--help option and help command should print to stdout not stderr
--help and help are successful commands so output should not go to error. QE teams have requested this change, also users doing docker help | less or docker run --help | less would expect this to work. Usage statement should only be printed when the user asks for it. Errors should print error message and then suggest the docker COMMAND --help command to see usage information. The current behaviour causes the user to have to search for the error message and sometimes scrolls right off the screen. For example a error on a "docker run" command is very difficult to diagnose. Finally erros should always exit with a non 0 exit code, if the user makes a CLI error. Docker-DCO-1.1-Signed-off-by: Dan Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com> (github: rhatdan)
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1 changed files with 43 additions and 2 deletions
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@ -410,6 +410,47 @@ func IsSet(name string) bool {
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return CommandLine.IsSet(name)
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}
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// Indicator used to pass to BadArgs function
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const (
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Exact = 1
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Max = 2
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Min = 3
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)
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// Bad Args takes two arguments.
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// The first one indicates whether the number of arguments should, be
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// A Minimal number of arguments, a maximum number of arguments or
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// The exact number of arguments required
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// If the actuall number of arguments is not valid and error message
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// prints and true is returned, otherwise false is returned
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func (f *FlagSet) BadArgs(arg_type, nargs int) bool {
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if arg_type == Max && f.NArg() > nargs {
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if nargs == 1 {
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fmt.Fprintf(f.out(), "docker: '%s' requires a maximum of 1 argument. See 'docker %s --help'.\n", f.name, f.name)
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} else {
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fmt.Fprintf(f.out(), "docker: '%s' requires a maximum of %d arguments. See 'docker %s --help'.\n", f.name, nargs, f.name)
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}
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return true
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}
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if arg_type == Exact && f.NArg() != nargs {
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if nargs == 1 {
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fmt.Fprintf(f.out(), "docker: '%s' requires 1 argument. See 'docker %s --help'.\n", f.name, f.name)
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} else {
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fmt.Fprintf(f.out(), "docker: '%s' requires %d arguments. See 'docker %s --help'.\n", f.name, nargs, f.name)
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}
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return true
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}
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if arg_type == Min && f.NArg() < nargs {
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if nargs == 1 {
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fmt.Fprintf(f.out(), "docker: '%s' requires a minimum of 1 argument. See 'docker %s --help'.\n", f.name, f.name)
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} else {
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fmt.Fprintf(f.out(), "docker: '%s' requires a minimum of %d arguments. See 'docker %s --help'.\n", f.name, nargs, f.name)
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}
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return true
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}
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return false
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}
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// Set sets the value of the named flag.
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func (f *FlagSet) Set(name, value string) error {
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flag, ok := f.formal[name]
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@ -483,7 +524,7 @@ func defaultUsage(f *FlagSet) {
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// Usage prints to standard error a usage message documenting all defined command-line flags.
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// The function is a variable that may be changed to point to a custom function.
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var Usage = func() {
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fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "Usage of %s:\n", os.Args[0])
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fmt.Fprintf(CommandLine.output, "Usage of %s:\n", os.Args[0])
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PrintDefaults()
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}
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@ -789,7 +830,7 @@ func Var(value Value, names []string, usage string) {
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func (f *FlagSet) failf(format string, a ...interface{}) error {
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err := fmt.Errorf(format, a...)
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fmt.Fprintln(f.out(), err)
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f.usage()
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fmt.Fprintf(f.out(), "See 'docker %s --help'.\n", f.name)
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return err
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}
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