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				| // 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. | |
| // | |
| // Author: wan@google.com (Zhanyong Wan) | |
| // | |
| // The Google C++ Testing Framework (Google Test) | |
| // | |
| // This header file defines the public API for Google Test.  It should be | |
| // included by any test program that uses Google Test. | |
| // | |
| // IMPORTANT NOTE: Due to limitation of the C++ language, we have to | |
| // leave some internal implementation details in this header file. | |
| // They are clearly marked by comments like this: | |
| // | |
| //   // INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM. | |
| // | |
| // Such code is NOT meant to be used by a user directly, and is subject | |
| // to CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE.  Therefore DO NOT DEPEND ON IT in a user | |
| // program! | |
| // | |
| // Acknowledgment: Google Test borrowed the idea of automatic test | |
| // registration from Barthelemy Dagenais' (barthelemy@prologique.com) | |
| // easyUnit framework. | |
|  | |
| #ifndef GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_GTEST_H_ | |
| #define GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_GTEST_H_ | |
|  | |
| #include <limits> | |
| #include <vector> | |
|  | |
| #include "gtest/internal/gtest-internal.h" | |
| #include "gtest/internal/gtest-string.h" | |
| #include "gtest/gtest-death-test.h" | |
| #include "gtest/gtest-message.h" | |
| #include "gtest/gtest-param-test.h" | |
| #include "gtest/gtest-printers.h" | |
| #include "gtest/gtest_prod.h" | |
| #include "gtest/gtest-test-part.h" | |
| #include "gtest/gtest-typed-test.h" | |
|  | |
| // Depending on the platform, different string classes are available. | |
| // On Linux, in addition to ::std::string, Google also makes use of | |
| // class ::string, which has the same interface as ::std::string, but | |
| // has a different implementation. | |
| // | |
| // The user can define GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING to 1 to indicate that | |
| // ::string is available AND is a distinct type to ::std::string, or | |
| // define it to 0 to indicate otherwise. | |
| // | |
| // If the user's ::std::string and ::string are the same class due to | |
| // aliasing, he should define GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING to 0. | |
| // | |
| // If the user doesn't define GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING, it is defined | |
| // heuristically. | |
|  | |
| namespace testing { | |
| 
 | |
| // Declares the flags. | |
|  | |
| // This flag temporary enables the disabled tests. | |
| GTEST_DECLARE_bool_(also_run_disabled_tests); | |
| 
 | |
| // This flag brings the debugger on an assertion failure. | |
| GTEST_DECLARE_bool_(break_on_failure); | |
| 
 | |
| // This flag controls whether Google Test catches all test-thrown exceptions | |
| // and logs them as failures. | |
| GTEST_DECLARE_bool_(catch_exceptions); | |
| 
 | |
| // This flag enables using colors in terminal output. Available values are | |
| // "yes" to enable colors, "no" (disable colors), or "auto" (the default) | |
| // to let Google Test decide. | |
| GTEST_DECLARE_string_(color); | |
| 
 | |
| // This flag sets up the filter to select by name using a glob pattern | |
| // the tests to run. If the filter is not given all tests are executed. | |
| GTEST_DECLARE_string_(filter); | |
| 
 | |
| // This flag causes the Google Test to list tests. None of the tests listed | |
| // are actually run if the flag is provided. | |
| GTEST_DECLARE_bool_(list_tests); | |
| 
 | |
| // This flag controls whether Google Test emits a detailed XML report to a file | |
| // in addition to its normal textual output. | |
| GTEST_DECLARE_string_(output); | |
| 
 | |
| // This flags control whether Google Test prints the elapsed time for each | |
| // test. | |
| GTEST_DECLARE_bool_(print_time); | |
| 
 | |
| // This flag specifies the random number seed. | |
| GTEST_DECLARE_int32_(random_seed); | |
| 
 | |
| // This flag sets how many times the tests are repeated. The default value | |
| // is 1. If the value is -1 the tests are repeating forever. | |
| GTEST_DECLARE_int32_(repeat); | |
| 
 | |
| // This flag controls whether Google Test includes Google Test internal | |
| // stack frames in failure stack traces. | |
| GTEST_DECLARE_bool_(show_internal_stack_frames); | |
| 
 | |
| // When this flag is specified, tests' order is randomized on every iteration. | |
| GTEST_DECLARE_bool_(shuffle); | |
| 
 | |
| // This flag specifies the maximum number of stack frames to be | |
| // printed in a failure message. | |
| GTEST_DECLARE_int32_(stack_trace_depth); | |
| 
 | |
| // When this flag is specified, a failed assertion will throw an | |
| // exception if exceptions are enabled, or exit the program with a | |
| // non-zero code otherwise. | |
| GTEST_DECLARE_bool_(throw_on_failure); | |
| 
 | |
| // When this flag is set with a "host:port" string, on supported | |
| // platforms test results are streamed to the specified port on | |
| // the specified host machine. | |
| GTEST_DECLARE_string_(stream_result_to); | |
| 
 | |
| // The upper limit for valid stack trace depths. | |
| const int kMaxStackTraceDepth = 100; | |
| 
 | |
| namespace internal { | |
| 
 | |
| class AssertHelper; | |
| class DefaultGlobalTestPartResultReporter; | |
| class ExecDeathTest; | |
| class NoExecDeathTest; | |
| class FinalSuccessChecker; | |
| class GTestFlagSaver; | |
| class TestResultAccessor; | |
| class TestEventListenersAccessor; | |
| class TestEventRepeater; | |
| class WindowsDeathTest; | |
| class UnitTestImpl* GetUnitTestImpl(); | |
| void ReportFailureInUnknownLocation(TestPartResult::Type result_type, | |
|                                     const String& message); | |
| 
 | |
| // 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 in gtest-internal.h but defined here, 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) { | |
|   return (Message() << streamable).GetString(); | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| }  // namespace internal | |
|  | |
| // The friend relationship of some of these classes is cyclic. | |
| // If we don't forward declare them the compiler might confuse the classes | |
| // in friendship clauses with same named classes on the scope. | |
| class Test; | |
| class TestCase; | |
| class TestInfo; | |
| class UnitTest; | |
| 
 | |
| // A class for indicating whether an assertion was successful.  When | |
| // the assertion wasn't successful, the AssertionResult object | |
| // remembers a non-empty message that describes how it failed. | |
| // | |
| // To create an instance of this class, use one of the factory functions | |
| // (AssertionSuccess() and AssertionFailure()). | |
| // | |
| // This class is useful for two purposes: | |
| //   1. Defining predicate functions to be used with Boolean test assertions | |
| //      EXPECT_TRUE/EXPECT_FALSE and their ASSERT_ counterparts | |
| //   2. Defining predicate-format functions to be | |
| //      used with predicate assertions (ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT*, etc). | |
| // | |
| // For example, if you define IsEven predicate: | |
| // | |
| //   testing::AssertionResult IsEven(int n) { | |
| //     if ((n % 2) == 0) | |
| //       return testing::AssertionSuccess(); | |
| //     else | |
| //       return testing::AssertionFailure() << n << " is odd"; | |
| //   } | |
| // | |
| // Then the failed expectation EXPECT_TRUE(IsEven(Fib(5))) | |
| // will print the message | |
| // | |
| //   Value of: IsEven(Fib(5)) | |
| //     Actual: false (5 is odd) | |
| //   Expected: true | |
| // | |
| // instead of a more opaque | |
| // | |
| //   Value of: IsEven(Fib(5)) | |
| //     Actual: false | |
| //   Expected: true | |
| // | |
| // in case IsEven is a simple Boolean predicate. | |
| // | |
| // If you expect your predicate to be reused and want to support informative | |
| // messages in EXPECT_FALSE and ASSERT_FALSE (negative assertions show up | |
| // about half as often as positive ones in our tests), supply messages for | |
| // both success and failure cases: | |
| // | |
| //   testing::AssertionResult IsEven(int n) { | |
| //     if ((n % 2) == 0) | |
| //       return testing::AssertionSuccess() << n << " is even"; | |
| //     else | |
| //       return testing::AssertionFailure() << n << " is odd"; | |
| //   } | |
| // | |
| // Then a statement EXPECT_FALSE(IsEven(Fib(6))) will print | |
| // | |
| //   Value of: IsEven(Fib(6)) | |
| //     Actual: true (8 is even) | |
| //   Expected: false | |
| // | |
| // NB: Predicates that support negative Boolean assertions have reduced | |
| // performance in positive ones so be careful not to use them in tests | |
| // that have lots (tens of thousands) of positive Boolean assertions. | |
| // | |
| // To use this class with EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT assertions such as: | |
| // | |
| //   // Verifies that Foo() returns an even number. | |
| //   EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT1(IsEven, Foo()); | |
| // | |
| // you need to define: | |
| // | |
| //   testing::AssertionResult IsEven(const char* expr, int n) { | |
| //     if ((n % 2) == 0) | |
| //       return testing::AssertionSuccess(); | |
| //     else | |
| //       return testing::AssertionFailure() | |
| //         << "Expected: " << expr << " is even\n  Actual: it's " << n; | |
| //   } | |
| // | |
| // If Foo() returns 5, you will see the following message: | |
| // | |
| //   Expected: Foo() is even | |
| //     Actual: it's 5 | |
| // | |
| class GTEST_API_ AssertionResult { | |
|  public: | |
|   // Copy constructor. | |
|   // Used in EXPECT_TRUE/FALSE(assertion_result). | |
|   AssertionResult(const AssertionResult& other); | |
|   // Used in the EXPECT_TRUE/FALSE(bool_expression). | |
|   explicit AssertionResult(bool success) : success_(success) {} | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns true iff the assertion succeeded. | |
|   operator bool() const { return success_; }  // NOLINT | |
|  | |
|   // Returns the assertion's negation. Used with EXPECT/ASSERT_FALSE. | |
|   AssertionResult operator!() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the text streamed into this AssertionResult. Test assertions | |
|   // use it when they fail (i.e., the predicate's outcome doesn't match the | |
|   // assertion's expectation). When nothing has been streamed into the | |
|   // object, returns an empty string. | |
|   const char* message() const { | |
|     return message_.get() != NULL ?  message_->c_str() : ""; | |
|   } | |
|   // TODO(vladl@google.com): Remove this after making sure no clients use it. | |
|   // Deprecated; please use message() instead. | |
|   const char* failure_message() const { return message(); } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Streams a custom failure message into this object. | |
|   template <typename T> AssertionResult& operator<<(const T& value) { | |
|     AppendMessage(Message() << value); | |
|     return *this; | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Allows streaming basic output manipulators such as endl or flush into | |
|   // this object. | |
|   AssertionResult& operator<<( | |
|       ::std::ostream& (*basic_manipulator)(::std::ostream& stream)) { | |
|     AppendMessage(Message() << basic_manipulator); | |
|     return *this; | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|  private: | |
|   // Appends the contents of message to message_. | |
|   void AppendMessage(const Message& a_message) { | |
|     if (message_.get() == NULL) | |
|       message_.reset(new ::std::string); | |
|     message_->append(a_message.GetString().c_str()); | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Stores result of the assertion predicate. | |
|   bool success_; | |
|   // Stores the message describing the condition in case the expectation | |
|   // construct is not satisfied with the predicate's outcome. | |
|   // Referenced via a pointer to avoid taking too much stack frame space | |
|   // with test assertions. | |
|   internal::scoped_ptr< ::std::string> message_; | |
| 
 | |
|   GTEST_DISALLOW_ASSIGN_(AssertionResult); | |
| }; | |
| 
 | |
| // Makes a successful assertion result. | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult AssertionSuccess(); | |
| 
 | |
| // Makes a failed assertion result. | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult AssertionFailure(); | |
| 
 | |
| // Makes a failed assertion result with the given failure message. | |
| // Deprecated; use AssertionFailure() << msg. | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult AssertionFailure(const Message& msg); | |
| 
 | |
| // The abstract class that all tests inherit from. | |
| // | |
| // In Google Test, a unit test program contains one or many TestCases, and | |
| // each TestCase contains one or many Tests. | |
| // | |
| // When you define a test using the TEST macro, you don't need to | |
| // explicitly derive from Test - the TEST macro automatically does | |
| // this for you. | |
| // | |
| // The only time you derive from Test is when defining a test fixture | |
| // to be used a TEST_F.  For example: | |
| // | |
| //   class FooTest : public testing::Test { | |
| //    protected: | |
| //     virtual void SetUp() { ... } | |
| //     virtual void TearDown() { ... } | |
| //     ... | |
| //   }; | |
| // | |
| //   TEST_F(FooTest, Bar) { ... } | |
| //   TEST_F(FooTest, Baz) { ... } | |
| // | |
| // Test is not copyable. | |
| class GTEST_API_ Test { | |
|  public: | |
|   friend class TestInfo; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Defines types for pointers to functions that set up and tear down | |
|   // a test case. | |
|   typedef internal::SetUpTestCaseFunc SetUpTestCaseFunc; | |
|   typedef internal::TearDownTestCaseFunc TearDownTestCaseFunc; | |
| 
 | |
|   // The d'tor is virtual as we intend to inherit from Test. | |
|   virtual ~Test(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Sets up the stuff shared by all tests in this test case. | |
|   // | |
|   // Google Test will call Foo::SetUpTestCase() before running the first | |
|   // test in test case Foo.  Hence a sub-class can define its own | |
|   // SetUpTestCase() method to shadow the one defined in the super | |
|   // class. | |
|   static void SetUpTestCase() {} | |
| 
 | |
|   // Tears down the stuff shared by all tests in this test case. | |
|   // | |
|   // Google Test will call Foo::TearDownTestCase() after running the last | |
|   // test in test case Foo.  Hence a sub-class can define its own | |
|   // TearDownTestCase() method to shadow the one defined in the super | |
|   // class. | |
|   static void TearDownTestCase() {} | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns true iff the current test has a fatal failure. | |
|   static bool HasFatalFailure(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns true iff the current test has a non-fatal failure. | |
|   static bool HasNonfatalFailure(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns true iff the current test has a (either fatal or | |
|   // non-fatal) failure. | |
|   static bool HasFailure() { return HasFatalFailure() || HasNonfatalFailure(); } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Logs a property for the current test.  Only the last value for a given | |
|   // key is remembered. | |
|   // These are public static so they can be called from utility functions | |
|   // that are not members of the test fixture. | |
|   // The arguments are const char* instead strings, as Google Test is used | |
|   // on platforms where string doesn't compile. | |
|   // | |
|   // Note that a driving consideration for these RecordProperty methods | |
|   // was to produce xml output suited to the Greenspan charting utility, | |
|   // which at present will only chart values that fit in a 32-bit int. It | |
|   // is the user's responsibility to restrict their values to 32-bit ints | |
|   // if they intend them to be used with Greenspan. | |
|   static void RecordProperty(const char* key, const char* value); | |
|   static void RecordProperty(const char* key, int value); | |
| 
 | |
|  protected: | |
|   // Creates a Test object. | |
|   Test(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Sets up the test fixture. | |
|   virtual void SetUp(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Tears down the test fixture. | |
|   virtual void TearDown(); | |
| 
 | |
|  private: | |
|   // Returns true iff the current test has the same fixture class as | |
|   // the first test in the current test case. | |
|   static bool HasSameFixtureClass(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Runs the test after the test fixture has been set up. | |
|   // | |
|   // A sub-class must implement this to define the test logic. | |
|   // | |
|   // DO NOT OVERRIDE THIS FUNCTION DIRECTLY IN A USER PROGRAM. | |
|   // Instead, use the TEST or TEST_F macro. | |
|   virtual void TestBody() = 0; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Sets up, executes, and tears down the test. | |
|   void Run(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Deletes self.  We deliberately pick an unusual name for this | |
|   // internal method to avoid clashing with names used in user TESTs. | |
|   void DeleteSelf_() { delete this; } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Uses a GTestFlagSaver to save and restore all Google Test flags. | |
|   const internal::GTestFlagSaver* const gtest_flag_saver_; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Often a user mis-spells SetUp() as Setup() and spends a long time | |
|   // wondering why it is never called by Google Test.  The declaration of | |
|   // the following method is solely for catching such an error at | |
|   // compile time: | |
|   // | |
|   //   - The return type is deliberately chosen to be not void, so it | |
|   //   will be a conflict if a user declares void Setup() in his test | |
|   //   fixture. | |
|   // | |
|   //   - This method is private, so it will be another compiler error | |
|   //   if a user calls it from his test fixture. | |
|   // | |
|   // DO NOT OVERRIDE THIS FUNCTION. | |
|   // | |
|   // If you see an error about overriding the following function or | |
|   // about it being private, you have mis-spelled SetUp() as Setup(). | |
|   struct Setup_should_be_spelled_SetUp {}; | |
|   virtual Setup_should_be_spelled_SetUp* Setup() { return NULL; } | |
| 
 | |
|   // We disallow copying Tests. | |
|   GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(Test); | |
| }; | |
| 
 | |
| typedef internal::TimeInMillis TimeInMillis; | |
| 
 | |
| // A copyable object representing a user specified test property which can be | |
| // output as a key/value string pair. | |
| // | |
| // Don't inherit from TestProperty as its destructor is not virtual. | |
| class TestProperty { | |
|  public: | |
|   // C'tor.  TestProperty does NOT have a default constructor. | |
|   // Always use this constructor (with parameters) to create a | |
|   // TestProperty object. | |
|   TestProperty(const char* a_key, const char* a_value) : | |
|     key_(a_key), value_(a_value) { | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the user supplied key. | |
|   const char* key() const { | |
|     return key_.c_str(); | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the user supplied value. | |
|   const char* value() const { | |
|     return value_.c_str(); | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Sets a new value, overriding the one supplied in the constructor. | |
|   void SetValue(const char* new_value) { | |
|     value_ = new_value; | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|  private: | |
|   // The key supplied by the user. | |
|   internal::String key_; | |
|   // The value supplied by the user. | |
|   internal::String value_; | |
| }; | |
| 
 | |
| // The result of a single Test.  This includes a list of | |
| // TestPartResults, a list of TestProperties, a count of how many | |
| // death tests there are in the Test, and how much time it took to run | |
| // the Test. | |
| // | |
| // TestResult is not copyable. | |
| class GTEST_API_ TestResult { | |
|  public: | |
|   // Creates an empty TestResult. | |
|   TestResult(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // D'tor.  Do not inherit from TestResult. | |
|   ~TestResult(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the number of all test parts.  This is the sum of the number | |
|   // of successful test parts and the number of failed test parts. | |
|   int total_part_count() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the number of the test properties. | |
|   int test_property_count() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns true iff the test passed (i.e. no test part failed). | |
|   bool Passed() const { return !Failed(); } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns true iff the test failed. | |
|   bool Failed() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns true iff the test fatally failed. | |
|   bool HasFatalFailure() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns true iff the test has a non-fatal failure. | |
|   bool HasNonfatalFailure() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the elapsed time, in milliseconds. | |
|   TimeInMillis elapsed_time() const { return elapsed_time_; } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the i-th test part result among all the results. i can range | |
|   // from 0 to test_property_count() - 1. If i is not in that range, aborts | |
|   // the program. | |
|   const TestPartResult& GetTestPartResult(int i) const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the i-th test property. i can range from 0 to | |
|   // test_property_count() - 1. If i is not in that range, aborts the | |
|   // program. | |
|   const TestProperty& GetTestProperty(int i) const; | |
| 
 | |
|  private: | |
|   friend class TestInfo; | |
|   friend class UnitTest; | |
|   friend class internal::DefaultGlobalTestPartResultReporter; | |
|   friend class internal::ExecDeathTest; | |
|   friend class internal::TestResultAccessor; | |
|   friend class internal::UnitTestImpl; | |
|   friend class internal::WindowsDeathTest; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the vector of TestPartResults. | |
|   const std::vector<TestPartResult>& test_part_results() const { | |
|     return test_part_results_; | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the vector of TestProperties. | |
|   const std::vector<TestProperty>& test_properties() const { | |
|     return test_properties_; | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Sets the elapsed time. | |
|   void set_elapsed_time(TimeInMillis elapsed) { elapsed_time_ = elapsed; } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Adds a test property to the list. The property is validated and may add | |
|   // a non-fatal failure if invalid (e.g., if it conflicts with reserved | |
|   // key names). If a property is already recorded for the same key, the | |
|   // value will be updated, rather than storing multiple values for the same | |
|   // key. | |
|   void RecordProperty(const TestProperty& test_property); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Adds a failure if the key is a reserved attribute of Google Test | |
|   // testcase tags.  Returns true if the property is valid. | |
|   // TODO(russr): Validate attribute names are legal and human readable. | |
|   static bool ValidateTestProperty(const TestProperty& test_property); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Adds a test part result to the list. | |
|   void AddTestPartResult(const TestPartResult& test_part_result); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the death test count. | |
|   int death_test_count() const { return death_test_count_; } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Increments the death test count, returning the new count. | |
|   int increment_death_test_count() { return ++death_test_count_; } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Clears the test part results. | |
|   void ClearTestPartResults(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Clears the object. | |
|   void Clear(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Protects mutable state of the property vector and of owned | |
|   // properties, whose values may be updated. | |
|   internal::Mutex test_properites_mutex_; | |
| 
 | |
|   // The vector of TestPartResults | |
|   std::vector<TestPartResult> test_part_results_; | |
|   // The vector of TestProperties | |
|   std::vector<TestProperty> test_properties_; | |
|   // Running count of death tests. | |
|   int death_test_count_; | |
|   // The elapsed time, in milliseconds. | |
|   TimeInMillis elapsed_time_; | |
| 
 | |
|   // We disallow copying TestResult. | |
|   GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(TestResult); | |
| };  // class TestResult | |
|  | |
| // A TestInfo object stores the following information about a test: | |
| // | |
| //   Test case name | |
| //   Test name | |
| //   Whether the test should be run | |
| //   A function pointer that creates the test object when invoked | |
| //   Test result | |
| // | |
| // The constructor of TestInfo registers itself with the UnitTest | |
| // singleton such that the RUN_ALL_TESTS() macro knows which tests to | |
| // run. | |
| class GTEST_API_ TestInfo { | |
|  public: | |
|   // Destructs a TestInfo object.  This function is not virtual, so | |
|   // don't inherit from TestInfo. | |
|   ~TestInfo(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the test case name. | |
|   const char* test_case_name() const { return test_case_name_.c_str(); } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the test name. | |
|   const char* name() const { return name_.c_str(); } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the name of the parameter type, or NULL if this is not a typed | |
|   // or a type-parameterized test. | |
|   const char* type_param() const { | |
|     if (type_param_.get() != NULL) | |
|       return type_param_->c_str(); | |
|     return NULL; | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the text representation of the value parameter, or NULL if this | |
|   // is not a value-parameterized test. | |
|   const char* value_param() const { | |
|     if (value_param_.get() != NULL) | |
|       return value_param_->c_str(); | |
|     return NULL; | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns true if this test should run, that is if the test is not disabled | |
|   // (or it is disabled but the also_run_disabled_tests flag has been specified) | |
|   // and its full name matches the user-specified filter. | |
|   // | |
|   // Google Test allows the user to filter the tests by their full names. | |
|   // The full name of a test Bar in test case Foo is defined as | |
|   // "Foo.Bar".  Only the tests that match the filter will run. | |
|   // | |
|   // A filter is a colon-separated list of glob (not regex) patterns, | |
|   // optionally followed by a '-' and a colon-separated list of | |
|   // negative patterns (tests to exclude).  A test is run if it | |
|   // matches one of the positive patterns and does not match any of | |
|   // the negative patterns. | |
|   // | |
|   // For example, *A*:Foo.* is a filter that matches any string that | |
|   // contains the character 'A' or starts with "Foo.". | |
|   bool should_run() const { return should_run_; } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the result of the test. | |
|   const TestResult* result() const { return &result_; } | |
| 
 | |
|  private: | |
| 
 | |
| #if GTEST_HAS_DEATH_TEST | |
|   friend class internal::DefaultDeathTestFactory; | |
| #endif  // GTEST_HAS_DEATH_TEST | |
|   friend class Test; | |
|   friend class TestCase; | |
|   friend class internal::UnitTestImpl; | |
|   friend TestInfo* internal::MakeAndRegisterTestInfo( | |
|       const char* test_case_name, const char* name, | |
|       const char* type_param, | |
|       const char* value_param, | |
|       internal::TypeId fixture_class_id, | |
|       Test::SetUpTestCaseFunc set_up_tc, | |
|       Test::TearDownTestCaseFunc tear_down_tc, | |
|       internal::TestFactoryBase* factory); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Constructs a TestInfo object. The newly constructed instance assumes | |
|   // ownership of the factory object. | |
|   TestInfo(const char* test_case_name, const char* name, | |
|            const char* a_type_param, | |
|            const char* a_value_param, | |
|            internal::TypeId fixture_class_id, | |
|            internal::TestFactoryBase* factory); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Increments the number of death tests encountered in this test so | |
|   // far. | |
|   int increment_death_test_count() { | |
|     return result_.increment_death_test_count(); | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Creates the test object, runs it, records its result, and then | |
|   // deletes it. | |
|   void Run(); | |
| 
 | |
|   static void ClearTestResult(TestInfo* test_info) { | |
|     test_info->result_.Clear(); | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // These fields are immutable properties of the test. | |
|   const std::string test_case_name_;     // Test case name | |
|   const std::string name_;               // Test name | |
|   // Name of the parameter type, or NULL if this is not a typed or a | |
|   // type-parameterized test. | |
|   const internal::scoped_ptr<const ::std::string> type_param_; | |
|   // Text representation of the value parameter, or NULL if this is not a | |
|   // value-parameterized test. | |
|   const internal::scoped_ptr<const ::std::string> value_param_; | |
|   const internal::TypeId fixture_class_id_;   // ID of the test fixture class | |
|   bool should_run_;                 // True iff this test should run | |
|   bool is_disabled_;                // True iff this test is disabled | |
|   bool matches_filter_;             // True if this test matches the | |
|                                     // user-specified filter. | |
|   internal::TestFactoryBase* const factory_;  // The factory that creates | |
|                                               // the test object | |
|  | |
|   // This field is mutable and needs to be reset before running the | |
|   // test for the second time. | |
|   TestResult result_; | |
| 
 | |
|   GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(TestInfo); | |
| }; | |
| 
 | |
| // A test case, which consists of a vector of TestInfos. | |
| // | |
| // TestCase is not copyable. | |
| class GTEST_API_ TestCase { | |
|  public: | |
|   // Creates a TestCase with the given name. | |
|   // | |
|   // TestCase does NOT have a default constructor.  Always use this | |
|   // constructor to create a TestCase object. | |
|   // | |
|   // Arguments: | |
|   // | |
|   //   name:         name of the test case | |
|   //   a_type_param: the name of the test's type parameter, or NULL if | |
|   //                 this is not a type-parameterized test. | |
|   //   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 | |
|   TestCase(const char* name, const char* a_type_param, | |
|            Test::SetUpTestCaseFunc set_up_tc, | |
|            Test::TearDownTestCaseFunc tear_down_tc); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Destructor of TestCase. | |
|   virtual ~TestCase(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the name of the TestCase. | |
|   const char* name() const { return name_.c_str(); } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the name of the parameter type, or NULL if this is not a | |
|   // type-parameterized test case. | |
|   const char* type_param() const { | |
|     if (type_param_.get() != NULL) | |
|       return type_param_->c_str(); | |
|     return NULL; | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns true if any test in this test case should run. | |
|   bool should_run() const { return should_run_; } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the number of successful tests in this test case. | |
|   int successful_test_count() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the number of failed tests in this test case. | |
|   int failed_test_count() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the number of disabled tests in this test case. | |
|   int disabled_test_count() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Get the number of tests in this test case that should run. | |
|   int test_to_run_count() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the number of all tests in this test case. | |
|   int total_test_count() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns true iff the test case passed. | |
|   bool Passed() const { return !Failed(); } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns true iff the test case failed. | |
|   bool Failed() const { return failed_test_count() > 0; } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the elapsed time, in milliseconds. | |
|   TimeInMillis elapsed_time() const { return elapsed_time_; } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the i-th test among all the tests. i can range from 0 to | |
|   // total_test_count() - 1. If i is not in that range, returns NULL. | |
|   const TestInfo* GetTestInfo(int i) const; | |
| 
 | |
|  private: | |
|   friend class Test; | |
|   friend class internal::UnitTestImpl; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the (mutable) vector of TestInfos in this TestCase. | |
|   std::vector<TestInfo*>& test_info_list() { return test_info_list_; } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the (immutable) vector of TestInfos in this TestCase. | |
|   const std::vector<TestInfo*>& test_info_list() const { | |
|     return test_info_list_; | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the i-th test among all the tests. i can range from 0 to | |
|   // total_test_count() - 1. If i is not in that range, returns NULL. | |
|   TestInfo* GetMutableTestInfo(int i); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Sets the should_run member. | |
|   void set_should_run(bool should) { should_run_ = should; } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Adds a TestInfo to this test case.  Will delete the TestInfo upon | |
|   // destruction of the TestCase object. | |
|   void AddTestInfo(TestInfo * test_info); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Clears the results of all tests in this test case. | |
|   void ClearResult(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Clears the results of all tests in the given test case. | |
|   static void ClearTestCaseResult(TestCase* test_case) { | |
|     test_case->ClearResult(); | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Runs every test in this TestCase. | |
|   void Run(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Runs SetUpTestCase() for this TestCase.  This wrapper is needed | |
|   // for catching exceptions thrown from SetUpTestCase(). | |
|   void RunSetUpTestCase() { (*set_up_tc_)(); } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Runs TearDownTestCase() for this TestCase.  This wrapper is | |
|   // needed for catching exceptions thrown from TearDownTestCase(). | |
|   void RunTearDownTestCase() { (*tear_down_tc_)(); } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns true iff test passed. | |
|   static bool TestPassed(const TestInfo* test_info) { | |
|     return test_info->should_run() && test_info->result()->Passed(); | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns true iff test failed. | |
|   static bool TestFailed(const TestInfo* test_info) { | |
|     return test_info->should_run() && test_info->result()->Failed(); | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns true iff test is disabled. | |
|   static bool TestDisabled(const TestInfo* test_info) { | |
|     return test_info->is_disabled_; | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns true if the given test should run. | |
|   static bool ShouldRunTest(const TestInfo* test_info) { | |
|     return test_info->should_run(); | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Shuffles the tests in this test case. | |
|   void ShuffleTests(internal::Random* random); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Restores the test order to before the first shuffle. | |
|   void UnshuffleTests(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Name of the test case. | |
|   internal::String name_; | |
|   // Name of the parameter type, or NULL if this is not a typed or a | |
|   // type-parameterized test. | |
|   const internal::scoped_ptr<const ::std::string> type_param_; | |
|   // The vector of TestInfos in their original order.  It owns the | |
|   // elements in the vector. | |
|   std::vector<TestInfo*> test_info_list_; | |
|   // Provides a level of indirection for the test list to allow easy | |
|   // shuffling and restoring the test order.  The i-th element in this | |
|   // vector is the index of the i-th test in the shuffled test list. | |
|   std::vector<int> test_indices_; | |
|   // Pointer to the function that sets up the test case. | |
|   Test::SetUpTestCaseFunc set_up_tc_; | |
|   // Pointer to the function that tears down the test case. | |
|   Test::TearDownTestCaseFunc tear_down_tc_; | |
|   // True iff any test in this test case should run. | |
|   bool should_run_; | |
|   // Elapsed time, in milliseconds. | |
|   TimeInMillis elapsed_time_; | |
| 
 | |
|   // We disallow copying TestCases. | |
|   GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(TestCase); | |
| }; | |
| 
 | |
| // An Environment object is capable of setting up and tearing down an | |
| // environment.  The user should subclass this to define his own | |
| // environment(s). | |
| // | |
| // An Environment object does the set-up and tear-down in virtual | |
| // methods SetUp() and TearDown() instead of the constructor and the | |
| // destructor, as: | |
| // | |
| //   1. You cannot safely throw from a destructor.  This is a problem | |
| //      as in some cases Google Test is used where exceptions are enabled, and | |
| //      we may want to implement ASSERT_* using exceptions where they are | |
| //      available. | |
| //   2. You cannot use ASSERT_* directly in a constructor or | |
| //      destructor. | |
| class Environment { | |
|  public: | |
|   // The d'tor is virtual as we need to subclass Environment. | |
|   virtual ~Environment() {} | |
| 
 | |
|   // Override this to define how to set up the environment. | |
|   virtual void SetUp() {} | |
| 
 | |
|   // Override this to define how to tear down the environment. | |
|   virtual void TearDown() {} | |
|  private: | |
|   // If you see an error about overriding the following function or | |
|   // about it being private, you have mis-spelled SetUp() as Setup(). | |
|   struct Setup_should_be_spelled_SetUp {}; | |
|   virtual Setup_should_be_spelled_SetUp* Setup() { return NULL; } | |
| }; | |
| 
 | |
| // The interface for tracing execution of tests. The methods are organized in | |
| // the order the corresponding events are fired. | |
| class TestEventListener { | |
|  public: | |
|   virtual ~TestEventListener() {} | |
| 
 | |
|   // Fired before any test activity starts. | |
|   virtual void OnTestProgramStart(const UnitTest& unit_test) = 0; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Fired before each iteration of tests starts.  There may be more than | |
|   // one iteration if GTEST_FLAG(repeat) is set. iteration is the iteration | |
|   // index, starting from 0. | |
|   virtual void OnTestIterationStart(const UnitTest& unit_test, | |
|                                     int iteration) = 0; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Fired before environment set-up for each iteration of tests starts. | |
|   virtual void OnEnvironmentsSetUpStart(const UnitTest& unit_test) = 0; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Fired after environment set-up for each iteration of tests ends. | |
|   virtual void OnEnvironmentsSetUpEnd(const UnitTest& unit_test) = 0; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Fired before the test case starts. | |
|   virtual void OnTestCaseStart(const TestCase& test_case) = 0; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Fired before the test starts. | |
|   virtual void OnTestStart(const TestInfo& test_info) = 0; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Fired after a failed assertion or a SUCCEED() invocation. | |
|   virtual void OnTestPartResult(const TestPartResult& test_part_result) = 0; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Fired after the test ends. | |
|   virtual void OnTestEnd(const TestInfo& test_info) = 0; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Fired after the test case ends. | |
|   virtual void OnTestCaseEnd(const TestCase& test_case) = 0; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Fired before environment tear-down for each iteration of tests starts. | |
|   virtual void OnEnvironmentsTearDownStart(const UnitTest& unit_test) = 0; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Fired after environment tear-down for each iteration of tests ends. | |
|   virtual void OnEnvironmentsTearDownEnd(const UnitTest& unit_test) = 0; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Fired after each iteration of tests finishes. | |
|   virtual void OnTestIterationEnd(const UnitTest& unit_test, | |
|                                   int iteration) = 0; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Fired after all test activities have ended. | |
|   virtual void OnTestProgramEnd(const UnitTest& unit_test) = 0; | |
| }; | |
| 
 | |
| // The convenience class for users who need to override just one or two | |
| // methods and are not concerned that a possible change to a signature of | |
| // the methods they override will not be caught during the build.  For | |
| // comments about each method please see the definition of TestEventListener | |
| // above. | |
| class EmptyTestEventListener : public TestEventListener { | |
|  public: | |
|   virtual void OnTestProgramStart(const UnitTest& /*unit_test*/) {} | |
|   virtual void OnTestIterationStart(const UnitTest& /*unit_test*/, | |
|                                     int /*iteration*/) {} | |
|   virtual void OnEnvironmentsSetUpStart(const UnitTest& /*unit_test*/) {} | |
|   virtual void OnEnvironmentsSetUpEnd(const UnitTest& /*unit_test*/) {} | |
|   virtual void OnTestCaseStart(const TestCase& /*test_case*/) {} | |
|   virtual void OnTestStart(const TestInfo& /*test_info*/) {} | |
|   virtual void OnTestPartResult(const TestPartResult& /*test_part_result*/) {} | |
|   virtual void OnTestEnd(const TestInfo& /*test_info*/) {} | |
|   virtual void OnTestCaseEnd(const TestCase& /*test_case*/) {} | |
|   virtual void OnEnvironmentsTearDownStart(const UnitTest& /*unit_test*/) {} | |
|   virtual void OnEnvironmentsTearDownEnd(const UnitTest& /*unit_test*/) {} | |
|   virtual void OnTestIterationEnd(const UnitTest& /*unit_test*/, | |
|                                   int /*iteration*/) {} | |
|   virtual void OnTestProgramEnd(const UnitTest& /*unit_test*/) {} | |
| }; | |
| 
 | |
| // TestEventListeners lets users add listeners to track events in Google Test. | |
| class GTEST_API_ TestEventListeners { | |
|  public: | |
|   TestEventListeners(); | |
|   ~TestEventListeners(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Appends an event listener to the end of the list. Google Test assumes | |
|   // the ownership of the listener (i.e. it will delete the listener when | |
|   // the test program finishes). | |
|   void Append(TestEventListener* listener); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Removes the given event listener from the list and returns it.  It then | |
|   // becomes the caller's responsibility to delete the listener. Returns | |
|   // NULL if the listener is not found in the list. | |
|   TestEventListener* Release(TestEventListener* listener); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the standard listener responsible for the default console | |
|   // output.  Can be removed from the listeners list to shut down default | |
|   // console output.  Note that removing this object from the listener list | |
|   // with Release transfers its ownership to the caller and makes this | |
|   // function return NULL the next time. | |
|   TestEventListener* default_result_printer() const { | |
|     return default_result_printer_; | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the standard listener responsible for the default XML output | |
|   // controlled by the --gtest_output=xml flag.  Can be removed from the | |
|   // listeners list by users who want to shut down the default XML output | |
|   // controlled by this flag and substitute it with custom one.  Note that | |
|   // removing this object from the listener list with Release transfers its | |
|   // ownership to the caller and makes this function return NULL the next | |
|   // time. | |
|   TestEventListener* default_xml_generator() const { | |
|     return default_xml_generator_; | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|  private: | |
|   friend class TestCase; | |
|   friend class TestInfo; | |
|   friend class internal::DefaultGlobalTestPartResultReporter; | |
|   friend class internal::NoExecDeathTest; | |
|   friend class internal::TestEventListenersAccessor; | |
|   friend class internal::UnitTestImpl; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns repeater that broadcasts the TestEventListener events to all | |
|   // subscribers. | |
|   TestEventListener* repeater(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Sets the default_result_printer attribute to the provided listener. | |
|   // The listener is also added to the listener list and previous | |
|   // default_result_printer is removed from it and deleted. The listener can | |
|   // also be NULL in which case it will not be added to the list. Does | |
|   // nothing if the previous and the current listener objects are the same. | |
|   void SetDefaultResultPrinter(TestEventListener* listener); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Sets the default_xml_generator attribute to the provided listener.  The | |
|   // listener is also added to the listener list and previous | |
|   // default_xml_generator is removed from it and deleted. The listener can | |
|   // also be NULL in which case it will not be added to the list. Does | |
|   // nothing if the previous and the current listener objects are the same. | |
|   void SetDefaultXmlGenerator(TestEventListener* listener); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Controls whether events will be forwarded by the repeater to the | |
|   // listeners in the list. | |
|   bool EventForwardingEnabled() const; | |
|   void SuppressEventForwarding(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // The actual list of listeners. | |
|   internal::TestEventRepeater* repeater_; | |
|   // Listener responsible for the standard result output. | |
|   TestEventListener* default_result_printer_; | |
|   // Listener responsible for the creation of the XML output file. | |
|   TestEventListener* default_xml_generator_; | |
| 
 | |
|   // We disallow copying TestEventListeners. | |
|   GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(TestEventListeners); | |
| }; | |
| 
 | |
| // A UnitTest consists of a vector of TestCases. | |
| // | |
| // This is a singleton class.  The only instance of UnitTest is | |
| // created when UnitTest::GetInstance() is first called.  This | |
| // instance is never deleted. | |
| // | |
| // UnitTest is not copyable. | |
| // | |
| // This class is thread-safe as long as the methods are called | |
| // according to their specification. | |
| class GTEST_API_ UnitTest { | |
|  public: | |
|   // Gets the singleton UnitTest object.  The first time this method | |
|   // is called, a UnitTest object is constructed and returned. | |
|   // Consecutive calls will return the same object. | |
|   static UnitTest* GetInstance(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Runs all tests in this UnitTest object and prints the result. | |
|   // Returns 0 if successful, or 1 otherwise. | |
|   // | |
|   // This method can only be called from the main thread. | |
|   // | |
|   // INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM. | |
|   int Run() GTEST_MUST_USE_RESULT_; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the working directory when the first TEST() or TEST_F() | |
|   // was executed.  The UnitTest object owns the string. | |
|   const char* original_working_dir() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the TestCase object for the test that's currently running, | |
|   // or NULL if no test is running. | |
|   const TestCase* current_test_case() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the TestInfo object for the test that's currently running, | |
|   // or NULL if no test is running. | |
|   const TestInfo* current_test_info() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the random seed used at the start of the current test run. | |
|   int random_seed() const; | |
| 
 | |
| #if GTEST_HAS_PARAM_TEST | |
|   // Returns the ParameterizedTestCaseRegistry object used to keep track of | |
|   // value-parameterized tests and instantiate and register them. | |
|   // | |
|   // INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM. | |
|   internal::ParameterizedTestCaseRegistry& parameterized_test_registry(); | |
| #endif  // GTEST_HAS_PARAM_TEST | |
|  | |
|   // Gets the number of successful test cases. | |
|   int successful_test_case_count() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the number of failed test cases. | |
|   int failed_test_case_count() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the number of all test cases. | |
|   int total_test_case_count() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the number of all test cases that contain at least one test | |
|   // that should run. | |
|   int test_case_to_run_count() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the number of successful tests. | |
|   int successful_test_count() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the number of failed tests. | |
|   int failed_test_count() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the number of disabled tests. | |
|   int disabled_test_count() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the number of all tests. | |
|   int total_test_count() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the number of tests that should run. | |
|   int test_to_run_count() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the elapsed time, in milliseconds. | |
|   TimeInMillis elapsed_time() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns true iff the unit test passed (i.e. all test cases passed). | |
|   bool Passed() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns true iff the unit test failed (i.e. some test case failed | |
|   // or something outside of all tests failed). | |
|   bool Failed() const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the i-th test case among all the test cases. i can range from 0 to | |
|   // total_test_case_count() - 1. If i is not in that range, returns NULL. | |
|   const TestCase* GetTestCase(int i) const; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Returns the list of event listeners that can be used to track events | |
|   // inside Google Test. | |
|   TestEventListeners& listeners(); | |
| 
 | |
|  private: | |
|   // Registers and returns a global test environment.  When a test | |
|   // program is run, all global test environments will be set-up in | |
|   // the order they were registered.  After all tests in the program | |
|   // have finished, all global test environments will be torn-down in | |
|   // the *reverse* order they were registered. | |
|   // | |
|   // The UnitTest object takes ownership of the given environment. | |
|   // | |
|   // This method can only be called from the main thread. | |
|   Environment* AddEnvironment(Environment* env); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Adds a TestPartResult to the current TestResult object.  All | |
|   // Google Test assertion macros (e.g. ASSERT_TRUE, EXPECT_EQ, etc) | |
|   // eventually call this to report their results.  The user code | |
|   // should use the assertion macros instead of calling this directly. | |
|   void AddTestPartResult(TestPartResult::Type result_type, | |
|                          const char* file_name, | |
|                          int line_number, | |
|                          const internal::String& message, | |
|                          const internal::String& os_stack_trace); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Adds a TestProperty to the current TestResult object. If the result already | |
|   // contains a property with the same key, the value will be updated. | |
|   void RecordPropertyForCurrentTest(const char* key, const char* value); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Gets the i-th test case among all the test cases. i can range from 0 to | |
|   // total_test_case_count() - 1. If i is not in that range, returns NULL. | |
|   TestCase* GetMutableTestCase(int i); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Accessors for the implementation object. | |
|   internal::UnitTestImpl* impl() { return impl_; } | |
|   const internal::UnitTestImpl* impl() const { return impl_; } | |
| 
 | |
|   // These classes and funcions are friends as they need to access private | |
|   // members of UnitTest. | |
|   friend class Test; | |
|   friend class internal::AssertHelper; | |
|   friend class internal::ScopedTrace; | |
|   friend Environment* AddGlobalTestEnvironment(Environment* env); | |
|   friend internal::UnitTestImpl* internal::GetUnitTestImpl(); | |
|   friend void internal::ReportFailureInUnknownLocation( | |
|       TestPartResult::Type result_type, | |
|       const internal::String& message); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Creates an empty UnitTest. | |
|   UnitTest(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // D'tor | |
|   virtual ~UnitTest(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Pushes a trace defined by SCOPED_TRACE() on to the per-thread | |
|   // Google Test trace stack. | |
|   void PushGTestTrace(const internal::TraceInfo& trace); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Pops a trace from the per-thread Google Test trace stack. | |
|   void PopGTestTrace(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Protects mutable state in *impl_.  This is mutable as some const | |
|   // methods need to lock it too. | |
|   mutable internal::Mutex mutex_; | |
| 
 | |
|   // Opaque implementation object.  This field is never changed once | |
|   // the object is constructed.  We don't mark it as const here, as | |
|   // doing so will cause a warning in the constructor of UnitTest. | |
|   // Mutable state in *impl_ is protected by mutex_. | |
|   internal::UnitTestImpl* impl_; | |
| 
 | |
|   // We disallow copying UnitTest. | |
|   GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(UnitTest); | |
| }; | |
| 
 | |
| // A convenient wrapper for adding an environment for the test | |
| // program. | |
| // | |
| // You should call this before RUN_ALL_TESTS() is called, probably in | |
| // main().  If you use gtest_main, you need to call this before main() | |
| // starts for it to take effect.  For example, you can define a global | |
| // variable like this: | |
| // | |
| //   testing::Environment* const foo_env = | |
| //       testing::AddGlobalTestEnvironment(new FooEnvironment); | |
| // | |
| // However, we strongly recommend you to write your own main() and | |
| // call AddGlobalTestEnvironment() there, as relying on initialization | |
| // of global variables makes the code harder to read and may cause | |
| // problems when you register multiple environments from different | |
| // translation units and the environments have dependencies among them | |
| // (remember that the compiler doesn't guarantee the order in which | |
| // global variables from different translation units are initialized). | |
| inline Environment* AddGlobalTestEnvironment(Environment* env) { | |
|   return UnitTest::GetInstance()->AddEnvironment(env); | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Initializes Google Test.  This must be called before calling | |
| // RUN_ALL_TESTS().  In particular, it parses a command line for the | |
| // flags that Google Test recognizes.  Whenever a Google Test flag is | |
| // seen, it is removed from argv, and *argc is decremented. | |
| // | |
| // No value is returned.  Instead, the Google Test flag variables are | |
| // updated. | |
| // | |
| // Calling the function for the second time has no user-visible effect. | |
| GTEST_API_ void InitGoogleTest(int* argc, char** argv); | |
| 
 | |
| // This overloaded version can be used in Windows programs compiled in | |
| // UNICODE mode. | |
| GTEST_API_ void InitGoogleTest(int* argc, wchar_t** argv); | |
| 
 | |
| namespace internal { | |
| 
 | |
| // Formats a comparison assertion (e.g. ASSERT_EQ, EXPECT_LT, and etc) | |
| // operand to be used in a failure message.  The type (but not value) | |
| // of the other operand may affect the format.  This allows us to | |
| // print a char* as a raw pointer when it is compared against another | |
| // char*, and print it as a C string when it is compared against an | |
| // std::string object, for example. | |
| // | |
| // The default implementation ignores the type of the other operand. | |
| // Some specialized versions are used to handle formatting wide or | |
| // narrow C strings. | |
| // | |
| // INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM. | |
| template <typename T1, typename T2> | |
| String FormatForComparisonFailureMessage(const T1& value, | |
|                                          const T2& /* other_operand */) { | |
|   // C++Builder compiles this incorrectly if the namespace isn't explicitly | |
|   // given. | |
|   return ::testing::PrintToString(value); | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // The helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_EQ. | |
| template <typename T1, typename T2> | |
| AssertionResult CmpHelperEQ(const char* expected_expression, | |
|                             const char* actual_expression, | |
|                             const T1& expected, | |
|                             const T2& actual) { | |
| #ifdef _MSC_VER | |
| # pragma warning(push)          // Saves the current warning state. | |
| # pragma warning(disable:4389)  // Temporarily disables warning on | |
|                                // signed/unsigned mismatch. | |
| #endif | |
|  | |
|   if (expected == actual) { | |
|     return AssertionSuccess(); | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
| #ifdef _MSC_VER | |
| # pragma warning(pop)          // Restores the warning state. | |
| #endif | |
|  | |
|   return EqFailure(expected_expression, | |
|                    actual_expression, | |
|                    FormatForComparisonFailureMessage(expected, actual), | |
|                    FormatForComparisonFailureMessage(actual, expected), | |
|                    false); | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // With this overloaded version, we allow anonymous enums to be used | |
| // in {ASSERT|EXPECT}_EQ when compiled with gcc 4, as anonymous enums | |
| // can be implicitly cast to BiggestInt. | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult CmpHelperEQ(const char* expected_expression, | |
|                                        const char* actual_expression, | |
|                                        BiggestInt expected, | |
|                                        BiggestInt actual); | |
| 
 | |
| // The helper class for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_EQ.  The template argument | |
| // lhs_is_null_literal is true iff the first argument to ASSERT_EQ() | |
| // is a null pointer literal.  The following default implementation is | |
| // for lhs_is_null_literal being false. | |
| template <bool lhs_is_null_literal> | |
| class EqHelper { | |
|  public: | |
|   // This templatized version is for the general case. | |
|   template <typename T1, typename T2> | |
|   static AssertionResult Compare(const char* expected_expression, | |
|                                  const char* actual_expression, | |
|                                  const T1& expected, | |
|                                  const T2& actual) { | |
|     return CmpHelperEQ(expected_expression, actual_expression, expected, | |
|                        actual); | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // With this overloaded version, we allow anonymous enums to be used | |
|   // in {ASSERT|EXPECT}_EQ when compiled with gcc 4, as anonymous | |
|   // enums can be implicitly cast to BiggestInt. | |
|   // | |
|   // Even though its body looks the same as the above version, we | |
|   // cannot merge the two, as it will make anonymous enums unhappy. | |
|   static AssertionResult Compare(const char* expected_expression, | |
|                                  const char* actual_expression, | |
|                                  BiggestInt expected, | |
|                                  BiggestInt actual) { | |
|     return CmpHelperEQ(expected_expression, actual_expression, expected, | |
|                        actual); | |
|   } | |
| }; | |
| 
 | |
| // This specialization is used when the first argument to ASSERT_EQ() | |
| // is a null pointer literal, like NULL, false, or 0. | |
| template <> | |
| class EqHelper<true> { | |
|  public: | |
|   // We define two overloaded versions of Compare().  The first | |
|   // version will be picked when the second argument to ASSERT_EQ() is | |
|   // NOT a pointer, e.g. ASSERT_EQ(0, AnIntFunction()) or | |
|   // EXPECT_EQ(false, a_bool). | |
|   template <typename T1, typename T2> | |
|   static AssertionResult Compare( | |
|       const char* expected_expression, | |
|       const char* actual_expression, | |
|       const T1& expected, | |
|       const T2& actual, | |
|       // The following line prevents this overload from being considered if T2 | |
|       // is not a pointer type.  We need this because ASSERT_EQ(NULL, my_ptr) | |
|       // expands to Compare("", "", NULL, my_ptr), which requires a conversion | |
|       // to match the Secret* in the other overload, which would otherwise make | |
|       // this template match better. | |
|       typename EnableIf<!is_pointer<T2>::value>::type* = 0) { | |
|     return CmpHelperEQ(expected_expression, actual_expression, expected, | |
|                        actual); | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // This version will be picked when the second argument to ASSERT_EQ() is a | |
|   // pointer, e.g. ASSERT_EQ(NULL, a_pointer). | |
|   template <typename T> | |
|   static AssertionResult Compare( | |
|       const char* expected_expression, | |
|       const char* actual_expression, | |
|       // We used to have a second template parameter instead of Secret*.  That | |
|       // template parameter would deduce to 'long', making this a better match | |
|       // than the first overload even without the first overload's EnableIf. | |
|       // Unfortunately, gcc with -Wconversion-null warns when "passing NULL to | |
|       // non-pointer argument" (even a deduced integral argument), so the old | |
|       // implementation caused warnings in user code. | |
|       Secret* /* expected (NULL) */, | |
|       T* actual) { | |
|     // We already know that 'expected' is a null pointer. | |
|     return CmpHelperEQ(expected_expression, actual_expression, | |
|                        static_cast<T*>(NULL), actual); | |
|   } | |
| }; | |
| 
 | |
| // A macro for implementing the helper functions needed to implement | |
| // ASSERT_?? and EXPECT_??.  It is here just to avoid copy-and-paste | |
| // of similar code. | |
| // | |
| // For each templatized helper function, we also define an overloaded | |
| // version for BiggestInt in order to reduce code bloat and allow | |
| // anonymous enums to be used with {ASSERT|EXPECT}_?? when compiled | |
| // with gcc 4. | |
| // | |
| // INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM. | |
| #define GTEST_IMPL_CMP_HELPER_(op_name, op)\ | |
| template <typename T1, typename T2>\ | |
| AssertionResult CmpHelper##op_name(const char* expr1, const char* expr2, \ | |
|                                    const T1& val1, const T2& val2) {\ | |
|   if (val1 op val2) {\ | |
|     return AssertionSuccess();\ | |
|   } else {\ | |
|     return AssertionFailure() \ | |
|         << "Expected: (" << expr1 << ") " #op " (" << expr2\ | |
|         << "), actual: " << FormatForComparisonFailureMessage(val1, val2)\ | |
|         << " vs " << FormatForComparisonFailureMessage(val2, val1);\ | |
|   }\ | |
| }\ | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult CmpHelper##op_name(\ | |
|     const char* expr1, const char* expr2, BiggestInt val1, BiggestInt val2) | |
|  | |
| // INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM. | |
|  | |
| // Implements the helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_NE | |
| GTEST_IMPL_CMP_HELPER_(NE, !=); | |
| // Implements the helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_LE | |
| GTEST_IMPL_CMP_HELPER_(LE, <=); | |
| // Implements the helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_LT | |
| GTEST_IMPL_CMP_HELPER_(LT, < ); | |
| // Implements the helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_GE | |
| GTEST_IMPL_CMP_HELPER_(GE, >=); | |
| // Implements the helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_GT | |
| GTEST_IMPL_CMP_HELPER_(GT, > ); | |
| 
 | |
| #undef GTEST_IMPL_CMP_HELPER_ | |
|  | |
| // The helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_STREQ. | |
| // | |
| // INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM. | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult CmpHelperSTREQ(const char* expected_expression, | |
|                                           const char* actual_expression, | |
|                                           const char* expected, | |
|                                           const char* actual); | |
| 
 | |
| // The helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_STRCASEEQ. | |
| // | |
| // INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM. | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult CmpHelperSTRCASEEQ(const char* expected_expression, | |
|                                               const char* actual_expression, | |
|                                               const char* expected, | |
|                                               const char* actual); | |
| 
 | |
| // The helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_STRNE. | |
| // | |
| // INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM. | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult CmpHelperSTRNE(const char* s1_expression, | |
|                                           const char* s2_expression, | |
|                                           const char* s1, | |
|                                           const char* s2); | |
| 
 | |
| // The helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_STRCASENE. | |
| // | |
| // INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM. | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult CmpHelperSTRCASENE(const char* s1_expression, | |
|                                               const char* s2_expression, | |
|                                               const char* s1, | |
|                                               const char* s2); | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| // Helper function for *_STREQ on wide strings. | |
| // | |
| // INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM. | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult CmpHelperSTREQ(const char* expected_expression, | |
|                                           const char* actual_expression, | |
|                                           const wchar_t* expected, | |
|                                           const wchar_t* actual); | |
| 
 | |
| // Helper function for *_STRNE on wide strings. | |
| // | |
| // INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM. | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult CmpHelperSTRNE(const char* s1_expression, | |
|                                           const char* s2_expression, | |
|                                           const wchar_t* s1, | |
|                                           const wchar_t* s2); | |
| 
 | |
| }  // namespace internal | |
|  | |
| // IsSubstring() and IsNotSubstring() are intended to be used as the | |
| // first argument to {EXPECT,ASSERT}_PRED_FORMAT2(), not by | |
| // themselves.  They check whether needle is a substring of haystack | |
| // (NULL is considered a substring of itself only), and return an | |
| // appropriate error message when they fail. | |
| // | |
| // The {needle,haystack}_expr arguments are the stringified | |
| // expressions that generated the two real arguments. | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult IsSubstring( | |
|     const char* needle_expr, const char* haystack_expr, | |
|     const char* needle, const char* haystack); | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult IsSubstring( | |
|     const char* needle_expr, const char* haystack_expr, | |
|     const wchar_t* needle, const wchar_t* haystack); | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult IsNotSubstring( | |
|     const char* needle_expr, const char* haystack_expr, | |
|     const char* needle, const char* haystack); | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult IsNotSubstring( | |
|     const char* needle_expr, const char* haystack_expr, | |
|     const wchar_t* needle, const wchar_t* haystack); | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult IsSubstring( | |
|     const char* needle_expr, const char* haystack_expr, | |
|     const ::std::string& needle, const ::std::string& haystack); | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult IsNotSubstring( | |
|     const char* needle_expr, const char* haystack_expr, | |
|     const ::std::string& needle, const ::std::string& haystack); | |
| 
 | |
| #if GTEST_HAS_STD_WSTRING | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult IsSubstring( | |
|     const char* needle_expr, const char* haystack_expr, | |
|     const ::std::wstring& needle, const ::std::wstring& haystack); | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult IsNotSubstring( | |
|     const char* needle_expr, const char* haystack_expr, | |
|     const ::std::wstring& needle, const ::std::wstring& haystack); | |
| #endif  // GTEST_HAS_STD_WSTRING | |
|  | |
| namespace internal { | |
| 
 | |
| // Helper template function for comparing floating-points. | |
| // | |
| // Template parameter: | |
| // | |
| //   RawType: the raw floating-point type (either float or double) | |
| // | |
| // INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM. | |
| template <typename RawType> | |
| AssertionResult CmpHelperFloatingPointEQ(const char* expected_expression, | |
|                                          const char* actual_expression, | |
|                                          RawType expected, | |
|                                          RawType actual) { | |
|   const FloatingPoint<RawType> lhs(expected), rhs(actual); | |
| 
 | |
|   if (lhs.AlmostEquals(rhs)) { | |
|     return AssertionSuccess(); | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   ::std::stringstream expected_ss; | |
|   expected_ss << std::setprecision(std::numeric_limits<RawType>::digits10 + 2) | |
|               << expected; | |
| 
 | |
|   ::std::stringstream actual_ss; | |
|   actual_ss << std::setprecision(std::numeric_limits<RawType>::digits10 + 2) | |
|             << actual; | |
| 
 | |
|   return EqFailure(expected_expression, | |
|                    actual_expression, | |
|                    StringStreamToString(&expected_ss), | |
|                    StringStreamToString(&actual_ss), | |
|                    false); | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Helper function for implementing ASSERT_NEAR. | |
| // | |
| // INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM. | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult DoubleNearPredFormat(const char* expr1, | |
|                                                 const char* expr2, | |
|                                                 const char* abs_error_expr, | |
|                                                 double val1, | |
|                                                 double val2, | |
|                                                 double abs_error); | |
| 
 | |
| // INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN USER CODE. | |
| // A class that enables one to stream messages to assertion macros | |
| class GTEST_API_ AssertHelper { | |
|  public: | |
|   // Constructor. | |
|   AssertHelper(TestPartResult::Type type, | |
|                const char* file, | |
|                int line, | |
|                const char* message); | |
|   ~AssertHelper(); | |
| 
 | |
|   // Message assignment is a semantic trick to enable assertion | |
|   // streaming; see the GTEST_MESSAGE_ macro below. | |
|   void operator=(const Message& message) const; | |
| 
 | |
|  private: | |
|   // We put our data in a struct so that the size of the AssertHelper class can | |
|   // be as small as possible.  This is important because gcc is incapable of | |
|   // re-using stack space even for temporary variables, so every EXPECT_EQ | |
|   // reserves stack space for another AssertHelper. | |
|   struct AssertHelperData { | |
|     AssertHelperData(TestPartResult::Type t, | |
|                      const char* srcfile, | |
|                      int line_num, | |
|                      const char* msg) | |
|         : type(t), file(srcfile), line(line_num), message(msg) { } | |
| 
 | |
|     TestPartResult::Type const type; | |
|     const char*        const file; | |
|     int                const line; | |
|     String             const message; | |
| 
 | |
|    private: | |
|     GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(AssertHelperData); | |
|   }; | |
| 
 | |
|   AssertHelperData* const data_; | |
| 
 | |
|   GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(AssertHelper); | |
| }; | |
| 
 | |
| }  // namespace internal | |
|  | |
| #if GTEST_HAS_PARAM_TEST | |
| // The pure interface class that all value-parameterized tests inherit from. | |
| // A value-parameterized class must inherit from both ::testing::Test and | |
| // ::testing::WithParamInterface. In most cases that just means inheriting | |
| // from ::testing::TestWithParam, but more complicated test hierarchies | |
| // may need to inherit from Test and WithParamInterface at different levels. | |
| // | |
| // This interface has support for accessing the test parameter value via | |
| // the GetParam() method. | |
| // | |
| // Use it with one of the parameter generator defining functions, like Range(), | |
| // Values(), ValuesIn(), Bool(), and Combine(). | |
| // | |
| // class FooTest : public ::testing::TestWithParam<int> { | |
| //  protected: | |
| //   FooTest() { | |
| //     // Can use GetParam() here. | |
| //   } | |
| //   virtual ~FooTest() { | |
| //     // Can use GetParam() here. | |
| //   } | |
| //   virtual void SetUp() { | |
| //     // Can use GetParam() here. | |
| //   } | |
| //   virtual void TearDown { | |
| //     // Can use GetParam() here. | |
| //   } | |
| // }; | |
| // TEST_P(FooTest, DoesBar) { | |
| //   // Can use GetParam() method here. | |
| //   Foo foo; | |
| //   ASSERT_TRUE(foo.DoesBar(GetParam())); | |
| // } | |
| // INSTANTIATE_TEST_CASE_P(OneToTenRange, FooTest, ::testing::Range(1, 10)); | |
|  | |
| template <typename T> | |
| class WithParamInterface { | |
|  public: | |
|   typedef T ParamType; | |
|   virtual ~WithParamInterface() {} | |
| 
 | |
|   // The current parameter value. Is also available in the test fixture's | |
|   // constructor. This member function is non-static, even though it only | |
|   // references static data, to reduce the opportunity for incorrect uses | |
|   // like writing 'WithParamInterface<bool>::GetParam()' for a test that | |
|   // uses a fixture whose parameter type is int. | |
|   const ParamType& GetParam() const { return *parameter_; } | |
| 
 | |
|  private: | |
|   // Sets parameter value. The caller is responsible for making sure the value | |
|   // remains alive and unchanged throughout the current test. | |
|   static void SetParam(const ParamType* parameter) { | |
|     parameter_ = parameter; | |
|   } | |
| 
 | |
|   // Static value used for accessing parameter during a test lifetime. | |
|   static const ParamType* parameter_; | |
| 
 | |
|   // TestClass must be a subclass of WithParamInterface<T> and Test. | |
|   template <class TestClass> friend class internal::ParameterizedTestFactory; | |
| }; | |
| 
 | |
| template <typename T> | |
| const T* WithParamInterface<T>::parameter_ = NULL; | |
| 
 | |
| // Most value-parameterized classes can ignore the existence of | |
| // WithParamInterface, and can just inherit from ::testing::TestWithParam. | |
|  | |
| template <typename T> | |
| class TestWithParam : public Test, public WithParamInterface<T> { | |
| }; | |
| 
 | |
| #endif  // GTEST_HAS_PARAM_TEST | |
|  | |
| // Macros for indicating success/failure in test code. | |
|  | |
| // ADD_FAILURE unconditionally adds a failure to the current test. | |
| // SUCCEED generates a success - it doesn't automatically make the | |
| // current test successful, as a test is only successful when it has | |
| // no failure. | |
| // | |
| // EXPECT_* verifies that a certain condition is satisfied.  If not, | |
| // it behaves like ADD_FAILURE.  In particular: | |
| // | |
| //   EXPECT_TRUE  verifies that a Boolean condition is true. | |
| //   EXPECT_FALSE verifies that a Boolean condition is false. | |
| // | |
| // FAIL and ASSERT_* are similar to ADD_FAILURE and EXPECT_*, except | |
| // that they will also abort the current function on failure.  People | |
| // usually want the fail-fast behavior of FAIL and ASSERT_*, but those | |
| // writing data-driven tests often find themselves using ADD_FAILURE | |
| // and EXPECT_* more. | |
| // | |
| // Examples: | |
| // | |
| //   EXPECT_TRUE(server.StatusIsOK()); | |
| //   ASSERT_FALSE(server.HasPendingRequest(port)) | |
| //       << "There are still pending requests " << "on port " << port; | |
|  | |
| // Generates a nonfatal failure with a generic message. | |
| #define ADD_FAILURE() GTEST_NONFATAL_FAILURE_("Failed") | |
|  | |
| // Generates a nonfatal failure at the given source file location with | |
| // a generic message. | |
| #define ADD_FAILURE_AT(file, line) \ | |
|   GTEST_MESSAGE_AT_(file, line, "Failed", \ | |
|                     ::testing::TestPartResult::kNonFatalFailure) | |
|  | |
| // Generates a fatal failure with a generic message. | |
| #define GTEST_FAIL() GTEST_FATAL_FAILURE_("Failed") | |
|  | |
| // Define this macro to 1 to omit the definition of FAIL(), which is a | |
| // generic name and clashes with some other libraries. | |
| #if !GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_FAIL | |
| # define FAIL() GTEST_FAIL() | |
| #endif | |
|  | |
| // Generates a success with a generic message. | |
| #define GTEST_SUCCEED() GTEST_SUCCESS_("Succeeded") | |
|  | |
| // Define this macro to 1 to omit the definition of SUCCEED(), which | |
| // is a generic name and clashes with some other libraries. | |
| #if !GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_SUCCEED | |
| # define SUCCEED() GTEST_SUCCEED() | |
| #endif | |
|  | |
| // Macros for testing exceptions. | |
| // | |
| //    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_THROW(statement, expected_exception): | |
| //         Tests that the statement throws the expected exception. | |
| //    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_NO_THROW(statement): | |
| //         Tests that the statement doesn't throw any exception. | |
| //    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_ANY_THROW(statement): | |
| //         Tests that the statement throws an exception. | |
|  | |
| #define EXPECT_THROW(statement, expected_exception) \ | |
|   GTEST_TEST_THROW_(statement, expected_exception, GTEST_NONFATAL_FAILURE_) | |
| #define EXPECT_NO_THROW(statement) \ | |
|   GTEST_TEST_NO_THROW_(statement, GTEST_NONFATAL_FAILURE_) | |
| #define EXPECT_ANY_THROW(statement) \ | |
|   GTEST_TEST_ANY_THROW_(statement, GTEST_NONFATAL_FAILURE_) | |
| #define ASSERT_THROW(statement, expected_exception) \ | |
|   GTEST_TEST_THROW_(statement, expected_exception, GTEST_FATAL_FAILURE_) | |
| #define ASSERT_NO_THROW(statement) \ | |
|   GTEST_TEST_NO_THROW_(statement, GTEST_FATAL_FAILURE_) | |
| #define ASSERT_ANY_THROW(statement) \ | |
|   GTEST_TEST_ANY_THROW_(statement, GTEST_FATAL_FAILURE_) | |
|  | |
| // Boolean assertions. Condition can be either a Boolean expression or an | |
| // AssertionResult. For more information on how to use AssertionResult with | |
| // these macros see comments on that class. | |
| #define EXPECT_TRUE(condition) \ | |
|   GTEST_TEST_BOOLEAN_(condition, #condition, false, true, \ | |
|                       GTEST_NONFATAL_FAILURE_) | |
| #define EXPECT_FALSE(condition) \ | |
|   GTEST_TEST_BOOLEAN_(!(condition), #condition, true, false, \ | |
|                       GTEST_NONFATAL_FAILURE_) | |
| #define ASSERT_TRUE(condition) \ | |
|   GTEST_TEST_BOOLEAN_(condition, #condition, false, true, \ | |
|                       GTEST_FATAL_FAILURE_) | |
| #define ASSERT_FALSE(condition) \ | |
|   GTEST_TEST_BOOLEAN_(!(condition), #condition, true, false, \ | |
|                       GTEST_FATAL_FAILURE_) | |
|  | |
| // Includes the auto-generated header that implements a family of | |
| // generic predicate assertion macros. | |
| #include "gtest/gtest_pred_impl.h" | |
|  | |
| // Macros for testing equalities and inequalities. | |
| // | |
| //    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_EQ(expected, actual): Tests that expected == actual | |
| //    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_NE(v1, v2):           Tests that v1 != v2 | |
| //    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_LT(v1, v2):           Tests that v1 < v2 | |
| //    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_LE(v1, v2):           Tests that v1 <= v2 | |
| //    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_GT(v1, v2):           Tests that v1 > v2 | |
| //    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_GE(v1, v2):           Tests that v1 >= v2 | |
| // | |
| // When they are not, Google Test prints both the tested expressions and | |
| // their actual values.  The values must be compatible built-in types, | |
| // or you will get a compiler error.  By "compatible" we mean that the | |
| // values can be compared by the respective operator. | |
| // | |
| // Note: | |
| // | |
| //   1. It is possible to make a user-defined type work with | |
| //   {ASSERT|EXPECT}_??(), but that requires overloading the | |
| //   comparison operators and is thus discouraged by the Google C++ | |
| //   Usage Guide.  Therefore, you are advised to use the | |
| //   {ASSERT|EXPECT}_TRUE() macro to assert that two objects are | |
| //   equal. | |
| // | |
| //   2. The {ASSERT|EXPECT}_??() macros do pointer comparisons on | |
| //   pointers (in particular, C strings).  Therefore, if you use it | |
| //   with two C strings, you are testing how their locations in memory | |
| //   are related, not how their content is related.  To compare two C | |
| //   strings by content, use {ASSERT|EXPECT}_STR*(). | |
| // | |
| //   3. {ASSERT|EXPECT}_EQ(expected, actual) is preferred to | |
| //   {ASSERT|EXPECT}_TRUE(expected == actual), as the former tells you | |
| //   what the actual value is when it fails, and similarly for the | |
| //   other comparisons. | |
| // | |
| //   4. Do not depend on the order in which {ASSERT|EXPECT}_??() | |
| //   evaluate their arguments, which is undefined. | |
| // | |
| //   5. These macros evaluate their arguments exactly once. | |
| // | |
| // Examples: | |
| // | |
| //   EXPECT_NE(5, Foo()); | |
| //   EXPECT_EQ(NULL, a_pointer); | |
| //   ASSERT_LT(i, array_size); | |
| //   ASSERT_GT(records.size(), 0) << "There is no record left."; | |
|  | |
| #define EXPECT_EQ(expected, actual) \ | |
|   EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal:: \ | |
|                       EqHelper<GTEST_IS_NULL_LITERAL_(expected)>::Compare, \ | |
|                       expected, actual) | |
| #define EXPECT_NE(expected, actual) \ | |
|   EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperNE, expected, actual) | |
| #define EXPECT_LE(val1, val2) \ | |
|   EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperLE, val1, val2) | |
| #define EXPECT_LT(val1, val2) \ | |
|   EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperLT, val1, val2) | |
| #define EXPECT_GE(val1, val2) \ | |
|   EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperGE, val1, val2) | |
| #define EXPECT_GT(val1, val2) \ | |
|   EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperGT, val1, val2) | |
|  | |
| #define GTEST_ASSERT_EQ(expected, actual) \ | |
|   ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal:: \ | |
|                       EqHelper<GTEST_IS_NULL_LITERAL_(expected)>::Compare, \ | |
|                       expected, actual) | |
| #define GTEST_ASSERT_NE(val1, val2) \ | |
|   ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperNE, val1, val2) | |
| #define GTEST_ASSERT_LE(val1, val2) \ | |
|   ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperLE, val1, val2) | |
| #define GTEST_ASSERT_LT(val1, val2) \ | |
|   ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperLT, val1, val2) | |
| #define GTEST_ASSERT_GE(val1, val2) \ | |
|   ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperGE, val1, val2) | |
| #define GTEST_ASSERT_GT(val1, val2) \ | |
|   ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperGT, val1, val2) | |
|  | |
| // Define macro GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_ASSERT_XY to 1 to omit the definition of | |
| // ASSERT_XY(), which clashes with some users' own code. | |
|  | |
| #if !GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_ASSERT_EQ | |
| # define ASSERT_EQ(val1, val2) GTEST_ASSERT_EQ(val1, val2) | |
| #endif | |
|  | |
| #if !GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_ASSERT_NE | |
| # define ASSERT_NE(val1, val2) GTEST_ASSERT_NE(val1, val2) | |
| #endif | |
|  | |
| #if !GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_ASSERT_LE | |
| # define ASSERT_LE(val1, val2) GTEST_ASSERT_LE(val1, val2) | |
| #endif | |
|  | |
| #if !GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_ASSERT_LT | |
| # define ASSERT_LT(val1, val2) GTEST_ASSERT_LT(val1, val2) | |
| #endif | |
|  | |
| #if !GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_ASSERT_GE | |
| # define ASSERT_GE(val1, val2) GTEST_ASSERT_GE(val1, val2) | |
| #endif | |
|  | |
| #if !GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_ASSERT_GT | |
| # define ASSERT_GT(val1, val2) GTEST_ASSERT_GT(val1, val2) | |
| #endif | |
|  | |
| // C String Comparisons.  All tests treat NULL and any non-NULL string | |
| // as different.  Two NULLs are equal. | |
| // | |
| //    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_STREQ(s1, s2):     Tests that s1 == s2 | |
| //    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_STRNE(s1, s2):     Tests that s1 != s2 | |
| //    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_STRCASEEQ(s1, s2): Tests that s1 == s2, ignoring case | |
| //    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_STRCASENE(s1, s2): Tests that s1 != s2, ignoring case | |
| // | |
| // For wide or narrow string objects, you can use the | |
| // {ASSERT|EXPECT}_??() macros. | |
| // | |
| // Don't depend on the order in which the arguments are evaluated, | |
| // which is undefined. | |
| // | |
| // These macros evaluate their arguments exactly once. | |
|  | |
| #define EXPECT_STREQ(expected, actual) \ | |
|   EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperSTREQ, expected, actual) | |
| #define EXPECT_STRNE(s1, s2) \ | |
|   EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperSTRNE, s1, s2) | |
| #define EXPECT_STRCASEEQ(expected, actual) \ | |
|   EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperSTRCASEEQ, expected, actual) | |
| #define EXPECT_STRCASENE(s1, s2)\ | |
|   EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperSTRCASENE, s1, s2) | |
|  | |
| #define ASSERT_STREQ(expected, actual) \ | |
|   ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperSTREQ, expected, actual) | |
| #define ASSERT_STRNE(s1, s2) \ | |
|   ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperSTRNE, s1, s2) | |
| #define ASSERT_STRCASEEQ(expected, actual) \ | |
|   ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperSTRCASEEQ, expected, actual) | |
| #define ASSERT_STRCASENE(s1, s2)\ | |
|   ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperSTRCASENE, s1, s2) | |
|  | |
| // Macros for comparing floating-point numbers. | |
| // | |
| //    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_FLOAT_EQ(expected, actual): | |
| //         Tests that two float values are almost equal. | |
| //    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_DOUBLE_EQ(expected, actual): | |
| //         Tests that two double values are almost equal. | |
| //    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_NEAR(v1, v2, abs_error): | |
| //         Tests that v1 and v2 are within the given distance to each other. | |
| // | |
| // Google Test uses ULP-based comparison to automatically pick a default | |
| // error bound that is appropriate for the operands.  See the | |
| // FloatingPoint template class in gtest-internal.h if you are | |
| // interested in the implementation details. | |
|  | |
| #define EXPECT_FLOAT_EQ(expected, actual)\ | |
|   EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperFloatingPointEQ<float>, \ | |
|                       expected, actual) | |
|  | |
| #define EXPECT_DOUBLE_EQ(expected, actual)\ | |
|   EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperFloatingPointEQ<double>, \ | |
|                       expected, actual) | |
|  | |
| #define ASSERT_FLOAT_EQ(expected, actual)\ | |
|   ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperFloatingPointEQ<float>, \ | |
|                       expected, actual) | |
|  | |
| #define ASSERT_DOUBLE_EQ(expected, actual)\ | |
|   ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperFloatingPointEQ<double>, \ | |
|                       expected, actual) | |
|  | |
| #define EXPECT_NEAR(val1, val2, abs_error)\ | |
|   EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT3(::testing::internal::DoubleNearPredFormat, \ | |
|                       val1, val2, abs_error) | |
|  | |
| #define ASSERT_NEAR(val1, val2, abs_error)\ | |
|   ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT3(::testing::internal::DoubleNearPredFormat, \ | |
|                       val1, val2, abs_error) | |
|  | |
| // These predicate format functions work on floating-point values, and | |
| // can be used in {ASSERT|EXPECT}_PRED_FORMAT2*(), e.g. | |
| // | |
| //   EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(testing::DoubleLE, Foo(), 5.0); | |
|  | |
| // Asserts that val1 is less than, or almost equal to, val2.  Fails | |
| // otherwise.  In particular, it fails if either val1 or val2 is NaN. | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult FloatLE(const char* expr1, const char* expr2, | |
|                                    float val1, float val2); | |
| GTEST_API_ AssertionResult DoubleLE(const char* expr1, const char* expr2, | |
|                                     double val1, double val2); | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| #if GTEST_OS_WINDOWS | |
|  | |
| // Macros that test for HRESULT failure and success, these are only useful | |
| // on Windows, and rely on Windows SDK macros and APIs to compile. | |
| // | |
| //    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_HRESULT_{SUCCEEDED|FAILED}(expr) | |
| // | |
| // When expr unexpectedly fails or succeeds, Google Test prints the | |
| // expected result and the actual result with both a human-readable | |
| // string representation of the error, if available, as well as the | |
| // hex result code. | |
| # define EXPECT_HRESULT_SUCCEEDED(expr) \ | |
|     EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT1(::testing::internal::IsHRESULTSuccess, (expr)) | |
|  | |
| # define ASSERT_HRESULT_SUCCEEDED(expr) \ | |
|     ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT1(::testing::internal::IsHRESULTSuccess, (expr)) | |
|  | |
| # define EXPECT_HRESULT_FAILED(expr) \ | |
|     EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT1(::testing::internal::IsHRESULTFailure, (expr)) | |
|  | |
| # define ASSERT_HRESULT_FAILED(expr) \ | |
|     ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT1(::testing::internal::IsHRESULTFailure, (expr)) | |
|  | |
| #endif  // GTEST_OS_WINDOWS | |
|  | |
| // Macros that execute statement and check that it doesn't generate new fatal | |
| // failures in the current thread. | |
| // | |
| //   * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_NO_FATAL_FAILURE(statement); | |
| // | |
| // Examples: | |
| // | |
| //   EXPECT_NO_FATAL_FAILURE(Process()); | |
| //   ASSERT_NO_FATAL_FAILURE(Process()) << "Process() failed"; | |
| // | |
| #define ASSERT_NO_FATAL_FAILURE(statement) \ | |
|     GTEST_TEST_NO_FATAL_FAILURE_(statement, GTEST_FATAL_FAILURE_) | |
| #define EXPECT_NO_FATAL_FAILURE(statement) \ | |
|     GTEST_TEST_NO_FATAL_FAILURE_(statement, GTEST_NONFATAL_FAILURE_) | |
|  | |
| // Causes a trace (including the source file path, the current line | |
| // number, and the given message) to be included in every test failure | |
| // message generated by code in the current scope.  The effect is | |
| // undone when the control leaves the current scope. | |
| // | |
| // The message argument can be anything streamable to std::ostream. | |
| // | |
| // In the implementation, we include the current line number as part | |
| // of the dummy variable name, thus allowing multiple SCOPED_TRACE()s | |
| // to appear in the same block - as long as they are on different | |
| // lines. | |
| #define SCOPED_TRACE(message) \ | |
|   ::testing::internal::ScopedTrace GTEST_CONCAT_TOKEN_(gtest_trace_, __LINE__)(\ | |
|     __FILE__, __LINE__, ::testing::Message() << (message)) | |
|  | |
| // Compile-time assertion for type equality. | |
| // StaticAssertTypeEq<type1, type2>() compiles iff type1 and type2 are | |
| // the same type.  The value it returns is not interesting. | |
| // | |
| // Instead of making StaticAssertTypeEq a class template, we make it a | |
| // function template that invokes a helper class template.  This | |
| // prevents a user from misusing StaticAssertTypeEq<T1, T2> by | |
| // defining objects of that type. | |
| // | |
| // CAVEAT: | |
| // | |
| // When used inside a method of a class template, | |
| // StaticAssertTypeEq<T1, T2>() is effective ONLY IF the method is | |
| // instantiated.  For example, given: | |
| // | |
| //   template <typename T> class Foo { | |
| //    public: | |
| //     void Bar() { testing::StaticAssertTypeEq<int, T>(); } | |
| //   }; | |
| // | |
| // the code: | |
| // | |
| //   void Test1() { Foo<bool> foo; } | |
| // | |
| // will NOT generate a compiler error, as Foo<bool>::Bar() is never | |
| // actually instantiated.  Instead, you need: | |
| // | |
| //   void Test2() { Foo<bool> foo; foo.Bar(); } | |
| // | |
| // to cause a compiler error. | |
| template <typename T1, typename T2> | |
| bool StaticAssertTypeEq() { | |
|   (void)internal::StaticAssertTypeEqHelper<T1, T2>(); | |
|   return true; | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Defines a test. | |
| // | |
| // The first parameter is the name of the test case, and the second | |
| // parameter is the name of the test within the test case. | |
| // | |
| // The convention is to end the test case name with "Test".  For | |
| // example, a test case for the Foo class can be named FooTest. | |
| // | |
| // The user should put his test code between braces after using this | |
| // macro.  Example: | |
| // | |
| //   TEST(FooTest, InitializesCorrectly) { | |
| //     Foo foo; | |
| //     EXPECT_TRUE(foo.StatusIsOK()); | |
| //   } | |
|  | |
| // Note that we call GetTestTypeId() instead of GetTypeId< | |
| // ::testing::Test>() here to get the type ID of testing::Test.  This | |
| // is to work around a suspected linker bug when using Google Test as | |
| // a framework on Mac OS X.  The bug causes GetTypeId< | |
| // ::testing::Test>() to return different values depending on whether | |
| // the call is from the Google Test framework itself or from user test | |
| // code.  GetTestTypeId() is guaranteed to always return the same | |
| // value, as it always calls GetTypeId<>() from the Google Test | |
| // framework. | |
| #define GTEST_TEST(test_case_name, test_name)\ | |
|   GTEST_TEST_(test_case_name, test_name, \ | |
|               ::testing::Test, ::testing::internal::GetTestTypeId()) | |
|  | |
| // Define this macro to 1 to omit the definition of TEST(), which | |
| // is a generic name and clashes with some other libraries. | |
| #if !GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_TEST | |
| # define TEST(test_case_name, test_name) GTEST_TEST(test_case_name, test_name) | |
| #endif | |
|  | |
| // Defines a test that uses a test fixture. | |
| // | |
| // The first parameter is the name of the test fixture class, which | |
| // also doubles as the test case name.  The second parameter is the | |
| // name of the test within the test case. | |
| // | |
| // A test fixture class must be declared earlier.  The user should put | |
| // his test code between braces after using this macro.  Example: | |
| // | |
| //   class FooTest : public testing::Test { | |
| //    protected: | |
| //     virtual void SetUp() { b_.AddElement(3); } | |
| // | |
| //     Foo a_; | |
| //     Foo b_; | |
| //   }; | |
| // | |
| //   TEST_F(FooTest, InitializesCorrectly) { | |
| //     EXPECT_TRUE(a_.StatusIsOK()); | |
| //   } | |
| // | |
| //   TEST_F(FooTest, ReturnsElementCountCorrectly) { | |
| //     EXPECT_EQ(0, a_.size()); | |
| //     EXPECT_EQ(1, b_.size()); | |
| //   } | |
|  | |
| #define TEST_F(test_fixture, test_name)\ | |
|   GTEST_TEST_(test_fixture, test_name, test_fixture, \ | |
|               ::testing::internal::GetTypeId<test_fixture>()) | |
|  | |
| // Use this macro in main() to run all tests.  It returns 0 if all | |
| // tests are successful, or 1 otherwise. | |
| // | |
| // RUN_ALL_TESTS() should be invoked after the command line has been | |
| // parsed by InitGoogleTest(). | |
|  | |
| #define RUN_ALL_TESTS()\ | |
|   (::testing::UnitTest::GetInstance()->Run()) | |
|  | |
| }  // namespace testing | |
|  | |
| #endif  // GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_GTEST_H_
 |