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
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.
Originally the tests were from #1912, but as it turned out, the issue
was somewhere else. Still, the inputs provided were interesting, so
they are now part of our test suite.
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
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
This is both a really big and a really small commit. It is small in
that it only contains renaming, moving and modification of include
directives caused by this.
It is really big in the obvious way of touching something like 200
files.
The new rules for naming files is simple: headers use the `.hpp`
extension. The rules for physical file layout is still kinda in
progress, but the basics are also simple:
* Significant parts of functionality get their own subfolder
* Benchmarking is in `catch2/benchmark`
* Matchers are in `catch2/matchers`
* Generators are in `catch2/generators`
* Reporters are in `catch2/reporters`
* Baseline testing facilities are in `catch2/`
* Various top level folders also contain `internal` subfolder,
with files that users probably do not want to include directly,
at least not until they have to write something like their own
reporter.
* The exact files in these subfolders is likely to change later
on
Note that while some includes were cleaned up in this commit, it
is only the low hanging fruit and further cleanup using automatic
tooling will happen later.
Also note that various include guards, copyright notices and file
headers will also be standardized later, rather than in this commit.
In the future we can expect many more matchers, so let's give them
a place to live.
Also moved matcher-related internal files to `internal` subfolder.
Ideally we should sort out all of our source code, but that will
have to come later.
This commit also forbids composing lvalues of composed matchers, as
per previous deprecation notice. I do not expect this to be contentious
in practice, because there was a bug in that usage for years, and
nobody complained.
b77cec05c0 fixed this problem for tagging tests, so that a test
case tagged with `[.foo]` would be parsed as tagged with `[.][foo]`.
This does the same for the test spec parsing.
Fixes#1798
Now that Catch2 is a proper library, we can always build the full
library (comparatively minor slowdown) and the user can avoid
including benchmarking headers to avoid the compilation slowdown.
Now that the recommended distribution and usage method is proper
library, users can just avoid including the matcher headers to get
basically the same effect.