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vue-driven-cloud-storage/backend/node_modules/ansi-regex
237899745 4350113979 fix: 修复配额说明重复和undefined问题
- 在editStorageForm中初始化oss_storage_quota_value和oss_quota_unit
- 删除重复的旧配额说明块,保留新的当前配额设置显示

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-22 19:39:53 +08:00
..

ansi-regex

Regular expression for matching ANSI escape codes

Install

npm install ansi-regex

Usage

import ansiRegex from 'ansi-regex';

ansiRegex().test('\u001B[4mcake\u001B[0m');
//=> true

ansiRegex().test('cake');
//=> false

'\u001B[4mcake\u001B[0m'.match(ansiRegex());
//=> ['\u001B[4m', '\u001B[0m']

'\u001B[4mcake\u001B[0m'.match(ansiRegex({onlyFirst: true}));
//=> ['\u001B[4m']

'\u001B]8;;https://github.com\u0007click\u001B]8;;\u0007'.match(ansiRegex());
//=> ['\u001B]8;;https://github.com\u0007', '\u001B]8;;\u0007']

API

ansiRegex(options?)

Returns a regex for matching ANSI escape codes.

options

Type: object

onlyFirst

Type: boolean
Default: false (Matches any ANSI escape codes in a string)

Match only the first ANSI escape.

Important

If you run the regex against untrusted user input in a server context, you should give it a timeout.

I do not consider ReDoS a valid vulnerability for this package.

FAQ

Why do you test for codes not in the ECMA 48 standard?

Some of the codes we run as a test are codes that we acquired finding various lists of non-standard or manufacturer specific codes. We test for both standard and non-standard codes, as most of them follow the same or similar format and can be safely matched in strings without the risk of removing actual string content. There are a few non-standard control codes that do not follow the traditional format (i.e. they end in numbers) thus forcing us to exclude them from the test because we cannot reliably match them.

On the historical side, those ECMA standards were established in the early 90's whereas the VT100, for example, was designed in the mid/late 70's. At that point in time, control codes were still pretty ungoverned and engineers used them for a multitude of things, namely to activate hardware ports that may have been proprietary. Somewhere else you see a similar 'anarchy' of codes is in the x86 architecture for processors; there are a ton of "interrupts" that can mean different things on certain brands of processors, most of which have been phased out.

Maintainers