chef-config 17.10.29 → 17.10.95

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@@ -1,350 +1,350 @@
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- #
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- # Author:: Bryan McLellan <btm@loftninjas.org>
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- # Copyright:: Copyright (c) Chef Software Inc.
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- # License:: Apache License, Version 2.0
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- #
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- # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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- # you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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- # You may obtain a copy of the License at
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- #
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- # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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- #
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- # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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- # distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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- # WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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- # See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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- # limitations under the License.
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- #
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-
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- require "chef-utils" unless defined?(ChefUtils::CANARY)
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- require_relative "windows"
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- require_relative "logger"
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- require_relative "exceptions"
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-
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- module ChefConfig
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- class PathHelper
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- # Maximum characters in a standard Windows path (260 including drive letter and NUL)
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- WIN_MAX_PATH = 259
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-
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- def self.dirname(path, windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
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- if windows
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- # Find the first slash, not counting trailing slashes
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- end_slash = path.size
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- loop do
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- slash = path.rindex(/[#{Regexp.escape(File::SEPARATOR)}#{Regexp.escape(path_separator(windows: windows))}]/, end_slash - 1)
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- if !slash
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- return end_slash == path.size ? "." : path_separator(windows: windows)
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- elsif slash == end_slash - 1
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- end_slash = slash
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- else
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- return path[0..slash - 1]
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- end
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- end
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- else
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- ::File.dirname(path)
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- end
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- end
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-
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- BACKSLASH = "\\".freeze
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-
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- def self.path_separator(windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
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- if windows
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- BACKSLASH
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- else
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- File::SEPARATOR
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- end
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- end
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-
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- def self.join(*args, windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
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- path_separator_regex = Regexp.escape(windows ? "#{File::SEPARATOR}#{BACKSLASH}" : File::SEPARATOR)
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- trailing_slashes_regex = /[#{path_separator_regex}]+$/.freeze
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- leading_slashes_regex = /^[#{path_separator_regex}]+/.freeze
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-
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- args.flatten.inject do |joined_path, component|
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- joined_path = joined_path.sub(trailing_slashes_regex, "")
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- component = component.sub(leading_slashes_regex, "")
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- joined_path + "#{path_separator(windows: windows)}#{component}"
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- end
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- end
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-
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- def self.validate_path(path, windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
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- if windows
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- unless printable?(path)
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- msg = "Path '#{path}' contains non-printable characters. Check that backslashes are escaped with another backslash (e.g. C:\\\\Windows) in double-quoted strings."
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- ChefConfig.logger.error(msg)
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- raise ChefConfig::InvalidPath, msg
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- end
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-
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- if windows_max_length_exceeded?(path)
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- ChefConfig.logger.trace("Path '#{path}' is longer than #{WIN_MAX_PATH}, prefixing with'\\\\?\\'")
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- path.insert(0, "\\\\?\\")
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- end
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- end
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-
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- path
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- end
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-
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- def self.windows_max_length_exceeded?(path)
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- # Check to see if paths without the \\?\ prefix are over the maximum allowed length for the Windows API
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- # http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa365247%28v=vs.85%29.aspx
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- unless /^\\\\?\\/.match?(path)
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- if path.length > WIN_MAX_PATH
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- return true
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- end
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- end
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-
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- false
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- end
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-
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- def self.printable?(string)
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- # returns true if string is free of non-printable characters (escape sequences)
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- # this returns false for whitespace escape sequences as well, e.g. \n\t
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- if /[^[:print:]]/.match?(string)
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- false
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- else
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- true
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- end
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- end
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-
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- # Produces a comparable path.
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- def self.canonical_path(path, add_prefix = true, windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
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- # First remove extra separators and resolve any relative paths
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- abs_path = File.absolute_path(path)
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-
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- if windows
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- # Add the \\?\ API prefix on Windows unless add_prefix is false
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- # Downcase on Windows where paths are still case-insensitive
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- abs_path.gsub!(::File::SEPARATOR, path_separator(windows: windows))
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- if add_prefix && abs_path !~ /^\\\\?\\/
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- abs_path.insert(0, "\\\\?\\")
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- end
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-
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- abs_path.downcase!
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- end
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-
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- abs_path
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- end
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-
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- # The built in ruby Pathname#cleanpath method does not clean up forward slashes and
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- # backslashes. This is a wrapper around that which does. In general this is NOT
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- # recommended for internal use within ruby/chef since ruby does not care about forward slashes
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- # vs. backslashes, even on Windows. Where this generally matters is when being rendered
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- # to the user, or being rendered into things like the windows PATH or to commands that
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- # are being executed. In some cases it may be easier on windows to render paths to
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- # unix-style for being eventually eval'd by ruby in the future (templates being rendered
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- # with code to be consumed by ruby) where forcing unix-style forward slashes avoids the
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- # issue of needing to escape the backslashes in rendered strings. This has a boolean
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- # operator to force windows-style or non-windows style operation, where the default is
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- # determined by the underlying node['platform'] value.
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- #
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- # In general if you don't know if you need this routine, do not use it, best practice
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- # within chef/ruby itself is not to care. Only use it to force windows or unix style
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- # when it really matters.
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- #
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- # @param path [String] the path to clean
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- # @param windows [Boolean] optional flag to force to windows or unix-style
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- # @return [String] cleaned path
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- #
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- def self.cleanpath(path, windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
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- path = Pathname.new(path).cleanpath.to_s
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- if windows
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- # ensure all forward slashes are backslashes
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- path.gsub(File::SEPARATOR, path_separator(windows: windows))
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- else
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- # ensure all backslashes are forward slashes
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- path.gsub(BACKSLASH, File::SEPARATOR)
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- end
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- end
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-
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- # This is not just escaping for something like use in Regexps, or in globs. For the former
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- # just use Regexp.escape. For the latter, use escape_glob_dir below.
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- #
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- # This is escaping where the path to be rendered is being put into a ruby file which will
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- # later be read back by ruby (or something similar) so we need quadruple backslashes.
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- #
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- # In order to print:
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- #
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- # file_cache_path "C:\\chef"
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- #
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- # We need to convert "C:\chef" to "C:\\\\chef" to interpolate into a string which is rendered
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- # into the output file with that line in it.
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- #
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- # @param path [String] the path to escape
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- # @return [String] the escaped path
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- #
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- def self.escapepath(path)
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- path.gsub(BACKSLASH, BACKSLASH * 4)
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- end
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-
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- def self.paths_eql?(path1, path2, windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
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- canonical_path(path1, windows: windows) == canonical_path(path2, windows: windows)
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- end
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-
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- # @deprecated this method is deprecated. Please use escape_glob_dirs
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- # Paths which may contain glob-reserved characters need
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- # to be escaped before globbing can be done.
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- # http://stackoverflow.com/questions/14127343
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- def self.escape_glob(*parts, windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
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- path = cleanpath(join(*parts, windows: windows), windows: windows)
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- path.gsub(/[\\\{\}\[\]\*\?]/) { |x| "\\" + x }
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- end
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-
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- # This function does not switch to backslashes for windows
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- # This is because only forwardslashes should be used with dir (even for windows)
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- def self.escape_glob_dir(*parts)
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- path = Pathname.new(join(*parts)).cleanpath.to_s
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- path.gsub(/[\\\{\}\[\]\*\?]/) { |x| "\\" + x }
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- end
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-
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- def self.relative_path_from(from, to, windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
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- Pathname.new(cleanpath(to, windows: windows)).relative_path_from(Pathname.new(cleanpath(from, windows: windows)))
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- end
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-
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- # Set the project-specific home directory environment variable.
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- #
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- # This can be used to allow per-tool home directory aliases like $KNIFE_HOME.
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- #
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- # @param [env_var] Key for an environment variable to use.
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- # @return [nil]
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- def self.per_tool_home_environment=(env_var)
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- @@per_tool_home_environment = env_var
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- # Reset this in case .home was already called.
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- @@home_dir = nil
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- end
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-
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- # Retrieves the "home directory" of the current user while trying to ascertain the existence
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- # of said directory. The path returned uses / for all separators (the ruby standard format).
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- # If the home directory doesn't exist or an error is otherwise encountered, nil is returned.
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- #
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- # If a set of path elements is provided, they are appended as-is to the home path if the
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- # homepath exists.
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- #
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- # If an optional block is provided, the joined path is passed to that block if the home path is
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- # valid and the result of the block is returned instead.
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- #
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- # Home-path discovery is performed once. If a path is discovered, that value is memoized so
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- # that subsequent calls to home_dir don't bounce around.
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- #
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- # @see all_homes
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- # @param args [Array<String>] Path components to look for under the home directory.
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- # @return [String]
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- def self.home(*args)
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- @@home_dir ||= all_homes { |p| break p }
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- if @@home_dir
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- path = File.join(@@home_dir, *args)
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- block_given? ? (yield path) : path
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- end
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- end
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-
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- # See self.home. This method performs a similar operation except that it yields all the different
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- # possible values of 'HOME' that one could have on this platform. Hence, on windows, if
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- # HOMEDRIVE\HOMEPATH and USERPROFILE are different, the provided block will be called twice.
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- # This method goes out and checks the existence of each location at the time of the call.
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- #
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- # The return is a list of all the returned values from each block invocation or a list of paths
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- # if no block is provided.
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- def self.all_homes(*args, windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
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- paths = []
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- paths << ENV[@@per_tool_home_environment] if defined?(@@per_tool_home_environment) && @@per_tool_home_environment && ENV[@@per_tool_home_environment]
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- paths << ENV["CHEF_HOME"] if ENV["CHEF_HOME"]
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- if windows
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- # By default, Ruby uses the the following environment variables to determine Dir.home:
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- # HOME
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- # HOMEDRIVE HOMEPATH
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- # USERPROFILE
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- # Ruby only checks to see if the variable is specified - not if the directory actually exists.
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- # On Windows, HOMEDRIVE HOMEPATH can point to a different location (such as an unavailable network mounted drive)
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- # while USERPROFILE points to the location where the user application settings and profile are stored. HOME
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- # is not defined as an environment variable (usually). If the home path actually uses UNC, then the prefix is
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- # HOMESHARE instead of HOMEDRIVE.
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- #
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- # We instead walk down the following and only include paths that actually exist.
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- # HOME
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- # HOMEDRIVE HOMEPATH
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- # HOMESHARE HOMEPATH
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- # USERPROFILE
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-
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- paths << ENV["HOME"]
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- paths << ENV["HOMEDRIVE"] + ENV["HOMEPATH"] if ENV["HOMEDRIVE"] && ENV["HOMEPATH"]
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- paths << ENV["HOMESHARE"] + ENV["HOMEPATH"] if ENV["HOMESHARE"] && ENV["HOMEPATH"]
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- paths << ENV["USERPROFILE"]
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- end
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- paths << Dir.home if ENV["HOME"]
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-
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- # Depending on what environment variables we're using, the slashes can go in any which way.
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- # Just change them all to / to keep things consistent.
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- # Note: Maybe this is a bad idea on some unixy systems where \ might be a valid character depending on
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- # the particular brand of kool-aid you consume. This code assumes that \ and / are both
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- # path separators on any system being used.
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- paths = paths.map { |home_path| home_path.gsub(path_separator(windows: windows), ::File::SEPARATOR) if home_path }
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-
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- # Filter out duplicate paths and paths that don't exist.
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- valid_paths = paths.select { |home_path| home_path && Dir.exist?(home_path.force_encoding("utf-8")) }
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- valid_paths = valid_paths.uniq
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-
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- # Join all optional path elements at the end.
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- # If a block is provided, invoke it - otherwise just return what we've got.
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- joined_paths = valid_paths.map { |home_path| File.join(home_path, *args) }
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- if block_given?
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- joined_paths.each { |p| yield p }
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- else
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- joined_paths
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- end
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- end
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-
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- # Determine if the given path is protected by macOS System Integrity Protection.
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- def self.is_sip_path?(path, node)
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- if ChefUtils.macos?
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- # @todo: parse rootless.conf for this?
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- sip_paths = [
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- "/System", "/bin", "/sbin", "/usr"
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- ]
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- sip_paths.each do |sip_path|
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- ChefConfig.logger.info("#{sip_path} is a SIP path, checking if it is in the exceptions list.")
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- return true if path.start_with?(sip_path)
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- end
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- false
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- else
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- false
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- end
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- end
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-
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- # Determine if the given path is on the exception list for macOS System Integrity Protection.
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- def self.writable_sip_path?(path)
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- # todo: parse rootless.conf for this?
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- sip_exceptions = [
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- "/System/Library/Caches", "/System/Library/Extensions",
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- "/System/Library/Speech", "/System/Library/User Template",
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- "/usr/libexec/cups", "/usr/local", "/usr/share/man"
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- ]
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- sip_exceptions.each do |exception_path|
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- return true if path.start_with?(exception_path)
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- end
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- ChefConfig.logger.error("Cannot write to a SIP path #{path} on macOS!")
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- false
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- end
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-
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- # Splits a string into an array of tokens as commands and arguments
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- #
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- # str = 'command with "some arguments"'
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- # split_args(str) => ["command", "with", "\"some arguments\""]
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- #
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- def self.split_args(line)
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- cmd_args = []
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- field = ""
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- line.scan(/\s*(?>([^\s\\"]+|"([^"]*)"|'([^']*)')|(\S))(\s|\z)?/m) do |word, within_dq, within_sq, esc, sep|
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-
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- # Append the string with Word & Escape Character
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- field << (word || esc.gsub(/\\(.)/, "\\1"))
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-
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- # Re-build the field when any whitespace character or
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- # End of string is encountered
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- if sep
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- cmd_args << field
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- field = ""
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- end
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- end
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- cmd_args
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- end
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- end
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- end
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+ #
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+ # Author:: Bryan McLellan <btm@loftninjas.org>
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+ # Copyright:: Copyright (c) Chef Software Inc.
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+ # License:: Apache License, Version 2.0
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+ #
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+ # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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+ # you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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+ # You may obtain a copy of the License at
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+ #
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+ # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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+ #
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+ # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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+ # distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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+ # WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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+ # See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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+ # limitations under the License.
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+ #
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+
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+ require "chef-utils" unless defined?(ChefUtils::CANARY)
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+ require_relative "windows"
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+ require_relative "logger"
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+ require_relative "exceptions"
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+
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+ module ChefConfig
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+ class PathHelper
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+ # Maximum characters in a standard Windows path (260 including drive letter and NUL)
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+ WIN_MAX_PATH = 259
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+
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+ def self.dirname(path, windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
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+ if windows
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+ # Find the first slash, not counting trailing slashes
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+ end_slash = path.size
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+ loop do
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+ slash = path.rindex(/[#{Regexp.escape(File::SEPARATOR)}#{Regexp.escape(path_separator(windows: windows))}]/, end_slash - 1)
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+ if !slash
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+ return end_slash == path.size ? "." : path_separator(windows: windows)
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+ elsif slash == end_slash - 1
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+ end_slash = slash
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+ else
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+ return path[0..slash - 1]
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+ end
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+ end
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+ else
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+ ::File.dirname(path)
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+ end
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+ end
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+
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+ BACKSLASH = "\\".freeze
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+
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+ def self.path_separator(windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
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+ if windows
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+ BACKSLASH
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+ else
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+ File::SEPARATOR
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+ end
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+ end
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+
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+ def self.join(*args, windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
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+ path_separator_regex = Regexp.escape(windows ? "#{File::SEPARATOR}#{BACKSLASH}" : File::SEPARATOR)
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+ trailing_slashes_regex = /[#{path_separator_regex}]+$/.freeze
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+ leading_slashes_regex = /^[#{path_separator_regex}]+/.freeze
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+
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+ args.flatten.inject do |joined_path, component|
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+ joined_path = joined_path.sub(trailing_slashes_regex, "")
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+ component = component.sub(leading_slashes_regex, "")
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+ joined_path + "#{path_separator(windows: windows)}#{component}"
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+ end
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+ end
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+
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+ def self.validate_path(path, windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
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+ if windows
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+ unless printable?(path)
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+ msg = "Path '#{path}' contains non-printable characters. Check that backslashes are escaped with another backslash (e.g. C:\\\\Windows) in double-quoted strings."
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+ ChefConfig.logger.error(msg)
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+ raise ChefConfig::InvalidPath, msg
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+ end
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+
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+ if windows_max_length_exceeded?(path)
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+ ChefConfig.logger.trace("Path '#{path}' is longer than #{WIN_MAX_PATH}, prefixing with'\\\\?\\'")
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+ path.insert(0, "\\\\?\\")
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+ end
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+ end
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+
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+ path
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+ end
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+
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+ def self.windows_max_length_exceeded?(path)
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+ # Check to see if paths without the \\?\ prefix are over the maximum allowed length for the Windows API
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+ # http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa365247%28v=vs.85%29.aspx
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+ unless /^\\\\?\\/.match?(path)
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+ if path.length > WIN_MAX_PATH
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+ return true
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+ end
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+ end
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+
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+ false
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+ end
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+
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+ def self.printable?(string)
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+ # returns true if string is free of non-printable characters (escape sequences)
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+ # this returns false for whitespace escape sequences as well, e.g. \n\t
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+ if /[^[:print:]]/.match?(string)
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+ false
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+ else
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+ true
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+ end
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+ end
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+
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+ # Produces a comparable path.
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+ def self.canonical_path(path, add_prefix = true, windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
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+ # First remove extra separators and resolve any relative paths
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+ abs_path = File.absolute_path(path)
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+
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+ if windows
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+ # Add the \\?\ API prefix on Windows unless add_prefix is false
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+ # Downcase on Windows where paths are still case-insensitive
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+ abs_path.gsub!(::File::SEPARATOR, path_separator(windows: windows))
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+ if add_prefix && abs_path !~ /^\\\\?\\/
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+ abs_path.insert(0, "\\\\?\\")
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+ end
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+
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+ abs_path.downcase!
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+ end
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+
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+ abs_path
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+ end
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+
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+ # The built in ruby Pathname#cleanpath method does not clean up forward slashes and
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+ # backslashes. This is a wrapper around that which does. In general this is NOT
130
+ # recommended for internal use within ruby/chef since ruby does not care about forward slashes
131
+ # vs. backslashes, even on Windows. Where this generally matters is when being rendered
132
+ # to the user, or being rendered into things like the windows PATH or to commands that
133
+ # are being executed. In some cases it may be easier on windows to render paths to
134
+ # unix-style for being eventually eval'd by ruby in the future (templates being rendered
135
+ # with code to be consumed by ruby) where forcing unix-style forward slashes avoids the
136
+ # issue of needing to escape the backslashes in rendered strings. This has a boolean
137
+ # operator to force windows-style or non-windows style operation, where the default is
138
+ # determined by the underlying node['platform'] value.
139
+ #
140
+ # In general if you don't know if you need this routine, do not use it, best practice
141
+ # within chef/ruby itself is not to care. Only use it to force windows or unix style
142
+ # when it really matters.
143
+ #
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+ # @param path [String] the path to clean
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+ # @param windows [Boolean] optional flag to force to windows or unix-style
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+ # @return [String] cleaned path
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+ #
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+ def self.cleanpath(path, windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
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+ path = Pathname.new(path).cleanpath.to_s
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+ if windows
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+ # ensure all forward slashes are backslashes
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+ path.gsub(File::SEPARATOR, path_separator(windows: windows))
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+ else
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+ # ensure all backslashes are forward slashes
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+ path.gsub(BACKSLASH, File::SEPARATOR)
156
+ end
157
+ end
158
+
159
+ # This is not just escaping for something like use in Regexps, or in globs. For the former
160
+ # just use Regexp.escape. For the latter, use escape_glob_dir below.
161
+ #
162
+ # This is escaping where the path to be rendered is being put into a ruby file which will
163
+ # later be read back by ruby (or something similar) so we need quadruple backslashes.
164
+ #
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+ # In order to print:
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+ #
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+ # file_cache_path "C:\\chef"
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+ #
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+ # We need to convert "C:\chef" to "C:\\\\chef" to interpolate into a string which is rendered
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+ # into the output file with that line in it.
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+ #
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+ # @param path [String] the path to escape
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+ # @return [String] the escaped path
174
+ #
175
+ def self.escapepath(path)
176
+ path.gsub(BACKSLASH, BACKSLASH * 4)
177
+ end
178
+
179
+ def self.paths_eql?(path1, path2, windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
180
+ canonical_path(path1, windows: windows) == canonical_path(path2, windows: windows)
181
+ end
182
+
183
+ # @deprecated this method is deprecated. Please use escape_glob_dirs
184
+ # Paths which may contain glob-reserved characters need
185
+ # to be escaped before globbing can be done.
186
+ # http://stackoverflow.com/questions/14127343
187
+ def self.escape_glob(*parts, windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
188
+ path = cleanpath(join(*parts, windows: windows), windows: windows)
189
+ path.gsub(/[\\\{\}\[\]\*\?]/) { |x| "\\" + x }
190
+ end
191
+
192
+ # This function does not switch to backslashes for windows
193
+ # This is because only forwardslashes should be used with dir (even for windows)
194
+ def self.escape_glob_dir(*parts)
195
+ path = Pathname.new(join(*parts)).cleanpath.to_s
196
+ path.gsub(/[\\\{\}\[\]\*\?]/) { |x| "\\" + x }
197
+ end
198
+
199
+ def self.relative_path_from(from, to, windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
200
+ Pathname.new(cleanpath(to, windows: windows)).relative_path_from(Pathname.new(cleanpath(from, windows: windows)))
201
+ end
202
+
203
+ # Set the project-specific home directory environment variable.
204
+ #
205
+ # This can be used to allow per-tool home directory aliases like $KNIFE_HOME.
206
+ #
207
+ # @param [env_var] Key for an environment variable to use.
208
+ # @return [nil]
209
+ def self.per_tool_home_environment=(env_var)
210
+ @@per_tool_home_environment = env_var
211
+ # Reset this in case .home was already called.
212
+ @@home_dir = nil
213
+ end
214
+
215
+ # Retrieves the "home directory" of the current user while trying to ascertain the existence
216
+ # of said directory. The path returned uses / for all separators (the ruby standard format).
217
+ # If the home directory doesn't exist or an error is otherwise encountered, nil is returned.
218
+ #
219
+ # If a set of path elements is provided, they are appended as-is to the home path if the
220
+ # homepath exists.
221
+ #
222
+ # If an optional block is provided, the joined path is passed to that block if the home path is
223
+ # valid and the result of the block is returned instead.
224
+ #
225
+ # Home-path discovery is performed once. If a path is discovered, that value is memoized so
226
+ # that subsequent calls to home_dir don't bounce around.
227
+ #
228
+ # @see all_homes
229
+ # @param args [Array<String>] Path components to look for under the home directory.
230
+ # @return [String]
231
+ def self.home(*args)
232
+ @@home_dir ||= all_homes { |p| break p }
233
+ if @@home_dir
234
+ path = File.join(@@home_dir, *args)
235
+ block_given? ? (yield path) : path
236
+ end
237
+ end
238
+
239
+ # See self.home. This method performs a similar operation except that it yields all the different
240
+ # possible values of 'HOME' that one could have on this platform. Hence, on windows, if
241
+ # HOMEDRIVE\HOMEPATH and USERPROFILE are different, the provided block will be called twice.
242
+ # This method goes out and checks the existence of each location at the time of the call.
243
+ #
244
+ # The return is a list of all the returned values from each block invocation or a list of paths
245
+ # if no block is provided.
246
+ def self.all_homes(*args, windows: ChefUtils.windows?)
247
+ paths = []
248
+ paths << ENV[@@per_tool_home_environment] if defined?(@@per_tool_home_environment) && @@per_tool_home_environment && ENV[@@per_tool_home_environment]
249
+ paths << ENV["CHEF_HOME"] if ENV["CHEF_HOME"]
250
+ if windows
251
+ # By default, Ruby uses the the following environment variables to determine Dir.home:
252
+ # HOME
253
+ # HOMEDRIVE HOMEPATH
254
+ # USERPROFILE
255
+ # Ruby only checks to see if the variable is specified - not if the directory actually exists.
256
+ # On Windows, HOMEDRIVE HOMEPATH can point to a different location (such as an unavailable network mounted drive)
257
+ # while USERPROFILE points to the location where the user application settings and profile are stored. HOME
258
+ # is not defined as an environment variable (usually). If the home path actually uses UNC, then the prefix is
259
+ # HOMESHARE instead of HOMEDRIVE.
260
+ #
261
+ # We instead walk down the following and only include paths that actually exist.
262
+ # HOME
263
+ # HOMEDRIVE HOMEPATH
264
+ # HOMESHARE HOMEPATH
265
+ # USERPROFILE
266
+
267
+ paths << ENV["HOME"]
268
+ paths << ENV["HOMEDRIVE"] + ENV["HOMEPATH"] if ENV["HOMEDRIVE"] && ENV["HOMEPATH"]
269
+ paths << ENV["HOMESHARE"] + ENV["HOMEPATH"] if ENV["HOMESHARE"] && ENV["HOMEPATH"]
270
+ paths << ENV["USERPROFILE"]
271
+ end
272
+ paths << Dir.home if ENV["HOME"]
273
+
274
+ # Depending on what environment variables we're using, the slashes can go in any which way.
275
+ # Just change them all to / to keep things consistent.
276
+ # Note: Maybe this is a bad idea on some unixy systems where \ might be a valid character depending on
277
+ # the particular brand of kool-aid you consume. This code assumes that \ and / are both
278
+ # path separators on any system being used.
279
+ paths = paths.map { |home_path| home_path.gsub(path_separator(windows: windows), ::File::SEPARATOR) if home_path }
280
+
281
+ # Filter out duplicate paths and paths that don't exist.
282
+ valid_paths = paths.select { |home_path| home_path && Dir.exist?(home_path.force_encoding("utf-8")) }
283
+ valid_paths = valid_paths.uniq
284
+
285
+ # Join all optional path elements at the end.
286
+ # If a block is provided, invoke it - otherwise just return what we've got.
287
+ joined_paths = valid_paths.map { |home_path| File.join(home_path, *args) }
288
+ if block_given?
289
+ joined_paths.each { |p| yield p }
290
+ else
291
+ joined_paths
292
+ end
293
+ end
294
+
295
+ # Determine if the given path is protected by macOS System Integrity Protection.
296
+ def self.is_sip_path?(path, node)
297
+ if ChefUtils.macos?
298
+ # @todo: parse rootless.conf for this?
299
+ sip_paths = [
300
+ "/System", "/bin", "/sbin", "/usr"
301
+ ]
302
+ sip_paths.each do |sip_path|
303
+ ChefConfig.logger.info("#{sip_path} is a SIP path, checking if it is in the exceptions list.")
304
+ return true if path.start_with?(sip_path)
305
+ end
306
+ false
307
+ else
308
+ false
309
+ end
310
+ end
311
+
312
+ # Determine if the given path is on the exception list for macOS System Integrity Protection.
313
+ def self.writable_sip_path?(path)
314
+ # todo: parse rootless.conf for this?
315
+ sip_exceptions = [
316
+ "/System/Library/Caches", "/System/Library/Extensions",
317
+ "/System/Library/Speech", "/System/Library/User Template",
318
+ "/usr/libexec/cups", "/usr/local", "/usr/share/man"
319
+ ]
320
+ sip_exceptions.each do |exception_path|
321
+ return true if path.start_with?(exception_path)
322
+ end
323
+ ChefConfig.logger.error("Cannot write to a SIP path #{path} on macOS!")
324
+ false
325
+ end
326
+
327
+ # Splits a string into an array of tokens as commands and arguments
328
+ #
329
+ # str = 'command with "some arguments"'
330
+ # split_args(str) => ["command", "with", "\"some arguments\""]
331
+ #
332
+ def self.split_args(line)
333
+ cmd_args = []
334
+ field = ""
335
+ line.scan(/\s*(?>([^\s\\"]+|"([^"]*)"|'([^']*)')|(\S))(\s|\z)?/m) do |word, within_dq, within_sq, esc, sep|
336
+
337
+ # Append the string with Word & Escape Character
338
+ field << (word || esc.gsub(/\\(.)/, "\\1"))
339
+
340
+ # Re-build the field when any whitespace character or
341
+ # End of string is encountered
342
+ if sep
343
+ cmd_args << field
344
+ field = ""
345
+ end
346
+ end
347
+ cmd_args
348
+ end
349
+ end
350
+ end