'[body]="200-byte header"'
output=$(notmuch reply id:${gen_msg_id})
test_expect_equal "$output" "From: Notmuch Test Suite <test_suite@notmuchmail.org>
-Subject: Re: This subject is exactly 200 bytes in length. Other than its length there is not much of note here. Note that the length of 200 bytes includes the Subject: and Re: prefixes with two spaces
+Subject: Re: This subject is exactly 200 bytes in length. Other than its
+ length there is not much of note here. Note that the length of 200 bytes
+ includes the Subject: and Re: prefixes with two spaces
In-Reply-To: <${gen_msg_id}>
References: <${gen_msg_id}>
'[date]="Tue, 05 Jan 2010 15:43:56 -0000"' \
'[body]="Encoding"'
-output=$(notmuch reply id:${gen_msg_id})
+# GMime happens to change from Q- to B-encoding. We canonicalize the
+# case of the encoding and charset because different versions of GMime
+# capitalize the encoding differently.
+output=$(notmuch reply id:${gen_msg_id} | perl -pe 's/=\?[^?]+\?[bB]\?/lc($&)/ge')
test_expect_equal "$output" "\
From: Notmuch Test Suite <test_suite@notmuchmail.org>
-Subject: Re: àßç
-To: ☃ <snowman@example.com>
+Subject: Re: =?iso-8859-1?b?4N/n?=
+To: =?utf-8?b?4piD?= <snowman@example.com>
In-Reply-To: <${gen_msg_id}>
References: <${gen_msg_id}>
"reply-headers": {
"From": "Notmuch Test Suite <test_suite@notmuchmail.org>",
"In-reply-to": "<'${gen_msg_id}'>",
- "References": " <'${gen_msg_id}'>",
+ "References": "<'${gen_msg_id}'>",
"Subject": "Re: \u00e0\u00df\u00e7",
"To": "\u2603 <snowman@example.com>"
}