NPM Package: @mergesium/shell-quote
Parse and quote shell commands.
Example usage
quote
The quote
function is used to convert an array of N arbitrary strings into a correctly escaped / quoted string that a Posix shell would parse as the same N individual words. Unicode characters are preserved for readability, but not all terminal emulators are able to take Unicode text cut and pasted. To escape the Unicode to \uXXXX sequences, use the quote_ascii
variant.
The output of quote
is POSIX shell compliant, and should also be compatible with flavours like bash, ksh, etc. However, Windows CMD is not supported because it interprets the single quote as a literal rather than a quoting character. Commands which are intended to run on windows will have the incorrect quoting, and likely need manual adjustment to make them correct.
Example (open in Codepen):
var { quote } = require('@mergesium/shell-quote/quote');
var user_input = "|-|ello world! | am Bobby⇥les; I have * your files now.";
var cmd_pipe = [
'echo', '-n', user_input,
{op: '|'},
'grep', "-qi", "hello",
{op: '||'},
'echo', "Rude New User"];
console.log(quote(cmd_pipe));
// No, Bobby, you don't have *
Output:
echo -n '|-|ello world! | am Bobby⇥les; I have * your files now.' | grep -qi hello || echo 'Rude New User'
Ie. if pasted into a terminal window, the shell would echo
the user input to the stdin of grep
and output 'Rude New User' if the word 'hello' is not found:
All characters which have a special meaning to the shell (eg, <, >, `, $, #, etc) are quoted appropriately, so the output string can be cut-and-pasted into a terminal window.
The example above, demostrates how our old friend Bobby Tables provided some input which is quoted/sanitized as to thwart Bobby's intended exploit.
quote_ascii
Same as quote, except it also escapes all Unicode characters to \uXXXX sequences.In the example, the ⇥
is the only Unicode character, and it is escaped too.
Example:
const { quote_ascii } = require('@mergesium/shell-quote/quote');
var user_input = "|-|ello world! | am Bobby⇥les; I have * your files now.";
var cmd_pipe = [
'echo', '-n', user_input,
{op: '|'},
'grep', "-qi", "hello",
{op: '||'},
'echo', "Rude New User"];
console.log(quote_ascii(cmd_pipe));
// No, Bobby, you don't have *
Output:
echo -n '|-|ello world! | am Bobby'\\u21e5'les; I have * your files now.' | grep -qi hello || echo 'Rude New User'
parse
var parse = require('@mergesium/shell-quote/parse');
var xs = parse('a "b c" \\$def \'it\\\'s great\'');
console.dir(xs);
output
[ 'a', 'b c', '\\$def', 'it\'s great' ]
parse with an environment variable
var parse = require('@mergesium/shell-quote/parse');
var xs = parse('beep --boop="$PWD"', { PWD: '/home/robot' });
console.dir(xs);
output
[ 'beep', '--boop=/home/robot' ]
parse with custom escape character
var parse = require('@mergesium/shell-quote/parse');
var xs = parse('beep ^--boop="$PWD"', { PWD: '/home/robot' }, { escape: '^' });
console.dir(xs);
output
[ 'beep --boop=/home/robot' ]
parsing shell operators
var parse = require('@mergesium/shell-quote/parse');
var xs = parse('beep || boop > /byte');
console.dir(xs);
output:
[ 'beep', { op: '||' }, 'boop', { op: '>' }, '/byte' ]
parsing shell comment
var parse = require('@mergesium/shell-quote/parse');
var xs = parse('beep > boop # > kaboom');
console.dir(xs);
output:
[ 'beep', { op: '>' }, 'boop', { comment: '> kaboom' } ]
methods
var quote = require('@mergesium/shell-quote/quote');
var parse = require('@mergesium/shell-quote/parse');
quote(args)
Return a quoted string for the array args
suitable for using in shell
commands.
parse(cmd, env={})
Return an array of arguments from the quoted string cmd
.
Interpolate embedded bash-style $VARNAME
and ${VARNAME}
variables with
the env
object which like bash will replace undefined variables with ""
.
env
is usually an object but it can also be a function to perform lookups.
When env(key)
returns a string, its result will be output just like env[key]
would. When env(key)
returns an object, it will be inserted into the result
array like the operator objects.
When a bash operator is encountered, the element in the array with be an object
with an "op"
key set to the operator string. For example:
'beep || boop > /byte'
parses as:
[ 'beep', { op: '||' }, 'boop', { op: '>' }, '/byte' ]
install
With npm do:
npm install @mergesium/shell-quote
license
MIT