On Tue, Nov 17, 2020 at 07:37:34AM +0100, Patrick Steinhardt wrote: > > then I'd feel comfortable making it a public-facing feature. And for > > most cases it would be pretty pleasant to use (and for the unpleasant > > ones, I'm not sure that a little quoting is any worse than the paired > > environment variables found here). > > I tend to disagree there. As long as you control keys and values > yourself it's not too hard, that's true. But as soon as you start > processing untrusted keys or values, then it's getting a lot harder. > > E.g. suppose you create a fetch mirror for a user, where the source is > protected by a password. We don't want to write the password into the > gitconfig of the mirror repository. Passing it via `-C` will show up in > ps(1). Using GIT_CONFIG_PARAMETERS requires you to quote the value, > which contains arbitrary data, and if you fail to do that correctly you > now have an avenue for arbitrary config injection. > > That scenario is roughly why I came up with the _KEY/_VALUE schema. It > requires no quoting, is trivial to set up (at least for its target > audience, which is mostly scripts or programs) and wouldn't show up in > ps(1). True. Shell-quoting is pretty easy, but it's still a thing that the caller has to do (and get right). Within Git we have nice routines for that, but if you're calling from another program, you probably don't. > > Yeah, scripts can currently assume that: > > > > unset $(git rev-parse --local-env-vars) > > > > will drop any config from the environment. In some cases, having > > rev-parse enumerate the GIT_CONFIG_KEY_* variables that are set would be > > sufficient. But that implies that rev-parse is seeing the same > > environment we're planning to clear. As it is now, a script is free to > > use rev-parse to generate that list, hold on to it, and then use it > > later. > > Good point. Adjusting it would be trivial, though: unset all consecutive > GIT_CONFIG_KEY_$n keys and potentially also GIT_CONFIG_VALUE_$n until we > hit a gap. The parser would stop on the first gap anyway. That doesn't help this case, which currently works: # remember the list so we don't have to invoke rev-parse in # each iteration of the loop vars=$(git rev-parse --local-env-vars) for repo in $repos; do # start with a clean slate unset $vars export GIT_DIR=$repo git do-some-thing # oops, these won't get cleared in the next go-round because # they weren't set when we called rev-parse export GIT_CONFIG_KEY_1=foo.bar export GIT_CONFIG_VALUE_1=whatever git do-another-thing done Now I have no idea if anybody is doing something along those lines, and it's a bit convoluted (I'd probably use a subshell). And obviously nobody is doing this _exact_ thing yet, because the key/value variables don't exist yet. So maybe it would all work out (the caller of this script could have set git vars, but in that case we'd pick them up in the rev-parse call). So I dunno. It's probably unlikely to bite somebody, but it is a departure from the current design. -Peff