# What's expected Since in `acme.sh` path strings are concatenated with a hardcoded slash in between, the left operand must never end with a trailing slash for the resulting path to be valid. Otherwise, obviously, the resulting path will have two adjacent slashes in the middle and will not be valid. # What actually happens Even though I cannot tell for each of the input params, I know this for sure for the the `--home` argument's value. If I run `acme.sh` with `--home` argument's value being a path ending in a trailing slash, ```sh acme.sh ... --debug ... --home /some/path/ ... -d somedomainna.me ... ``` I get the following (distinct) occurrencies of resulting invalid paths containing two adjacent slashes: ``` [...] Using config home:/some/path/ [...] DOMAIN_PATH='/some/path//somedomainna.me' [...] _CURL='curl --silent --dump-header /some/path//http.header -L -g ' [...] The domain key is here: /some/path//somedomainna.me/somedomainna.me.key [...] _CURL='curl --silent --dump-header /some/path//http.header -L -g -I ' [...] Your cert is in: /some/path//somedomainna.me/somedomainna.me.cer [...] Your cert key is in: /some/path//somedomainna.me/somedomainna.me.key [...] The intermediate CA cert is in: /some/path//somedomainna.me/ca.cer [...] And the full chain certs is there: /some/path//somedomainna.me/fullchain.cer ``` # Suggested fix Trim trailing slash in `--home` argument's value from the get-go.pull/4410/head
parent
16dc21afff
commit
9f942a6b65