| // Copyright 2005, Google Inc. |
| // All rights reserved. |
| // |
| // Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without |
| // modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are |
| // met: |
| // |
| // * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright |
| // notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. |
| // * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above |
| // copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer |
| // in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the |
| // distribution. |
| // * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its |
| // contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from |
| // this software without specific prior written permission. |
| // |
| // THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS |
| // "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT |
| // LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR |
| // A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT |
| // OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, |
| // SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT |
| // LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, |
| // DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY |
| // THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT |
| // (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE |
| // OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. |
| // |
| // Authors: [email protected] (Zhanyong Wan), [email protected] (Sean Mcafee) |
| // |
| // The Google C++ Testing Framework (Google Test) |
| // |
| // This header file declares functions and macros used internally by |
| // Google Test. They are subject to change without notice. |
| |
| #ifndef GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_INTERNAL_GTEST_INTERNAL_H_ |
| #define GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_INTERNAL_GTEST_INTERNAL_H_ |
| |
| #include <gtest/internal/gtest-port.h> |
| |
| #ifdef GTEST_OS_LINUX |
| #include <stdlib.h> |
| #include <sys/types.h> |
| #include <sys/wait.h> |
| #include <unistd.h> |
| #endif // GTEST_OS_LINUX |
| |
| #include <ctype.h> |
| #include <string.h> |
| #include <iomanip> |
| #include <limits> |
| #include <set> |
| |
| #include <gtest/internal/gtest-string.h> |
| #include <gtest/internal/gtest-filepath.h> |
| #include <gtest/internal/gtest-type-util.h> |
| |
| #include "llvm/Support/raw_os_ostream.h" |
| |
| // Due to C++ preprocessor weirdness, we need double indirection to |
| // concatenate two tokens when one of them is __LINE__. Writing |
| // |
| // foo ## __LINE__ |
| // |
| // will result in the token foo__LINE__, instead of foo followed by |
| // the current line number. For more details, see |
| // http://www.parashift.com/c++-faq-lite/misc-technical-issues.html#faq-39.6 |
| #define GTEST_CONCAT_TOKEN_(foo, bar) GTEST_CONCAT_TOKEN_IMPL_(foo, bar) |
| #define GTEST_CONCAT_TOKEN_IMPL_(foo, bar) foo ## bar |
| |
| // Google Test defines the testing::Message class to allow construction of |
| // test messages via the << operator. The idea is that anything |
| // streamable to std::ostream can be streamed to a testing::Message. |
| // This allows a user to use his own types in Google Test assertions by |
| // overloading the << operator. |
| // |
| // util/gtl/stl_logging-inl.h overloads << for STL containers. These |
| // overloads cannot be defined in the std namespace, as that will be |
| // undefined behavior. Therefore, they are defined in the global |
| // namespace instead. |
| // |
| // C++'s symbol lookup rule (i.e. Koenig lookup) says that these |
| // overloads are visible in either the std namespace or the global |
| // namespace, but not other namespaces, including the testing |
| // namespace which Google Test's Message class is in. |
| // |
| // To allow STL containers (and other types that has a << operator |
| // defined in the global namespace) to be used in Google Test assertions, |
| // testing::Message must access the custom << operator from the global |
| // namespace. Hence this helper function. |
| // |
| // Note: Jeffrey Yasskin suggested an alternative fix by "using |
| // ::operator<<;" in the definition of Message's operator<<. That fix |
| // doesn't require a helper function, but unfortunately doesn't |
| // compile with MSVC. |
| |
| // LLVM INTERNAL CHANGE: To allow operator<< to work with both |
| // std::ostreams and LLVM's raw_ostreams, we define a special |
| // std::ostream with an implicit conversion to raw_ostream& and stream |
| // to that. This causes the compiler to prefer std::ostream overloads |
| // but still find raw_ostream& overloads. |
| namespace llvm { |
| class convertible_fwd_ostream : public std::ostream { |
| std::ostream& os_; |
| raw_os_ostream ros_; |
| |
| public: |
| convertible_fwd_ostream(std::ostream& os) |
| : std::ostream(os.rdbuf()), os_(os), ros_(*this) {} |
| operator raw_ostream&() { return ros_; } |
| }; |
| } |
| template <typename T> |
| inline void GTestStreamToHelper(std::ostream* os, const T& val) { |
| llvm::convertible_fwd_ostream cos(*os); |
| cos << val; |
| } |
| |
| namespace testing { |
| |
| // Forward declaration of classes. |
| |
| class Message; // Represents a failure message. |
| class Test; // Represents a test. |
| class TestCase; // A collection of related tests. |
| class TestPartResult; // Result of a test part. |
| class TestInfo; // Information about a test. |
| class UnitTest; // A collection of test cases. |
| class UnitTestEventListenerInterface; // Listens to Google Test events. |
| class AssertionResult; // Result of an assertion. |
| |
| namespace internal { |
| |
| struct TraceInfo; // Information about a trace point. |
| class ScopedTrace; // Implements scoped trace. |
| class TestInfoImpl; // Opaque implementation of TestInfo |
| class TestResult; // Result of a single Test. |
| class UnitTestImpl; // Opaque implementation of UnitTest |
| |
| template <typename E> class List; // A generic list. |
| template <typename E> class ListNode; // A node in a generic list. |
| |
| // How many times InitGoogleTest() has been called. |
| extern int g_init_gtest_count; |
| |
| // The text used in failure messages to indicate the start of the |
| // stack trace. |
| extern const char kStackTraceMarker[]; |
| |
| // A secret type that Google Test users don't know about. It has no |
| // definition on purpose. Therefore it's impossible to create a |
| // Secret object, which is what we want. |
| class Secret; |
| |
| // Two overloaded helpers for checking at compile time whether an |
| // expression is a null pointer literal (i.e. NULL or any 0-valued |
| // compile-time integral constant). Their return values have |
| // different sizes, so we can use sizeof() to test which version is |
| // picked by the compiler. These helpers have no implementations, as |
| // we only need their signatures. |
| // |
| // Given IsNullLiteralHelper(x), the compiler will pick the first |
| // version if x can be implicitly converted to Secret*, and pick the |
| // second version otherwise. Since Secret is a secret and incomplete |
| // type, the only expression a user can write that has type Secret* is |
| // a null pointer literal. Therefore, we know that x is a null |
| // pointer literal if and only if the first version is picked by the |
| // compiler. |
| char IsNullLiteralHelper(Secret* p); |
| char (&IsNullLiteralHelper(...))[2]; // NOLINT |
| |
| // A compile-time bool constant that is true if and only if x is a |
| // null pointer literal (i.e. NULL or any 0-valued compile-time |
| // integral constant). |
| #ifdef GTEST_ELLIPSIS_NEEDS_COPY_ |
| // Passing non-POD classes through ellipsis (...) crashes the ARM |
| // compiler. The Nokia Symbian and the IBM XL C/C++ compiler try to |
| // instantiate a copy constructor for objects passed through ellipsis |
| // (...), failing for uncopyable objects. Hence we define this to |
| // false (and lose support for NULL detection). |
| #define GTEST_IS_NULL_LITERAL_(x) false |
| #else |
| #define GTEST_IS_NULL_LITERAL_(x) \ |
| (sizeof(::testing::internal::IsNullLiteralHelper(x)) == 1) |
| #endif // GTEST_ELLIPSIS_NEEDS_COPY_ |
| |
| // Appends the user-supplied message to the Google-Test-generated message. |
| String AppendUserMessage(const String& gtest_msg, |
| const Message& user_msg); |
| |
| // A helper class for creating scoped traces in user programs. |
| class ScopedTrace { |
| public: |
| // The c'tor pushes the given source file location and message onto |
| // a trace stack maintained by Google Test. |
| ScopedTrace(const char* file, int line, const Message& message); |
| |
| // The d'tor pops the info pushed by the c'tor. |
| // |
| // Note that the d'tor is not virtual in order to be efficient. |
| // Don't inherit from ScopedTrace! |
| ~ScopedTrace(); |
| |
| private: |
| GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(ScopedTrace); |
| } GTEST_ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED_; // A ScopedTrace object does its job in its |
| // c'tor and d'tor. Therefore it doesn't |
| // need to be used otherwise. |
| |
| // Converts a streamable value to a String. A NULL pointer is |
| // converted to "(null)". When the input value is a ::string, |
| // ::std::string, ::wstring, or ::std::wstring object, each NUL |
| // character in it is replaced with "\\0". |
| // Declared here but defined in gtest.h, so that it has access |
| // to the definition of the Message class, required by the ARM |
| // compiler. |
| template <typename T> |
| String StreamableToString(const T& streamable); |
| |
| // Formats a value to be used in a failure message. |
| |
| #ifdef GTEST_NEEDS_IS_POINTER_ |
| |
| // These are needed as the Nokia Symbian and IBM XL C/C++ compilers |
| // cannot decide between const T& and const T* in a function template. |
| // These compilers _can_ decide between class template specializations |
| // for T and T*, so a tr1::type_traits-like is_pointer works, and we |
| // can overload on that. |
| |
| // This overload makes sure that all pointers (including |
| // those to char or wchar_t) are printed as raw pointers. |
| template <typename T> |
| inline String FormatValueForFailureMessage(internal::true_type dummy, |
| T* pointer) { |
| return StreamableToString(static_cast<const void*>(pointer)); |
| } |
| |
| template <typename T> |
| inline String FormatValueForFailureMessage(internal::false_type dummy, |
| const T& value) { |
| return StreamableToString(value); |
| } |
| |
| template <typename T> |
| inline String FormatForFailureMessage(const T& value) { |
| return FormatValueForFailureMessage( |
| typename internal::is_pointer<T>::type(), value); |
| } |
| |
| #else |
| |
| // These are needed as the above solution using is_pointer has the |
| // limitation that T cannot be a type without external linkage, when |
| // compiled using MSVC. |
| |
| template <typename T> |
| inline String FormatForFailureMessage(const T& value) { |
| return StreamableToString(value); |
| } |
| |
| // This overload makes sure that all pointers (including |
| // those to char or wchar_t) are printed as raw pointers. |
| template <typename T> |
| inline String FormatForFailureMessage(T* pointer) { |
| return StreamableToString(static_cast<const void*>(pointer)); |
| } |
| |
| #endif // GTEST_NEEDS_IS_POINTER_ |
| |
| // These overloaded versions handle narrow and wide characters. |
| String FormatForFailureMessage(char ch); |
| String FormatForFailureMessage(wchar_t wchar); |
| |
| // When this operand is a const char* or char*, and the other operand |
| // is a ::std::string or ::string, we print this operand as a C string |
| // rather than a pointer. We do the same for wide strings. |
| |
| // This internal macro is used to avoid duplicated code. |
| #define GTEST_FORMAT_IMPL_(operand2_type, operand1_printer)\ |
| inline String FormatForComparisonFailureMessage(\ |
| operand2_type::value_type* str, const operand2_type& /*operand2*/) {\ |
| return operand1_printer(str);\ |
| }\ |
| inline String FormatForComparisonFailureMessage(\ |
| const operand2_type::value_type* str, const operand2_type& /*operand2*/) {\ |
| return operand1_printer(str);\ |
| } |
| |
| #if GTEST_HAS_STD_STRING |
| GTEST_FORMAT_IMPL_(::std::string, String::ShowCStringQuoted) |
| #endif // GTEST_HAS_STD_STRING |
| #if GTEST_HAS_STD_WSTRING |
| GTEST_FORMAT_IMPL_(::std::wstring, String::ShowWideCStringQuoted) |
| #endif // GTEST_HAS_STD_WSTRING |
| |
| #if GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING |
| GTEST_FORMAT_IMPL_(::string, String::ShowCStringQuoted) |
| #endif // GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING |
| #if GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_WSTRING |
| GTEST_FORMAT_IMPL_(::wstring, String::ShowWideCStringQuoted) |
| #endif // GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_WSTRING |
| |
| #undef GTEST_FORMAT_IMPL_ |
| |
| // Constructs and returns the message for an equality assertion |
| // (e.g. ASSERT_EQ, EXPECT_STREQ, etc) failure. |
| // |
| // The first four parameters are the expressions used in the assertion |
| // and their values, as strings. For example, for ASSERT_EQ(foo, bar) |
| // where foo is 5 and bar is 6, we have: |
| // |
| // expected_expression: "foo" |
| // actual_expression: "bar" |
| // expected_value: "5" |
| // actual_value: "6" |
| // |
| // The ignoring_case parameter is true iff the assertion is a |
| // *_STRCASEEQ*. When it's true, the string " (ignoring case)" will |
| // be inserted into the message. |
| AssertionResult EqFailure(const char* expected_expression, |
| const char* actual_expression, |
| const String& expected_value, |
| const String& actual_value, |
| bool ignoring_case); |
| |
| |
| // This template class represents an IEEE floating-point number |
| // (either single-precision or double-precision, depending on the |
| // template parameters). |
| // |
| // The purpose of this class is to do more sophisticated number |
| // comparison. (Due to round-off error, etc, it's very unlikely that |
| // two floating-points will be equal exactly. Hence a naive |
| // comparison by the == operation often doesn't work.) |
| // |
| // Format of IEEE floating-point: |
| // |
| // The most-significant bit being the leftmost, an IEEE |
| // floating-point looks like |
| // |
| // sign_bit exponent_bits fraction_bits |
| // |
| // Here, sign_bit is a single bit that designates the sign of the |
| // number. |
| // |
| // For float, there are 8 exponent bits and 23 fraction bits. |
| // |
| // For double, there are 11 exponent bits and 52 fraction bits. |
| // |
| // More details can be found at |
| // http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_floating-point_standard. |
| // |
| // Template parameter: |
| // |
| // RawType: the raw floating-point type (either float or double) |
| template <typename RawType> |
| class FloatingPoint { |
| public: |
| // Defines the unsigned integer type that has the same size as the |
| // floating point number. |
| typedef typename TypeWithSize<sizeof(RawType)>::UInt Bits; |
| |
| // Constants. |
| |
| // # of bits in a number. |
| static const size_t kBitCount = 8*sizeof(RawType); |
| |
| // # of fraction bits in a number. |
| static const size_t kFractionBitCount = |
| std::numeric_limits<RawType>::digits - 1; |
| |
| // # of exponent bits in a number. |
| static const size_t kExponentBitCount = kBitCount - 1 - kFractionBitCount; |
| |
| // The mask for the sign bit. |
| static const Bits kSignBitMask = static_cast<Bits>(1) << (kBitCount - 1); |
| |
| // The mask for the fraction bits. |
| static const Bits kFractionBitMask = |
| ~static_cast<Bits>(0) >> (kExponentBitCount + 1); |
| |
| // The mask for the exponent bits. |
| static const Bits kExponentBitMask = ~(kSignBitMask | kFractionBitMask); |
| |
| // How many ULP's (Units in the Last Place) we want to tolerate when |
| // comparing two numbers. The larger the value, the more error we |
| // allow. A 0 value means that two numbers must be exactly the same |
| // to be considered equal. |
| // |
| // The maximum error of a single floating-point operation is 0.5 |
| // units in the last place. On Intel CPU's, all floating-point |
| // calculations are done with 80-bit precision, while double has 64 |
| // bits. Therefore, 4 should be enough for ordinary use. |
| // |
| // See the following article for more details on ULP: |
| // http://www.cygnus-software.com/papers/comparingfloats/comparingfloats.htm. |
| static const size_t kMaxUlps = 4; |
| |
| // Constructs a FloatingPoint from a raw floating-point number. |
| // |
| // On an Intel CPU, passing a non-normalized NAN (Not a Number) |
| // around may change its bits, although the new value is guaranteed |
| // to be also a NAN. Therefore, don't expect this constructor to |
| // preserve the bits in x when x is a NAN. |
| explicit FloatingPoint(const RawType& x) : value_(x) {} |
| |
| // Static methods |
| |
| // Reinterprets a bit pattern as a floating-point number. |
| // |
| // This function is needed to test the AlmostEquals() method. |
| static RawType ReinterpretBits(const Bits bits) { |
| FloatingPoint fp(0); |
| fp.bits_ = bits; |
| return fp.value_; |
| } |
| |
| // Returns the floating-point number that represent positive infinity. |
| static RawType Infinity() { |
| return ReinterpretBits(kExponentBitMask); |
| } |
| |
| // Non-static methods |
| |
| // Returns the bits that represents this number. |
| const Bits &bits() const { return bits_; } |
| |
| // Returns the exponent bits of this number. |
| Bits exponent_bits() const { return kExponentBitMask & bits_; } |
| |
| // Returns the fraction bits of this number. |
| Bits fraction_bits() const { return kFractionBitMask & bits_; } |
| |
| // Returns the sign bit of this number. |
| Bits sign_bit() const { return kSignBitMask & bits_; } |
| |
| // Returns true iff this is NAN (not a number). |
| bool is_nan() const { |
| // It's a NAN if the exponent bits are all ones and the fraction |
| // bits are not entirely zeros. |
| return (exponent_bits() == kExponentBitMask) && (fraction_bits() != 0); |
| } |
| |
| // Returns true iff this number is at most kMaxUlps ULP's away from |
| // rhs. In particular, this function: |
| // |
| // - returns false if either number is (or both are) NAN. |
| // - treats really large numbers as almost equal to infinity. |
| // - thinks +0.0 and -0.0 are 0 DLP's apart. |
| bool AlmostEquals(const FloatingPoint& rhs) const { |
| // The IEEE standard says that any comparison operation involving |
| // a NAN must return false. |
| if (is_nan() || rhs.is_nan()) return false; |
| |
| return DistanceBetweenSignAndMagnitudeNumbers(bits_, rhs.bits_) <= kMaxUlps; |
| } |
| |
| private: |
| // Converts an integer from the sign-and-magnitude representation to |
| // the biased representation. More precisely, let N be 2 to the |
| // power of (kBitCount - 1), an integer x is represented by the |
| // unsigned number x + N. |
| // |
| // For instance, |
| // |
| // -N + 1 (the most negative number representable using |
| // sign-and-magnitude) is represented by 1; |
| // 0 is represented by N; and |
| // N - 1 (the biggest number representable using |
| // sign-and-magnitude) is represented by 2N - 1. |
| // |
| // Read http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signed_number_representations |
| // for more details on signed number representations. |
| static Bits SignAndMagnitudeToBiased(const Bits &sam) { |
| if (kSignBitMask & sam) { |
| // sam represents a negative number. |
| return ~sam + 1; |
| } else { |
| // sam represents a positive number. |
| return kSignBitMask | sam; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // Given two numbers in the sign-and-magnitude representation, |
| // returns the distance between them as an unsigned number. |
| static Bits DistanceBetweenSignAndMagnitudeNumbers(const Bits &sam1, |
| const Bits &sam2) { |
| const Bits biased1 = SignAndMagnitudeToBiased(sam1); |
| const Bits biased2 = SignAndMagnitudeToBiased(sam2); |
| return (biased1 >= biased2) ? (biased1 - biased2) : (biased2 - biased1); |
| } |
| |
| union { |
| RawType value_; // The raw floating-point number. |
| Bits bits_; // The bits that represent the number. |
| }; |
| }; |
| |
| // Typedefs the instances of the FloatingPoint template class that we |
| // care to use. |
| typedef FloatingPoint<float> Float; |
| typedef FloatingPoint<double> Double; |
| |
| // In order to catch the mistake of putting tests that use different |
| // test fixture classes in the same test case, we need to assign |
| // unique IDs to fixture classes and compare them. The TypeId type is |
| // used to hold such IDs. The user should treat TypeId as an opaque |
| // type: the only operation allowed on TypeId values is to compare |
| // them for equality using the == operator. |
| typedef const void* TypeId; |
| |
| template <typename T> |
| class TypeIdHelper { |
| public: |
| // dummy_ must not have a const type. Otherwise an overly eager |
| // compiler (e.g. MSVC 7.1 & 8.0) may try to merge |
| // TypeIdHelper<T>::dummy_ for different Ts as an "optimization". |
| static bool dummy_; |
| }; |
| |
| template <typename T> |
| bool TypeIdHelper<T>::dummy_ = false; |
| |
| // GetTypeId<T>() returns the ID of type T. Different values will be |
| // returned for different types. Calling the function twice with the |
| // same type argument is guaranteed to return the same ID. |
| template <typename T> |
| TypeId GetTypeId() { |
| // The compiler is required to allocate a different |
| // TypeIdHelper<T>::dummy_ variable for each T used to instantiate |
| // the template. Therefore, the address of dummy_ is guaranteed to |
| // be unique. |
| return &(TypeIdHelper<T>::dummy_); |
| } |
| |
| // Returns the type ID of ::testing::Test. Always call this instead |
| // of GetTypeId< ::testing::Test>() to get the type ID of |
| // ::testing::Test, as the latter may give the wrong result due to a |
| // suspected linker bug when compiling Google Test as a Mac OS X |
| // framework. |
| TypeId GetTestTypeId(); |
| |
| // Defines the abstract factory interface that creates instances |
| // of a Test object. |
| class TestFactoryBase { |
| public: |
| virtual ~TestFactoryBase() {} |
| |
| // Creates a test instance to run. The instance is both created and destroyed |
| // within TestInfoImpl::Run() |
| virtual Test* CreateTest() = 0; |
| |
| protected: |
| TestFactoryBase() {} |
| |
| private: |
| GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(TestFactoryBase); |
| }; |
| |
| // This class provides implementation of TeastFactoryBase interface. |
| // It is used in TEST and TEST_F macros. |
| template <class TestClass> |
| class TestFactoryImpl : public TestFactoryBase { |
| public: |
| virtual Test* CreateTest() { return new TestClass; } |
| }; |
| |
| #ifdef GTEST_OS_WINDOWS |
| |
| // Predicate-formatters for implementing the HRESULT checking macros |
| // {ASSERT|EXPECT}_HRESULT_{SUCCEEDED|FAILED} |
| // We pass a long instead of HRESULT to avoid causing an |
| // include dependency for the HRESULT type. |
| AssertionResult IsHRESULTSuccess(const char* expr, long hr); // NOLINT |
| AssertionResult IsHRESULTFailure(const char* expr, long hr); // NOLINT |
| |
| #endif // GTEST_OS_WINDOWS |
| |
| // Formats a source file path and a line number as they would appear |
| // in a compiler error message. |
| inline String FormatFileLocation(const char* file, int line) { |
| const char* const file_name = file == NULL ? "unknown file" : file; |
| if (line < 0) { |
| return String::Format("%s:", file_name); |
| } |
| #ifdef _MSC_VER |
| return String::Format("%s(%d):", file_name, line); |
| #else |
| return String::Format("%s:%d:", file_name, line); |
| #endif // _MSC_VER |
| } |
| |
| // Types of SetUpTestCase() and TearDownTestCase() functions. |
| typedef void (*SetUpTestCaseFunc)(); |
| typedef void (*TearDownTestCaseFunc)(); |
| |
| // Creates a new TestInfo object and registers it with Google Test; |
| // returns the created object. |
| // |
| // Arguments: |
| // |
| // test_case_name: name of the test case |
| // name: name of the test |
| // test_case_comment: a comment on the test case that will be included in |
| // the test output |
| // comment: a comment on the test that will be included in the |
| // test output |
| // fixture_class_id: ID of the test fixture class |
| // set_up_tc: pointer to the function that sets up the test case |
| // tear_down_tc: pointer to the function that tears down the test case |
| // factory: pointer to the factory that creates a test object. |
| // The newly created TestInfo instance will assume |
| // ownership of the factory object. |
| TestInfo* MakeAndRegisterTestInfo( |
| const char* test_case_name, const char* name, |
| const char* test_case_comment, const char* comment, |
| TypeId fixture_class_id, |
| SetUpTestCaseFunc set_up_tc, |
| TearDownTestCaseFunc tear_down_tc, |
| TestFactoryBase* factory); |
| |
| #if defined(GTEST_HAS_TYPED_TEST) || defined(GTEST_HAS_TYPED_TEST_P) |
| |
| // State of the definition of a type-parameterized test case. |
| class TypedTestCasePState { |
| public: |
| TypedTestCasePState() : registered_(false) {} |
| |
| // Adds the given test name to defined_test_names_ and return true |
| // if the test case hasn't been registered; otherwise aborts the |
| // program. |
| bool AddTestName(const char* file, int line, const char* case_name, |
| const char* test_name) { |
| if (registered_) { |
| fprintf(stderr, "%s Test %s must be defined before " |
| "REGISTER_TYPED_TEST_CASE_P(%s, ...).\n", |
| FormatFileLocation(file, line).c_str(), test_name, case_name); |
| abort(); |
| } |
| defined_test_names_.insert(test_name); |
| return true; |
| } |
| |
| // Verifies that registered_tests match the test names in |
| // defined_test_names_; returns registered_tests if successful, or |
| // aborts the program otherwise. |
| const char* VerifyRegisteredTestNames( |
| const char* file, int line, const char* registered_tests); |
| |
| private: |
| bool registered_; |
| ::std::set<const char*> defined_test_names_; |
| }; |
| |
| // Skips to the first non-space char after the first comma in 'str'; |
| // returns NULL if no comma is found in 'str'. |
| inline const char* SkipComma(const char* str) { |
| const char* comma = strchr(str, ','); |
| if (comma == NULL) { |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| while (isspace(*(++comma))) {} |
| return comma; |
| } |
| |
| // Returns the prefix of 'str' before the first comma in it; returns |
| // the entire string if it contains no comma. |
| inline String GetPrefixUntilComma(const char* str) { |
| const char* comma = strchr(str, ','); |
| return comma == NULL ? String(str) : String(str, comma - str); |
| } |
| |
| // TypeParameterizedTest<Fixture, TestSel, Types>::Register() |
| // registers a list of type-parameterized tests with Google Test. The |
| // return value is insignificant - we just need to return something |
| // such that we can call this function in a namespace scope. |
| // |
| // Implementation note: The GTEST_TEMPLATE_ macro declares a template |
| // template parameter. It's defined in gtest-type-util.h. |
| template <GTEST_TEMPLATE_ Fixture, class TestSel, typename Types> |
| class TypeParameterizedTest { |
| public: |
| // 'index' is the index of the test in the type list 'Types' |
| // specified in INSTANTIATE_TYPED_TEST_CASE_P(Prefix, TestCase, |
| // Types). Valid values for 'index' are [0, N - 1] where N is the |
| // length of Types. |
| static bool Register(const char* prefix, const char* case_name, |
| const char* test_names, int index) { |
| typedef typename Types::Head Type; |
| typedef Fixture<Type> FixtureClass; |
| typedef typename GTEST_BIND_(TestSel, Type) TestClass; |
| |
| // First, registers the first type-parameterized test in the type |
| // list. |
| MakeAndRegisterTestInfo( |
| String::Format("%s%s%s/%d", prefix, prefix[0] == '\0' ? "" : "/", |
| case_name, index).c_str(), |
| GetPrefixUntilComma(test_names).c_str(), |
| String::Format("TypeParam = %s", GetTypeName<Type>().c_str()).c_str(), |
| "", |
| GetTypeId<FixtureClass>(), |
| TestClass::SetUpTestCase, |
| TestClass::TearDownTestCase, |
| new TestFactoryImpl<TestClass>); |
| |
| // Next, recurses (at compile time) with the tail of the type list. |
| return TypeParameterizedTest<Fixture, TestSel, typename Types::Tail> |
| ::Register(prefix, case_name, test_names, index + 1); |
| } |
| }; |
| |
| // The base case for the compile time recursion. |
| template <GTEST_TEMPLATE_ Fixture, class TestSel> |
| class TypeParameterizedTest<Fixture, TestSel, Types0> { |
| public: |
| static bool Register(const char* /*prefix*/, const char* /*case_name*/, |
| const char* /*test_names*/, int /*index*/) { |
| return true; |
| } |
| }; |
| |
| // TypeParameterizedTestCase<Fixture, Tests, Types>::Register() |
| // registers *all combinations* of 'Tests' and 'Types' with Google |
| // Test. The return value is insignificant - we just need to return |
| // something such that we can call this function in a namespace scope. |
| template <GTEST_TEMPLATE_ Fixture, typename Tests, typename Types> |
| class TypeParameterizedTestCase { |
| public: |
| static bool Register(const char* prefix, const char* case_name, |
| const char* test_names) { |
| typedef typename Tests::Head Head; |
| |
| // First, register the first test in 'Test' for each type in 'Types'. |
| TypeParameterizedTest<Fixture, Head, Types>::Register( |
| prefix, case_name, test_names, 0); |
| |
| // Next, recurses (at compile time) with the tail of the test list. |
| return TypeParameterizedTestCase<Fixture, typename Tests::Tail, Types> |
| ::Register(prefix, case_name, SkipComma(test_names)); |
| } |
| }; |
| |
| // The base case for the compile time recursion. |
| template <GTEST_TEMPLATE_ Fixture, typename Types> |
| class TypeParameterizedTestCase<Fixture, Templates0, Types> { |
| public: |
| static bool Register(const char* prefix, const char* case_name, |
| const char* test_names) { |
| return true; |
| } |
| }; |
| |
| #endif // GTEST_HAS_TYPED_TEST || GTEST_HAS_TYPED_TEST_P |
| |
| // Returns the current OS stack trace as a String. |
| // |
| // The maximum number of stack frames to be included is specified by |
| // the gtest_stack_trace_depth flag. The skip_count parameter |
| // specifies the number of top frames to be skipped, which doesn't |
| // count against the number of frames to be included. |
| // |
| // For example, if Foo() calls Bar(), which in turn calls |
| // GetCurrentOsStackTraceExceptTop(..., 1), Foo() will be included in |
| // the trace but Bar() and GetCurrentOsStackTraceExceptTop() won't. |
| String GetCurrentOsStackTraceExceptTop(UnitTest* unit_test, int skip_count); |
| |
| // Returns the number of failed test parts in the given test result object. |
| int GetFailedPartCount(const TestResult* result); |
| |
| } // namespace internal |
| } // namespace testing |
| |
| #define GTEST_MESSAGE_(message, result_type) \ |
| ::testing::internal::AssertHelper(result_type, __FILE__, __LINE__, message) \ |
| = ::testing::Message() |
| |
| #define GTEST_FATAL_FAILURE_(message) \ |
| return GTEST_MESSAGE_(message, ::testing::TPRT_FATAL_FAILURE) |
| |
| #define GTEST_NONFATAL_FAILURE_(message) \ |
| GTEST_MESSAGE_(message, ::testing::TPRT_NONFATAL_FAILURE) |
| |
| #define GTEST_SUCCESS_(message) \ |
| GTEST_MESSAGE_(message, ::testing::TPRT_SUCCESS) |
| |
| #define GTEST_TEST_THROW_(statement, expected_exception, fail) \ |
| GTEST_AMBIGUOUS_ELSE_BLOCKER_ \ |
| if (const char* gtest_msg = "") { \ |
| bool gtest_caught_expected = false; \ |
| try { \ |
| statement; \ |
| } \ |
| catch (expected_exception const&) { \ |
| gtest_caught_expected = true; \ |
| } \ |
| catch (...) { \ |
| gtest_msg = "Expected: " #statement " throws an exception of type " \ |
| #expected_exception ".\n Actual: it throws a different " \ |
| "type."; \ |
| goto GTEST_CONCAT_TOKEN_(gtest_label_testthrow_, __LINE__); \ |
| } \ |
| if (!gtest_caught_expected) { \ |
| gtest_msg = "Expected: " #statement " throws an exception of type " \ |
| #expected_exception ".\n Actual: it throws nothing."; \ |
| goto GTEST_CONCAT_TOKEN_(gtest_label_testthrow_, __LINE__); \ |
| } \ |
| } else \ |
| GTEST_CONCAT_TOKEN_(gtest_label_testthrow_, __LINE__): \ |
| fail(gtest_msg) |
| |
| #define GTEST_TEST_NO_THROW_(statement, fail) \ |
| GTEST_AMBIGUOUS_ELSE_BLOCKER_ \ |
| if (const char* gtest_msg = "") { \ |
| try { \ |
| statement; \ |
| } \ |
| catch (...) { \ |
| gtest_msg = "Expected: " #statement " doesn't throw an exception.\n" \ |
| " Actual: it throws."; \ |
| goto GTEST_CONCAT_TOKEN_(gtest_label_testnothrow_, __LINE__); \ |
| } \ |
| } else \ |
| GTEST_CONCAT_TOKEN_(gtest_label_testnothrow_, __LINE__): \ |
| fail(gtest_msg) |
| |
| #define GTEST_TEST_ANY_THROW_(statement, fail) \ |
| GTEST_AMBIGUOUS_ELSE_BLOCKER_ \ |
| if (const char* gtest_msg = "") { \ |
| bool gtest_caught_any = false; \ |
| try { \ |
| statement; \ |
| } \ |
| catch (...) { \ |
| gtest_caught_any = true; \ |
| } \ |
| if (!gtest_caught_any) { \ |
| gtest_msg = "Expected: " #statement " throws an exception.\n" \ |
| " Actual: it doesn't."; \ |
| goto GTEST_CONCAT_TOKEN_(gtest_label_testanythrow_, __LINE__); \ |
| } \ |
| } else \ |
| GTEST_CONCAT_TOKEN_(gtest_label_testanythrow_, __LINE__): \ |
| fail(gtest_msg) |
| |
| |
| #define GTEST_TEST_BOOLEAN_(boolexpr, booltext, actual, expected, fail) \ |
| GTEST_AMBIGUOUS_ELSE_BLOCKER_ \ |
| if (boolexpr) \ |
| ; \ |
| else \ |
| fail("Value of: " booltext "\n Actual: " #actual "\nExpected: " #expected) |
| |
| #define GTEST_TEST_NO_FATAL_FAILURE_(statement, fail) \ |
| GTEST_AMBIGUOUS_ELSE_BLOCKER_ \ |
| if (const char* gtest_msg = "") { \ |
| ::testing::internal::HasNewFatalFailureHelper gtest_fatal_failure_checker; \ |
| { statement; } \ |
| if (gtest_fatal_failure_checker.has_new_fatal_failure()) { \ |
| gtest_msg = "Expected: " #statement " doesn't generate new fatal " \ |
| "failures in the current thread.\n" \ |
| " Actual: it does."; \ |
| goto GTEST_CONCAT_TOKEN_(gtest_label_testnofatal_, __LINE__); \ |
| } \ |
| } else \ |
| GTEST_CONCAT_TOKEN_(gtest_label_testnofatal_, __LINE__): \ |
| fail(gtest_msg) |
| |
| // Expands to the name of the class that implements the given test. |
| #define GTEST_TEST_CLASS_NAME_(test_case_name, test_name) \ |
| test_case_name##_##test_name##_Test |
| |
| // Helper macro for defining tests. |
| #define GTEST_TEST_(test_case_name, test_name, parent_class, parent_id)\ |
| class GTEST_TEST_CLASS_NAME_(test_case_name, test_name) : public parent_class {\ |
| public:\ |
| GTEST_TEST_CLASS_NAME_(test_case_name, test_name)() {}\ |
| private:\ |
| virtual void TestBody();\ |
| static ::testing::TestInfo* const test_info_;\ |
| GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(\ |
| GTEST_TEST_CLASS_NAME_(test_case_name, test_name));\ |
| };\ |
| \ |
| ::testing::TestInfo* const GTEST_TEST_CLASS_NAME_(test_case_name, test_name)\ |
| ::test_info_ =\ |
| ::testing::internal::MakeAndRegisterTestInfo(\ |
| #test_case_name, #test_name, "", "", \ |
| (parent_id), \ |
| parent_class::SetUpTestCase, \ |
| parent_class::TearDownTestCase, \ |
| new ::testing::internal::TestFactoryImpl<\ |
| GTEST_TEST_CLASS_NAME_(test_case_name, test_name)>);\ |
| void GTEST_TEST_CLASS_NAME_(test_case_name, test_name)::TestBody() |
| |
| #endif // GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_INTERNAL_GTEST_INTERNAL_H_ |