The new scheme is that there is one protected member instance of
`ReporterPreferences` in the `IStreamingReporter` base class,
and derived classes can modify it to express their own preferences.
Retrieving the preferences is now a non-virtual operation, which
makes it much cheaper to read them frequently. Previously, we
avoided doing so by caching the preferences in another variable,
but we still read them at least once per test case run.
`catch_reporter_bases.hpp` turned out fairly expensive for parsing
when building the main library, and the significant amount of code
in headers likely doesn't help. Since the reason it is in the header
is legacy from CRTP reporter bases, moving as much of the
implementations to the .cpp file is free compilation perf.
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
A test runner already has a --durations option to print durations.
However, this isn't entirely satisfactory.
When there are many tests, this produces output spam which makes it hard
to find the test failure output. Nevertheless, it is helpful to be
informed of tests which are unusually slow.
Therefore, introduce a new option --min-duration that causes all
durations above a certain threshold to be printed. This allows slow
tests to be visible without mentioning every test.
Some compilers, e.g. the Green Hills C++ compiler, react badly to the
appearance of std::exception_ptr, std::current_exception,
std::rethrow_exception and std::uncaught_exception(s). To allow usage of
Catch2 with these compilers when exceptions are disabled, hide the usage
of std::exception_ptr etc. when compiling with
CATCH_CONFIG_DISABLE_EXCEPTIONS.
* Successive executions of the same `GENERATE` macro (e.g. because
of a for loop) no longer lead to multiple nested generators.
* The same line can now contain multiple `GENERATE` macros without
issues.
Fixes#1913
This brings our output inline with GTest's. We do not handle skipped
tests properly, but that should be currently less important than
having the attribute exist with proper value for non-skipped tests.
Thanks @joda-01.
Closes#1899
The issue is caused by deleted `std::__detail::begin` declared in `bits/iterator_concepts.h`. This would be found by ADL, and because it is deleted, compilation would fail. This change makes it so that we SFINAE on `begin(std::declval<T>())` and `end(std::declval<T>())` being well-formed.
D:\vcpkg\toolsrc\include\catch2\catch.hpp(11285): warning C6330: 'char' passed as _Param_(1) when 'unsigned char' is required in call to 'isspace'.
D:\vcpkg\toolsrc\include\catch2\catch.hpp(11288): warning C6330: 'char' passed as _Param_(1) when 'unsigned char' is required in call to 'isspace'.
ISO/IEC 9899:2011:
"7.4 Character handling <ctype.h>"/1
[...] In all cases the argument is an int, the value of which shall be
representable as an unsigned char or shall equal the value of the macro
EOF. If the argument has any other value, the behavior is undefined.
This means if isspace was passed a character like ñ it could corrupt
memory without the static_cast to treat it as a positive value after
integral promotion (and C libraries commonly use the int index supplied
as a key into a table which result in out of bounds access if the
resulting int is negative).
Ideally, clang-tidy would be smart that if one alias of a warning
is suppressed, then the other one is suppressed as well, but as of
right now, it isn't. This means that for now we have to suppress
both aliases of this warning. Opened upstream issue to fix this:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45859
Obviously, ideally clang-tidy would also not warn that we are calling
a vararg function when it is an unevaluated magic builtin, but that
also is not happening right now and I opened an issue for it:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45860Closes#1921
Doing some benchmarking with ClangBuildAnalyzer suggests that
compiling Catch2's `SelfTest` spends 10% of the time instantiating
`std::unique_ptr` for some interface types required for registering
and running tests.
The lesser compilation overhead of `Catch::Detail::unique_ptr` should
significantly reduce that time.
The compiled implementation was also changed to use the custom impl,
to avoid having to convert between using `std::unique_ptr` and
`Catch::Detail::unique_ptr`. This will likely also improve the compile
times of the implementation, but that is less important than improving
compilation times of the user's TUs with tests.
This simplified variant supports only a subset of the functionality
in `std::unique_ptr<T>`. `Catch::Detail::unique_ptr<T>` only supports
single element pointer (no array support) with default deleter.
By removing the support for custom deleters, we also avoid requiring
significant machinery to support EBO, speeding up instantiations of
`unique_ptr<T>` significantly. Catch2 also currently does not need
to support `unique_ptr<T[]>`, so that is not supported either.
As far as I know, only a few users actually use it, but these changes
allow us to avoid including a surprising amount of code in the main
compilation path.
As part of `-Wdeprecated-copy-dtor` sweep, I noticed that Capturer's
copies are defaulted. Given that the class would likely break horribly
in the event of actual copy happening, they are now deleted.
This should improve the compilation times by decreasing the number
of TUs compiled, without making overly big TUs that would cause
problems with heavy-tailed compilation times.
There is one "combined TU" for the top level part, and each subpart,
except for Reporters, which currently do not have any trivial TUs.
Special member functions are now implicit, which should make them
both noexcept and constexpr. The `operator<<` has been made into
hidden friend as per best practices.
As Clara is no longer maintained as a separate project, the
implementation was moved to the internal subfolder of top-level
folder. This removes one folder and avoids potential user confusion.
Also simplified the convenience header checking script accordingly.
There are two reasons for this:
1) It is highly unlikely that someone has use for this header,
which has no customization points and only provides simplest
possible main, and cannot link the static library which also
provides a default main implementation.
2) It being a header was causing extra complications with
the convenience headers, and our checking script. This would either
require special handling in the checking script, or would break user's
of the main convenience header.
All in all, it is simpler and better in the long term to remove it,
than to fix its problems.
I do not think we need a safeguard against not including files in
CMake anymore, and as it is, it caused annoying false positive about
the default main implementation.
The naming scheme is simple, to include all matchers, include header
`catch2/matchers/catch_matchers_all.hpp`. To include **everything**,
include `catch2/catch_all.hpp`.
This describes the reality better, as it also links in the rest
of Catch2.
The on-disk name of the static library remains just `Catch2Main`,
as that is what it is -- single main function -- and on-disk artifacts
cannot describe link dependencies.
Catch assumes std::uncaught_exceptions is available whenever C++17 is
available, but for macOS versions older than 10.12 this is not the case.
Instead of checking the C++ version, use a macro to check whether the
feature is available.
Previously a random test ordering was obtained by applying std::shuffle
to the tests in declaration order. This has two problems:
- It depends on the declaration order, so the order in which the tests
will be run will be platform-specific.
- When trying to debug accidental inter-test dependencies, it is helpful
to be able to find a minimal subset of tests which exhibits the issue.
However, any change to the set of tests being run will completely
change the test ordering, making it difficult or impossible to reduce
the set of tests being run in any reasonably efficient manner.
Therefore, change the randomization approach to resolve both these
issues.
Generate a random value based on the user-provided RNG seed. Convert
every test case to an integer by hashing a combination of that value
with the test name. Sort the test cases by this integer.
The test names and RNG are platform-independent, so this should be
consistent across platforms. Also, removing one test does not change
the integer value associated with the remaining tests, so they remain in
the same order.
To hash, use the FNV-1a hash, except with the basis being our randomly
selected value rather than the fixed basis set in the algorithm. Cannot
use std::hash, because it is important that the result be
platform-independent.
It did not clear out all of its internal state when switching from
one pattern to another, so when it should've escaped `,`, it took
its position from its position in the original user-provided string,
rather than its position in the current pattern.
Fixes#1905
CATCH_INTERNAL_IGNORE_BUT_WARN() introduced with b7b346c triggers
clang-tidy warning 'cppcoreguidelines-pro-type-vararg' for every usage
of assertion macros like CHECK() and REQUIRE(). Silence it via NOLINT
in the '#if defined(__clang__)' block only, as clang-tidy honors those.
The old code caused warnings to fire under MSVC, and Clang <3.8.
I could not find a GCC version where it worked, but I assume that it
did at some point.
This new code causes all of MSVC, GCC, Clang, in current versions,
to emit signed/unsigned comparison warning in test like this:
```cpp
TEST_CASE() {
int32_t i = -1;
uint32_t j = 1;
REQUIRE(i != j);
}
```
Where previously only MSVC would emit the warning.
Fixes#1880