package models import ( "fmt" "strings" "github.com/miekg/dns" ) // IsQuoted returns true if the string starts and ends with a double quote. func IsQuoted(s string) bool { if s == "" { return false } if len(s) < 2 { return false } if s[0] == '"' && s[len(s)-1] == s[0] { return true } return false } // StripQuotes returns the string with the starting and ending quotes removed. // If it is not quoted, the original string is returned. func StripQuotes(s string) string { if IsQuoted(s) { return s[1 : len(s)-1] } return s } // ParseQuotedTxt returns the individual strings of a combined quoted string. // // `foo` -> []string{"foo"} // `"foo"` -> []string{"foo"} // `"foo" "bar"` -> []string{"foo", "bar"} // `"f"oo" "bar"` -> []string{`f"oo`, "bar"} // // NOTE: It is assumed there is exactly one space between the quotes. // NOTE: This doesn't handle escaped quotes. // NOTE: You probably want to use ParseQuotedFields() for RFC 1035-compliant quoting. func ParseQuotedTxt(s string) []string { if !IsQuoted(s) { return []string{s} } return strings.Split(StripQuotes(s), `" "`) } // ParseQuotedFields is like strings.Fields except individual fields // might be quoted using `"`. func ParseQuotedFields(s string) ([]string, error) { // Parse according to RFC1035 zonefile specifications. // "foo" -> one string: `foo`` // "foo" "bar" -> two strings: `foo` and `bar` // The dns package doesn't expose the quote parser. Therefore we create a TXT record and extract the strings. rr, err := dns.NewRR("example.com. IN TXT " + s) if err != nil { return nil, fmt.Errorf("could not parse %q TXT: %w", s, err) } return rr.(*dns.TXT).Txt, nil }