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.
This PR ultimately does 3 things
* Separately tracks matched tests per each filter part (that is, a set of filters separated by an OR (`,`)), which allows Catch2 to report each of the alternative filters that don't match any tests.
* Fixes `-w NoTests` to return non-zero in the process
* Adds tests for `-w NoTests`.
* 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.
* 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)
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.