X-Git-Url: https://git.exim.org/exim.git/blobdiff_plain/d0de84b2d250e2f066286db3a3f5400a0f931b67..7ce1ced40351c3cd5982d37ff4ccdb02afd82365:/test/README diff --git a/test/README b/test/README index c0f548292..6c9a2d8da 100644 --- a/test/README +++ b/test/README @@ -696,6 +696,17 @@ be replaced by the local host's name. Long commands can be continued over 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: @@ -747,6 +758,12 @@ This command runs the exigrep utility with the given data (the search pattern) on the current mainlog file. + exiqgrep + +This command runs the exiqgrep utility with the given options +on the current spool directory. + + gnutls This command is present at the start of all but one of the tests that use @@ -814,6 +831,14 @@ are still in existence at the end of the run (for messages that were not 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 @@ -1119,13 +1144,16 @@ are of the following kinds: (2) A line that starts with "*sleep" specifies a number of seconds to wait before proceeding. -(3) A line containing "*eof" specifies that the client is expected to close +(3) A line containing "*data" and a number specifies that the client is + expected to send that many byte; the server discards them + +(4) A line containing "*eof" specifies that the client is expected to close the connection at this point. -(4) A line containing just '.' specifies that the client is expected to send +(5) A line containing just '.' specifies that the client is expected to send many lines, terminated by one that contains just a dot. -(5) Otherwise, the line defines the start of an input line that the client +(6) Otherwise, the line defines the start of an input line that the client is expected to send. To allow for lines that start with digits, the line may start with '<', which is not taken as part of the input data. If the lines starts with '<<' then only the characters are expected; no return-