qpsmtpd/t/qpsmtpd-address.t
John Peacock 2535e77293 Merge branches/0.3x back to trunk.
Too many individual changes to document.  Trust me... ;-)

Lightly tested (i.e. it accepts and delivers mail with minimal plugins).

NOTES/LIMITATIONS: 
logging/adaptive currently eats some log messages.
auth_vpopmail_sql is currently broken (needs continuations?).
'make test' fails in dnsbl (no Test::Qpsmtpd::input_sock() method).


git-svn-id: https://svn.perl.org/qpsmtpd/trunk@588 958fd67b-6ff1-0310-b445-bb7760255be9
2005-12-22 21:30:53 +00:00

104 lines
2.7 KiB
Perl

#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
$^W = 1;
use Test::More tests => 29;
BEGIN {
use_ok('Qpsmtpd::Address');
}
my $as;
my $ao;
$as = '<>';
$ao = Qpsmtpd::Address->parse($as);
ok ($ao, "parse $as");
is ($ao->format, $as, "format $as");
$as = '<postmaster>';
$ao = Qpsmtpd::Address->parse($as);
ok ($ao, "parse $as");
is ($ao->format, $as, "format $as");
$as = '<foo@example.com>';
$ao = Qpsmtpd::Address->parse($as);
ok ($ao, "parse $as");
is ($ao->format, $as, "format $as");
is ($ao->user, 'foo', 'user');
is ($ao->host, 'example.com', 'host');
# the \ before the @ in the local part is not required, but
# allowed. For simplicity we add a backslash before all characters
# which are not allowed in a dot-string.
$as = '<"musa_ibrah@caramail.comandrea.luger"@wifo.ac.at>';
$ao = Qpsmtpd::Address->parse($as);
ok ($ao, "parse $as");
is ($ao->format, '<"musa_ibrah\@caramail.comandrea.luger"@wifo.ac.at>', "format $as");
# email addresses with spaces
$as = '<foo bar@example.com>';
$ao = Qpsmtpd::Address->parse($as);
ok ($ao, "parse $as");
is ($ao->format, '<"foo\ bar"@example.com>', "format $as");
$as = 'foo@example.com';
$ao = Qpsmtpd::Address->new($as);
ok ($ao, "new $as");
is ($ao->address, $as, "address $as");
$as = '<foo@example.com>';
$ao = Qpsmtpd::Address->new($as);
ok ($ao, "new $as");
is ($ao->address, 'foo@example.com', "address $as");
$as = '<foo@foo.x.example.com>';
$ao = Qpsmtpd::Address->new($as);
ok ($ao, "new $as");
is ($ao->format, $as, "format $as");
$as = 'foo@foo.x.example.com';
ok ($ao = Qpsmtpd::Address->parse('<'.$as.'>'), "parse $as");
is ($ao && $ao->address, $as, "address $as");
# Not sure why we can change the address like this, but we can so test it ...
is ($ao && $ao->address('test@example.com'), 'test@example.com', 'address(test@example.com)');
$as = '<foo@foo.x.example.com>';
$ao = Qpsmtpd::Address->new($as);
ok ($ao, "new $as");
is ($ao->format, $as, "format $as");
is ("$ao", $as, "overloaded stringify $as");
$as = 'foo@foo.x.example.com';
ok ($ao = Qpsmtpd::Address->parse("<$as>"), "parse <$as>");
is ($ao && $ao->address, $as, "address $as");
ok ($ao eq $as, "overloaded 'cmp' operator");
my @unsorted_list = map { Qpsmtpd::Address->new($_) }
qw(
"musa_ibrah@caramail.comandrea.luger"@wifo.ac.at
foo@example.com
ask@perl.org
foo@foo.x.example.com
jpeacock@cpan.org
test@example.com
);
# NOTE that this is sorted by _host_ not by _domain_
my @sorted_list = map { Qpsmtpd::Address->new($_) }
qw(
jpeacock@cpan.org
foo@example.com
test@example.com
foo@foo.x.example.com
ask@perl.org
"musa_ibrah@caramail.comandrea.luger"@wifo.ac.at
);
my @test_list = sort @unsorted_list;
is_deeply( \@test_list, \@sorted_list, "sort via overloaded 'cmp' operator");