This means that the CLI interface now uses the new key-value oriented
reporter spec, the common reporter base creates the colour implementation
based on the reporter-specific configuration, and it also stores the
custom configuration options for each reporter instance.
Closes#339 as it allows per-reporter forcing of ansi colour codes.
This includes always compiling the ANSI and None colour
implementations, as they don't need to touch any platform
specific APIs, and removing their respective compile-time
configuration options.
Because the Win32 colour implementation requires Win32-specific
APIs, it is still hidden behind a compile-time toggle,
`CATCH_CONFIG_COLOUR_WIN32` (renamed from `..._COLOUR_WINDOWS`).
The commandline options for colours were also changed. The
option now uses different name, and allows to select between
different implementations, rather than changing whether
the compiled-in colour implementation is used through
"yes/no/default" options.
catch_default_main.hpp was removed in db32550898
The example 000-CatchMain.cpp is no longer compiled, but is still
present in the examples and is still references by other example
files. Remove the file and references to it, as they are confusing.
This requires a bunch of different changes across the reporter
subsystem.
* We need to handle multiple reporters and their differing
preferences in `ListeningReporter`, e.g. what to do when
we mix reporters that capture and don't capture stdout.
* We need to change how the reporter is given output and
how we parse reporter's output destination from CLI.
* Approval tests need to handle multireporter option
* Add buildAndTest.cmd for Windows users
Signed-off-by: Alan Jowett <alanjo@microsoft.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin Hořeňovský <martin.horenovsky@gmail.com>
A new flag, `--allow-running-no-tests` was added to override this
behaviour if exit code of 0 was desired.
This change also made `-w NoTests` obsolete, and so it has been
removed.
Previously registration was case preserving, but lookup used
lowercased reporter name, so a reporter whose name contained
upper case character could not be requested by the user.
This greatly simplifies running Catch2 tests in single binary
in parallel from external test runners. Instead of having to
shard the tests by tags/test names, an external test runner
can now just ask for test shard 2 (out of X), and execute that
in single process, without having to know what tests are actually
in the shard.
Note that sharding also applies to test listing, and happens after
tests were ordered according to the `--order` feature.