unix: Improve command line argument processing.
Per CPython everything which comes after the command, module or file argument is not an option for the interpreter itself. Hence the processing of options should stop when encountering those, and the remainder be passed as sys.argv. Note the latter was already the case for a module or file but not for a command. This fixes issues like 'micropython myfile.py -h' showing the help and exiting instead of passing '-h' as sys.argv[1], likewise for '-X <something>' being treated as a special option no matter where it occurs on the command line.
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@ -341,6 +341,9 @@ STATIC int invalid_args(void) {
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STATIC void pre_process_options(int argc, char **argv) {
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for (int a = 1; a < argc; a++) {
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if (argv[a][0] == '-') {
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if (strcmp(argv[a], "-c") == 0 || strcmp(argv[a], "-m") == 0) {
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break; // Everything after this is a command/module and arguments for it
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}
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if (strcmp(argv[a], "-h") == 0) {
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print_help(argv);
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exit(0);
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@ -400,6 +403,8 @@ STATIC void pre_process_options(int argc, char **argv) {
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}
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a++;
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}
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} else {
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break; // Not an option but a file
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}
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}
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}
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@ -568,11 +573,10 @@ MP_NOINLINE int main_(int argc, char **argv) {
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if (a + 1 >= argc) {
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return invalid_args();
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}
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set_sys_argv(argv, a + 1, a); // The -c becomes first item of sys.argv, as in CPython
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set_sys_argv(argv, argc, a + 2); // Then what comes after the command
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ret = do_str(argv[a + 1]);
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if (ret & FORCED_EXIT) {
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break;
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}
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a += 1;
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break;
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} else if (strcmp(argv[a], "-m") == 0) {
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if (a + 1 >= argc) {
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return invalid_args();
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@ -1,2 +1,2 @@
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# cmdline: -c print("test") -i
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# cmdline: -i -c print("test")
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# -c option combined with -i option results in REPL
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@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
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test
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MicroPython \.\+ version
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Use \.\+
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>>> # cmdline: -c print("test") -i
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>>> # cmdline: -i -c print("test")
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>>> # -c option combined with -i option results in REPL
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>>>
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