This change also changes it so that test case macros using a
class name can have same name **and** tags as long as the
used class name differs.
Closes#1915Closes#1999
This event listener performs basic consistency checks (akin to
matching braces) on events that are passed to the listeners
when the `SelfTest` test binary is run.
The current checks are about nesting events (e.g. `testCaseStarting`
cannot be received before `testRunStarting`, `sectionStarting`
can only be received when a test case is active, etc), and matching
up counts of starting/ended events.
The simplicity means that it could be confused by starting/ended
events matching up but being out of order, e.g.
```
* test case A starting
* test case B ended
* test case B starting
* test case A ended
```
would be accepted, even though it is wrong. However, doing full
order checking would be much more implementation work, for relatively
little benefit, so it is left out for now.
This means that e.g. for `TEST_CASE` with two sibling `SECTION`s
the event will fire twice, because the `TEST_CASE` will be entered
twice.
Closes#2107 (the event mentioned there already exists, but this
is its counterpart that we also want to provide to users)
With these changes, all these benchmarks
```cpp
BENCHMARK("Empty benchmark") {};
BENCHMARK("Throwing benchmark") {
throw "just a plain literal, bleh";
};
BENCHMARK("Asserting benchmark") {
REQUIRE(1 == 2);
};
BENCHMARK("FAIL'd benchmark") {
FAIL("This benchmark only fails, nothing else");
};
```
report the respective failure and mark the outer `TEST_CASE` as
failed. Previously, the first two would not fail the `TEST_CASE`,
and the latter two would break xml reporter's formatting, because
`benchmarkFailed`, `benchmarkEnded` etc would not be be called
properly in failure cases.
This is a simplification of the fix proposed in #2152, with the
critical function split out so that it can be tested directly,
without having to go through the ULP matcher.
Closes#2152
More specifically, made the actual implementation of string-like
type handling take argument as `Catch::StringRef`, instead of
taking `std::string const&`.
This means that string-like types that are not `std::string` no
longer need to pay for an extra construction of `std::string`
(including the potential allocation), before they can be stringified.
The actual string stringification routine is now also better about
reserving sufficient space.
This test tends to be brittle on Mac CI machines, which are
heavily loaded and bursty. Since the tests are only run as part
of the "extra tests" test set, this increase should not have
a significant impact on the total duration of CI runs.
A surrogate TU is TU that includes 1 specific header, and does
nothing else. This is useful to verify that the header is
self-sufficient and does not require other headers to be included
for compilation to succeed.
Closes#2106Closes#2166 (this is a better solution)
This includes
* Testing both positive and negative path through the matchers
* Testing them with types whose `begin` and `end` member functions
require ADL
* Testing them with types that return different types from `begin`
and `end`
The old name was a legacy of v2 era, where all headers were stitched
into one. With v3 using separate headers, it is better when they have
proper name.
The problem was that under specific circumstances, namely that none
of their children progressed, `GeneratorTracker` will not progress.
This was changed recently, to allow for code like this, where a
`SECTION` follows a `GENERATE` at the same level:
```cpp
SECTION("A") {}
auto a = GENERATE(1, 2);
SECTION("B") {}
```
However, this interacted badly with `SECTION` filters (`-c foo`),
as they could deactivate all `SECTION`s below a generator, and thus
stop it from progressing forever. This commit makes GeneratorTracker
check whether there are any filters active, and if they are, it checks
whether its section-children can ever run.
Fixes#2025
The new output (mostly) follows the old `--list-test-names-only`
format, with the exception of no longer supporting line output
for `--verbosity high`.
Fixes#2051
This commits also adds a script that does the amalgamation of headers
and .cpp files into the distributable version, removes the old
`generateSingleHeader` script, and also adds a very simple compilation
test for the amalgamated distribution.
Most of the changes are completely pointless renaming of constructor
arguments so that they do not use the same name as the type members,
but 🤷Closes#2015
The base was also renamed from `TestEventListenerBase` to
`EventListenerBase`, and modified to derive directly from the
reporter interface, rather than deriving from `StreamingReporterBase`.
Each of the two reporter bases now has its own header file, and
cpp file. Even though this adds another TU to the compilation,
the total CPU time taken by compilation is reduced by about 1%
for debug build and ~0.5% for optimized build of the main library.
(The improvement would be roughly doubles without splitting the TUs,
but the maintainability hit is not worth it.)
The code size of the static library build has also somewhat decreased.
Follow up: Introduce combined TU for reporters, and further split
apart the catch_reporter_streaming_base.hpp header into its
constituent parts, as it still contains a whole bunch of other stuff.
* Added some missing `noexcept`s on custom destructors.
* Fixed `std::move` being called on a const-reference.
* Initialized `ScopedMessage::m_moved` in class definition, instead
of doing so in constructors explicitly.
* Turned some `enum`s into `enum class`es.
* Initialized `StreamingReporterBase::currentTestCaseInfo` in class
definition.
* Some cleanups in SelfTest code.
TAP format requires all results to be reported.
Removed extraneous preferences function (handled by parent)
Incorporated fix from 3d9e7db2e0
Simplified total printing
This means that code such as
```cpp
TEST_CASE() {
SECTION("first") { SUCCEED(); }
auto _ = GENERATE(1, 2);
SECTION("second") { SUCCEED(); }
}
```
will run and report 3 assertions, 1 from section "first" and 2
from section "second". This also applies for greater and potentially
more confusing nesting, but fundamentally it is up to the user to
avoid overly complex and confusing nestings, just as with `SECTION`s.
The old behaviour of `GENERATE` as first thing in a `TEST_CASE`,
`GENERATE` not followed by a `SECTION`, etc etc should be unchanged.
Closes#1938