`print` version of the logging functions supports `printf`-like
formatting, which we do not use and given our current debug print
internals, will never use. This should be slightly more efficient
and expresses the intent better.
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`.
Noticed that the code was originally concatenating strings just to
then append the result to another string. Now it does not create
temporaries and also preallocates the string buffer.
Under WSL, Python in text mode will translate `\n` into `\r\n`, even
though other tools and utilities use `\n` (because WSL is basically
Linux). This leads to the update scripts leaving the files with
Windows newlines even though git and similar expect them to have
Linux newlines.
By instead handling files in binary mode, we can keep the original
newlines. This commits switches parts of the update process to
binary mode, but not all because some of the will require a lot of
work to fix.
Last time it was fixed to a specific version because the `conan`
and the `conan-package-tools` package that `pip install` would
gather were not compatible, let's hope it won't happen again.
* 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.
For some time now (I'd guess almost a year 🤷), the coverage
merging on Windows has been failing, because the reports have been
generated in a different folder than expected. Our merge script did
not report failure because it was not checking the returned error
code from OpenCppCoverage, and for some reason, the `codecov` tool
happily returned 0 even though it did not find the file it was
supposed to upload...
The former is also fixed by this commit.