...and here is the test:

#!/usr/bin/perl use Test::More qw(no_plan) ; my ($username,@userinfo) = (qw(bronto Marco Marongiu),'San Gavino') ; my $good = 'c0m&c@z%' ; my @passwords = ('shrt', # too short 'waytoolong', # too long 'pitbull', # doesn't contain digits/symbols '!@#$%^&', # doesn't contain digits/alphas '12345678', # doesn't contain symbols/alphas 'pitbul1', # doesn't contain symbols 'pitbull@', # doesn't contain digits '!@#$1234', # doesn't contain alphas 'manyyyyy', # too many y's 't1c&t1c&', # password matches itself after rotatio +ns 'nto1bro%', # stripped rot. password matches userna +me 'oc$ra1m;', # stripped reversed password matches na +me "comar1\$", # stripped rot. password matches name 'ma0$ron', # stripped rot. password matches surnam +e 'sang@v1n', # stripped rot. password matches city '!gavian0', # stripped rot. password and city match ) ; my $ok = "password ok" ; require './passcheck.pl' ; is($ok,passcheck($username,$good,@userinfo),"$good is good") ; foreach (@passwords) { my $check = passcheck($username,$_,@userinfo) ; isnt($ok,$check,"$_: $check") ; }

Ciao!
--bronto


The very nature of Perl to be like natural language--inconsistant and full of dwim and special cases--makes it impossible to know it all without simply memorizing the documentation (which is not complete or totally correct anyway).
--John M. Dlugosz

In reply to Basic password checking: the test by bronto
in thread Basic password checking by bronto

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