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linux - How to escape colon (:) in $PATH on UNIX?

I need to parse the $PATH environment variable in my application. So I was wondering what escape characters would be valid in $PATH. I created a test directory called /bin:d and created a test script called funny inside it. It runs if I call it with an absolute path. I just can't figure out how to escape : in $PATH I tried escaping the colon with and wrapping it into single ' and double " quotes. But always when I run which funny it can't find it. I'm running CentOS 6.

question from:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/14661373/how-to-escape-colon-in-path-on-unix

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This is impossible according to the POSIX standard. This is not a function of a specific shell, PATH handling is done within the execvp function in the C library. There is no provision for any kind of quoting.

This is the reason why including certain characters (anything not in the "portable filename character set" - colon is specifically called out as an example.) is strongly recommended against.

From SUSv7:

Since <colon> is a separator in this context, directory names that might be used in PATH should not include a <colon> character.

See also source of GLIBC execvp. We can see it uses the strchrnul and memcpy functions for processing the PATH components, with absolutely no provision for skipping over or unescaping any kind of escape character.


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