At line 1 changed 4 lines |
All have a start and end, and use curly brackets. Some take additional parameters separated by colons. : |
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They are also processed in this order of sequence as listed here:\\ |
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Function syntax consists of a start and end tag, the function name to be enclosed in curly brackets. Take at least one parameter as "argument". Some take additional parameters separated by colon characters. Generic syntax: |
{{{ |
{functionname_start:optionalargument1:optionalargument2}argument{functionname_end} |
}}} |
The arguments can be text or numeric literals or server variables. Special case of optional arguments, when these contain the colon (:) character itself, that needs to be manually encoded as ~..~. |
The functions are processed by the replacement engine in this very order of sequence as listed here.\\ |
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!General purpose |
\\ |
At line 22 added 8 lines |
VRL encodes the inner data....@ becomes {at}, % becomes {percent} etc. |
{{{ |
vrlencode_start |
}}} |
VRL decodes the inner data. {at} becomes @ etc |
{{{ |
vrldecode_start |
}}} |
At line 49 changed one line |
Safeguards the text for raw SQL preventing ' and ; and %, etc risks in input text. |
Safeguards the text for raw SQL preventing ' and; and %, etc risks in the input text. |
At line 83 changed one line |
Parsing a date to a millisecond value. Example: {parse_start:MMddyy HH~..~mm~..~ss}042578 22:43:12{parse_end} Note how the sideways colon is used to represent the colon since colon is our separator character. ~..~ means : in functions where that scenario occurs. |
Parsing a date to a millisecond value. Example: {parse_start:MMddyy HH~..~mm~..~ss}042578 22:43:12{parse_end} Note how the sideways colon is used to represent the colon since colon is our separator character. ~..~~ means: in functions where that scenario occurs. For strict parsing use character '__=__' at the beginning of the date format like {parse_start:__=__MM/dd/yyyy}. It will parse only valid dates and fails for example for __13__/02/2022 (Month maximum number is __12__). |
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user,pass,path,port,host,protocol,file,query |
protocol, user, pass, host, port, path, file, and query in this order. |
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Do very basic math operation on text formatted math. Example: {math_start:l}5+5{math_end} would result in 10. The l is for LONG. f is for FLOAT. i is for INTEGER, which is the default. So {math_start:f}5+5{math_end} would result in 10.0 |
Do very basic math operations on text formatted math. Example: {math_start:l}5+5{math_end} would result in 10. The l is for LONG. f is for FLOAT. i is for INTEGER. d is for big numbers (double of the integer) which is the default. So {math_start:f}5+5{math_end} would result in 10.0 |
At line 104 changed one line |
Reference a list of user attributes, separated by a delimitator character, of a group of users. Example: {group_start:email:MainUsers:,}Mygroup{group_end} comma separated list of user e-mail addresses members of Mygroup from MainUsers connection group |
Reference a list of user attributes, separated by a delimitator character, of a group of users. Example: {group_start:email:MainUsers:,}Mygroup{group_end} comma-separated list of user e-mail addresses members of Mygroup from MainUsers connection group |
At line 125 added 50 lines |
Turn off function replacement. If the text starts with the variable {ignore_functions} function replacement will be turned off. |
{{{ |
ignore_functions |
}}} |
Log custom text to CrushFTP.log |
{{{ |
{log_start}some text, or {variables}{log_end} |
}}} |
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\\ |
!Special functions that only work in the UserVariable task\\ |
__Save, Load, and Add to named list items in a job flow. (UserVariable task only) (CrushFTP 10.3.0_43+ supports this)__\\ |
Save a copy of the current list to the name in the function (applying the filter of the UserVariable task) |
{{{ |
save_list_start |
}}} |
Load a list into the current list and start using it. The existing list is discarded. |
{{{ |
load_list_start |
}}} |
Add the current item to a named list. |
{{{ |
add_list_start |
}}} |
\\ |
---- |
__Parse in a JSON object, explode to a list of key name - key value pairs__ |
{{{ |
json_parse_start |
}}} |
Use it like {json_parse_start}{myJson}{json_parse_end} with it's argument a variable referencing a JSON object. Can dereference a particular key value with the key name enclosed in curly brackets ( like {mykey1} ). It doesn't work with nested JSON structures.\\ |
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__Parse in an XML file, explode to a list of key name - key value pairs__\\ |
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__!!!Restriction:__ Only works for XML attributes: __type="properties"__ or __type="vector"__.\\ |
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{{{ |
{xml_parse_start}{file_contents}{xml_parse_end} |
}}}\\ |
\\ |
You can also convert the input XML into a parsable format:\\ |
{{{ |
{xml_parse_start}{replace_start:<mytag:<mytag type="properties"}{file_contents}{replace_end}{xml_parse_end} |
}}}\\ |
{{{ |
{xml_parse_start}{replace_start:<mytag:<mytag type="vector"}{file_contents}{replace_end}{xml_parse_end} |
}}} |
\\ |
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