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.
This also required some refactoring of how the pattern matching
works. This means that the concepts of include and exclude patterns
are no longer unified, with exclusion patterns working as just
negation of an inclusion patterns (which led to including hidden
tags by default, as they did not match the exclusion), but rather
both include and exclude patterns are handled separately.
The new logic is that given a filter and a test case, the test
case must match _all_ include patterns and _no_ exclude patterns
to be included by the filter. Furthermore, if the test case is
hidden, then the filter must have at least one include pattern
for the test case to be used.
Closes#1184
The JUnit report is improved in that:
* The message shows the testing condition, not the result
* The actual message has similar output than the console one
Now it no longer tries to be this weird hybrid between an owning
and non-owning reference, and is only ever non-owning. This is also
reflected in its interface, for example `StringRef::isNullTerminated`
is now public, and `StringRef::c_str()` has the precondition that it
is true.
Overview of the changes:
* The `StringRef::m_data` member has been completely removed, as it
had no more uses.
* `StringRef::isSubstring()` has been made public and renamed to
`StringRef::isNullTerminated()`, so that the name reflects what the
method actually does.
* `StringRef::currentData()` has been renamed to `StringRef::data()`,
to be in line with common C++ containers and container-alikes.
* `StringRef::c_str()` will no longer silently make copies. It instead
has a precondition that `isNullTerminated()` is true.
* If the user needs a null-terminated string, they should use the
`std::string` conversion operator and call `c_str()` on the resulting
`std::string`.
* Some small optimizations in various places.
* Basic functionality is now `constexpr`.
This should now properly handle small numbers which would previously
output something like `[0.00000000000000019, 0.00000000000000019]`,
which does not allow user to read the numbers properly.
Closes#1760
Only works for exceptions that publicly derive from `std::exception`
and the matching is done exactly, including case and whitespace.
Closes#1649Closes#1728
# Please enter the commit message for your changes. Lines starting
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# On branch master
# Your branch is up-to-date with 'origin/master'.
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# Changes to be committed:
# modified: ../docs/matchers.md
# modified: ../include/internal/catch_capture_matchers.h
# modified: ../projects/CMakeLists.txt
# modified: ../projects/SelfTest/Baselines/compact.sw.approved.txt
# modified: ../projects/SelfTest/Baselines/console.std.approved.txt
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# modified: ../projects/SelfTest/UsageTests/Matchers.tests.cpp
#
# Untracked files:
# ./
# ../clang-full/
# ../clang-test/
# ../clang10-build/
# ../coverage-build/
# ../gcc-build/
# ../gcc-full/
# ../include/internal/catch_matchers_exception.cpp
# ../include/internal/catch_matchers_exception.hpp
# ../misc-build/
# ../msvc-sln/
# ../notes.txt
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#
It checks Knuth's _close enough with tolerance_ relationship, that
is `|lhs - rhs| <= epsilon * max(|lhs|, |rhs|)`, rather then the
_very close with tolerance_ relationship that can be written down as
`|lhs - rhs| <= epsilon * min(|lhs|, |rhs|)`.
This is because it is the more common model around the internet, and
as such is likely to be less surprising to the users. In the future
we might want to provide the other model as well.
Closes#1746
In the future, we will also want to introduce our own
`uniform_int_distribution` and `uniform_real_distribution` to get
repeatable test runs across different platforms.
The leading/trailing whitespace is problematic because of e.g.
`WHEN` macro having preceeding whitespace for alignment, and it is
generally messy.
Credits to Phil who did lot of the original work.
Closes#1708
This way it is explicit when there is a `StringRef` -> `std::string`
conversion and makes it easier to look for allocations that could
be avoided.
Doing this has already removed one allocation per registered test
case, as there was a completely pointless `StringRef` -> `std::string`
conversion when parsing tags of a test case.
The parameter given to `convert` may not be copyable therefore it has to be
captured by const reference. For example an `std::tuple` that contains a
non-copyable type is itself non-copyable.
The NonDefaultConstructible test-case was reduced by one example type
because it did not add any value.
They lead to stringification of file (which is ok) and file line
(not ok) to the approvals, which makes them exceedingly brittle
and not worth approval testing. Instead we just run them as part
of the base test run.
* Fix non-default-constructible type lists used in TEMPLATE_LIST_TEST_CASE
std::tuple is not default constructible when the first type is not
default-constuctible. Therefore it can not be instantiated.
to circumvent this, we have to use std::declval in the unevaluate decltype
context.
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 avoids the problem where writes to stderr/stdout stop being
line-buffered when stderr/stdout is redirected to a file, which led
to different order of outputs between Linux and Windows in our tests.