The base was also renamed from `TestEventListenerBase` to
`EventListenerBase`, and modified to derive directly from the
reporter interface, rather than deriving from `StreamingReporterBase`.
Each of the two reporter bases now has its own header file, and
cpp file. Even though this adds another TU to the compilation,
the total CPU time taken by compilation is reduced by about 1%
for debug build and ~0.5% for optimized build of the main library.
(The improvement would be roughly doubles without splitting the TUs,
but the maintainability hit is not worth it.)
The code size of the static library build has also somewhat decreased.
Follow up: Introduce combined TU for reporters, and further split
apart the catch_reporter_streaming_base.hpp header into its
constituent parts, as it still contains a whole bunch of other stuff.
There are some examples on issue #850 of using this feature, but they
are not easily found from the documentation. Adding them here as an
example makes them more findable and ensures they keep working if the
API changes.
* Successive executions of the same `GENERATE` macro (e.g. because
of a for loop) no longer lead to multiple nested generators.
* The same line can now contain multiple `GENERATE` macros without
issues.
Fixes#1913
Doing some benchmarking with ClangBuildAnalyzer suggests that
compiling Catch2's `SelfTest` spends 10% of the time instantiating
`std::unique_ptr` for some interface types required for registering
and running tests.
The lesser compilation overhead of `Catch::Detail::unique_ptr` should
significantly reduce that time.
The compiled implementation was also changed to use the custom impl,
to avoid having to convert between using `std::unique_ptr` and
`Catch::Detail::unique_ptr`. This will likely also improve the compile
times of the implementation, but that is less important than improving
compilation times of the user's TUs with tests.
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.
This describes the reality better, as it also links in the rest
of Catch2.
The on-disk name of the static library remains just `Catch2Main`,
as that is what it is -- single main function -- and on-disk artifacts
cannot describe link dependencies.
This is both a really big and a really small commit. It is small in
that it only contains renaming, moving and modification of include
directives caused by this.
It is really big in the obvious way of touching something like 200
files.
The new rules for naming files is simple: headers use the `.hpp`
extension. The rules for physical file layout is still kinda in
progress, but the basics are also simple:
* Significant parts of functionality get their own subfolder
* Benchmarking is in `catch2/benchmark`
* Matchers are in `catch2/matchers`
* Generators are in `catch2/generators`
* Reporters are in `catch2/reporters`
* Baseline testing facilities are in `catch2/`
* Various top level folders also contain `internal` subfolder,
with files that users probably do not want to include directly,
at least not until they have to write something like their own
reporter.
* The exact files in these subfolders is likely to change later
on
Note that while some includes were cleaned up in this commit, it
is only the low hanging fruit and further cleanup using automatic
tooling will happen later.
Also note that various include guards, copyright notices and file
headers will also be standardized later, rather than in this commit.
This was an old "include all" header, that we no longer want to be
usable, to make the include differences in new versions explicit.
We will introduce new "include all" headers later, in the form of
`catch_all.hpp`, `catch_matchers_all.hpp` and so on...
- Overrides added
- usages of push_back() replaced with emplace_back()
- Loop variable made const-refernce
- NULL replaced with nullptr
- Names used in the declaration and definition unified
- size() replaced with empty
- Identical cases merged
The use we previously used the polyfill or naked new is that we
supported C++11, which did not yet have `std::make_unique`. However,
with the move to C++14 as the minimum, `std::make_unique` can be
expected to be always available.
This should decrease the number of allocations before main is entered
significantly, but complicates the code somewhat in return.
Assuming I used `massif` right, doing just `SelfTest --list-tests`
went from 929 allocations at "Remove gcc-4.9 from the travis builds"
(2 commits up), to 614 allocations with this commit.
Now a `TEST_CASE` macro should create a single TestCaseInfo and then
it should never be copied around. This, together with latter changes,
should significantly decrease the number of allocations made before
`main` is even entered.
* Use Xenial as the base distribution
* Remove C++11 builds
* Add a lot more C++14 builds
* Add some C++17 builds
* Include newer versions of Clang and GCC
Prevent warnings
- gnu: -Wcomment: multi-line comment
- clang: -Wweak-vtables 'class' has no out-of-line virtual method definitions; its vtable will be emitted in every translation unit
- clang: -Winconsistent-missing-override: 'method' overrides a member function but is not marked 'override'
- MSVC: C4702: unreachable code
This also goes for pkg-config installed by our CMake installation.
This includes
* Updating CMake version on Travis
* Adding a `Catch2` subfolder to the `single_include/` folder to
provide this include path both _inside_ the repository, and _outside_.
* Updated examples to build with the new paths
* Other general CMake cleanup