Inside a <script>
block it is syntactically illegal to have any </
followed by a name—not just </script>
—so you need to escape that anywhere it may appear. For example:
:javascript
var foo = { store: #{@store.to_json.gsub('</','</')} };
This will create the sequence </
inside your JS strings, which is interpreted to be the same as </
. Ensure that you use single quotes in your gsub replacement string, or else use gsub( "</", "<\/" )
due to the difference between single and double quotes in Ruby.
Shown in action:
irb:02.0> s = "<b>foo</b>" # Here's a dangerous string
#=> "<b>foo</b>"
irb:03.0> a = [s] # Wrapped in an array, for fun.
#=> ["<b>foo</b>"]
irb:04.0> json = a.to_json.gsub( '</', '</' ) # Sanitized
irb:05.0> puts json # This is what would come out in your HTML; safe!
#=> ["<b>foo</b>"]
irb:06.0> puts JSON.parse(json).first # Same as the original? Yes! Yay!
#=> <b>foo</b>
If you are using Rails (or ActiveSupport) you can enable JSON escaping:
ActiveSupport::JSON::Encoding.escape_html_entities_in_json = true
Seen in action:
irb:02.0> a = ["<b>foo</b>"]
irb:03.0> puts a.to_json # Without the magic
#=> ["<b>foo</b>"]
irb:04.0> require 'active_support'
irb:05.0> ActiveSupport::JSON::Encoding.escape_html_entities_in_json = true
irb:06.0> puts a.to_json # With the magic
#=> ["u003Cbu003Efoou003C/bu003E"]
It produces JSON that is more verbose than you need to solve this particular problem, but it is effective.
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…