naiveproxy/net/base/filename_util.cc

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2018-08-15 01:19:20 +03:00
// Copyright 2014 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
// found in the LICENSE file.
#include "net/base/filename_util.h"
#include <set>
#include "base/files/file_path.h"
#include "base/files/file_util.h"
#include "base/path_service.h"
#include "base/strings/string_util.h"
#include "base/strings/sys_string_conversions.h"
#include "base/strings/utf_string_conversions.h"
#include "base/threading/thread_restrictions.h"
#include "build/build_config.h"
#include "net/base/escape.h"
#include "net/base/filename_util_internal.h"
#include "net/base/net_string_util.h"
#include "net/http/http_content_disposition.h"
#include "url/gurl.h"
namespace net {
// Prefix to prepend to get a file URL.
static const base::FilePath::CharType kFileURLPrefix[] =
FILE_PATH_LITERAL("file:///");
GURL FilePathToFileURL(const base::FilePath& path) {
// Produce a URL like "file:///C:/foo" for a regular file, or
// "file://///server/path" for UNC. The URL canonicalizer will fix up the
// latter case to be the canonical UNC form: "file://server/path"
base::FilePath::StringType url_string(kFileURLPrefix);
url_string.append(path.value());
// Now do replacement of some characters. Since we assume the input is a
// literal filename, anything the URL parser might consider special should
// be escaped here.
// must be the first substitution since others will introduce percents as the
// escape character
base::ReplaceSubstringsAfterOffset(
&url_string, 0, FILE_PATH_LITERAL("%"), FILE_PATH_LITERAL("%25"));
// semicolon is supposed to be some kind of separator according to RFC 2396
base::ReplaceSubstringsAfterOffset(
&url_string, 0, FILE_PATH_LITERAL(";"), FILE_PATH_LITERAL("%3B"));
base::ReplaceSubstringsAfterOffset(
&url_string, 0, FILE_PATH_LITERAL("#"), FILE_PATH_LITERAL("%23"));
base::ReplaceSubstringsAfterOffset(
&url_string, 0, FILE_PATH_LITERAL("?"), FILE_PATH_LITERAL("%3F"));
#if defined(OS_POSIX) || defined(OS_FUCHSIA)
base::ReplaceSubstringsAfterOffset(
&url_string, 0, FILE_PATH_LITERAL("\\"), FILE_PATH_LITERAL("%5C"));
#endif
return GURL(url_string);
}
bool FileURLToFilePath(const GURL& url, base::FilePath* file_path) {
*file_path = base::FilePath();
base::FilePath::StringType& file_path_str =
const_cast<base::FilePath::StringType&>(file_path->value());
file_path_str.clear();
if (!url.is_valid())
return false;
#if defined(OS_WIN)
std::string path;
std::string host = url.host();
if (host.empty()) {
// URL contains no host, the path is the filename. In this case, the path
// will probably be preceeded with a slash, as in "/C:/foo.txt", so we
// trim out that here.
path = url.path();
size_t first_non_slash = path.find_first_not_of("/\\");
if (first_non_slash != std::string::npos && first_non_slash > 0)
path.erase(0, first_non_slash);
} else {
// URL contains a host: this means it's UNC. We keep the preceeding slash
// on the path.
path = "\\\\";
path.append(host);
path.append(url.path());
}
std::replace(path.begin(), path.end(), '/', '\\');
#else // defined(OS_WIN)
// Firefox seems to ignore the "host" of a file url if there is one. That is,
// file://foo/bar.txt maps to /bar.txt.
// TODO(dhg): This should probably take into account UNCs which could
// include a hostname other than localhost or blank
std::string path = url.path();
#endif // !defined(OS_WIN)
if (path.empty())
return false;
// "%2F" ('/') results in failure, because it represents a literal '/'
// character in a path segment (not a path separator). If this were decoded,
// it would be interpreted as a path separator on both POSIX and Windows (note
// that Firefox *does* decode this, but it was decided on
// https://crbug.com/585422 that this represents a potential security risk).
// It isn't correct to keep it as "%2F", so this just fails. This is fine,
// because '/' is not a valid filename character on either POSIX or Windows.
std::set<unsigned char> illegal_encoded_bytes{'/'};
#if defined(OS_WIN)
// "%5C" ('\\') on Windows results in failure, for the same reason as '/'
// above. On POSIX, "%5C" simply decodes as '\\', a valid filename character.
illegal_encoded_bytes.insert('\\');
#endif
if (ContainsEncodedBytes(path, illegal_encoded_bytes))
return false;
// Unescape all percent-encoded sequences, including blacklisted-for-display
// characters, control characters and invalid UTF-8 byte sequences.
// Percent-encoded bytes are not meaningful in a file system.
path = UnescapeBinaryURLComponent(path);
#if defined(OS_WIN)
if (base::IsStringUTF8(path)) {
file_path_str.assign(base::UTF8ToWide(path));
// We used to try too hard and see if |path| made up entirely of
// the 1st 256 characters in the Unicode was a zero-extended UTF-16.
// If so, we converted it to 'Latin-1' and checked if the result was UTF-8.
// If the check passed, we converted the result to UTF-8.
// Otherwise, we treated the result as the native OS encoding.
// However, that led to http://crbug.com/4619 and http://crbug.com/14153
} else {
// Not UTF-8, assume encoding is native codepage and we're done. We know we
// are giving the conversion function a nonempty string, and it may fail if
// the given string is not in the current encoding and give us an empty
// string back. We detect this and report failure.
file_path_str = base::SysNativeMBToWide(path);
}
#else // defined(OS_WIN)
// Collapse multiple path slashes into a single path slash.
std::string new_path;
do {
new_path = path;
base::ReplaceSubstringsAfterOffset(&new_path, 0, "//", "/");
path.swap(new_path);
} while (new_path != path);
file_path_str.assign(path);
#endif // !defined(OS_WIN)
return !file_path_str.empty();
}
void GenerateSafeFileName(const std::string& mime_type,
bool ignore_extension,
base::FilePath* file_path) {
// Make sure we get the right file extension
EnsureSafeExtension(mime_type, ignore_extension, file_path);
#if defined(OS_WIN)
// Prepend "_" to the file name if it's a reserved name
base::FilePath::StringType leaf_name = file_path->BaseName().value();
DCHECK(!leaf_name.empty());
if (IsReservedNameOnWindows(leaf_name)) {
leaf_name = base::FilePath::StringType(FILE_PATH_LITERAL("_")) + leaf_name;
*file_path = file_path->DirName();
if (file_path->value() == base::FilePath::kCurrentDirectory) {
*file_path = base::FilePath(leaf_name);
} else {
*file_path = file_path->Append(leaf_name);
}
}
#endif
}
bool IsReservedNameOnWindows(const base::FilePath::StringType& filename) {
// This list is taken from the MSDN article "Naming a file"
// http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa365247(VS.85).aspx
// I also added clock$ because GetSaveFileName seems to consider it as a
// reserved name too.
static const char* const known_devices[] = {
"con", "prn", "aux", "nul", "com1", "com2", "com3", "com4",
"com5", "com6", "com7", "com8", "com9", "lpt1", "lpt2", "lpt3",
"lpt4", "lpt5", "lpt6", "lpt7", "lpt8", "lpt9", "clock$"};
#if defined(OS_WIN)
std::string filename_lower = base::ToLowerASCII(base::WideToUTF8(filename));
#elif defined(OS_POSIX) || defined(OS_FUCHSIA)
std::string filename_lower = base::ToLowerASCII(filename);
#endif
for (const char* const device : known_devices) {
// Exact match.
if (filename_lower == device)
return true;
// Starts with "DEVICE.".
if (base::StartsWith(filename_lower, std::string(device) + ".",
base::CompareCase::SENSITIVE)) {
return true;
}
}
static const char* const magic_names[] = {
// These file names are used by the "Customize folder" feature of the
// shell.
"desktop.ini",
"thumbs.db",
};
for (const char* const magic_name : magic_names) {
if (filename_lower == magic_name)
return true;
}
return false;
}
} // namespace net