This way it is explicit when there is a `StringRef` -> `std::string`
conversion and makes it easier to look for allocations that could
be avoided.
Doing this has already removed one allocation per registered test
case, as there was a completely pointless `StringRef` -> `std::string`
conversion when parsing tags of a test case.
The StringMaker is off by default and can be enabled by a new macro `CATCH_CONFIG_ENABLE_VARIANT_STRINGMAKER`, to avoid increasing the footprint of stringification machinery by default.
Happening when using clang and templated operators, clang cannot decide
between the operator provided by ReusableStringStream and the one provided
by the value value as both are templates. This is easily solved by calling
the operator<< through the member syntax.
Fixes#1285
This should align more closely with the intended semantics, where
types without `StringMaker` specialization or `operator<<` overload
are passed down to the user defined fallback stringifier.
Related to #1024
This support is based on overriden `std::exception::what` method, so
if an exception does not do so meaningfully, the message is still
pointless.
This is only used as a fallback, both `StringMaker` specialization and
`operator<<` overload have priority..
The fix leaves an open question: should we keep treating refs
to static array of chars as strings, or should we instead
use `strnlen` to check if it is null-terminated within the buffer
Fixes#1238
ReusableStringStream holds a std::ostringstream internally, but only exposes the ostream interface.
It caches a pool of ostringstreams in a vector which is currently global, but will be made thread-local.
Altogether this should enable both runtime and compile-time benefits. although more work is needed to realise the compile time opportunities.
Also hides std::chrono, std::pair and std::chrono::* behind
new configuration macros, CATCH_CONFIG_ENABLE_*_STRINGMAKER
to avoid dragging in <utility>, <tuple> and <chrono> in common
path, unless requested.
Swept:
`-Wpadded` in some places (where it caused extra size, instead of just
saying "hey, we padded struct at the end to align, just as standard says")
`-Wweak-vtables` everywhere (Clang)
`-Wexit-time-destructors` everywhere (Clang)
`-Wmissing-noreturn` everywhere (Clang)
The last three are enabled for Clang compilation going forward.
Also enabled `-Wunreachable-code` for Clang and GCC