Getopt::Long's argument callback feature ("<>") may help here. The idea is to call GetOptions twice: first time with the global options, and to stop on the first unrecognized non-option. This one may be an invalid global option, or a subcmd, either valid or invalid. After this, call GetOptions again with the remaining arguments which would all be subcmd options.
#!/usr/bin/perl use strict; use Getopt::Long; my $subcmd; my $global_option; my $subcmd_option; GetOptions("global" => \$global_option, "<>" => sub { my($arg) = @_; if ($arg =~ m{^-}) { die "usage error: unhandled option $arg detected in + global option section"; } elsif ($arg !~ m{^(subcmd1|subcmd2)$}) { die "usage error: invalid subcommand $arg"; } else { $subcmd = $arg; die "!FINISH"; } }) or die "usage error (in global option section)"; GetOptions("subcmd" => \$subcmd_option) or die "usage error (in subcmd option section)"; print <<EOF; global_option: $global_option subcmd: $subcmd subcmd_option: $subcmd_option leftover: @ARGV EOF __END__

In reply to Re: Parsing commandline with subcommands by eserte
in thread Parsing commandline with subcommands by hoppfrosch

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