glib/glib/gshell.c
Sébastien Wilmet 8edcf67b02 License headers: "GLib" -> "This library"
Harmonize a little the license headers. In most of the license headers
in GLib, it is "This library".

It is also what is explained at:
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html#SEC4
"How to Apply These Terms to Your New Libraries"

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=776586
2017-01-04 19:12:56 +01:00

708 lines
20 KiB
C
Raw Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

/* gshell.c - Shell-related utilities
*
* Copyright 2000 Red Hat, Inc.
* g_execvpe implementation based on GNU libc execvp:
* Copyright 1991, 92, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
*
* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
* version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
* Lesser General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
* along with this library; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
#include "config.h"
#include <string.h>
#include "gshell.h"
#include "gslist.h"
#include "gstrfuncs.h"
#include "gstring.h"
#include "gtestutils.h"
#include "glibintl.h"
#include "gthread.h"
/**
* SECTION:shell
* @title: Shell-related Utilities
* @short_description: shell-like commandline handling
*
* GLib provides the functions g_shell_quote() and g_shell_unquote()
* to handle shell-like quoting in strings. The function g_shell_parse_argv()
* parses a string similar to the way a POSIX shell (/bin/sh) would.
*
* Note that string handling in shells has many obscure and historical
* corner-cases which these functions do not necessarily reproduce. They
* are good enough in practice, though.
*/
/**
* G_SHELL_ERROR:
*
* Error domain for shell functions. Errors in this domain will be from
* the #GShellError enumeration. See #GError for information on error
* domains.
**/
/**
* GShellError:
* @G_SHELL_ERROR_BAD_QUOTING: Mismatched or otherwise mangled quoting.
* @G_SHELL_ERROR_EMPTY_STRING: String to be parsed was empty.
* @G_SHELL_ERROR_FAILED: Some other error.
*
* Error codes returned by shell functions.
**/
G_DEFINE_QUARK (g-shell-error-quark, g_shell_error)
/* Single quotes preserve the literal string exactly. escape
* sequences are not allowed; not even \' - if you want a '
* in the quoted text, you have to do something like 'foo'\''bar'
*
* Double quotes allow $ ` " \ and newline to be escaped with backslash.
* Otherwise double quotes preserve things literally.
*/
static gboolean
unquote_string_inplace (gchar* str, gchar** end, GError** err)
{
gchar* dest;
gchar* s;
gchar quote_char;
g_return_val_if_fail(end != NULL, FALSE);
g_return_val_if_fail(err == NULL || *err == NULL, FALSE);
g_return_val_if_fail(str != NULL, FALSE);
dest = s = str;
quote_char = *s;
if (!(*s == '"' || *s == '\''))
{
g_set_error_literal (err,
G_SHELL_ERROR,
G_SHELL_ERROR_BAD_QUOTING,
_("Quoted text doesnt begin with a quotation mark"));
*end = str;
return FALSE;
}
/* Skip the initial quote mark */
++s;
if (quote_char == '"')
{
while (*s)
{
g_assert(s > dest); /* loop invariant */
switch (*s)
{
case '"':
/* End of the string, return now */
*dest = '\0';
++s;
*end = s;
return TRUE;
break;
case '\\':
/* Possible escaped quote or \ */
++s;
switch (*s)
{
case '"':
case '\\':
case '`':
case '$':
case '\n':
*dest = *s;
++s;
++dest;
break;
default:
/* not an escaped char */
*dest = '\\';
++dest;
/* ++s already done. */
break;
}
break;
default:
*dest = *s;
++dest;
++s;
break;
}
g_assert(s > dest); /* loop invariant */
}
}
else
{
while (*s)
{
g_assert(s > dest); /* loop invariant */
if (*s == '\'')
{
/* End of the string, return now */
*dest = '\0';
++s;
*end = s;
return TRUE;
}
else
{
*dest = *s;
++dest;
++s;
}
g_assert(s > dest); /* loop invariant */
}
}
/* If we reach here this means the close quote was never encountered */
*dest = '\0';
g_set_error_literal (err,
G_SHELL_ERROR,
G_SHELL_ERROR_BAD_QUOTING,
_("Unmatched quotation mark in command line or other shell-quoted text"));
*end = s;
return FALSE;
}
/**
* g_shell_quote:
* @unquoted_string: a literal string
*
* Quotes a string so that the shell (/bin/sh) will interpret the
* quoted string to mean @unquoted_string. If you pass a filename to
* the shell, for example, you should first quote it with this
* function. The return value must be freed with g_free(). The
* quoting style used is undefined (single or double quotes may be
* used).
*
* Returns: quoted string
**/
gchar*
g_shell_quote (const gchar *unquoted_string)
{
/* We always use single quotes, because the algorithm is cheesier.
* We could use double if we felt like it, that might be more
* human-readable.
*/
const gchar *p;
GString *dest;
g_return_val_if_fail (unquoted_string != NULL, NULL);
dest = g_string_new ("'");
p = unquoted_string;
/* could speed this up a lot by appending chunks of text at a
* time.
*/
while (*p)
{
/* Replace literal ' with a close ', a \', and a open ' */
if (*p == '\'')
g_string_append (dest, "'\\''");
else
g_string_append_c (dest, *p);
++p;
}
/* close the quote */
g_string_append_c (dest, '\'');
return g_string_free (dest, FALSE);
}
/**
* g_shell_unquote:
* @quoted_string: shell-quoted string
* @error: error return location or NULL
*
* Unquotes a string as the shell (/bin/sh) would. Only handles
* quotes; if a string contains file globs, arithmetic operators,
* variables, backticks, redirections, or other special-to-the-shell
* features, the result will be different from the result a real shell
* would produce (the variables, backticks, etc. will be passed
* through literally instead of being expanded). This function is
* guaranteed to succeed if applied to the result of
* g_shell_quote(). If it fails, it returns %NULL and sets the
* error. The @quoted_string need not actually contain quoted or
* escaped text; g_shell_unquote() simply goes through the string and
* unquotes/unescapes anything that the shell would. Both single and
* double quotes are handled, as are escapes including escaped
* newlines. The return value must be freed with g_free(). Possible
* errors are in the #G_SHELL_ERROR domain.
*
* Shell quoting rules are a bit strange. Single quotes preserve the
* literal string exactly. escape sequences are not allowed; not even
* \' - if you want a ' in the quoted text, you have to do something
* like 'foo'\''bar'. Double quotes allow $, `, ", \, and newline to
* be escaped with backslash. Otherwise double quotes preserve things
* literally.
*
* Returns: an unquoted string
**/
gchar*
g_shell_unquote (const gchar *quoted_string,
GError **error)
{
gchar *unquoted;
gchar *end;
gchar *start;
GString *retval;
g_return_val_if_fail (quoted_string != NULL, NULL);
unquoted = g_strdup (quoted_string);
start = unquoted;
end = unquoted;
retval = g_string_new (NULL);
/* The loop allows cases such as
* "foo"blah blah'bar'woo foo"baz"la la la\'\''foo'
*/
while (*start)
{
/* Append all non-quoted chars, honoring backslash escape
*/
while (*start && !(*start == '"' || *start == '\''))
{
if (*start == '\\')
{
/* all characters can get escaped by backslash,
* except newline, which is removed if it follows
* a backslash outside of quotes
*/
++start;
if (*start)
{
if (*start != '\n')
g_string_append_c (retval, *start);
++start;
}
}
else
{
g_string_append_c (retval, *start);
++start;
}
}
if (*start)
{
if (!unquote_string_inplace (start, &end, error))
{
goto error;
}
else
{
g_string_append (retval, start);
start = end;
}
}
}
g_free (unquoted);
return g_string_free (retval, FALSE);
error:
g_assert (error == NULL || *error != NULL);
g_free (unquoted);
g_string_free (retval, TRUE);
return NULL;
}
/* g_parse_argv() does a semi-arbitrary weird subset of the way
* the shell parses a command line. We don't do variable expansion,
* don't understand that operators are tokens, don't do tilde expansion,
* don't do command substitution, no arithmetic expansion, IFS gets ignored,
* don't do filename globs, don't remove redirection stuff, etc.
*
* READ THE UNIX98 SPEC on "Shell Command Language" before changing
* the behavior of this code.
*
* Steps to parsing the argv string:
*
* - tokenize the string (but since we ignore operators,
* our tokenization may diverge from what the shell would do)
* note that tokenization ignores the internals of a quoted
* word and it always splits on spaces, not on IFS even
* if we used IFS. We also ignore "end of input indicator"
* (I guess this is control-D?)
*
* Tokenization steps, from UNIX98 with operator stuff removed,
* are:
*
* 1) "If the current character is backslash, single-quote or
* double-quote (\, ' or ") and it is not quoted, it will affect
* quoting for subsequent characters up to the end of the quoted
* text. The rules for quoting are as described in Quoting
* . During token recognition no substitutions will be actually
* performed, and the result token will contain exactly the
* characters that appear in the input (except for newline
* character joining), unmodified, including any embedded or
* enclosing quotes or substitution operators, between the quote
* mark and the end of the quoted text. The token will not be
* delimited by the end of the quoted field."
*
* 2) "If the current character is an unquoted newline character,
* the current token will be delimited."
*
* 3) "If the current character is an unquoted blank character, any
* token containing the previous character is delimited and the
* current character will be discarded."
*
* 4) "If the previous character was part of a word, the current
* character will be appended to that word."
*
* 5) "If the current character is a "#", it and all subsequent
* characters up to, but excluding, the next newline character
* will be discarded as a comment. The newline character that
* ends the line is not considered part of the comment. The
* "#" starts a comment only when it is at the beginning of a
* token. Since the search for the end-of-comment does not
* consider an escaped newline character specially, a comment
* cannot be continued to the next line."
*
* 6) "The current character will be used as the start of a new word."
*
*
* - for each token (word), perform portions of word expansion, namely
* field splitting (using default whitespace IFS) and quote
* removal. Field splitting may increase the number of words.
* Quote removal does not increase the number of words.
*
* "If the complete expansion appropriate for a word results in an
* empty field, that empty field will be deleted from the list of
* fields that form the completely expanded command, unless the
* original word contained single-quote or double-quote characters."
* - UNIX98 spec
*
*
*/
static inline void
ensure_token (GString **token)
{
if (*token == NULL)
*token = g_string_new (NULL);
}
static void
delimit_token (GString **token,
GSList **retval)
{
if (*token == NULL)
return;
*retval = g_slist_prepend (*retval, g_string_free (*token, FALSE));
*token = NULL;
}
static GSList*
tokenize_command_line (const gchar *command_line,
GError **error)
{
gchar current_quote;
const gchar *p;
GString *current_token = NULL;
GSList *retval = NULL;
gboolean quoted;
current_quote = '\0';
quoted = FALSE;
p = command_line;
while (*p)
{
if (current_quote == '\\')
{
if (*p == '\n')
{
/* we append nothing; backslash-newline become nothing */
}
else
{
/* we append the backslash and the current char,
* to be interpreted later after tokenization
*/
ensure_token (&current_token);
g_string_append_c (current_token, '\\');
g_string_append_c (current_token, *p);
}
current_quote = '\0';
}
else if (current_quote == '#')
{
/* Discard up to and including next newline */
while (*p && *p != '\n')
++p;
current_quote = '\0';
if (*p == '\0')
break;
}
else if (current_quote)
{
if (*p == current_quote &&
/* check that it isn't an escaped double quote */
!(current_quote == '"' && quoted))
{
/* close the quote */
current_quote = '\0';
}
/* Everything inside quotes, and the close quote,
* gets appended literally.
*/
ensure_token (&current_token);
g_string_append_c (current_token, *p);
}
else
{
switch (*p)
{
case '\n':
delimit_token (&current_token, &retval);
break;
case ' ':
case '\t':
/* If the current token contains the previous char, delimit
* the current token. A nonzero length
* token should always contain the previous char.
*/
if (current_token &&
current_token->len > 0)
{
delimit_token (&current_token, &retval);
}
/* discard all unquoted blanks (don't add them to a token) */
break;
/* single/double quotes are appended to the token,
* escapes are maybe appended next time through the loop,
* comment chars are never appended.
*/
case '\'':
case '"':
ensure_token (&current_token);
g_string_append_c (current_token, *p);
/* FALL THRU */
case '\\':
current_quote = *p;
break;
case '#':
if (p == command_line)
{ /* '#' was the first char */
current_quote = *p;
break;
}
switch(*(p-1))
{
case ' ':
case '\n':
case '\0':
current_quote = *p;
break;
default:
ensure_token (&current_token);
g_string_append_c (current_token, *p);
break;
}
break;
default:
/* Combines rules 4) and 6) - if we have a token, append to it,
* otherwise create a new token.
*/
ensure_token (&current_token);
g_string_append_c (current_token, *p);
break;
}
}
/* We need to count consecutive backslashes mod 2,
* to detect escaped doublequotes.
*/
if (*p != '\\')
quoted = FALSE;
else
quoted = !quoted;
++p;
}
delimit_token (&current_token, &retval);
if (current_quote)
{
if (current_quote == '\\')
g_set_error (error,
G_SHELL_ERROR,
G_SHELL_ERROR_BAD_QUOTING,
_("Text ended just after a “\\” character."
" (The text was “%s”)"),
command_line);
else
g_set_error (error,
G_SHELL_ERROR,
G_SHELL_ERROR_BAD_QUOTING,
_("Text ended before matching quote was found for %c."
" (The text was “%s”)"),
current_quote, command_line);
goto error;
}
if (retval == NULL)
{
g_set_error_literal (error,
G_SHELL_ERROR,
G_SHELL_ERROR_EMPTY_STRING,
_("Text was empty (or contained only whitespace)"));
goto error;
}
/* we appended backward */
retval = g_slist_reverse (retval);
return retval;
error:
g_assert (error == NULL || *error != NULL);
g_slist_free_full (retval, g_free);
return NULL;
}
/**
* g_shell_parse_argv:
* @command_line: command line to parse
* @argcp: (out) (optional): return location for number of args
* @argvp: (out) (optional) (array length=argcp zero-terminated=1): return
* location for array of args
* @error: (optional): return location for error
*
* Parses a command line into an argument vector, in much the same way
* the shell would, but without many of the expansions the shell would
* perform (variable expansion, globs, operators, filename expansion,
* etc. are not supported). The results are defined to be the same as
* those you would get from a UNIX98 /bin/sh, as long as the input
* contains none of the unsupported shell expansions. If the input
* does contain such expansions, they are passed through
* literally. Possible errors are those from the #G_SHELL_ERROR
* domain. Free the returned vector with g_strfreev().
*
* Returns: %TRUE on success, %FALSE if error set
**/
gboolean
g_shell_parse_argv (const gchar *command_line,
gint *argcp,
gchar ***argvp,
GError **error)
{
/* Code based on poptParseArgvString() from libpopt */
gint argc = 0;
gchar **argv = NULL;
GSList *tokens = NULL;
gint i;
GSList *tmp_list;
g_return_val_if_fail (command_line != NULL, FALSE);
tokens = tokenize_command_line (command_line, error);
if (tokens == NULL)
return FALSE;
/* Because we can't have introduced any new blank space into the
* tokens (we didn't do any new expansions), we don't need to
* perform field splitting. If we were going to honor IFS or do any
* expansions, we would have to do field splitting on each word
* here. Also, if we were going to do any expansion we would need to
* remove any zero-length words that didn't contain quotes
* originally; but since there's no expansion we know all words have
* nonzero length, unless they contain quotes.
*
* So, we simply remove quotes, and don't do any field splitting or
* empty word removal, since we know there was no way to introduce
* such things.
*/
argc = g_slist_length (tokens);
argv = g_new0 (gchar*, argc + 1);
i = 0;
tmp_list = tokens;
while (tmp_list)
{
argv[i] = g_shell_unquote (tmp_list->data, error);
/* Since we already checked that quotes matched up in the
* tokenizer, this shouldn't be possible to reach I guess.
*/
if (argv[i] == NULL)
goto failed;
tmp_list = g_slist_next (tmp_list);
++i;
}
g_slist_free_full (tokens, g_free);
if (argcp)
*argcp = argc;
if (argvp)
*argvp = argv;
else
g_strfreev (argv);
return TRUE;
failed:
g_assert (error == NULL || *error != NULL);
g_strfreev (argv);
g_slist_free_full (tokens, g_free);
return FALSE;
}