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e037fe05ff
All the content of the pathod docs are moved into Sphinx. The interactive format has not translated well to static docs, and there's still a lot of rewriting, format fixing, structuring, etc to be done.
258 lines
7.8 KiB
ReStructuredText
258 lines
7.8 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _language:
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language spec
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=============
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************
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HTTP Request
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************
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**method:path:[colon-separated list of features]**
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.. list-table::
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:widths: 20 80
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:header-rows: 0
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* - method
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- A :ref:`VALUE` specifying the HTTP method to
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use. Standard methods do not need to be enclosed in quotes, while
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non-standard methods can be specified as quoted strings.
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The special method **ws** creates a valid websocket upgrade
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GET request, and signals to pathoc to switch to websocket recieve
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mode if the server responds correctly. Apart from that, websocket
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requests are just like any other, and all aspects of the request
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can be over-ridden.
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* - h\:\ :ref:`VALUE`\ =\ :ref:`VALUE`\
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- Set a header.
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* - r
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- Set the **raw** flag on this response. Pathod will not calculate a
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*Content-Length* header if a body is set.
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* - c\ :ref:`VALUE`
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- A shortcut for setting the Content-Type header. Equivalent to
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``h"Content-Type"=VALUE``
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* - u\ :ref:`VALUE`
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uSHORTCUT
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- Set a User-Agent header on this request. You can specify either a
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complete :ref:`VALUE`, or a User-Agent shortcut: **android**,
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**blackberry**, **bingbot**, **chrome**, **firefox**, **googlebot**,
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**ie9**, **ipad**, **iphone**, **safari**.
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* - b\ :ref:`VALUE`
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- Set the body. The appropriate Content-Length header is added
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automatically unless the **r** flag is set.
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* - s\ :ref:`VALUE`
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- An embedded Response specification, appended to the path of the request.
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* - x\ :ref:`INTEGER`
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- Repeat this message N times.
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* - d\ :ref:`OFFSET`
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- Disconnect after OFFSET bytes (HTTP/1 only).
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* - i\ :ref:`OFFSET`,\ :ref:`VALUE`
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- Inject the specified value at the offset (HTTP/1 only)
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* - p\ :ref:`OFFSET`,SECONDS
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- Pause for SECONDS seconds after OFFSET bytes. SECONDS can be an integer
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or "f" to pause forever (HTTP/1 only)
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*************
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HTTP Response
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*************
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**code:[colon-separated list of features]**
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.. list-table::
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:widths: 20 80
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:header-rows: 0
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* - code
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- An integer specifying the HTTP response code.
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The special method **ws** creates a valid websocket upgrade
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response (code 101), and moves pathod to websocket mode. Apart
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from that, websocket responses are just like any other, and all
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aspects of the response can be over-ridden.
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* - m\ :ref:`VALUE`
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- HTTP Reason message. Automatically chosen according to the response
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code if not specified. (HTTP/1 only)
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* - h\:\ :ref:`VALUE`\ =\ :ref:`VALUE`\
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- Set a header.
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* - r
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- Set the **raw** flag on this response. Pathod will not calculate a
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*Content-Length* header if a body is set.
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* - l\ :ref:`VALUE`
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- A shortcut for setting the Location header. Equivalent to
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``h"Location"=VALUE``
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* - c\ :ref:`VALUE`
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- A shortcut for setting the Content-Type header. Equivalent to
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``h"Content-Type"=VALUE``
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* - b\ :ref:`VALUE`
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- Set the body. The appropriate Content-Length header is added
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automatically unless the **r** flag is set.
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* - d\ :ref:`OFFSET`
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- Disconnect after OFFSET bytes (HTTP/1 only).
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* - i\ :ref:`OFFSET`,\ :ref:`VALUE`
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- Inject the specified value at the offset (HTTP/1 only)
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* - p\ :ref:`OFFSET`,SECONDS
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- Pause for SECONDS seconds after OFFSET bytes. SECONDS can be an integer
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or "f" to pause forever (HTTP/1 only)
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***************
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Websocket Frame
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***************
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**wf:[colon-separated list of features]**
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.. list-table::
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:widths: 20 80
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:header-rows: 0
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* - b\ :ref:`VALUE`
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- Set the frame payload. If a masking key is present, the value is
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encoded automatically.
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* - c\ :ref:`INTEGER`
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- Set the op code. This can either be an integer from 0-15, or be one of
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the following opcode names: **text** (the default), **continue**,
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**binary**, **close**, **ping**, **pong**.
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* - d\ :ref:`OFFSET`
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- Disconnect after OFFSET bytes
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* - i\ :ref:`OFFSET`,\ :ref:`VALUE`
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- Inject the specified value at the offset
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* - p\ :ref:`OFFSET`,SECONDS
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- Pause for SECONDS seconds after OFFSET bytes. SECONDS can be an integer
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or "f" to pause forever
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* - x\ :ref:`INTEGER`
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- Repeat this message N times.
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* - [-]fin
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- Set or un-set the **fin** bit.
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* - k\ :ref:`VALUE`
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- Set the masking key. The resulting value must be exactly 4 bytes long.
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The special form **knone** specifies that no key should be set, even if
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the mask bit is on.
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* - l\ :ref:`INTEGER`
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- Set the payload length in the frame header, regardless of the actual
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body length.
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* - [-]mask
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- Set or un-set the <b>mask</b> bit.
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* - r\ :ref:`VALUE`
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- Set the raw frame payload. This disables masking, even if the key is present.
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* - [-]rsv1
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- Set or un-set the **rsv1** bit.
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* - [-]rsv2
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- Set or un-set the **rsv2** bit.
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* - [-]rsv2
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- Set or un-set the **rsv2** bit.
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**********
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Data types
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**********
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.. _INTEGER:
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INTEGER
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^^^^^^^
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.. _OFFSET:
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OFFSET
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^^^^^^
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Offsets are calculated relative to the base message, before any injections or
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other transforms are applied. They have 3 flavors:
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======= ==========================
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integer An integer byte offset
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**r** A random location
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**a** The end of the message
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======= ==========================
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.. _VALUE:
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VALUE
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^^^^^
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Literals
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""""""""
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Literal values are specified as a quoted strings::
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"foo"
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Either single or double quotes are accepted, and quotes can be escaped with
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backslashes within the string::
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'fo\'o'
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Literal values can contain Python-style backslash escape sequences::
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'foo\r\nbar'
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Generated
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"""""""""
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An @-symbol lead-in specifies that generated data should be used. There are two
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components to a generator specification - a size, and a data type. By default
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pathod assumes a data type of "bytes".
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Here's a value specifier for generating 100 bytes::
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@100
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You can use standard suffixes to indicate larger values. Here, for instance, is
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a specifier for generating 100 megabytes:
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@100m
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Data is generated and served efficiently - if you really want to send a
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terabyte of data to a client, pathod can do it. The supported suffixes are:
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========== ====================
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b 1024**0 (bytes)
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k 1024**1 (kilobytes)
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m 1024**2 (megabytes)
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g 1024**3 (gigabytes)
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t 1024**4 (terabytes)
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========== ====================
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Data types are separated from the size specification by a comma. This specification
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generates 100mb of ASCII::
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@100m,ascii
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Supported data types are:
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================= ==============================================
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ascii All ASCII characters
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ascii_letters A-Za-z
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ascii_lowercase a-z
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ascii_uppercase A-Z
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bytes All 256 byte values
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digits 0-9
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hexdigits 0-f
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octdigits 0-7
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punctuation !"#$%&\'()*+,-./:;<=>?@[\\]^_`{|}~ and space
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whitespace \\t \\n \\x0b \\x0c \\r and space
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================= ==============================================
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Files
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"""""
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You can load a value from a specified file path. To do so, you have to specify a
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_staticdir_ option to pathod on the command-line, like so:
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>>> pathod -d ~/myassets
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All paths are relative paths under this directory. File loads are indicated by
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starting the value specifier with the left angle bracket::
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<my/path
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The path value can also be a quoted string, with the same syntax as literals::
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<"my/path"
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