Classes will automatically inherit the virtual-ness of their base
class destructors. If the base class already has a virtual
destructor and the derived class needs default destructor semantics
then the derived class can omit defining the destructor in favor of
the compiler automatically defining it.
This has an additional benefit of reenabling move semantics. The
presence of a user-specified destructor automatically disables move
operations.
This removes about 200 pointless copies from printing the help
message (the original motivation for the change), and also nicely
improves performance of the various reporters that depend on
TextFlow.
The code is now even worse mess than before, due to the ad-hoc
implementation of Result-ish type based on virtual functions in
Clara, but it has dropped the allocations for empty binary down
to 151.
Because TokenStream is copied around a lot, moving it to use
`StringRef` removes _a lot_ of allocations per `Opt` in the parser.
Args are not copied around much, but changing them as well makes it
obvious that they do not participate in the ownership.
The changes add up to removing ~180 allocations for "empty"
invocation of the test binary.
(`./tests/ExtraTests/NoTests --allow-running-no-tests -o /dev/null`
is down to 317 allocs)
This prevents the full construction from being O(N^2) in number
of `Opt`s, and also reduces the number of allocations for running
no tests significantly:
`tests/SelfTest`: 7705 -> 6095
`tests/ExtraTests/NoTests` 2215 -> 605
* Clara::Opt::getHelpColumns returns single item
It could never return multiple items, but for some reason it
was wrapping that single item in a vector.
* Use ReusableStringStream in Clara
* Reserve HelpColumns ahead of time
* Use StringRef for descriptions in HelpColumn type
The combination of these changes ends up removing about 7% (~200)
of allocations when Catch2 has to prepare output for `-h`.
There is no good reason for these to be std::strings, as these
are just (optional) constants for nice user output. This ends up
reducing the allocations significantly.
When measuring allocations when running no tests, the changes are
`tests/SelfTest` 9213 -> 7705
`tests/ExtraTests/NoTests` 3723 -> 2215
By moving to use our `uniform_integer_distribution`, which is
reproducible across different platforms, instead of the stdlib
one which is not, we can provide reproducible results for `float`s
and `double`s. Still no reproducibility for `long double`s, because
those are too different across different platforms.
* Utility for extended mult n x n bits -> 2n bits
* Utility to adapt output from URBG to target (unsigned) integral
type
* Utility to reorder signed values into unsigned type while keeping
the order.
Specifically we add
* `gamma(a, b)`, which returns the magnitude of largest 1-ULP
step in range [a, b].
* `count_equidistant_float(a, b, distance)`, which returns the
number of equi-distant floats in range [a, b].
The base images for GitHub Actions are updated weekly, but
sometimes that is not enough to be able to install the packages
we require. The recommended fix for this is to always run
`apt-get update` before `apt-get install`.
We do not support specific compilers, but rather compilers with
reasonable quality of their C++14 support. While developing the
new random generators, I ran into issues with VS2017 where it
rejects perfectly valid C++14 code, **and** the error does not
point me in the right direction to try and work around the issue.
It is time for VS2017 to go.
Together with liberal use of `_sr` UDL to compile-time convert
string literals into StringRefs, this will reduce the number of
allocation and remove most of the strcpy calls inherent in
converting string lits into `std::string`s.