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Phase 4 of plans/exit.md: the aux/terminal sub-entrypoints. pkg/auxents and
pkg/terminals are now os.Exit-free; even the dispatchers return exit codes
instead of exiting.
- auxents.Dispatch returns (handled bool, exitCode int); entrypoint.Main --
the one sanctioned exit point -- exits with the code.
- terminals.Dispatch returns an exit code; the climain caller wraps it in a
lib.ExitRequest, which also retires the 'terminal did not exit the process'
panic.
- Usage functions (hex, unhex, lecat, termcvt, repl, script, regtest) no
longer take an exitCode parameter and exit; call sites print usage and
return the code explicitly.
- Inner I/O helpers (hexDumpFile, unhexFile, lecatFile, termcvtFile) return
errors; each sub-main prints 'mlr {verb}: ...' as before and returns 1.
lecatFile formerly looped forever on a non-EOF read error; it now returns
the error.
- The regtest directory walk (Execute / executeSinglePath /
executeSingleDirectory / hasCaseSubdirectories) plumbs errors up to
RegTestMain; regression_test.go updated for the new Execute signature.
Stderr messages and exit codes are unchanged across mlr aux-list, hex, unhex,
lecat, termcvt, help, version, repl, script, and regtest surfaces (checked by
hand); all 4779 regression cases pass; make lint is clean; docs rebuild with
zero churn.
Co-authored-by: Claude Fable 5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
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| .. | ||
| doc.go | ||
| errors_json.go | ||
| errors_json_test.go | ||
| mlrcli_mlrrc.go | ||
| mlrcli_mlrrc_test.go | ||
| mlrcli_parse.go | ||
| mlrcli_shebang.go | ||
| README.md | ||
Logic for parsing the Miller command line.
pkg/climainis the flag-parsing logic for supporting Miller's command-line interface. When you type something likemlr --icsv --ojson put '$sum = $a + $b' then filter '$sum > 1000' myfile.csv, it's the CLI parser which makes it possible for Miller to construct a CSV record-reader, a transformer chain ofputthenfilter, and a JSON record-writer.pkg/clicontains datatypes for the CLI-parser, which was split out to avoid a Go package-import cycle.- I don't use the Go
flagpackage. Theflagpackage is quite fine; Miller's command-line processing is multi-purpose between serving CLI needs per se as well as for manpage/docfile generation, and I found it simplest to roll my own command-line handling here. More importantly, some Miller verbs such assorttake flags more than once --mlr sort -f field1 -n field2 -f field3-- which is not supported by theflagpackage.