Perl::Critic::Policy::InputOutput::RequireEncodingWithUTF8Layer(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Perl::Critic::Policy::InputOutput::RequireEncodingWithUTF8Layer(3pm) |
Perl::Critic::Policy::InputOutput::RequireEncodingWithUTF8Layer - Write "open $fh, q{<:encoding(UTF-8)}, $filename;" instead of "open $fh, q{<:utf8}, $filename;".
This Policy is part of the core Perl::Critic distribution.
Use of the ":utf8" I/O layer (as opposed to ":encoding(UTF8)" or ":encoding(UTF-8)") was suggested in the Perl documentation up to version 5.8.8. This may be OK for output, but on input ":utf8" does not validate the input, leading to unexpected results.
An exploit based on this behavior of ":utf8" is exhibited on PerlMonks at <http://www.perlmonks.org/?node_id=644786>. The exploit involves a string read from an external file and sanitized with "m/^(\w+)$/", where $1 nonetheless ends up containing shell meta-characters.
To summarize:
open $fh, '<:utf8', 'foo.txt'; # BAD open $fh, '<:encoding(UTF8)', 'foo.txt'; # GOOD open $fh, '<:encoding(UTF-8)', 'foo.txt'; # BETTER
See the Encode documentation for the difference between "UTF8" and "UTF-8". The short version is that "UTF-8" implements the Unicode standard, and "UTF8" is liberalized.
For consistency's sake, this policy checks files opened for output as well as input. For complete coverage it also checks "binmode()" calls, where the direction of operation can not be determined.
This Policy is not configurable except for the standard options.
Because "Perl::Critic" does a static analysis, this policy can not detect cases like
my $encoding = ':utf8'; binmode $fh, $encoding;
where the encoding is computed.
PerlIO
Encode
"perldoc -f binmode"
<http://www.socialtext.net/perl5/index.cgi?the_utf8_perlio_layer>
<http://www.perlmonks.org/?node_id=644786>
Thomas R. Wyant, III wyant at cpan dot org
Copyright (c) 2010-2011 Thomas R. Wyant, III
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
2023-01-15 | perl v5.36.0 |