git/var.c
Eric W. Biederman aed022ab4c [PATCH] Add git-var a tool for reading interesting git variables.
Sharing code between shell scripts and C is a challenge.  The program
git-var allows us to have a set of named values that a shell script can
interrogate and a normal C program can simply call the functions that
compute them.  Allowing sharing when computing plain test values.

Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
2005-07-15 10:00:35 -07:00

66 lines
1.1 KiB
C

/*
* GIT - The information manager from hell
*
* Copyright (C) Eric Biederman, 2005
*/
#include "cache.h"
#include <stdio.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <string.h>
static char *var_usage = "git-var [-l | <variable>]";
struct git_var {
const char *name;
char *(*read)(void);
};
static struct git_var git_vars[] = {
{ "GIT_COMMITTER_IDENT", git_committer_info },
{ "GIT_AUTHOR_IDENT", git_author_info },
{ "", NULL },
};
static void list_vars(void)
{
struct git_var *ptr;
for(ptr = git_vars; ptr->read; ptr++) {
printf("%s=%s\n", ptr->name, ptr->read());
}
}
static const char *read_var(const char *var)
{
struct git_var *ptr;
const char *val;
val = NULL;
for(ptr = git_vars; ptr->read; ptr++) {
if (strcmp(var, ptr->name) == 0) {
val = ptr->read();
break;
}
}
return val;
}
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
const char *val;
if (argc != 2) {
usage(var_usage);
}
setup_ident();
val = NULL;
if (strcmp(argv[1], "-l") == 0) {
list_vars();
return 0;
}
val = read_var(argv[1]);
if (!val)
usage(var_usage);
printf("%s\n", val);
return 0;
}