Testsuite: detect "hidden" IPs
[exim.git] / test / scripts / 0000-Basic / 0002
index 278a38660519afadefd1ae19eef06594dae3d9aa..c2dcc40d9abc9b59b9d66da2eee73d7ef1995f56 100644 (file)
@@ -132,7 +132,9 @@ addresses: ${addresses:Exim Person <local-part@dom.ain> (that's me), \
            xyz@abc, nullgroupname:;, group: p@q, r@s; }
 addresses: ${addresses:local-part@dom.ain <local-part@dom.ain>}
 
-escape: ${escape:B7·F2ò}
+escape:     ${escape:B7·F2ò}
+excape8bit: ${escape8bit:undisturbed text\ttab\nnewline\ttab\\backslash \176tilde\177DEL\200\x81.}
+
 eval:   ${eval:1+1}
 eval:   ${eval:1+2*3}
 eval:   ${eval:(1+2)*3}
@@ -179,6 +181,20 @@ hex2b64:${hex2b64:1a2b3c4d5e6g}
 hex2b64:${hex2b64:${md5:the quick brown fox}}
 hex2b64:${hex2b64:${sha1:the quick brown fox}}
 
+base32: 0  <${base32:0}>
+base32: 1  <${base32:1}>
+base32: 31 <${base32:31}>
+base32: 32 <${base32:32}>
+base32: 42 <${base32:42}>
+base32 error: 0x1 ${base32:0x1}
+
+base32d: 0  ${base32d:${base32:0}}
+base32d: 1  ${base32d:${base32:1}}
+base32d: 31 ${base32d:${base32:31}}
+base32d: 32 ${base32d:${base32:32}}
+base32d: 42 ${base32d:${base32:42}}
+base32d error: ABC ${base32d:ABC}
+
 The base62 operator is actually a base36 operator in the Darwin and Cygwin
 environments. Write cunning tests that produce the same output in both cases,
 while doing a reasonable check.