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//! Quote strings for use with Bash, the GNU Bourne-Again Shell.
//!
//! # ⚠️ Warning
//!
//! It is _possible_ to encode NUL in a Bash string, but Bash appears to then
//! truncate the rest of the string after that point, likely because NUL is the
//! C string terminator. This appears to be a bug in Bash or at least a serious
//! limitation.
//!
//! If you're quoting UTF-8 content this may not be a problem since there is
//! only one code point – the null character itself – that will ever produce a
//! NUL byte. To avoid this problem entirely, consider using [Modified
//! UTF-8][modified-utf-8] so that the NUL byte can never appear in a valid byte
//! stream.
//!
//! [modified-utf-8]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTF-8#Modified_UTF-8
//!
//! # Notes
//!
//! From bash(1):
//!
//! Words of the form $'string' are treated specially. The word expands to
//! string, with backslash- escaped characters replaced as specified by the
//! ANSI C standard. Backslash escape sequences, if present, are decoded as
//! follows:
//!
//! ```text
//! \a alert (bell)
//! \b backspace
//! \e an escape character
//! \f form feed
//! \n new line
//! \r carriage return
//! \t horizontal tab
//! \v vertical tab
//! \\ backslash
//! \' single quote
//! \nnn the eight-bit character whose value is the
//! octal value nnn (one to three digits)
//! \xHH the eight-bit character whose value is the
//! hexadecimal value HH (one or two hex digits)
//! \cx a control-x character
//! ```
//!
//! Bash allows, in newer versions, for non-ASCII Unicode characters with
//! `\uHHHH` and `\UXXXXXXXX` syntax inside these [ANSI C quoted
//! strings][ansi-c-quoting], but we avoid this and work only with bytes. Part
//! of the problem is that it's not clear how Bash then works with these
//! strings. Does it encode these characters into bytes according to the user's
//! current locale? Are strings in Bash now natively Unicode?
//!
//! For now it's up to the caller to figure out encoding. A significant use case
//! for this code is to escape filenames into scripts, and on *nix variants I
//! understand that filenames are essentially arrays of bytes, even if the OS
//! adds some normalisation and case-insensitivity on top.
//!
//! If you have some expertise in this area I would love to hear from you.
//!
//! [ansi-c-quoting]:
//! https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/ANSI_002dC-Quoting.html
//!
use std::ffi::OsString;
use std::os::unix::ffi::OsStringExt;
use crate::ascii::Char;
/// Escape a string of *bytes* into a new `Vec<u8>`.
///
/// This will return one of the following:
/// - The string as-is, if no escaping is necessary.
/// - An [ANSI-C escaped string][ansi-c-quoting], like `$'foo\nbar'`.
///
/// See [`escape_into`] for a variant that extends an existing `Vec` instead of
/// allocating a new one.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// # use shell_quote::bash;
/// assert_eq!(bash::escape("foobar"), b"foobar");
/// assert_eq!(bash::escape("foo bar"), b"$'foo bar'");
/// ```
///
/// The input argument is `Into<OsString>`, so you can pass in regular Rust
/// strings, `PathBuf`, and so on. For a regular Rust string it will be quoted
/// byte for byte.
///
/// [ansi-c-quoting]:
/// https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/ANSI_002dC-Quoting.html
///
pub fn escape<T: Into<OsString>>(s: T) -> Vec<u8> {
let sin = s.into().into_vec();
if let Some(esc) = escape_prepare(&sin) {
// Maybe pointless optimisation, but here we calculate the memory we need to
// avoid reallocations as we construct the output string. Since we now know
// we're going to use Bash's $'...' string notation, we also add 3 bytes.
let size: usize = esc.iter().map(escape_size).sum();
let mut sout = Vec::with_capacity(size + 3);
escape_chars(esc, &mut sout); // Do the work.
sout
} else {
sin
}
}
/// Escape a string of *bytes* into a new `OsString`.
///
/// Same as [`escape`], but returns an `OsString`.
///
pub fn quote<T: Into<OsString>>(s: T) -> OsString {
OsString::from_vec(escape(s))
}
/// Escape a string of *bytes* into an existing `Vec<u8>`.
///
/// See [`escape`][] for more details.
///
/// [`escape`]: ./fn.escape.html
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// # use shell_quote::bash;
/// let mut buf = Vec::with_capacity(128);
/// bash::escape_into("foobar", &mut buf);
/// buf.push(b' '); // Add a space.
/// bash::escape_into("foo bar", &mut buf);
/// assert_eq!(buf, b"foobar $'foo bar'");
/// ```
///
pub fn escape_into<T: Into<OsString>>(s: T, sout: &mut Vec<u8>) {
let sin = s.into().into_vec();
if let Some(esc) = escape_prepare(&sin) {
// Maybe pointless optimisation, but here we calculate the memory we need to
// avoid reallocations as we construct the output string. Since we now know
// we're going to use Bash's $'...' string notation, we also add 3 bytes.
let size: usize = esc.iter().map(escape_size).sum();
sout.reserve(size + 3);
escape_chars(esc, sout); // Do the work.
} else {
sout.extend(sin);
}
}
fn escape_prepare(sin: &[u8]) -> Option<Vec<Char>> {
let esc: Vec<_> = sin.iter().map(Char::from).collect();
// An optimisation: if the string only contains "safe" characters we can
// avoid further work.
if esc.iter().all(Char::is_inert) {
None
} else {
Some(esc)
}
}
fn escape_chars(esc: Vec<Char>, sout: &mut Vec<u8>) {
// Push a Bash-style $'...' escaped string into `sout`.
sout.extend(b"$'");
for mode in esc {
use Char::*;
match mode {
Bell => sout.extend(b"\\a"),
Backspace => sout.extend(b"\\b"),
Escape => sout.extend(b"\\e"),
FormFeed => sout.extend(b"\\f"),
NewLine => sout.extend(b"\\n"),
CarriageReturn => sout.extend(b"\\r"),
HorizontalTab => sout.extend(b"\\t"),
VerticalTab => sout.extend(b"\\v"),
Control(ch) => sout.extend(format!("\\x{:02X}", ch).bytes()),
Backslash => sout.extend(b"\\\\"),
SingleQuote => sout.extend(b"\\'"),
DoubleQuote => sout.extend(b"\""),
Delete => sout.extend(b"\\x7F"),
PrintableInert(ch) => sout.push(ch),
Printable(ch) => sout.push(ch),
Extended(ch) => sout.extend(format!("\\x{:02X}", ch).bytes()),
}
}
sout.push(b'\'');
}
fn escape_size(char: &Char) -> usize {
use Char::*;
match char {
Bell => 2,
Backspace => 2,
Escape => 2,
FormFeed => 2,
NewLine => 2,
CarriageReturn => 2,
HorizontalTab => 2,
VerticalTab => 2,
Control(_) => 4,
Backslash => 2,
SingleQuote => 2,
DoubleQuote => 1,
Delete => 4,
PrintableInert(_) => 1,
Printable(_) => 1,
Extended(_) => 4,
}
}
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
use std::ffi::OsString;
use std::os::unix::prelude::OsStringExt;
use crate::find_bins;
use super::{escape, escape_into, quote};
#[test]
fn test_lowercase_ascii() {
assert_eq!(
escape("abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"),
b"abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"
);
}
#[test]
fn test_uppercase_ascii() {
assert_eq!(
escape("ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ"),
b"ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ"
);
}
#[test]
fn test_numbers() {
assert_eq!(escape("0123456789"), b"0123456789");
}
#[test]
fn test_punctuation() {
assert_eq!(escape("-_=/,.+"), b"$'-_=/,.+'");
}
#[test]
fn test_basic_escapes() {
assert_eq!(escape(r#"woo"wah""#), br#"$'woo"wah"'"#);
}
#[test]
#[allow(non_snake_case)]
fn test_control_characters() {
assert_eq!(escape(&"\x00"), b"$'\\x00'");
assert_eq!(escape(&"\x07"), b"$'\\a'");
assert_eq!(escape(&"\x00"), b"$'\\x00'");
assert_eq!(escape(&"\x06"), b"$'\\x06'");
assert_eq!(escape(&"\x7F"), b"$'\\x7F'");
}
#[test]
fn test_escape_into_plain() {
let mut buffer = Vec::new();
escape_into("hello", &mut buffer);
assert_eq!(buffer, b"hello");
}
#[test]
fn test_escape_into_with_escapes() {
let mut buffer = Vec::new();
escape_into("-_=/,.+", &mut buffer);
assert_eq!(buffer, b"$'-_=/,.+'");
}
#[test]
fn test_roundtrip() {
use std::process::Command;
let mut script = b"echo -n ".to_vec();
// It doesn't seem possible to roundtrip NUL, probably because it is the
// string terminator character in C. To me this seems like a bug in Bash.
let string: OsString = OsString::from_vec((1u8..=u8::MAX).collect());
escape_into(&string, &mut script);
let script = OsString::from_vec(script);
// Test with every version of `bash` we find on `PATH`.
for bin in find_bins("bash") {
let output = Command::new(bin).arg("-c").arg(&script).output().unwrap();
let result = OsString::from_vec(output.stdout);
assert_eq!(result, string);
}
}
#[test]
fn test_quote() {
assert_eq!(
quote("abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"),
OsString::from("abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"),
);
}
}