Previously it returned the sum of listed things because ???. This
was completely useless and in many ways actively counterproductive
because of the success/failure conventions around exit codes.
Closes#1410
This PR ultimately does 3 things
* Separately tracks matched tests per each filter part (that is, a set of filters separated by an OR (`,`)), which allows Catch2 to report each of the alternative filters that don't match any tests.
* Fixes `-w NoTests` to return non-zero in the process
* Adds tests for `-w NoTests`.
7f229b4f caused the output file to get opened twice, while
some types of files (e.g. named pipes) can be only opened once.
After this change Session::applyCommandLine opens the output file
only when there is an error to print.
* Session::applyCommandLine overload on wchar_t
This allows users on Windows to use Catch::Session::applyCommandLine
with wchar_t * arguments of application.
With this change Session::run became templated so both char and wchar_t
version have the same implementation.
This means
* Adding new configuration toggle `CATCH_CONFIG_DISABLE_EXCEPTIONS`
and a best-guess configuration auto-checking for it.
* Adding new set of internal macros, `CATCH_TRY`, `CATCH_CATCH_ALL`
and `CATCH_CATCH_ANON` that can be used in place of regular `try`,
`catch(...)` and `catch(T const&)` respectively, while disappearing
when `CATCH_CONFIG_DISABLE_EXCEPTIONS` is enabled.
* Replacing all uses of `throw` with calls to `Catch::throw_exception`
customization point.
* Providing a default implementation for the above customization point
when `CATCH_CONFIG_DISABLE_EXCEPTIONS` is set.
* Letting users override this implementation with their own.
* Some minor changes and ifdefs all around to support the above
Catch2's documentation promises that listeners are called _before_
reporters, but because of the previous implementation, they were
called _after_ reporters. This commit fixes that.
Closes#1234
To prevent bugs with stitching system headers inside Catch,
the proxy header is responsible for guarding against inclusion
on Linux, rather than the includers.
Might be related to #1197