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bug#21702: shell-quote-argument semantics and safety


From: Eli Zaretskii
Subject: bug#21702: shell-quote-argument semantics and safety
Date: Mon, 19 Oct 2015 10:47:28 +0300

> From: taylanbayirli@gmail.com (Taylan Ulrich Bayırlı/Kammer)
> Cc: 21702@debbugs.gnu.org
> Date: Mon, 19 Oct 2015 09:34:15 +0200
> 
> > Item 1 was this:
> >
> >> >> The function should clearly document
> >> >> 
> >> >>     1) for which shells will the quoting work absolutely, i.e. lead to
> >> >>     the given string to appear *verbatim* in an element of the ARGV of
> >> >>     the called command,
> >
> > There's nothing about safety here, only about correctness.  That is
> > the aspect that I think is now covered, as the doc string now says for
> > which shells one can have correct results.
> 
> Usually it's indeed correctness that protects against injection attacks.
> A quoting mechanism that's correct is automatically safe.

And that is the current situation, AFAIU.

> Another way to make it safe would be to error when the given string
> contains characters outside of a limited character set.

What limited set would you suggest that will not make the function
useless in real-life scenarios?

In any case, I think quoting is better than rejecting, as it supports
more use cases.

> Either way, the safeness should be documented clearly, either implicitly
> through a clear documentation of the correctness, or explicitly.

Like I said, this convention should be adopted project-wide.  Doing so
only in a few doc strings, let alone one, will only confuse, because
the user will not know whether the lack of such documentation means
the API is safe or unsafe.

> I would propose something along the lines of:
> 
>     It is guaranteed that ARGUMENT will be parsed as a single token by
>     shells X, Y, and Z, as long as it is separated from other text via a
>     delimiter in the syntax of the respective shell.

I don't think we want to mention specific shells explicitly, because
maintaining such a list would be a burden.  The standard shell of each
OS is well defined and known to the users of the respective systems.
Moreover, Emacs by default uses that shell automatically.

> >> Does that make sense?
> >
> > Maybe it does, but only if we start documenting these aspects
> > project-wide.  It makes little sense to me to do that for a single
> > API, and not an important one at that.  But that's me.
> 
> This is an API which if its implementation is imperfect will result in
> programs prone to code injection attacks when these programs face
> untrusted input sources.  Why do you say it's not an important one?

Because there are many much more important ones that can do much more
harm more easily.  In particular, a shell command doesn't need to be
quoted to be harmful or malicious.





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