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// Copyright 2020 The Gitea Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a MIT-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
package util
import "strings"
// Bash has the definition of a metacharacter:
// * A character that, when unquoted, separates words.
// A metacharacter is one of: " \t\n|&;()<>"
//
// The following characters also have addition special meaning when unescaped:
// * ‘${[*?!"'`\’
//
// Double Quotes preserve the literal value of all characters with then quotes
// excepting: ‘$’, ‘`’, ‘\’, and, when history expansion is enabled, ‘!’.
// The backslash retains its special meaning only when followed by one of the
// following characters: ‘$’, ‘`’, ‘"’, ‘\’, or newline.
// Backslashes preceding characters without a special meaning are left
// unmodified. A double quote may be quoted within double quotes by preceding
// it with a backslash. If enabled, history expansion will be performed unless
// an ‘!’ appearing in double quotes is escaped using a backslash. The
// backslash preceding the ‘!’ is not removed.
//
// -> This means that `!\n` cannot be safely expressed in `"`.
//
// Looking at the man page for Dash and ash the situation is similar.
//
// Now zsh requires that ‘}’, and ‘]’ are also enclosed in doublequotes or escaped
//
// Single quotes escape everything except a ‘'’
//
// There's one other gotcha - ‘~’ at the start of a string needs to be expanded
// because people always expect that - of course if there is a special character before '/'
// this is not going to work
const (
tildePrefix = '~'
needsEscape = " \t\n|&;()<>${}[]*?!\"'`\\"
needsSingleQuote = "!\n"
)
var (
doubleQuoteEscaper = strings.NewReplacer(`$`, `\$`, "`", "\\`", `"`, `\"`, `\`, `\\`)
singleQuoteEscaper = strings.NewReplacer(`'`, `'\''`)
singleQuoteCoalescer = strings.NewReplacer(`''\'`, `\'`, `\'''`, `\'`)
)
// ShellEscape will escape the provided string.
// We can't just use go-shellquote here because our preferences for escaping differ from those in that we want:
//
// * If the string doesn't require any escaping just leave it as it is.
// * If the string requires any escaping prefer double quote escaping
// * If we have ! or newlines then we need to use single quote escaping
func ShellEscape(toEscape string) string {
if len(toEscape) == 0 {
return toEscape
}
start := 0
if toEscape[0] == tildePrefix {
// We're in the forcibly non-escaped section...
idx := strings.IndexRune(toEscape, '/')
if idx < 0 {
idx = len(toEscape)
} else {
idx++
}
if !strings.ContainsAny(toEscape[:idx], needsEscape) {
// We'll assume that they intend ~ expansion to occur
start = idx
}
}
// Now for simplicity we'll look at the rest of the string
if !strings.ContainsAny(toEscape[start:], needsEscape) {
return toEscape
}
// OK we have to do some escaping
sb := &strings.Builder{}
_, _ = sb.WriteString(toEscape[:start])
// Do we have any characters which absolutely need to be within single quotes - that is simply ! or \n?
if strings.ContainsAny(toEscape[start:], needsSingleQuote) {
// We need to single quote escape.
sb2 := &strings.Builder{}
_, _ = sb2.WriteRune('\'')
_, _ = singleQuoteEscaper.WriteString(sb2, toEscape[start:])
_, _ = sb2.WriteRune('\'')
_, _ = singleQuoteCoalescer.WriteString(sb, sb2.String())
return sb.String()
}
// OK we can just use " just escape the things that need escaping
_, _ = sb.WriteRune('"')
_, _ = doubleQuoteEscaper.WriteString(sb, toEscape[start:])
_, _ = sb.WriteRune('"')
return sb.String()
}
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