SYNOPSIS
1) bufrresolve.pl <descriptor(s)>
[--partial]
[--simple]
[--noexpand]
[--bufrtable <name of BUFR B table]
[--tablepath <path to BUFR tables>]
[--verbose n]
[--help]
2) bufrresolve.pl --code <code or flag table>
[--bufrtable <name of BUFR B table>]
[--tablepath <path to BUFR tables>]
[--verbose n]
3) bufrresolve.pl --flag <value> --code <flag table>
[--bufrtable <name of BUFR B table]
[--tablepath <path to BUFR tables>]
[--verbose n]
DESCRIPTION
Utility program for fetching info from BUFR tables.
Execute without arguments for Usage, with option --help
for some additional info. See also https://wiki.met.no/bufr.pm/start for examples of use.
It is supposed that the code and flag tables are contained in a file with same name as corresponding B table except for having prefix C instead of B. The tables used can be chosen by the user with options --bufrtable
and --tablepath
. Default is the hard coded DEFAULT_TABLE in directory DEFAULT_TABLE_PATH, but this last one will be overriden if the environment variable BUFR_TABLES is set. You should consider edit the source code if you are not satisfied with the defaults chosen.
OPTIONS
--partial Expand D descriptors only once, ignoring replication
--simple Like --partial, but displaying the resulting
descriptors on one line
--noexpand Don't expand D descriptors at all
--bufrtable <name of BUFR B or D table> Set BUFR tables
--tablepath <path to BUFR tables> Set BUFR table path
--verbose n Display path and tables used if n > 0
--help Display Usage and explain the options used. Almost
the same as consulting perldoc bufrresolve.pl
Usage 1): Resolves the given descriptor(s) fully into table B descriptors, with name, unit, scale, reference value and width (in bits) written on each line (except for --simple). --partial, --simple and --noexpand are mutually exclusive (full expansion is default).
Usage 2): Prints the contents of the requested code or flag table (named by the table B descriptor).
Usage 3): Displays the bits set when the data value for the requested flag table is <value>.
Options may be abbreviated, e.g. --h
or -h
for --help
NOTE ON --VERBOSE
n > 1 in --verbose n
does not provide any more output than n=1, so demanding an argument to --verbose
looks funny. But if not, sooner or later someone would type bufrresolve.pl 307080 --verbose 1
which by Perl would be interpreted as if the arguments were 307080 000001 --verbose
, which probably is not what the user intended.
AUTHOR
P�l Sannes <pal.sannes@met.no>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2010-2016 MET Norway