* Add new SKIP macro for skipping tests at runtime
This adds a new `SKIP` macro for dynamically skipping tests at runtime.
The "skipped" status of a test case is treated as a first-class citizen,
like "succeeded" or "failed", and is reported with a new color on the
console.
* Don't show "skipped assertions" in console/compact reporters
Also extend skip tests to cover a few more use cases.
* Return exit code 4 if all test cases are skipped
* Use LightGrey for the skip colour
This isn't great, but is better than the deep blue that was borderline
invisible on dark backgrounds. The fix is to redo the colouring
a bit, including introducing light-blue that is actually visible.
* Add support for explicit skips in all reporters
* --allow-running-no-tests also allows all tests to be skipped
* Add docs for SKIP macro, deprecate IEventListener::skipTest
Co-authored-by: Martin Hořeňovský <martin.horenovsky@gmail.com>
Parsing C++ with regex in CMake is error prone and regularly leads to silently
dropped (not run) test cases.
Going forward the function `catch_discover_tests` from `contrib/CMake.cmake`
should be used.
For more information see https://github.com/catchorg/Catch2/issues/2092#issuecomment-747342765
This commit also forbids composing lvalues of composed matchers, as
per previous deprecation notice. I do not expect this to be contentious
in practice, because there was a bug in that usage for years, and
nobody complained.
Given that in the 2 or so years that matchers are thing nobody complained,
it seems that people do not actually write this sort of code, and the
possibility will be removed in v3. However, to avoid correctness bugs,
we will have to support this weird code in v2.
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
This captures the intent better, as some changes are indeed plain
deprecations leading to removal, but other changes can be viewed
as minor tune-ups instead.