By opting the JUnit and XML reporters into it, we no longer run
into problem where they underreport the results without `-s` flag.
Related to #1264, #1267, #1310
This also goes for pkg-config installed by our CMake installation.
This includes
* Updating CMake version on Travis
* Adding a `Catch2` subfolder to the `single_include/` folder to
provide this include path both _inside_ the repository, and _outside_.
* Updated examples to build with the new paths
* Other general CMake cleanup
- seems the #ifdef was necessary after all, because of the difference in the way the cpp files are included in the full project vs the single include
- in the OC project I moved the #include of catch_tostring.cpp first. That solves the project for now, but is a brittle solution
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 was removed in 64be2ad, to fix OS X approval tests. At the time
I couldn't investigate because I didn't have access to OS X, but this
fixed it (and since we don't have MinGW in CI, the breakage went
unnoticed).
As it turns out, piece-wise compilation of the Compact
reporter had broken OS X detection for a long time, and fixing it
was what broke the approvals. After the approval scripts were
changed to compensate, this change passes approval tests and fixes
Until now, the stack size for POSIX signal handling was determined by
the implementation defined limit `STKSZ`, which in some cases turned out
to be insufficient, leading to stack overflow inside the signal handler.
The new size, which was determined experimentally, is the larger of 32kb
or `MINSTKSZ`.
Fixes#1225
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..