> From: openssl-users [mailto:openssl-users-boun...@openssl.org] On Behalf Of 
> Jordan Brown
> Sent: Thursday, May 24, 2018 23:08
> Subject: Re: [openssl-users] Proper syntax for -header host switch

> On 5/24/2018 11:44 AM, Ben Wilson wrote:
> > -header "Host" "ocsp.example.com"
> > -header 'Host' 'ocsp.example.com'
> > -header Host ocsp.example.com

> I don't know anything about the option, but I do know shell syntax.  Those 
> three variants are identical when
> presented to the shell.

True for standard Linux/UNIX shells; not necessarily true on other platforms.

The Windows cmd.exe interpreter, for example, does not perform dequoting or 
argument splitting - those are performed by the application, typically in the C 
startup code, and the Microsoft C startup code doesn't recognize the 
single-quote character.

Of course on Windows you have the option of using a UNIX shell such as bash, in 
which case you'll get the behavior Jordan describes. But it's not universal. 
For that matter, on Linux or UNIX a user could be running some oddball shell 
that doesn't support one of those quote characters - it'd be a strange thing to 
do, but it's possible. Or be running something like bash, but have IFS set to 
include the "." character.

The basic point is solid - those three variants may well be indistinguishable 
to the application (almost certainly if running on UNIX or Linux). But it's not 
100% guaranteed.

--
Michael Wojcik
Distinguished Engineer, Micro Focus



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