It's caused by lookahead regex used in dash comment regex for inlining
PowerShell. This commit changes dash comment inlining.
- Change regex to one without lookahead.
- Add more test cases for inlining dash comment in tricky situations.
- Refactor makeInlineComment to be it's own function to easily test
other regex options.
- Document all regex alternatives.
- Remove redundant null check (`||`) with adding safe navigation
operator (`?`) to allow variable before check to be null instead of
throwing exception.
Add new ways to disable Defender on Windows:
1. Disable through renaming required files
2. Disable using registry changes
3. Disable using TrustedInstaller user
Add support for running code as TrustedInstaller 🥳. It allows running
commands in OS-protected areas. It is written in PowerShell and it uses
PowerShell syntax like backticks that are inlined in special way. So the
commit extends inlining support and allows writing PowerShell using:
- Comments
- Here-strings
- Backticks
Add disabling of more Defender service
Improve documentation and categorization of services.
It changes the way privacy.sexy escape double quotes inside batch
command when running PowerShell scripts as an argument to
PowerShell.exe. It uses more robust and stable way offering support for
wider use-cases.
This commit introduces two pipes: `inlinePowerShell`,
`escapeDoubleQuotes`. The types when used together allows writing adding
clean and real PowerShell scripts as they are (without inlinining or
escaping them), removing the need to have hard-coded inlining/escaping.
It enables writing better PowerShell, makes it easier to maintain and
extend PowerShell scripts. Also allows writing more stable code with
less "unseen" bugs due to manual escaping/inlining. This commit
naturally reveals and fixes double quotes not being escaped in "Empty
trash bin" script.
This is solved by unifying the use of RunPowerShell function by all
scripts using PowerShell. The function inlines and escapes the scripts
as compile time to be send them to PowerShell.exe as an argument and
then invokes PowerShell.exe with generated ugly code.
The goal is to be able to modify values of variables used in templates.
It enables future functionality such as escaping, inlining etc.
It adds support applying predefined pipes to variables. Pipes
can be applied to variable substitution in with and parameter
substitution expressions. They work in similar way to piping in Unix
where each pipe applied to the compiled result of pipe before.
It adds support for using pipes in `with` and parameter substitution
expressions. It also refactors how their regex is build to reuse more of
the logic by abstracting regex building into a new class.
Finally, it separates and extends documentation for templating.