Command to escape a string in bash

BashEscaping

Bash Problem Overview


I need a bash command that will convert a string to something that is escaped. Here's an example:

echo "hello\world" | escape | someprog

Where the escape command makes "hello\world" into "hello\\\world". Then, someprog can use "hello\\world" as it expects. Of course, this is a simplified example of what I will really be doing.

Bash Solutions


Solution 1 - Bash

In Bash:

printf "%q" "hello\world" | someprog

for example:

printf "%q" "hello\world"
hello\\world

This could be used through variables too:

printf -v var "%q\n" "hello\world"
echo "$var"
hello\\world

Solution 2 - Bash

Pure Bash, use parameter substitution:

string="Hello\ world"
echo ${string//\\/\\\\} | someprog

Solution 3 - Bash

It may not be quite what you want, since it's not a standard command on anyone's systems, but since my program should work fine on POSIX systems (if compiled), I'll mention it anyway. If you have the ability to compile or add programs on the machine in question, it should work.

I've used it without issue for about a year now, but it could be that it won't handle some edge cases. Most specifically, I have no idea what it would do with newlines in strings; a case for \\n might need to be added. This list of characters is not authoritative, but I believe it covers everything else.

I wrote this specifically as a 'helper' program so I could make a wrapper for things like scp commands.

It can likely be implemented as a shell function as well

I therefore present escapify.c. I use it like so:

scp user@host:"$(escapify "/this/path/needs to be escaped/file.c")" destination_file.c

PLEASE NOTE: I made this program for my own personal use. It also will (probably wrongly) assume that if it is given more than one argument that it should just print an unescaped space and continue on. This means that it can be used to pass multiple escaped arguments correctly, but could be seen as unwanted behavior by some.

#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
  char c='\0';
  int i=0;
  int j=1;
  /* do not care if no args passed; escaped nothing is still nothing. */
  if(argc < 2)
  {
    return 0;
  }
  while(j<argc)
  {
    while(i<strlen(argv[j]))
    {
      c=argv[j][i];
      /* this switch has no breaks on purpose. */
      switch(c)
      {
      case ';':
      case '\'':
      case ' ':
      case '!':
      case '"':
      case '#':
      case '$':
      case '&':
      case '(':
      case ')':
      case '|':
      case '*':
      case ',':
      case '<':
      case '>':
      case '[':
      case ']':
      case '\\':
      case '^':
      case '`':
      case '{':
      case '}':
        putchar('\\');
      default:
        putchar(c);
      }
      i++;
    }
    j++;
    if(j<argc) {
      putchar(' ');
    }
    i=0;
  }
  /* newline at end */
  putchar ('\n');
  return 0;
}

Solution 4 - Bash

A bash buitin has been added some time ago:

echo "hello\\world" | ( read -rsd '' x; echo ${x@Q} ) 
'hello\world'

The escaped output is in bash format, so it might not be what you need.

See also: https://stackoverflow.com/a/27817504/401059

Solution 5 - Bash

You can use perl to replace various characters, for example:

$ echo "Hello\ world" | perl -pe 's/\\/\\\\/g'
Hello\\ world

Depending on the nature of your escape, you can chain multiple calls to escape the proper characters.

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionUser1View Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - BashDennis WilliamsonView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - BashFritz G. MehnerView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - BashWyatt WardView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - BashCaesarView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - BashMichael Aaron SafyanView Answer on Stackoverflow