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This means that the CLI interface now uses the new key-value oriented reporter spec, the common reporter base creates the colour implementation based on the reporter-specific configuration, and it also stores the custom configuration options for each reporter instance. Closes #339 as it allows per-reporter forcing of ansi colour codes.
214 lines
8.2 KiB
Markdown
214 lines
8.2 KiB
Markdown
<a id="top"></a>
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# Reporters
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Reporters are a customization point for most of Catch2's output, e.g.
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formatting and writing out [assertions (whether passing or failing),
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sections, test cases, benchmarks, and so on](reporter-events.md#top).
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Catch2 comes with a bunch of reporters by default (currently 8), and
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you can also write your own reporter. Because multiple reporters can
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be active at the same time, your own reporters do not even have to handle
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all reporter event, just the ones you are interested in, e.g. benchmarks.
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## Using different reporters
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You can see which reporters are available by running the test binary
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with `--list-reporters`. You can then pick one of them with the [`-r`,
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`--reporter` option](command-line.md#choosing-a-reporter-to-use), followed
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by the name of the desired reporter, like so:
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```
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--reporter xml
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```
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You can also select multiple reporters to be used at the same time.
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In that case you should read the [section on using multiple
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reporters](#multiple-reporters) to avoid any surprises from doing so.
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<a id="multiple-reporters"></a>
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## Using multiple reporters
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> Support for having multiple parallel reporters was [introduced](https://github.com/catchorg/Catch2/pull/2183) in Catch2 X.Y.Z
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Catch2 supports using multiple reporters at the same time while having
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them write into different destinations. The two main uses of this are
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* having both human-friendly and machine-parseable (e.g. in JUnit format)
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output from one run of binary
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* having "partial" reporters that are highly specialized, e.g. having one
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reporter that writes out benchmark results as markdown tables and does
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nothing else, while also having standard testing output separately
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Specifying multiple reporter looks like this:
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```
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--reporter JUnit::out=result-junit.xml --reporter console::out=-::colour-mode=ansi
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```
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This tells Catch2 to use two reporters, `JUnit` reporter that writes
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its machine-readable XML output to file `result-junit.xml`, and the
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`console` reporter that writes its user-friendly output to stdout and
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uses ANSI colour codes for colouring the output.
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Using multiple reporters (or one reporter and one-or-more [event
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listeners](event-listener.md#top)) can have surprisingly complex semantics
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when using customization points provided to reporters by Catch2, namely
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capturing stdout/stderr from test cases.
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As long as at least one reporter (or listener) asks Catch2 to capture
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stdout/stderr, captured stdout and stderr will be available to all
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reporters and listeners.
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Because this might be surprising to the users, if at least one active
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_reporter_ is non-capturing, then Catch2 tries to roughly emulate
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non-capturing behaviour by printing out the captured stdout/stderr
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just before `testCasePartialEnded` event is sent out to the active
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reporters and listeners. This means that stdout/stderr is no longer
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printed out from tests as it is being written, but instead it is written
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out in batch after each runthrough of a test case is finished.
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## Writing your own reporter
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You can also write your own custom reporter and tell Catch2 to use it.
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When writing your reporter, you have two options:
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* Derive from `Catch::ReporterBase`. When doing this, you will have
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to provide handling for all [reporter events](reporter-events.md#top).
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* Derive from one of the provided [utility reporter bases in
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Catch2](#utility-reporter-bases).
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Generally we recommend doing the latter, as it is less work.
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Apart from overriding handling of the individual reporter events, reporters
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have access to some extra customization points, described below.
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### Utility reporter bases
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Catch2 currently provides two utility reporter bases:
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* `Catch::StreamingReporterBase`
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* `Catch::CumulativeReporterBase`
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`StreamingReporterBase` is useful for reporters that can format and write
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out the events as they come in. It provides (usually empty) implementation
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for all reporter events, and if you let it handle the relevant events,
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it also handles storing information about active test run and test case.
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`CumulativeReporterBase` is a base for reporters that need to see the whole
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test run, before they can start writing the output, such as the JUnit
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and SonarQube reporters. This post-facto approach requires the assertions
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to be stringified when it is finished, so that the assertion can be written
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out later. Because the stringification can be expensive, and not all
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cumulative reporters need the assertions, this base provides customization
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point to change whether the assertions are saved or not, separate for
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passing and failing assertions.
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_Generally we recommend that if you override a member function from either
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of the bases, you call into the base's implementation first. This is not
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necessarily in all cases, but it is safer and easier._
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Writing your own reporter then looks like this:
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```cpp
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#include <catch2/reporters/catch_reporter_streaming_base.hpp>
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#include <catch2/catch_test_case_info.hpp>
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#include <catch2/reporters/catch_reporter_registrars.hpp>
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#include <iostream>
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class PartialReporter : public Catch::StreamingReporterBase {
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public:
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using StreamingReporterBase::StreamingReporterBase;
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static std::string getDescription() {
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return "Reporter for testing TestCasePartialStarting/Ended events";
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}
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void testCasePartialStarting(Catch::TestCaseInfo const& testInfo,
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uint64_t partNumber) override {
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std::cout << "TestCaseStartingPartial: " << testInfo.name << '#' << partNumber << '\n';
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}
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void testCasePartialEnded(Catch::TestCaseStats const& testCaseStats,
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uint64_t partNumber) override {
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std::cout << "TestCasePartialEnded: " << testCaseStats.testInfo->name << '#' << partNumber << '\n';
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}
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};
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CATCH_REGISTER_REPORTER("partial", PartialReporter)
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```
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This create a simple reporter that responds to `testCasePartial*` events,
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and calls itself "partial" reporter, so it can be invoked with
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`--reporter partial` command line flag.
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### `ReporterPreferences`
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Each reporter instance contains instance of `ReporterPreferences`, a type
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that holds flags for the behaviour of Catch2 when this reporter run.
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Currently there are two customization options:
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* `shouldRedirectStdOut` - whether the reporter wants to handle
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writes to stdout/stderr from user code, or not. This is useful for
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reporters that output machine-parseable output, e.g. the JUnit
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reporter, or the XML reporter.
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* `shouldReportAllAssertions` - whether the reporter wants to handle
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`assertionEnded` events for passing assertions as well as failing
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assertions. Usually reporters do not report successful assertions
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and don't need them for their output, but sometimes the desired output
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format includes passing assertions even without the `-s` flag.
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### Per-reporter configuration
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> Per-reporter configuration was introduced in Catch2 X.Y.Z
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Catch2 supports some configuration to happen per reporter. The configuration
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options fall into one of two categories:
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* Catch2-recognized options
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* Reporter-specific options
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The former is a small set of universal options that Catch2 handles for
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the reporters, e.g. output file or console colour mode. The latter are
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options that the reporters have to handle themselves, but the keys and
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values can be arbitrary strings, as long as they don't contain `::`. This
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allows writing reporters that can be significantly customized at runtime.
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Reporter-specific options always have to be prefixed with "X" (large
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letter X).
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### Other expected functionality of a reporter
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When writing a custom reporter, there are few more things that you should
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keep in mind. These are not important for correctness, but they are
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important for the reporter to work _nicely_.
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* Catch2 provides a simple verbosity option for users. There are three
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verbosity levels, "quiet", "normal", and "high", and if it makes sense
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for reporter's output format, it should respond to these by changing
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what, and how much, it writes out.
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* Catch2 operates with an rng-seed. Knowing what seed a test run had
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is important if you want to replicate it, so your reporter should
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report the rng-seed, if at all possible given the target output format.
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* Catch2 also operates with test filters, or test specs. If a filter
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is present, you should also report the filter, if at all possible given
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the target output format.
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---
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[Home](Readme.md#top)
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