NAME
Test::Email - Test Email Contents
SYNOPSIS
use Test::Email;
# is-a MIME::Entity
my $email = Test::Email->new(\@lines);
# all-in-one test
$email->ok({
# optional search parameters
from => ($is or qr/$regex/),
subject => ($is or qr/$regex/),
body => ($is or qr/$regex/),
headername => ($is or qr/$regex/),
}, "passed tests");
# single-test header methods
$email->header_is($header_name, $value, "$header_name matches");
$email->header_ok($header_name, $value, "$header_name matches");
$email->header_like($header_name, qr/regex/, "$header_name matches");
# single-test body methods
$email->body_is($header_name, $value, "$header_name matches");
$email->body_ok($header_name, $value, "$header_name matches");
$email->body_like($header_name, qr/regex/, "$header_name matches");
# how many MIME parts does the messages contain?
$email->parts_ok($parts_count, "there were $parts_count parts found");
# what is the MIME type of the firs part
my @parts = $email->parts(); # see MIME::Entity
$parts[0]->mime_type_ok('test/html', 'the first part is type text/html');
DESCRIPTION
Please note that this is ALPHA CODE. As such, the interface is likely to change.
Test::Email is a subclass of MIME::Entity, with the above methods. If you want the messages fetched from a POP3 account, use Test::POP3.
Tests for equality remove trailing newlines from strings before testing. This is because some mail messages have newlines appended to them during the mailing process, which could cause unnecessary confusion.
This module should be 100% self-explanatory. If not, then please look at Test::Simple and Test::More for clarification.
METHODS
my $email = Test::Email->new($lines_aref);
-
This is identical to
MIME::Entity->new()
. See there for details. $email->ok($test_href, $description);
-
Using this method, you can test multiple qualities of an email message with one test. This will execute the tests as expected and will produce output just like
Test::Simple::ok
andTest::More::ok
. Keys for$test_href
are eitherbody
, or they are considered to be the name of a header, case-insensitive. - single-test methods
-
The single-test methods in the synopsis above are very similar to their counterparts in Test::Simple and Test::More. Please consult those modules for documentation.
Please note that tests for equality remove newlines from their operands before testing. This is because some email messages have newlines appended to them during mailing.
my $ok = $email-
parts_ok($parts_count, $description);>-
Check to see how many MIME parts this email contains. Each part is also a Test::Email object.
my $ok = $email-
mime_type_ok($expected_mime_type, $description);>-
Check the MIME type of an email or an email part.
EXPORT
None.
SEE ALSO
Test::Builder, Test::Simple, Test::More, Test::POP3
TODO
I am open to suggestions.
AUTHOR
James Tolley, <james@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2007-2008 by James Tolley
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.8 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.