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Most CLI commands that take file paths as arguments follow the convention of
treating a path of - (a single hyphen/dash) as referring to either standard
input or standard output (depending on whether the path is read from or written
to). The patharg crate lets your programs follow this convention too: it
provides InputArg and OutputArg types that wrap command-line arguments,
with methods for reading from/writing to either the given path or — if the
argument is just a hyphen — the appropriate standard stream.
InputArg and OutputArg implement From<OsString>, From<String>, and
FromStr, so you can use them seamlessly with your favorite Rust source of
command-line arguments, be it clap, lexopt, plain old
std::env::args/std::env::args_os, or whatever else is
out there. The source repository contains examples of two of these:
-
flipcaseandtokio-flipcaseshow how to use this crate withclap. -
revcharsandtokio-revcharsshow how to use this crate withlexopt.
The only other library I am aware of that provides similar functionality to
patharg is clio. Compared to clio, patharg aims to be a much
simpler, smaller library that doesn't try to be too clever. Major differences
between the libraries include:
-
When a
cliopath instance is created,cliowill either (depending on the type used) open the path immediately — which can lead to empty files being needlessly left behind if an output file is constructed during argument processing but an error occurs before the file is actually used — or else check that the path can be opened — which is vulnerable to TOCTTOU bugs.pathargdoes no such thing. -
cliosupports reading from & writing to HTTP(S) URLs and has special treatment for FIFOs.pathargsees no need for such excesses. -
patharghas a feature for allowing async I/O withtokio.cliodoes not. -
patharghas optional support forserde.cliodoes not.