Files
evolution/camel/tests
Peter Williams 6ffa930086 Add a CamelMimeFilterStripHeader that removes a header from mime output. Used
by sendmail to strip the BCC from the email while still sending to the BCC
recipients.

camel:

2001-06-28  Peter Williams  <peterw@ximian.com>

        * camel-mime-filter-stripheader.c: New file. Filter that strips a
        header from mime output.

        * camel-mime-filter-stripheader.h: New file. Header for the above.

        * providers/smtp/camel-smtp-transport.c (smtp_data): Use the stripheader
        filter to remove the "Bcc" header.

        * Makefile.am: Add the stripheader files.

        * tests/lib/Makefile.am (INCLUDES): Get this to compile again.

        * tests/mime-filter/test-stripheader.c: New file. Test suite for
        the CamelMimeFilterStripHeader.

        * tests/mime-filter/Makefile.am: New test section: mime filters.

mail:

2001-06-28  Peter Williams  <peterw@ximian.com>

        * mail-ops.c (mail_send_message): Revert fejj's Bcc header removal;
        this unsets the BCC recipients and so doesn't send to the Bcc'd
        people at all.

svn path=/trunk/; revision=10576
2001-06-28 20:35:43 +00:00
..
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This directory is to contain regression tests that should be run
before committing anything to camel.

In each subdirectory of tests there is a README containing a
one-line description of each test file.  This README must be kept
uptodate.

To write a new test: copy an existing one and replace the contents.

See camel-test.h for a number of functions and macros which setup and
define the test environmet, and help provide meaningful messages when
something actually fails.

All tests have the following options:
 -v[vvvv]
	verbose.  more v's more verbose.  2 v's will give you
	a simple test backtrace of any partially failed tests.
	No v's give you a simple backtrace of any failed tests.
 -q
	quiet.  Dont print anything, unless there is a SEGV.

See the other files in lib/* for utility functions that help to
write the tests (object comparison, creation, etc functions).

Tests may fail and be non-fatal.  In this case, you will see "Partial
success" on the result of each test line.  To get more information
about the test, run the test manually with a -v command line argument.
The more v's you have the more detail you get (upto about -vvvvv),
generally use -vv to find out which parts of a partially successful
test failed, and where.

Note that if writing tests, non-fatal tests (bracketed by a
camel_test_nonfatal() and camel_test_fatal() pair) should only be
defined where: 1. The test in question should ideally pass, and 2. The
code has known limitations currently that stop it passing, but
otherwise works for nominal input.

To debug tests, set a breakpoint on camel_test_fail, which will be
called for any failure, even a non-fatal one.  Or set it to
camel_test_break, which will only be called for fatal errors which are
to print to the screen.

 Michael <notzed@helixcode.com>