web service, the path
+to some data directory, or a default value which is to be used by
+several subcommands. Such options do not change frequently and are
+hence better stored in a configuration file rather than passed to
+every subcommand that needs the information.
+
+The config module of gsu makes it easy to maintain such options and
+performs routine tasks like reading and checking the values given in
+the config file, or printing out the current configuration. It can
+be used stand-alone, or in combination with either the subcommand or
+the gui module.
+
+___Defining config options___
+
+To use the config module, you must define the `$gsu_options`
+bash array. Each config option is represented by one slot in this
+array. Here is an example which defines two options:
+
+ gsu_options=(
+ "
+ name=fs_type
+ option_type=string
+ default_value=ext3
+ required=false
+ description='file system type to consider'
+ help_text='
+ This option is used in various contexts. All
+ subcommands which need a file system type
+ use the value specified here as the default.
+ '
+ "
+ "
+ name=limit
+ option_type=num
+ default_value=3
+ required=no
+ description='print at most this many lines of output'
+ "
+ )
+
+Each config option consists of the following fields:
+
+- `name`. This must be a valid bash variable name. Hence no special
+characters are allowed.
+
+- `option_type`. Only `string` and `num` are supported but additional
+types might be supported in future versions. While string variables
+may have arbitrary content, only integers are accepted for variables
+of type `num`.
+
+- `default_value`. The value to use if the option was not specified.
+
+- `required`. Whether gsu considers it an error if the option was
+not specified. It does not make sense to set this to `true` and set
+`default_value` at the same time.
+
+- `description`. Short description of the variable. It is printed by
+the `prefs` subcommand.
+
+- `help_text`. Optional long description, also printed by `prefs`.
+
+To enable the config module you must source the config module of gsu
+after `$gsu_options` has been defined:
+
+ . /usr/local/lib/gsu/config || exit 1
+
+___Passing config options to the application___
+
+There are two ways to pass the value of an option to a gsu application:
+environment variable and config file. The default config file is
+`~/.$gsu_name.rc` where `$gsu_name` is the basename of the application,
+but this can be changed by setting `$gsu_config_file`. Thus, the
+following two statements are equivalent
+
+ fs_type=xfs hello fs
+ echo 'fs_type=xfs' > ~/.hello.rc && hello fs
+
+If an option is set both in the environment and in the config file,
+the environment takes precedence.
+
+___Checking config options___
+
+The gsu config module defines two public functions for this purpose:
+`gsu_check_options()` and `gsu_check_options_or_die()`. The latter
+function exits on errors while the former function only sets `$ret`
+and `$result` as appropriate and lets the application deal with the
+error. The best place to call one of these functions is after sourcing
+the config module but before calling `gsu()` or `gsu_gui()`.
+
+___Using config values___
+
+The name of an option as specified in `$gsu_options` (`fs_type` in
+the example above) is what users of your application may specify at
+the command line or in the config file. This leads to a mistake that
+is easy to make and difficult to debug: The application might use a
+variable name which is also a config option.
+
+To reduce the chance for this to happen, `gsu_check_options()` creates
+a different set of variables for the application where each variable
+is prefixed with `${gsu_name}`. For example, if `$gsu_options` as above
+is part of the hello script, `$hello_fs_type` and `$hello_limit` are
+defined after `gsu_check_options()` returned successfully. Only the
+prefixed variants are guaranteed to contain the proper value, so this
+variable should be used exclusively in the application. The
+prefix may be changed by setting `$gsu_config_var_prefix` before calling
+`gsu_check_options()`.
+
+___com_prefs()___
+
+For scripts which source both the subcommand and the config module, the
+auto-generated `prefs` subcommand prints out the current configuration
+and exits. The description and help text of the option as specified
+in the `description` and `help_text` fields of `$gsu_options` are shown
+as comments in the output. Hence this output can be used as a template
+for the config file.
+
+List of public variables
+------------------------
+- `$gsu_dir`. Where gsu is installed. If unset, gsu guesses
+its installation directory by examining the `$BASH_SOURCE` array.
+
+- `$gsu_name`. The name of the application. Defaults to `$0` with
+all leading directories removed.
+
+- `$gsu_banner_txt`. Used by both the subcommand and the gui
+module. It is printed by the man subcommand, and as the title for
+dialog windows.
+
+- `$gsu_errors`. Identifier/text pairs for custom error reporting.
+
+- `$gsu_config_file`. The name of the config file of the application.
+Defaults to `~/.${gsu_name}.rc`.
+
+- `$gsu_options`. Array of config options, used by the config module.
+
+- `$gsu_config_var_prefix`. Used by the config module to set up
+the variables defined in `$gsu_options`.
+
+License
+-------
+gsu is licensed under the GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE (LGPL), version 3.
+See COPYING and COPYING.LESSER.
+
+Contact
+-------
+Send beer, pizza, patches, improvements, bug reports, flames,
+(in this order), to Andre Noll <maan@tuebingen.mpg.de>.
+
+References
+----------
+- [bash](http://www.gnu.org/software/bash/bash.html)
+- [dialog](http://www.invisible-island.net/dialog/dialog.html)
+- [grutatxt](http://triptico.com/software/grutatxt.html)