You can define a custom type that will raise an argparse.ArgumentTypeError
if the string
doesn't match the format you need.
def SpecialString(v):
fields = v.split(":")
# Raise a value error for any part of the string
# that doesn't match your specification. Make as many
# checks as you need. I've only included a couple here
# as examples.
if len(fields) != 5:
raise argparse.ArgumentTypeError("String must have 5 fields")
elif not (1 <= int(fields[2]) <= 10):
raise argparse.ArgumentTypeError("Field 3 must be between 1 and 10, inclusive")
else:
# If all the checks pass, just return the string as is
return v
group_simulate.add_argument('-P',
type=SpecialString,
help='simulate FC port down',
nargs=1,
metavar='fc_port_name',
dest='simulate')
UPDATE: here's a full custom type to check the value. All checking is done
in the regular expression, although it only gives one generic error message
if any part is wrong.
def SpecialString(v):
import re # Unless you've already imported re previously
try:
return re.match("^1:m:([1-9]|10):p:(1|2|3|4)$", v).group(0)
except:
raise argparse.ArgumentTypeError("String '%s' does not match required format"%(v,))
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