| // Copyright 2014 The Bazel Authors. All rights reserved. |
| // |
| // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); |
| // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. |
| // You may obtain a copy of the License at |
| // |
| // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 |
| // |
| // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software |
| // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, |
| // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. |
| // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
| // limitations under the License. |
| package com.google.devtools.common.options; |
| |
| import java.lang.annotation.ElementType; |
| import java.lang.annotation.Retention; |
| import java.lang.annotation.RetentionPolicy; |
| import java.lang.annotation.Target; |
| |
| /** |
| * An interface for annotating fields in classes (derived from OptionsBase) that are options. |
| * |
| * <p>The fields of this annotation have matching getters in {@link OptionDefinition}. Please do not |
| * access these fields directly, but instead go through that class. |
| * |
| * <p>A number of checks are run on an Option's fields' values at compile time. See |
| * {@link com.google.devtools.common.options.processor.OptionProcessor} for details. |
| */ |
| @Target(ElementType.FIELD) |
| @Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME) |
| public @interface Option { |
| /** The name of the option ("--name"). */ |
| String name(); |
| |
| /** The single-character abbreviation of the option ("-a"). */ |
| char abbrev() default '\0'; |
| |
| /** A help string for the usage information. */ |
| String help() default ""; |
| |
| /** |
| * A short text string to describe the type of the expected value. E.g., <code>regex</code>. This |
| * is ignored for boolean, tristate, boolean_or_enum, and void options. |
| */ |
| String valueHelp() default ""; |
| |
| /** |
| * The default value for the option. This method should only be invoked directly by the parser |
| * implementation. Any access to default values should go via the parser to allow for application |
| * specific defaults. |
| * |
| * <p>There are two reasons this is a string. Firstly, it ensures that explicitly specifying this |
| * option at its default value (as printed in the usage message) has the same behavior as not |
| * specifying the option at all; this would be very hard to achieve if the default value was an |
| * instance of type T, since we'd need to ensure that {@link #toString()} and {@link #converter} |
| * were dual to each other. The second reason is more mundane but also more restrictive: |
| * annotation values must be compile-time constants. |
| * |
| * <p>If an option's defaultValue() is the string "null", the option's converter will not be |
| * invoked to interpret it; a null reference will be used instead. (It would be nice if |
| * defaultValue could simply return null, but bizarrely, the Java Language Specification does not |
| * consider null to be a compile-time constant.) This special interpretation of the string "null" |
| * is only applicable when computing the default value; if specified on the command-line, this |
| * string will have its usual literal meaning. |
| * |
| * <p>The default value for flags that set allowMultiple is always the empty list and its default |
| * value is ignored. |
| */ |
| String defaultValue(); |
| |
| /** |
| * This category field is deprecated. Bazel is in the process of migrating all options to use the |
| * better defined enums in OptionDocumentationCategory and the tags in the option_filters.proto |
| * file. It will still be used for the usage documentation until a sufficient proportion of |
| * options are using the new system. |
| * |
| * <p>Please leave the old category field in existing options to minimize disruption to the Help |
| * output during the transition period. All uses of this field will be removed when transition is |
| * complete. This category field has no effect on the other fields below, having both set is not a |
| * problem. |
| */ |
| @Deprecated |
| String category() default "misc"; |
| |
| /** |
| * Grouping categories used for usage documentation. See the enum's definition for details. |
| * |
| * <p>For undocumented flags that aren't listed anywhere, set this to |
| * OptionDocumentationCategory.UNDOCUMENTED. |
| */ |
| OptionDocumentationCategory documentationCategory(); |
| |
| /** |
| * Tag about the intent or effect of this option. Unless this option is a no-op (and the reason |
| * for this should be documented) all options should have some effect, so this needs to have at |
| * least one value, and as many as apply. |
| * |
| * <p>No option should list NO_OP or UNKNOWN with other effects listed, but all other combinations |
| * are allowed. |
| */ |
| OptionEffectTag[] effectTags(); |
| |
| /** |
| * Tag about the option itself, not its effect, such as option state (experimental) or intended |
| * use (a value that isn't a flag but is used internally, for example, is "internal") |
| * |
| * <p>If one or more of the OptionMetadataTag values apply, please include, but otherwise, this |
| * list can be left blank. |
| * |
| * <p>Hidden or internal options must be UNDOCUMENTED (set in {@link #documentationCategory()}). |
| */ |
| OptionMetadataTag[] metadataTags() default {}; |
| |
| /** |
| * The converter that we'll use to convert the string representation of this option's value into |
| * an object or a simple type. The default is to use the builtin converters ({@link |
| * Converters#DEFAULT_CONVERTERS}). Custom converters must implement the {@link Converter} |
| * interface. |
| */ |
| @SuppressWarnings({"unchecked", "rawtypes"}) |
| // Can't figure out how to coerce Converter.class into Class<? extends Converter<?>> |
| Class<? extends Converter> converter() default Converter.class; |
| |
| /** |
| * A boolean value indicating whether the option type should be allowed to occur multiple times in |
| * a single arg list. |
| * |
| * <p>If the option can occur multiple times, then the attribute value <em>must</em> be a list |
| * type {@code List<T>}, and the result type of the converter for this option must either match |
| * the parameter {@code T} or {@code List<T>}. In the latter case the individual lists are |
| * concatenated to form the full options value. |
| * |
| * <p>The {@link #defaultValue()} field of the annotation is ignored for repeatable flags and the |
| * default value will be the empty list. |
| */ |
| boolean allowMultiple() default false; |
| |
| /** |
| * If the option is actually an abbreviation for other options, this field will contain the |
| * strings to expand this option into. The original option is dropped and the replacement used in |
| * its stead. It is recommended that such an option be of type {@link Void}. |
| * |
| * <p>An expanded option overrides previously specified options of the same name, even if it is |
| * explicitly specified. This is the original behavior and can be surprising if the user is not |
| * aware of it, which has led to several requests to change this behavior. This was discussed in |
| * the blaze team and it was decided that it is not a strong enough case to change the behavior. |
| */ |
| String[] expansion() default {}; |
| |
| /** |
| * A mechanism for specifying an expansion that is a function of the parser's {@link |
| * IsolatedOptionsData}. This can be used to create an option that expands to different strings |
| * depending on what other options the parser knows about. |
| * |
| * <p>If provided (i.e. not {@link ExpansionFunction}{@code .class}), the {@code expansion} field |
| * must not be set. The mechanism of expansion is as if the {@code expansion} field were set to |
| * whatever the return value of this function is. |
| */ |
| Class<? extends ExpansionFunction> expansionFunction() default ExpansionFunction.class; |
| |
| /** |
| * Additional options that need to be implicitly added for this option. |
| * |
| * <p>Nothing guarantees that these options are not overridden by later or higher-priority values |
| * for the same options, so if this is truly a requirement, the user should check that the correct |
| * set of options is set. |
| * |
| * <p>These requirements are added for ANY mention of this option, so may not work as intended: in |
| * the case where a user is trying to explicitly turn off a flag (say, by setting a boolean flag |
| * to its default value of false), the mention will still turn on its requirements. For this |
| * reason, it is best not to use this feature, and rely on expansion flags if multi-flag groupings |
| * are needed. |
| */ |
| String[] implicitRequirements() default {}; |
| |
| /** |
| * If this field is a non-empty string, the option is deprecated, and a deprecation warning is |
| * added to the list of warnings when such an option is used. |
| */ |
| String deprecationWarning() default ""; |
| |
| /** |
| * The old name for this option. If an option has a name "foo" and an old name "bar", --foo=baz |
| * and --bar=baz will be equivalent. If the old name is used, a warning will be printed indicating |
| * that the old name is deprecated and the new name should be used. |
| */ |
| String oldName() default ""; |
| } |