The new reporter spec generalizes key-value options that can be
passed to the reporter, looking like this
`reporterName[::key=value]*`. A key can be either Catch2-recognized,
which currently means either `out` or `colour`, or reporter-specific
which is anything prefixed with `X`, e.g. `Xfoo`.
Test case hashing includes tags and class name
As the hasher involves more code now, it was split out into its own file
and it got its own set of tests.
Closes#2304
This includes always compiling the ANSI and None colour
implementations, as they don't need to touch any platform
specific APIs, and removing their respective compile-time
configuration options.
Because the Win32 colour implementation requires Win32-specific
APIs, it is still hidden behind a compile-time toggle,
`CATCH_CONFIG_COLOUR_WIN32` (renamed from `..._COLOUR_WINDOWS`).
The commandline options for colours were also changed. The
option now uses different name, and allows to select between
different implementations, rather than changing whether
the compiled-in colour implementation is used through
"yes/no/default" options.
This also required splitting out Listener factory from
the reporter factory hierarchy. In return, the listener
factories only need to take in `IConfig const*`, which
opens up further refactorings down the road in the colour
selection and implementation.
- do not hardcode content of containers
- prefix members with m_
- add const and non-const iterators to `with_mocked_iterator_access`
- remove `m_touched` as it wasn't filled properly and isn't used anyway
This opens path to per-reporter colour output customization,
and fixes multiple issues with the old colour implementation.
Under the old implementation, using Win32-backed colouring
would always change the colour used by the console, even if the
actual output was written elsewhere, such as a file passed by
the `--out` flag. This will no longer happen, as the reporter's
colour impl will check that the reporter's stream is pointed
to console before trying to change the colours.
POSIX/ANSI colour implementation suffered a similar-ish issue,
in that it only wrote the colour escape codes into the default
output stream, even if the reporter asking for colouring was
actually writing to a completely different output stream.
This will become useful when reworking colour support, because
Win32 colour support requires checking whether the output is
stdout, which is done through the `IStream` wrapper.
This makes sure that CAPTURE works when called with variadic arguments,
and also works that way when disabled.
The underlying fix to #2316 is not applicable (CAPTURE is already
variadic when disabled).
This is a port of 5e94498ed0 to the
devel branch.
Removed:
* NaN normalization
* INFINITY normalization
* errno normalization
* Completely unused duration regex
Tests using these macros should be tagged `[approvals]`
so they are not run as part of approval tests.
Also simplified regex for the test's executable filename,
and hidden some tests relying on nullptr normalization.
This avoids issues with Catch2's handler firing too early, on
structured exceptions that would be handled later. This issue
meant that the old attempts at structured exception handling
were incompatible with Windows's ASan, because it throws
continuable `C0000005` exception, which it then handles.
With the new handling, Catch2 is only notified if nothing else,
including the debugger, has handled the exception.
Signed-off-by: Alan Jowett <alanjo@microsoft.com>
Closes#2332Closes#2286Closes#898
This requires a bunch of different changes across the reporter
subsystem.
* We need to handle multiple reporters and their differing
preferences in `ListeningReporter`, e.g. what to do when
we mix reporters that capture and don't capture stdout.
* We need to change how the reporter is given output and
how we parse reporter's output destination from CLI.
* Approval tests need to handle multireporter option
By not materializing the lower cased tags ahead of time, we
save allocations at the cost of worsened performance when comparing
two tags.
Since there are rarely many tags, and commonly they are not
compared even if present, this is almost always a win. The new
implementation also improves the robustness of the code
responsible for handling tags in a case-insensitive manner.