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bash 4.3.30 removes newlines in RULESET when "" are omitted, which
then causes nft -f to complain about invalid syntax.
As a result, all test cases that use this here-doc style fail.
Signed-off-by: Florian Westphal <fw@strlen.de>
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In libnftables, detect if given filename is '-' and treat it as the
common way of requesting to read from stdin, then open /dev/stdin
instead. (Calling 'nft -f /dev/stdin' worked before as well, but this
makes it official.)
With this in place and bash's support for here strings, review all tests
in tests/shell for needless use of temp files. Note that two categories
of test cases were intentionally left unchanged:
- Tests creating potentially large rulesets to avoid running into shell
parameter length limits.
- Tests for 'include' directive for obvious reasons.
Signed-off-by: Phil Sutter <phil@nwl.cc>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
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Andreas reports that he cannot use variables in set definitions:
define s-ext-2-int = 10.10.10.10 . 25, 10.10.10.10 . 143
set s-ext-2-int {
type ipv4_addr . inet_service
elements = { $s-ext-2-int }
}
This syntax is not correct though, since the curly braces should be
placed in the variable definition itself, so we have context to handle
this variable as a list of set elements.
The correct syntax that works after this patch is:
define s-ext-2-int = { 10.10.10.10 . 25, 10.10.10.10 . 143 }
table inet forward {
set s-ext-2-int {
type ipv4_addr . inet_service
elements = $s-ext-2-int
}
}
Reported-by: Andreas Hainke <andreas.hainke@foteviken.de>
Signed-off-by: Pablo Neira Ayuso <pablo@netfilter.org>
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