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Handle # and ? characters in directory path
When referencing the current-working-directory, before it is set by an OSC 7 escape sequence, we ask the OS for the correct path. This path was then being parsed as a URL; where a "#" or "?" character would be interpreted as the start of a fragment or query component of a URL -- which is a mistake. So this change parses the returned directory as such, where those characters will be treated as a normal character in the path. Nothing is changed for the OSC 7 escape sequence case. In that case, the application must percent-encode the path before sending, so that those characters are not misinterpreted. As per issue #6158 reported by Syntaxheld
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@ -1045,17 +1045,14 @@ impl LocalPane {
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{
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let leader = self.get_leader(policy);
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if let Some(path) = &leader.current_working_dir {
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return Url::parse(&format!("file://localhost{}", path.display())).ok();
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return Url::from_directory_path(path).ok();
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}
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return None;
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}
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#[cfg(windows)]
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if let Some(fg) = self.divine_foreground_process(policy) {
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// Since windows paths typically start with something like C:\,
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// we cannot simply stick `localhost` on the front; we have to
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// omit the hostname otherwise the url parser is unhappy.
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return Url::parse(&format!("file://{}", fg.cwd.display())).ok();
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return Url::from_directory_path(fg.cwd).ok();
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}
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#[allow(unreachable_code)]
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