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gnupg/doc/examples/pwpattern.list
Daniel Kahn Gillmor 0904b8ef34 Spelling cleanup.
No functional changes, just fixing minor spelling issues.

---

Most of these were identified from the command line by running:

  codespell \
    --ignore-words-list fpr,stati,keyserver,keyservers,asign,cas,iff,ifset \
    --skip '*.po,ChangeLog*,help.*.txt,*.jpg,*.eps,*.pdf,*.png,*.gpg,*.asc' \
    doc g13 g10 kbx agent artwork scd tests tools am common dirmngr sm \
    NEWS README README.maint TODO

Signed-off-by: Daniel Kahn Gillmor <dkg@fifthhorseman.net>
2020-02-18 18:07:46 -05:00

49 lines
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# pwpattern.list -*- default-generic -*-
#
# This is an example for a pattern file as used by gpg-check-pattern.
# The file is line based with comment lines beginning on the *first*
# position with a '#'. Empty lines and lines with just spaces are
# ignored. The other lines may be verbatim patterns and match as they
# are (trailing spaces are ignored) or extended regular expressions
# indicated by a / in the first column and terminated by another / or
# end of line. All comparisons are case insensitive.
# Reject the usual metavariables. Usual not required because
# gpg-agent can be used to reject all passphrases shorter than 8
# characters.
foo
bar
baz
# As well as very common passwords. Note that gpg-agent can be used
# to reject them due to missing non-alpha characters.
password
passwort
passphrase
mantra
test
abc
egal
# German number plates.
/^[A-Z]{1,3}[ ]*-[ ]*[A-Z]{1,2}[ ]*[0-9]+/
# Dates (very limited, only ISO dates). */
/^[012][0-9][0-9][0-9]-[012][0-9]-[0123][0-9]$/
# Arbitrary strings
the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dogs back
no-password
no password
12345678
123456789
1234567890
87654321
987654321
0987654321
qwertyuiop
qwertzuiop
asdfghjkl
zxcvbnm