This allows us to move <stdexcept> out of the common path, and replace
it with just <exception>. The difference between these two headers is
~13k lines after preprocessing on libstdc++ (16k vs 3k) and ~17k lines
for MS's STL(33k vs 16k).
Note that this is only beneficial if no other stdlib header we use
includes <stdexcept>. AFAIK this is true for the newest MS's STL,
but I have no idea of the applicability for libstdc++ and libc++.
* Units from <ratio> are no longer redeclared in our own namespace
* The default clock is `steady_clock`, not `high_resolution_clock`,
because, as HH says "high_resolution_clock is useless. If you want
measure the passing of time, use steady_clock. If you want user
friendly time, use system_clock".
* Benchmarking support is opt-in, not opt-out, to avoid the large
(~10%) compile time penalty.
* Benchmarking-related options in CLI are always present, to decrease
the amount of code that is only compiled conditionally and making
the whole shebang more maintainble.
Changes done to Nonius:
* Moved things into "Catch::Benchmark" namespace
* Benchmarks were integrated with `TEST_CASE`/`SECTION`/`GENERATE` macros
* Removed Nonius's parameters for benchmarks, Generators should be used instead
* Added relevant methods to the reporter interface (default-implemented, to avoid
breaking existing 3rd party reporters)
* Async processing is guarded with `_REENTRANT` macro for GCC/Clang, used by default
on MSVC
* Added a macro `CATCH_CONFIG_DISABLE_BENCHMARKING` that removes all traces of
benchmarking from Catch
This fixes an issue where a self-assignment of a StringRef copy would point into internally (and now dangling) data.
(now self-assignment check is no longer needed)
Previously we had them to avoid including <algorithm> in the vector
matchers, but
* we included it anyway, even though we did not use it
* we use <algorithm> anyways in the generators
Eventually this needs to be fixed in the textflow project by Phil,
but he has not done so in the half a year this bug has been known
to be there, so...
Closes#1470Closes#1455
* Deduce map return type implicitly
Giving the first template argument to map generator function to deduce
return type is now optional even if the return type is different from
the type generated by mapped generator.
This adds UNSCOPED_INFO macro, creating a log message that is stored
until the end of next assertion or the end of test case, whichever comes
first. These messages are not scoped locally, unlike messages created by
INFO macro.
This generator collects values from the underlying generator until it
has a specified amount of them, and then returns them in one "chunk".
In case the underlying generator does not have enough elements for
a specific chunk, the left-over elements are discarded.
Closes#1538
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.
Previously, for a TEMPLATE_PRODUCT_TEST_CASE("Test" ..., T, (P1, P2)),
the generated test case names were
Test - 0
Test - 1
With this commit, the correct typename is used:
Test - T<P1>
Test - T<P2>
-----------
MSVC needs another indirection to evaluate INTERNAL_CATCH_STRINGIZE
and also inserts a space before theINTERNAL_CATCH_STRINGIZE_WITHOUT_PARENS
parameter, which we can get rid of by pointer arithmetic.
The REQUIRE_THROWS and CATCH_REQUIRE_THROWS macros have
a subtle inconsistency in their implementation which can
cause a warning if [-Wunused-value] is used.
This commit changes CATCH_REQUIRE_THROWS so it has the
same implementation as REQUIRE_THROWS
It looks like REQUIRE_THROWS was change in commit
fae0fa4ec but not CATCH_REQUIRE_THROWS.
Similar changes for CATCH_CHECK_THROWS
The clock estimator has a potential division by zero.
Using `iteration + 1` seems also more logical to me for
an average.
Found with coverity in a downstream project.
The ostream passed as reference to `hexEscapeChar` is manipulated
and its original state not restored. This fixes it.
Seen via coverity in a downstream project.
As explained in issue #1273, `operator&&` and `operator||` should give
a proper compile time error on use instead of the compiler complaining
about them not being defined. This commit adds an `always_false` type in
`catch_meta.hpp` used for implementing a nice `static_assert` for both
of the abovementioned operators.
Closes#1273
This doesn't cause trouble with GCC/Clang and libstdc++, but IAR
and its stdlib apparently doesn't compile when you use `fno-exceptions`
and `std::current_exception`/`std::rethrow_exception`.
Fixes#1462
support for generating test cases based on multiple template template
types combined with template arguments for each of the template template
types specified
e.g.
```
TEMPLATE_PRODUCT_TEST_CASE("template product","[template]",
(std::tuple, std::pair, std::map),
((int,float),(char,double),(int,char)))
```
will effectively create 9 test cases with types:
std::tuple<int,float>
std::tuple<char,double>
std::tuple<int,char>
std::pair<int,float>
std::pair<char, double>
std::pair<int,char>
std::map<int,float>
std::map<char,double>
std::map<int,char>
Tested type is accessible in test case body as TestType
Unique name is created by appending ` - <index>` to test name
since preprocessor has some limitations in recursions
Closes#1454
The previous implemetation was just plain broken for most of
possible uses, the new one should work (even though it is ugly
as all hell, and should be improved ASAP).
Fixes#1436
This adds support for templated tests and test methods via
`TEMPLATE_TEST_CASE` and `TEMPLATE_TEST_CASE_METHOD` macros. These
work mostly just like their regular counterparts*, but take an
unlimited** number of types as their last arguments.
* Unlike the plain `TEST_CASE*` macros, the `TEMPLATE*` variants
require a tag string.
** In practice there is limit of about 300 types.