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47 lines
2.7 KiB
Markdown
47 lines
2.7 KiB
Markdown
<a id="top"></a>
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# Reporters
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Catch has a modular reporting system and comes bundled with a handful of useful reporters built in.
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You can also write your own reporters.
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## Using different reporters
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The reporter to use can easily be controlled from the command line.
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To specify a reporter use [`-r` or `--reporter`](command-line.md#choosing-a-reporter-to-use), followed by the name of the reporter, e.g.:
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```
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-r xml
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```
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If you don't specify a reporter then the console reporter is used by default.
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There are four reporters built in to the single include:
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* `console` writes as lines of text, formatted to a typical terminal width, with colours if a capable terminal is detected.
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* `compact` similar to `console` but optimised for minimal output - each entry on one line
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* `junit` writes xml that corresponds to Ant's [junitreport](http://help.catchsoftware.com/display/ET/JUnit+Format) target. Useful for build systems that understand Junit.
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Because of the way the junit format is structured the run must complete before anything is written.
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* `xml` writes an xml format tailored to Catch. Unlike `junit` this is a streaming format so results are delivered progressively.
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There are a few additional reporters, for specific build systems, in the Catch repository (in `include\reporters`) which you can `#include` in your project if you would like to make use of them.
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Do this in one source file - the same one you have `CATCH_CONFIG_MAIN` or `CATCH_CONFIG_RUNNER`.
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* `teamcity` writes the native, streaming, format that [TeamCity](https://www.jetbrains.com/teamcity/) understands.
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Use this when building as part of a TeamCity build to see results as they happen ([code example](../examples/207-Rpt-TeamCityReporter.cpp)).
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* `tap` writes in the TAP ([Test Anything Protocol](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Test_Anything_Protocol)) format.
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* `automake` writes in a format that correspond to [automake .trs](https://www.gnu.org/software/automake/manual/html_node/Log-files-generation-and-test-results-recording.html) files
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You see what reporters are available from the command line by running with `--list-reporters`.
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By default all these reports are written to stdout, but can be redirected to a file with [`-o` or `--out`](command-line.md#sending-output-to-a-file)
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## Writing your own reporter
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You can write your own custom reporter and register it with Catch.
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At time of writing the interface is subject to some changes so is not, yet, documented here.
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If you are determined you shouldn't have too much trouble working it out from the existing implementations -
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but do keep in mind upcoming changes (these will be minor, simplifying, changes such as not needing to forward calls to the base class).
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---
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[Home](Readme.md#top)
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