Plan 9 from Bell Labs’s /usr/web/sources/contrib/gabidiaz/root/sys/src/cmd/perl/t/op/crypt.t

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Distributed under the MIT License.
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#!./perl -w

BEGIN {
    chdir 't' if -d 't';
    @INC = qw(. ../lib);
}

BEGIN {
    use Config;

    require "test.pl";

    if( !$Config{d_crypt} ) {
        skip_all("crypt unimplemented");
    }
    else {
        plan(tests => 4);
    }
}

# Can't assume too much about the string returned by crypt(),
# and about how many bytes of the encrypted (really, hashed)
# string matter.
#
# HISTORICALLY the results started with the first two bytes of the salt,
# followed by 11 bytes from the set [./0-9A-Za-z], and only the first
# eight characters mattered, but those are probably no more safe
# bets, given alternative encryption/hashing schemes like MD5,
# C2 (or higher) security schemes, and non-UNIX platforms.

SKIP: {
	skip ("VOS crypt ignores salt.", 1) if ($^O eq 'vos');
	ok(substr(crypt("ab", "cd"), 2) ne substr(crypt("ab", "ce"), 2), "salt makes a difference");
}

$a = "a\xFF\x{100}";

eval {$b = crypt($a, "cd")};
like($@, qr/Wide character in crypt/, "wide characters ungood");

chop $a; # throw away the wide character

eval {$b = crypt($a, "cd")};
is($@, '',                   "downgrade to eight bit characters");
is($b, crypt("a\xFF", "cd"), "downgrade results agree");


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