use nu_test_support::{nu, pipeline}; const TEST_CWD: &str = "tests/fixtures/formats"; // The To field in this email is just "username@domain.com", which gets parsed out as the Address. The Name is empty. #[test] fn from_eml_get_to_field() { let actual = nu!( cwd: TEST_CWD, pipeline( r#" open sample.eml | get To | get Address | echo $it "# ) ); assert_eq!(actual.out, "username@domain.com"); let actual = nu!( cwd: TEST_CWD, pipeline( r#" open sample.eml | get To | get Name | echo $it "# ) ); assert_eq!(actual.out, ""); } // The Reply-To field in this email is "aw-confirm@ebay.com" , meaning both the Name and Address values are identical. #[test] fn from_eml_get_replyto_field() { let actual = nu!( cwd: TEST_CWD, pipeline( r#" open sample.eml | get Reply-To | get Address | echo $it "# ) ); assert_eq!(actual.out, "aw-confirm@ebay.com"); let actual = nu!( cwd: TEST_CWD, pipeline( r#" open sample.eml | get Reply-To | get Name | echo $it "# ) ); assert_eq!(actual.out, "aw-confirm@ebay.com"); } // The Reply-To field in this email is "aw-confirm@ebay.com" , meaning both the Name and Address values are identical. #[test] fn from_eml_get_subject_field() { let actual = nu!( cwd: TEST_CWD, pipeline( r#" open sample.eml | get Subject | echo $it "# ) ); assert_eq!(actual.out, "Billing Issues"); }