Escape backquote in a double-quoted string in shell

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离开以前
离开以前 2021-01-01 08:41

For the command: /usr/bin/sh -c \"ls 1`\" (a backquote after 1).

How to make it run successfully? Adding a backslash before \"`\" does not work. ` is a special char

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  •  有刺的猬
    2021-01-01 09:36

    You need to escape the backtick, but also escape the backslash:

    $ touch 1\`
    $ /bin/sh -c "ls 1\\\`"
    1`
    

    The reason you have to escape it "twice" is because you're entering this command in an environment (such as a shell script) that interprets the double-quoted string once. It then gets interpreted again by the subshell.

    You could also avoid the double-quotes, and thus avoid the first interpretation:

    $ /bin/sh -c 'ls 1\`'
    1`
    

    Another way is to store the filename in a variable, and use that value:

    $ export F='1`'
    $ printenv F
    1`
    $ /bin/sh -c 'ls $F'  # note that /bin/sh interprets $F, not my current shell
    1`
    

    And finally, what you tried will work on some shells (I'm using bash, as for the above examples), just apparently not with your shell:

    $ /bin/sh -c "ls 1'\`'"
    1`
    $ csh  # enter csh, the next line is executed in that environment
    % /bin/sh -c "ls 1'\`'"
    Unmatched `.
    

    I strongly suggest you avoid such filenames in the first place.

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