Removed:
* NaN normalization
* INFINITY normalization
* errno normalization
* Completely unused duration regex
Tests using these macros should be tagged `[approvals]`
so they are not run as part of approval tests.
Also simplified regex for the test's executable filename,
and hidden some tests relying on nullptr normalization.
This requires a bunch of different changes across the reporter
subsystem.
* We need to handle multiple reporters and their differing
preferences in `ListeningReporter`, e.g. what to do when
we mix reporters that capture and don't capture stdout.
* We need to change how the reporter is given output and
how we parse reporter's output destination from CLI.
* Approval tests need to handle multireporter option
* Add buildAndTest.cmd for Windows users
Signed-off-by: Alan Jowett <alanjo@microsoft.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin Hořeňovský <martin.horenovsky@gmail.com>
We used to use whatever precision we ended up having from C++'s
stdlib. However, some relatively popular tools, like Jenkins,
use Maven SureFire XML schema to validate JUnit test reports, and
Maven SureFire schema requires the duration to have at most 3
decimal places.
For compatibility, the JUnit reporter will now respect this
limitation.
Closes#2221
This commits also adds a script that does the amalgamation of headers
and .cpp files into the distributable version, removes the old
`generateSingleHeader` script, and also adds a very simple compilation
test for the amalgamated distribution.
On systems where the file system has excute permissions, this script was
not marked as executable in a clean git checkout and so could be run
without first changing the permissions. Fixed by setting the relevant
git flag.
As Clara is no longer maintained as a separate project, the
implementation was moved to the internal subfolder of top-level
folder. This removes one folder and avoids potential user confusion.
Also simplified the convenience header checking script accordingly.
There are two reasons for this:
1) It is highly unlikely that someone has use for this header,
which has no customization points and only provides simplest
possible main, and cannot link the static library which also
provides a default main implementation.
2) It being a header was causing extra complications with
the convenience headers, and our checking script. This would either
require special handling in the checking script, or would break user's
of the main convenience header.
All in all, it is simpler and better in the long term to remove it,
than to fix its problems.
Previously, we would collect coverage data for all source files in
Catch2's directory, including tests and examples, and we would then
ask codecov.io to ignore those. With this change, OpenCppCoverage
only collects coverage data for source files in the `src/` directory.
This cuts the size of the coverage report in half, and also speeds
up the coverage collection.