On 02/06/16 20:04, Stefan Beller wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 2, 2016 at 11:42 AM, Ramsay Jones
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>
>> On 02/06/16 17:10, Junio C Hamano wrote:
>>> Ramsay Jones <[email protected]> writes:
>>>
>>>> So, at risk of annoying you, let me continue in my ignorance a little
>>>> longer and ask: even if you have to protect all of this 'magic' from
>>>> the shell with '/" quoting, could you not use (nested) quotes to
>>>> protect the <value> part of an <attr>? For example:
>>>>
>>>> git ls-files ':(attr:whitespace="indent,trail,space",icase)'
>>>
>>> That would be workable, I would think. Before attr:VAR=VAL
>>> extention, supported pathspec <magic> were only single lowercase-ascii
>>> alphabet tokens, so nobody would have used " as a part of magic. So
>>> quting with double-quote pair would work.
>>
>> I was thinking about both ' and ", so that you could do:
>>
>> $ ./args ':(attr:whitespace="indent,trail,space",icase)'
>> 1::(attr:whitespace="indent,trail,space",icase)
>>
>> $ ./args ":(attr:whitespace='indent,trail,space',icase)"
>> 1::(attr:whitespace='indent,trail,space',icase)
>>
>> $ p=':(attr:whitespace="indent,trail,space",icase)'
>> $ ./args "$p"
>> 1::(attr:whitespace="indent,trail,space",icase)
>>
>> $ p=":(attr:whitespace=\"indent,trail,space\",icase)"
>> $ ./args "$p"
>> 1::(attr:whitespace="indent,trail,space",icase)
>>
>> but limiting it to " would probably be OK too.
>>
>>> You'd need to come up with a way to quote a double quote that
>>> happens to be a part of VAL somehow, though.
>>
>> Yes I was assuming \ quoting as well - I just want to reduce the
>> need for such quoting (especially on windows).
>>
>>> I think attribute
>>> value is limited to a string with non-whitespace letters; even
>>> though the built-in attributes that have defined meaning to the Git
>>> itself may not use values with letters beyond [-a-zA-Z0-9,], end
>>> users and projects can add arbitrary values within the allowed
>>> syntax, so it is not unconceivable that some project may have a
>>> custom attribute that lists forbidden characters in a path with
>>>
>>> === .gitattributes ===
>>> *.txt forbidden=`"
>
> We restrict the 'forbidden' to follow [-a-zA-Z0-9,], so we could enforce
> it for the values, too.
>
>
>>
>> $ ./args ":(attr:*.txt forbidden=\'\\\",icase)"
>> 1::(attr:*.txt forbidden=\'\",icase)
>
> You should lose the *.txt in there, but put it at the back
Ah, yes, just shows my ignorance of the attribute system!
>
>> $ ./args ":(attr:forbidden=\'\\\",icase)*.txt"
>
>>
>> $ ./args ':(attr:*.txt forbidden=\'\''\",icase)'
>> 1::(attr:*.txt forbidden=\'\",icase)
>
> I see, so quoting by " or ' is preferred. What if the user
> wants to do a
I think Junio wants to go with just " quoting (see other thread).
> forbidden=',"
>
> so we have to escape those in there, such as
>
> ./args ':(attr:"forbidden=\',\"")'
No, that won't work (" is not terminated), try this:
$ ./args ':(attr:"forbidden='\'',\"")'
1::(attr:"forbidden=',\"")
$
$ ./args ":(attr:\"forbidden=',\\\"\")"
1::(attr:"forbidden=',\"")
$
[half of the problem is just getting past the shell]
ATB,
Ramsay Jones
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