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Parsing Command Line Options
When you initialize the Ice run time by calling initialize, you can pass the application's arguments to the initialization call.
In most language mappings, this argument vector is an in-out parameter. In C++, for example, argc
is passed as a reference to an int
:
std::shared_ptr<Ice::Communicator> initialize(int& argc, const char* argv[], ...other parameters...);
Ice::CommunicatorPtr initialize(int& argc, const char* argv[], ...other parameters...);
initialize
parses the argument vector and initializes the new communicator's properties accordingly. It also removes all arguments that set Ice properties from the provided argument vector. For example, assume we invoke a C++ server as:
./server --myoption --Ice.Config=config -x a --Ice.Trace.Network=3 -y opt file
Initially, argc
has the value 9
, and argv
has ten elements: the first nine elements contain the program name and the arguments, and the final element, argv[argc]
, contains a null pointer (as required by the C++ standard). When Ice::initialize
returns, argc
has the value 7
and argv
contains the following elements:
./server --myoption -x a -y opt file 0 # Terminating null pointer
This means that you should initialize the Ice run time before you parse the command line for your application-specific arguments. That way, the Ice-related options are stripped from the argument vector for you so you do not need to explicitly skip them.
initialize
provides the same argument-property parsing and stripping in all language mappings.
If you use the Application helper class, the run
member function or method is passed an argument vector with the Ice-related options already stripped. The same is true for the runWithSession
member function or method called by the Glacier2::Application
helper class.
The Ice.ProgramName
Property
For C++, Objective-C, Python, and Ruby, initialize
sets the Ice.ProgramName
property to the name of the current program (argv[0]
). In C#, initialize
sets Ice.ProgramName
to the value of System.AppDomain.CurrentDomain.FriendlyName
. Your application code can read this property and use it for activities such as logging diagnostic or trace messages.
Even though Ice.ProgramName
is initialized for you, you can still override its value from a configuration file or by setting the property on the command line.
For Java, the program name is not supplied as part of the argument vector — if you want to use the Ice.ProgramName
property in your application, you must set it before initializing a communicator.