; mainargs.s ; ; Ullrich von Bassewitz, 2003-03-07 ; Based on code from Stefan A. Haubenthal , 2003-11-08 ; Greg King, 2003-05-18 ; Stefan Haubenthal, 2005-01-07 ; Oliver Schmidt, 2005-04-05 ; ; Scan a group of arguments that are in BASIC's input-buffer. ; Build an array that points to the beginning of each argument. ; Send, to main(), that array and the count of the arguments. ; Command-lines look like these lines: ; ; call2051 ; call2051 : rem ; call2051:rem arg1 " arg 2 is quoted " arg3 "" arg5 ; ; "call" and "rem" are entokenned; the args. are not. Leading and trailing ; spaces outside of quotes are ignored. ; TO-DO: ; Add a control-character quoting mechanism. .constructor initmainargs, 24 .import __argc, __argv, __dos_type .include "zeropage.inc" .include "apple2.inc" ; Maximum number of arguments allowed in the argument table. ; (An argument contains a comma, at least.) MAXARGS = 10 ; ProDOS stores the filename in the second half of BASIC's input buffer, so ; there are 128 characters left. At least 1 character is necessary for the ; REM so 127 characters (including the terminating zero) may be used before ; overwriting the ProDOS filename. As we don't want to further restrict the ; command-line length we reserve those 127 characters. BUF_LEN = 127 BASIC_BUF = $200 FNAM_LEN = $280 FNAM = $281 REM = $B2 ; BASIC token-code ; Get possible command-line arguments. Goes into the special ONCE segment, ; which may be reused after the startup code is run. .segment "ONCE" initmainargs: ; Assume that the program was loaded, a moment ago, by the traditional BLOAD ; statement of BASIC.SYSTEM. Save the filename as argument #0 if available. ldx __dos_type ; No ProDOS -> argv[0] = "" beq :+ ; Terminate the filename with a zero to make it a valid C string. ldx FNAM_LEN : lda #$00 sta FNAM,x inc __argc ; argc always is equal to, at least, 1 ; Find the "rem" token. ldx #$00 : lda BASIC_BUF,x beq done ; No "rem" -> no args inx cmp #REM bne :- ; If a clock is present it is called by ProDOS on file operations. On machines ; with a slot-based clock (like the Thunder Clock) the clock firmware places ; the current date in BASIC's input buffer. Therefore we have to create a copy ; of the command-line in a different buffer before the original is potentially ; destroyed. ldy #$00 sty buffer + BUF_LEN - 1 : lda BASIC_BUF,x sta buffer,y inx iny cpy #BUF_LEN - 1 ; Keep the terminating zero intact bcc :- ; Start processing the arguments. ldx #$00 ldy #$01 * 2 ; Start with argv[1] ; Find the next argument. Stop if the end of the string or a character with the ; hibit set is reached. The later is true if the string isn't already parsed by ; BASIC (as expected) but is a still unprocessed input string. In this case the ; string isn't the expected command-line at all. We found this out the hard way ; by BRUNing the program with ProDOS on a machine with a slot-based clock (like ; the Thunder Clock). ProDOS called the clock firmware which places the current ; date as BASIC input string with hibits set in the input buffer. While looking ; for the REM token we stumbled across the first '2' character ($32+$80 = $B2) ; and interpreted the rest of the date as a spurious command-line parameter. next: lda buffer,x beq done bmi done inx cmp #' ' ; Skip leading spaces beq next ; Found start of next argument. We've incremented the pointer in X already, so ; it points to the second character of the argument. This is useful since we ; will check now for a quoted argument, in which case we will have to skip this ; first character. cmp #'"' ; Is the argument quoted? beq :+ ; Jump if so dex ; Reset pointer to first argument character lda #' ' ; A space ends the argument : sta tmp1 ; Set end of argument marker ; Now store a pointer to the argument into the next slot. txa ; Get low byte clc adc #buffer sta argv,y iny inc __argc ; Found another arg ; Search for the end of the argument. : lda buffer,x beq done inx cmp tmp1 bne :- ; We've found the end of the argument. X points one character behind it, and ; A contains the terminating character. To make the argument a valid C string, ; replace the terminating character by a zero. lda #$00 sta buffer-1,x ; Check if the maximum number of command-line arguments is reached. If not, ; parse the next one. lda __argc ; Get low byte of argument count cmp #MAXARGS ; Maximum number of arguments reached? bcc next ; Parse next one if not ; (The last vector in argv[] already is NULL.) done: lda #argv sta __argv stx __argv+1 rts .data ; char* argv[MAXARGS+1] = {FNAM}; argv: .addr FNAM .res MAXARGS * 2 .segment "INIT" buffer: .res BUF_LEN