# we use decreasing timestamps here for historical reasons;
# the existing test suite when we converted to unique timestamps just
# happened to have signicantly fewer failures with that choice.
- template[date]=$(TZ=UTC printf "%(%a, %d %b %Y %T %z)T\n" \
- $((978709437 - gen_msg_cnt)))
+ local date_secs=$((978709437 - gen_msg_cnt))
+ # printf %(..)T is bash 4.2+ feature. use perl fallback if needed...
+ TZ=UTC printf -v template[date] "%(%a, %d %b %Y %T %z)T" $date_secs 2>/dev/null ||
+ template[date]=`perl -le 'use POSIX "strftime";
+ @time = gmtime '"$date_secs"';
+ print strftime "%a, %d %b %Y %T +0000", @time'`
fi
additional_headers=""
test_expect_equal "$output" "$expected" "$@"
}
+# Sort the top-level list of JSON data from stdin.
+test_sort_json () {
+ PYTHONIOENCODING=utf-8 python -c \
+ "import sys, json; json.dump(sorted(json.load(sys.stdin)),sys.stdout)"
+}
+
test_emacs_expect_t () {
test "$#" = 2 && { prereq=$1; shift; } || prereq=
test "$#" = 1 ||
perl -pe 's/("?thread"?: ?)("?)................("?)/\1\2XXX\3/'
}
+notmuch_search_files_sanitize()
+{
+ sed -e "s,$MAIL_DIR,MAIL_DIR,"
+}
+
NOTMUCH_SHOW_FILENAME_SQUELCH='s,filename:.*/mail,filename:/XXX/mail,'
notmuch_show_sanitize ()
{