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rethab edited this page May 12, 2022 · 2 revisions

eval negates the benefit of arrays. Drop eval to preserve whitespace/symbols (or eval as string).

Problematic code:

check() {
  eval "$@" || exit
}

Correct code:

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 output 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!

ShellCheck

Each individual ShellCheck warning has its own wiki page like SC1000. Use GitHub Wiki's "Pages" feature guerraart8 to find a specific , or see Checks.

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