To keep the compilation firewall effect, the implementations
are hidden behind a PIMPL. In this case it is probably not
worth it, but we can inline it later if needed.
Also split out helpers for testing matcher ranges (types whose
begin/end/empty/etc require ADL lookup, types whose iteration
uses iterator + sentinel pair, etc) into their own file.
Now we delay allocating owning `NameAndLocation` instances until
we construct a new tracker (because a tracker's lifetime can be
significantly different from the underlying tracked-thing's name).
This saves 4239 allocations (436948 -> 432709) when running
`./tests/SelfTest -o /dev/null`, at some cost to code clarity
due to introducing a new ref type, `NameAndLocationRef`.
* 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>
Instead of redoing the whole line where path was found, only the
directory part of the path is removed, instead of removing all
of the line before the path starts.
This results in slight change in how junit and sonarqube approvals
come out, and significant change in how TeamCity reporter approvals
come out. This latter difference is the reason for the change,
as now the lines with `testFailed` and `testIgnored` messages
are not completely butchered.
This is needed so that we can use conjunction and other logical
type traits to workaround issue with older GCC versions (8 and
below), when they run into types that have ambiguous constructor
from `0`, see e.g. #2571.
However, using conjunction and friends in the SFINAE constraint
in the template parameter breaks for C++20 and up, due to the new
comparison operator rewriting rules. With C++20, when the compiler
see `a == b`, it also tries `b == a` and collects overload set
for both of these expressions.
In Catch2, this means that e.g. `REQUIRE( 1 == 2 )` would lead
the compiler to check overloads for both `ExprLhs<int> == int`
and `int == ExprLhs<int>`. Since the overload set and SFINAE
constraints assume that `ExprLhs<T>` is always on the left side,
when the compiler tries to resolve the template parameters, all
hell breaks loose and the compilation fails.
By moving the SFINAE constraints to the return type, the compiler
can discard the switched expression without having to resolve
the complex SFINAE constraints, and thus everything works the
way it is supposed to.
Fixes#2571
This has two effects:
1) This significantly improves the performance of ApprovalTests
run in WSL, because running the massively multi-reporter
test would cause lots of small and parallel writes across the
WSL-Windows FS boundary, completely mudering performance.
2) ApprovalTests can be run from multiple build dirs in parallel,
as long as they do not fail. However, if they do fail,
the multiple runs will still step on each other toes when
writing the unapproved files for user.
This is primarily done to support new `std::*_ordering` types,
but the refactoring also supports any other type with this
property.
The compilation overhead is surprisingly low. Testing it with
clang on a Linux machine, compiling our SelfTest project takes
only 2-3% longer with these changes than it takes otherwise.
Closes#2555
They also got slapped with the `[approvals]` tag in the process,
because we have too many approval tests and want less of them,
and these particular tests don't bring much value.
Related to #2090