On 2025-08-06 09:04, Daniel Hofstetter wrote:
$ echo 'invalid' | base32 -d 2> /dev/null $ echo 'invalid' | base32 -d > /dev/null base32: invalid input $ echo 'invalid' | base64 -d 2> /dev/null �{ږ'$ $ echo 'invalid' | base64 -d > /dev/null base64: invalid input
I don't see a bug here. Both programs convert as much as they can, and then stop and diagnose a failure if there is one. base32 can't convert anything, so it stops right away. base64 can convert the 'inva' as that's valid base64 input, so it outputs the converted data before finding the "lid\n" which is invalid.