Created SC2294 (markdown)

Vidar Holen
2021-07-30 18:39:42 -07:00
parent 66ff378a31
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## eval negates the benefit of arrays. Drop eval to preserve whitespace/symbols (or eval as string).
### Problematic code:
```sh
check() {
eval "$@" || exit
}
```
### Correct code:
```sh
check() {
"$@" || exit
}
```
### Rationale:
ShellCheck found `eval` used on an array (or equivalently, `"$@"`). This is problematic because it effectively throws away all boundary information and rebuilds it from shell words.
Let's say you invoke `check sed -i '$d' "my file.txt"`:
`eval "$@"` will:
1. Join the elements on spaces: `sed -i $d my file.txt`
2. Split the string on shell word boundaries: `sed`, `-i`, `$d`, `my` `file.txt`
3. Perform shell expansions (assuming `$d` is unset): `sed`, `-i`, `my`, `file.txt`
4. Execute the first element as the command and the rest as its arguments, as if running `sed -i 'my' 'file.txt'`
`"$@"` will
1. Execute the first element as the command and the rest as its arguments, as if running `sed -i '$d' 'my file.txt'`
Note that while `"$@"` is essentially always better than `eval "$@"`, it's easy to unintentionally introduce a dependency on bad behavior through the shell debugging anti-strategy of "adding quotes until it works":
```
# Works with problematic example because of double-escaping, fails with correct example
check ls -l "'My File.txt'"
# Works with correct example the way it was always intended:
check ls -l "My File.txt"
```
The correct example is still better, but the function invocation has to be tweaked as well.
### Exceptions:
If each of the array elements is a carefully escaped shell command or word, use `*` instead of `@` to explicitly join the elements on spaces which is what would happen anyways:
```
on_exit=(
'rm /tmp/myfile; '
'echo "Finished on $(date)" > log.txt; '
)
# Equivalent to `eval "${on_exit[@]}"`, but more explicit
eval "${on_exit[*]}"
# Even better in this case, as it does not require
# semicolons and commands don't interfere:
for cmd in "${on_exit[@]}"
do
eval "$cmd"
done
```
If you require `eval` for another part of the command, explicitly transform the array into a series of escaped shell words. This ensures that the array elements will `eval` back to themselves:
```
# Assumed to be outside of our control,
# otherwise we would doput this in an array as well:
COMMAND='dialog --menu "Choose file:" 15 40 4'
# Our array:
array=(
1 "My File.txt"
2 "My Other File.txt"
)
eval "$COMMAND ${array[*]@Q}" # Bash 4+
eval "$COMMAND $(printf "%q " "${array[@]}")" # Bash 1+
```
### Related resources:
* Help by adding links to BashFAQ, StackOverflow, man pages, POSIX, etc!