Re: [Toybox] find applet arguments, quotations and wildcards

2018-02-08 Thread darken
Thanks for the explanations!
Now I understand.
I thought it was related to the search results somehow...
I didn't consider the local argument expansion.


2018-02-08 5:23 GMT+01:00 Robert Thompson :

> This is because the wildcard argument to -iname needs *not* to be
> expanded by the shell. It needs to be passed to find as a literal
> unexpanded string still containing wildcards. Usually this means
> single-quoting.
>
> for example,
> find . -iname '*data'
>
>
>
>
> The -iname takes a single argument, and if the *shell* expands the
> wildcard, the arguments find sees will be out of sync with
> expectations, resulting in an unexpected argument, or even unintended
> side effects, if the wildcard matched a file named '-delete' or
> something...
>
>
> one easy way of debugging this general kind of error is to add echo to
> the front of your commandline, so you can see the results.
>
> find . -iname '*.foo'
>
> becomes
>
> echo find . -iname '*.foo'
>
> if it prints
>
> find . -iname *.foo
>
> everything is good. If it prints
>
> find . -iname a.foo b.foo c.foo
>
> you have a problem. In most cases double quotes are okay, but single
> quotes are safe.
>
> Imagine someone really hates you and creates a filename that is
> literally $( rm -rf ${HOME} ) or something similar. doublequoted, the
> shell will still execute the rm so that it can expand the $( )
> variable with the stdout of the rm. Singlequoted, no expansion occurs.
>
>
>
>
> On 2/7/18, darken  wrote:
> > I just noticed the following find applet behavior with regards to
> > wildcards.
> > I don't think it's a bug as it shows in all find applets, but I'm puzzled
> > by what is happening.
> >
> > It seems that when using wildcards and the search results contain a
> > wildcard match that contains a dash, then find uses the result as
> argument
> > option? Why?
> >
> > ~Matthias
> >
> > ```
> > sailfish:/sdcard $ find --version
> > toybox 0.7.4-android
> > sailfish:/sdcard $ find . -iname *data
> > find: bad arg 'sleep-data'
> > 1|sailfish:/sdcard $ find . -iname "*data"
> > ./Android/data
> > ./data
> > ./sleep-data
> > ./Documents/sleep-data
> > sailfish:/storage/emulated/0 # find . -iname *droid
> > ./Android
> >
> >
> > sailfish:/storage/emulated/0 # /data/local/tmp/busybox-armv6l find .
> -iname
> > *data
> > find: unrecognized: sleep-data
> > BusyBox v1.26.2 (2017-01-11 08:43:16 UTC) multi-call binary.
> >
> >
> > darken@greendns:~/test$ find --version
> > find (GNU findutils) 4.7.0-git
> > darken@greendns:~/test$ mkdir -p Android/data
> > darken@greendns:~/test$ mkdir data
> > darken@greendns:~/test$ mkdir sleep-data
> > darken@greendns:~/test$ mkdir -p Documents/sleep-data
> > darken@greendns:~/test$ find . -iname *data
> > find: paths must precede expression: sleep-data
> > ```
> >
>
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[Toybox] find applet arguments, quotations and wildcards

2018-02-07 Thread darken
I just noticed the following find applet behavior with regards to wildcards.
I don't think it's a bug as it shows in all find applets, but I'm puzzled
by what is happening.

It seems that when using wildcards and the search results contain a
wildcard match that contains a dash, then find uses the result as argument
option? Why?

~Matthias

```
sailfish:/sdcard $ find --version
toybox 0.7.4-android
sailfish:/sdcard $ find . -iname *data
find: bad arg 'sleep-data'
1|sailfish:/sdcard $ find . -iname "*data"
./Android/data
./data
./sleep-data
./Documents/sleep-data
sailfish:/storage/emulated/0 # find . -iname *droid
./Android


sailfish:/storage/emulated/0 # /data/local/tmp/busybox-armv6l find . -iname
*data
find: unrecognized: sleep-data
BusyBox v1.26.2 (2017-01-11 08:43:16 UTC) multi-call binary.


darken@greendns:~/test$ find --version
find (GNU findutils) 4.7.0-git
darken@greendns:~/test$ mkdir -p Android/data
darken@greendns:~/test$ mkdir data
darken@greendns:~/test$ mkdir sleep-data
darken@greendns:~/test$ mkdir -p Documents/sleep-data
darken@greendns:~/test$ find . -iname *data
find: paths must precede expression: sleep-data
```
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