use warnings;
sub thread {
- my ($messages, $ordersub, $ibx) = @_;
+ my ($msgs, $ordersub, $ibx) = @_;
my $id_table = {};
- _add_message($id_table, $_) foreach @$messages;
+
+ # Sadly, we sort here anyways since the fill-in-the-blanks References:
+ # can be shakier if somebody used In-Reply-To with multiple, disparate
+ # messages. So, take the client Date: into account since we can't
+ # alway determine ordering when somebody uses multiple In-Reply-To.
+ # We'll trust the client Date: header here instead of the Received:
+ # time since this is for display (and not retrieval)
+ _add_message($id_table, $_) for sort { $a->{ds} <=> $b->{ds} } @$msgs;
my $rootset = [ grep {
!delete($_->{parent}) && $_->visible($ibx)
} values %$id_table ];
}
($simples, $smsgs) = make_objs(reverse @backwards);
my $forward = thread_to_s($smsgs);
-if ('Mail::Thread sorts by Date') {
+unless ('Mail::Thread sorts by Date') {
SKIP: {
skip 'Mail::Thread missing', 1 unless $mt;
check_mt($forward, $simples, 'matches Mail::Thread forwards');
}
}
-unless ('sorting by Date') {
+if ('sorting by Date') {
is("\n".$backward, "\n".$forward, 'forward and backward matches');
}