On Mon, Sep 03, 2007 at 07:47:14AM +0100, Gregory Stark wrote:
> "Tom Lane" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > Gregory Stark <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >> "Tom Lane" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >>> I made it reject all but latin letters, which is the same restriction
> >>> that's in place for timezone set filenames. That might be overly
> >>> strong, but we definitely have to forbid "." and "/" (and "\" on
> >>> Windows). Do we want to restrict it to letters, digits, underscore?
> >>> Or does it need to be weaker than that?
> >
> >> What's the problem with "."?
> >
> > ../../../../etc/passwd
> >
> > Possibly we could allow '.' as long as we forbade /,
>
> Right, traditionally the only characters forbidden in filenames in Unix are /
> and nul. If we want the files to play nice in Gnome etc then we should
> restrict them to ascii since we don't know what encoding the gui expects.
>
> Actually I think in Windows \ : and . are problems (not allowed more than one
> dot in dos).
\ and : are problems.
. is not a problem. We don't support 16-bit windows anyway, and multiple
dots works fine on any system we support.
//Magnus
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