NAME Test::MTA::Exim4 - Test Anything interface for testing Exim4 configurations VERSION version 0.05 SYNOPSIS Test::MTA::Exim4 allows the testing of an exim installation and configuration using the perl TAP (Test Anything Protocol) methodology. This allows the writing of some simple test scripts which can check for features of exim and check that this configuration routes, accepts or rejects mail as you would expect. As such it is an ideal system for creating a test suite for your mail configuration allowing you to check that there are no unexpected regressions when you make a change. You need to be aware that an exim installation depends on more than just a config file - the exim binary, and the installation environment may effect the behaviour and/or routing of messages. You really need to do final configuration tests on the box that the system will be running on in production. WARNING At present this module is experimental - both the API and implementation are subject to change. To this end I welcome discussion on how best to implement or expose functionality. There is other work proposed to produce similar test modules for other MTAs and so a common mechanism or compatibility layer between them is possible - this module has been produced to get something out as code is a better discussion point than vapourware ideas! Having said all that, it has now been around for several years, without substantial changes, so it may be as well to accept the API to be as stable as that of exim itself... EXAMPLES The sample directory contains an example used for testing the installation, and should hopefully act as a reasonable example configuration. METHODS new my $exim = Test::MTA::Exim4->new( \%fields ); Create a new exim configuration testing object. You may pass configuration information in as a hash reference - this is the only point at which the locations of the exim binary and configuration file may be set. The options that can be passed in are:- * exim_path This is the path to the exim binary. If this is not set, the default is taken as the first of the following:- * DEFAULT_EXIM_PATH - environment variable * exim4 in the current path * exim in the current path * /usr/sbin/exim * config_file The configuration file used. If this is not set the value of the environment variable DEFAULT_EXIM_CONFIG_FILE is used and if that is not set no config file is passed to the exim binary (meaning the default compiled into that is used). * test A test object - defaults to a new instance of Test::Builder * timeout The timeout enforced on commands, in seconds. Defaults to 5 seconds. reset Resets the internal state. Not sure when this might be useful! config_ok Checks that exim considers the configuration file as syntactically valid. The config file must be specified when new is called, otherwise the default is used. exim_version Returns the version of exim seen when the configuration was checked. This is intended for use within your own tests for appropriate versions, for example:- # ensure we are running exim 4.69 or later ok(($exim->exim_version gt '4.69'), 'Exim version check'); exim_build Returns the build number of exim seen when the configuration was checked. This is intended for use within your own tests for appropriate versions/builds. has_option $exim->has_option($option, $optional_msg) Checks whether the named exim option exists. This is taken from the list of options listed by exim -bP has_not_option $exim->has_not_option($option, $optional_msg) Precisely the opposite of has_option with an opposite test - so fails if the option does exist. option_is $exim->option_is($option, $value, $optional_msg) Checks the named exim option has the appropriate value. This is taken from the list of options listed by exim -bP option_is_true $exim->option_is_true($option, $optional_msg) Checks the named exim option has a true value. This is taken from the list of options listed by exim -bP option_is_false $exim->option_is_false($option, $optional_msg) Checks the named exim option has a false value. This is taken from the list of options listed by exim -bP expansion_is $exim->expansion_is($string, $value, $optional_msg) Checks the given exim expansion string ends up with the appropriate value. has_capability $exim->has_capability($type, $what, $optional_msg) $exim->has_capability('lookup', 'lsearch', 'Has lsearch capability') Checks that exim has the appropriate capability. This is taken from the lists of capabilities listed by exim -bV The types of capability are:- * support_for * lookup * authenticator * router * transport The items within a capability are processed to be lowercase alphanumeric only - so iconv rather than iconv() as output by exim. The subitems (for example maildir is a subitem of appendfile) are treated as separately checkable items. If the version of exim being used has both built-in and dynamic lookups (or potentially in later versions multiple types of other capabilities), then these are merged into a single capability list. has_not_capability Precisely the opposite of has_capability with an opposite test - so fails if this does exist. routes_ok $exim->routes_ok($address, $optional_msg); $exim->routes_ok('address@example.com', 'Checking routing'); Checks that exim with this configuration can route to the address given. Accepts any working address which may route to any number of final targets as long as there are no undeliverable addresses in the set. routes_as_ok $exim->routes_as_ok($address, $target, $optional_msg); $exim->routes_as_ok('address@example.com', {transport => 'local_smtp}, 'Checking routing'); Checks that exim with this configuration routes to the address given with the appropriate target results. The target is an arrayref of hashes (or as a special case a single hash), which matches against the addresses section of the result from _run_exim_bt. Each address matches if all the elements given in the target hash match (so an empty hash will match anything). See _run_exim_bt for hash elements. discards_ok $exim->discards_ok($address, $optional_msg); $exim->discards_ok('discards@example.com', 'Checking discarding'); Checks that exim with this configuration will discard the given address. undeliverable_ok $exim->undeliverable_ok($address, $optional_msg); $exim->undeliverable_ok('discards@example.com', 'Checking discarding'); Checks that exim with this configuration will consider the given address to be undeliverable. INTERNAL METHODS These methods are not intended to be run by end users, but are exposed. _run_exim_command Runs an exim instance with the appropriate configuration file and arguments. The configuration file is taken from the test object, the arguments are passed as arguments to this function. _run_exim_bv Runs exim -bV with the appropriate configuration file, to check that the configuration file is valid. The output of the command is parsed and stashed and used to provide the functions to check versions numbers and capabilities. _run_exim_bp Runs exim -bP with the appropriate configuration file, to cause Exim to display the value of all the main configuration options. The output of the command is parsed and stashed and used to provide the functions to check individual option values. _run_exim_be Runs exim -be, with the appropriate configuration file, in expansion testing mode, to cause Exim to expand the specified string. _run_exim_bt Runs exim -bt (address test mode) with the appropriate configuration file, to check how the single address passed routes. The output of the command is parsed and passed back in the results. The results structure is hash that looks like:- { all_ok => # no invocation errors deliverable => # number of deliverable addresses undeliverable => # number of undeliverable addresses total => # total number of addresses addresses => {} } The addresses part of the structure has one key for each resultant address, the value of which is another hash, which may contain the following items:- * ok True if the address routed OK, False otherwise. * discarded True if the address was discarded by the router, false or missing if not. * data Scalar of lines picked out of exim output related to this address and not otherwise recognised. * router The router name used to handle this address. * transport The transport name used to handle this address. * address The final destination address. * original The original address that was used within this transformation. This is actually an arrayref each containing an address as several transformations may take place. * target For a local transport, the delivery target. _diag Spits out some Test::Builder diagnostics for the last run command. Used internally by some tests on failure. The output data is the last error seen by IPC::Cmd and the complete output of the command. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The module draws very strongly on the Test::Exim4::Routing module by Max Maischein. It is structured differently, and is currently very experimental (meaning the API may change in a big way), so these changes were made as a new module in a name space that is intended for use by similar modules for other MTAs. INSTALLATION See perlmodinstall for information and options on installing Perl modules. BUGS AND LIMITATIONS You can make new bug reports, and view existing ones, through the web interface at http://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Test-MTA-Exim4. AVAILABILITY The project homepage is https://metacpan.org/release/Test-MTA-Exim4. The latest version of this module is available from the Comprehensive Perl Archive Network (CPAN). Visit http://www.perl.com/CPAN/ to find a CPAN site near you, or see https://metacpan.org/module/Test::MTA::Exim4/. AUTHOR Nigel Metheringham COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE This software is copyright (c) 2014 by Nigel Metheringham. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.