-SLOW For very slow hosts that appear to have Heisenbugs, delay before
comparing output files from a testcase
+ -TLS <client> For cross-library testing. Specify 'openssl" or 'gnutls'
+ as the client; the other is used as the server (assumes that
+ both have been built: set up Local/Makefile for OpenSSL and
+ "make exim_openssl", then for GnuTLS and "make exim_gnutls")
+
The options for ./runtest must be given first (but after the name of the
binary, if present). Any further options, that is, items on the command line
that start with a hyphen, are passed to the Exim binary when it is run as part
# -bS Use of HELO/RSET
A line consisting just of digits is interpreted as the expected return code
-for the command that follows. The default expectation when no such line exists
+for the command that follows.
+
+A line consisting of a tilde (~) followed by digits indicates a non-expected
+return code for the command that follows.
+
+The default expectation when neither such line exists
is a zero return code. For example, here is a complete test script, containing
just one command:
several lines by using \ as a continuation character. This does *not* apply to
data lines.
+A line with a leading number followed by a space and then an uppercase
+word, equals character, value sets an expected return code as above
+plus an environment variable. Example:
+
+ 255 TZ=GB
+ exim_msgdate -l -u -z -localhost_number=20 000000 1PANS3 ZZZZZZ
+ ****
+
+
+
+
Here follows a list of supported commands. They can be divided into two groups:
delivered) are not compared with saved versions.
+ no_munge
+
+If this command is encountered anywhere in the script, the output is not
+munged before it is compared with a saved version.
+This option allows meaningful tests of the exim_msgdate utility;
+without it all date comparison checks would succeed.
+
+
no_stderr_check
If this command is encountered anywhere in the script, the stderr output from
before proceeding.
(3) A line containing "*data" and a number specifies that the client is
- expected to send that many byte; the server discards them
+ expected to send that many bytes; the server discards them
(4) A line containing "*eof" specifies that the client is expected to close
the connection at this point.