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edde6f4736
Self test baselines also modified accordingly, due to one typo found in a string in test code.
156 lines
4.7 KiB
Markdown
156 lines
4.7 KiB
Markdown
<a id="top"></a>
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# Logging macros
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Additional messages can be logged during a test case. Note that the messages logged with `INFO` are scoped and thus will not be reported if failure occurs in scope preceding the message declaration. An example:
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```cpp
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TEST_CASE("Foo") {
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INFO("Test case start");
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for (int i = 0; i < 2; ++i) {
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INFO("The number is " << i);
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CHECK(i == 0);
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}
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}
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TEST_CASE("Bar") {
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INFO("Test case start");
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for (int i = 0; i < 2; ++i) {
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INFO("The number is " << i);
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CHECK(i == i);
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}
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CHECK(false);
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}
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```
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When the `CHECK` fails in the "Foo" test case, then two messages will be printed.
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```
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Test case start
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The number is 1
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```
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When the last `CHECK` fails in the "Bar" test case, then only one message will be printed: `Test case start`.
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## Logging without local scope
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`UNSCOPED_INFO` is similar to `INFO` with two key differences:
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- Lifetime of an unscoped message is not tied to its own scope.
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- An unscoped message can be reported by the first following assertion only, regardless of the result of that assertion.
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In other words, lifetime of `UNSCOPED_INFO` is limited by the following assertion (or by the end of test case/section, whichever comes first) whereas lifetime of `INFO` is limited by its own scope.
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These differences make this macro useful for reporting information from helper functions or inner scopes. An example:
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```cpp
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void print_some_info() {
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UNSCOPED_INFO("Info from helper");
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}
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TEST_CASE("Baz") {
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print_some_info();
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for (int i = 0; i < 2; ++i) {
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UNSCOPED_INFO("The number is " << i);
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}
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CHECK(false);
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}
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TEST_CASE("Qux") {
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INFO("First info");
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UNSCOPED_INFO("First unscoped info");
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CHECK(false);
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INFO("Second info");
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UNSCOPED_INFO("Second unscoped info");
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CHECK(false);
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}
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```
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"Baz" test case prints:
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```
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Info from helper
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The number is 0
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The number is 1
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```
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With "Qux" test case, two messages will be printed when the first `CHECK` fails:
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```
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First info
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First unscoped info
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```
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"First unscoped info" message will be cleared after the first `CHECK`, while "First info" message will persist until the end of the test case. Therefore, when the second `CHECK` fails, three messages will be printed:
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```
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First info
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Second info
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Second unscoped info
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```
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## Streaming macros
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All these macros allow heterogeneous sequences of values to be streaming using the insertion operator (```<<```) in the same way that std::ostream, std::cout, etc support it.
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E.g.:
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```c++
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INFO( "The number is " << i );
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```
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(Note that there is no initial ```<<``` - instead the insertion sequence is placed in parentheses.)
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These macros come in three forms:
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**INFO(** _message expression_ **)**
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The message is logged to a buffer, but only reported with next assertions that are logged. This allows you to log contextual information in case of failures which is not shown during a successful test run (for the console reporter, without -s). Messages are removed from the buffer at the end of their scope, so may be used, for example, in loops.
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_Note that in Catch2 2.x.x `INFO` can be used without a trailing semicolon as there is a trailing semicolon inside macro.
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This semicolon will be removed with next major version. It is highly advised to use a trailing semicolon after `INFO` macro._
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**UNSCOPED_INFO(** _message expression_ **)**
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Similar to `INFO`, but messages are not limited to their own scope: They are removed from the buffer after each assertion, section or test case, whichever comes first.
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**WARN(** _message expression_ **)**
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The message is always reported but does not fail the test.
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**FAIL(** _message expression_ **)**
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The message is reported and the test case fails.
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**FAIL_CHECK(** _message expression_ **)**
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AS `FAIL`, but does not abort the test
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## Quickly capture value of variables or expressions
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**CAPTURE(** _expression1_, _expression2_, ... **)**
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Sometimes you just want to log a value of variable, or expression. For
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convenience, we provide the `CAPTURE` macro, that can take a variable,
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or an expression, and prints out that variable/expression and its value
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at the time of capture.
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e.g. `CAPTURE( theAnswer );` will log message "theAnswer := 42", while
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```cpp
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int a = 1, b = 2, c = 3;
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CAPTURE( a, b, c, a + b, c > b, a == 1);
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```
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will log a total of 6 messages:
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```
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a := 1
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b := 2
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c := 3
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a + b := 3
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c > b := true
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a == 1 := true
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```
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You can also capture expressions that use commas inside parentheses
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(e.g. function calls), brackets, or braces (e.g. initializers). To
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properly capture expression that contains template parameters list
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(in other words, it contains commas between angle brackets), you need
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to enclose the expression inside parentheses:
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`CAPTURE( (std::pair<int, int>{1, 2}) );`
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---
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[Home](Readme.md#top)
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