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Wildcarding query
- Subject: Wildcarding query
- From: "David Buckley" <db@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 22 Dec 2004 10:44:24 -0000
Spec says:
"Unless explicitly specified, the : (colon) sub-address separator is
treated as being synonomous with a . (dot) separator. Exact matching
against a : (colon) is only required in situations where wild card
filtering against just the sub-address element is required."
What does that last bit mean? When does it apply??
Given a device a.b.c:d.e
a.b.*:*.* would shirley match. Is this what "explicitly
specified"
means?
But does a.b.c.d.e match it?
How about a.b.*.*.e or a.b.c.*.* or a.b.*.d.*
I'm also a bit hazy on body wilcarding. In the BSC spec it is clear
that multi-part bodies are permitted (xAPBSC.cmd example), and the xAP
spec says "Any multi-block message [note message not schema] with a
wildcarded header address may optionally include additional target
filter" but the BSC spec makes no mention of body targets.
Is it safe to just generically assume that _any_ body may contain a
target= element?
Finally, the '>' character, it is correct that nothing can follow it
in a wildcard specification?
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