ckpath(1) DG/UX 5.4R3.00 ckpath(1)
NAME
ckpath, errpath, helppath, valpath - prompt for and validate a
pathname
SYNOPSIS
ckpath [-Q] [-W width] [-a|l] [-b|c|g|y] [-n|[o|z]] [-rtwx] [-d
default]
[-h help] [-e error] [-p prompt] [-k pid [-s signal]]
/usr/sadm/bin/errpath [-W] [-a|l] [-b|c|g|y] [-n|[o|z]] [-rtwx] [-e
error]
/usr/sadm/bin/helppath [-W] [-a|l] [-b|c|g|y] [-n|[o|z]] [-rtwx] [-h
help]
/usr/sadm/bin/valpath [-a|l] [-b|c|g|y] [-n|[o|z]] [-rtwx] input
DESCRIPTION
ckpath prompts a user and validates the response. It defines, among
other things, a prompt message whose response should be a pathname,
text for help and error messages, and a default value (which will be
returned if the user responds with a carriage return).
The pathname must obey the criteria specified by the first group of
options. If no criteria is defined, the pathname must be for a
normal file that does not yet exist. If neither -a (absolute) or -l
(relative) is given, then either is assumed to be valid.
All messages are limited in length to 70 characters and are formatted
automatically. Any white space used in the definition (including
newline) is stripped. The -W option cancels the automatic
formatting. When a tilde is placed at the beginning or end of a
message definition, the default text will be inserted at that point,
allowing both custom text and the default text to be displayed.
If the prompt, help or error message is not defined, the default
message (as defined under NOTES) will be displayed.
Three visual tool modules are linked to the ckpath command. They are
errpath (which formats and displays an error message), helppath
(which formats and displays a help message), and valpath (which
validates a response). These modules should be used in conjunction
with FACE objects. In this instance, the FACE object defines the
prompt.
The options and arguments for this command are:
-Q Specifies that quit will not be allowed as a valid response.
-W Specifies that prompt, help and error messages will be
formatted to a line length of width.
-a Pathname must be an absolute path.
-l Pathname must be a relative path.
Licensed material--property of copyright holder(s) 1
ckpath(1) DG/UX 5.4R3.00 ckpath(1)
-b Pathname must be a block special file.
-c Pathname must be a character special file.
-g Pathname must be a regular file.
-y Pathname must be a directory.
-n Pathname must not exist (must be new).
-o Pathname must exist (must be old).
-z Pathname must have a length greater than 0 bytes.
-r Pathname must be readable.
-t Pathname must be creatable (touchable). Pathname will be
created if it does not already exist.
-w Pathname must be writable.
-x Pathname must be executable.
-d Defines the default value as default. The default is not
validated and so does not have to meet any criteria.
-h Defines the help messages as help.
-e Defines the error message as error.
-p Defines the prompt message as prompt.
-k Specifies that process ID pid is to be sent a signal if the
user chooses to abort.
-s Specifies that the process ID pid defined with the -k option
is to be sent signal signal when quit is chosen. If no signal
is specified, SIGTERM is used.
input Input to be verified against validation options.
EXIT CODES
0 = Successful execution
1 = EOF on input
2 = Usage error
3 = User termination (quit)
4 = Mutually exclusive options
SEE ALSO
valtools(1).
NOTES
The text of the default messages for ckpath depends upon the criteria
options that have been used. An example default prompt for ckpath
Licensed material--property of copyright holder(s) 2
ckpath(1) DG/UX 5.4R3.00 ckpath(1)
(using the -a option) is:
Enter a pathname [?,q]:
An example default error message (using the -a option) is:
ERROR - Invalid pathname entered. A pathname is a filename,
optionally preceded by parent directories.
An example default help message is:
A pathname is a filename, optionally preceded by parent
directories. The pathname you enter:
-- must contain 1 to {NAME_MAX} characters
-- must not contain a spaces or special characters
NAME_MAX is a system variable that is defined in limits.h.
When the quit option is chosen (and allowed), q is returned along
with the return code 3. The valpath module will not produce any
output. It returns zero for success and non-zero for failure.
Licensed material--property of copyright holder(s) 3