Index: ext/googletest/googletest/include/gtest/gtest-death-test.h =================================================================== diff -u -N -r4a481bbe77043e0bda2435c6d62a02700b3e46c5 -r3d5880c6661c3ed500e0c1c739a923ae9ede0364 --- ext/googletest/googletest/include/gtest/gtest-death-test.h (.../gtest-death-test.h) (revision 4a481bbe77043e0bda2435c6d62a02700b3e46c5) +++ ext/googletest/googletest/include/gtest/gtest-death-test.h (.../gtest-death-test.h) (revision 3d5880c6661c3ed500e0c1c739a923ae9ede0364) @@ -26,14 +26,14 @@ // 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 and Mocking Framework (Google Test) // -// The Google C++ Testing Framework (Google Test) -// // This header file defines the public API for death tests. It is // #included by gtest.h so a user doesn't need to include this // directly. +// GOOGLETEST_CM0001 DO NOT DELETE #ifndef GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_GTEST_DEATH_TEST_H_ #define GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_GTEST_DEATH_TEST_H_ @@ -99,10 +99,11 @@ // // On the regular expressions used in death tests: // +// GOOGLETEST_CM0005 DO NOT DELETE // On POSIX-compliant systems (*nix), we use the library, // which uses the POSIX extended regex syntax. // -// On other platforms (e.g. Windows), we only support a simple regex +// On other platforms (e.g. Windows or Mac), we only support a simple regex // syntax implemented as part of Google Test. This limited // implementation should be enough most of the time when writing // death tests; though it lacks many features you can find in PCRE @@ -160,7 +161,7 @@ // is rarely a problem as people usually don't put the test binary // directory in PATH. // -// TODO(wan@google.com): make thread-safe death tests search the PATH. +// FIXME: make thread-safe death tests search the PATH. // Asserts that a given statement causes the program to exit, with an // integer exit status that satisfies predicate, and emitting error output @@ -198,9 +199,10 @@ const int exit_code_; }; -# if !GTEST_OS_WINDOWS +# if !GTEST_OS_WINDOWS && !GTEST_OS_FUCHSIA // Tests that an exit code describes an exit due to termination by a // given signal. +// GOOGLETEST_CM0006 DO NOT DELETE class GTEST_API_ KilledBySignal { public: explicit KilledBySignal(int signum); @@ -272,6 +274,54 @@ # endif // NDEBUG for EXPECT_DEBUG_DEATH #endif // GTEST_HAS_DEATH_TEST +// This macro is used for implementing macros such as +// EXPECT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED and ASSERT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED on systems where +// death tests are not supported. Those macros must compile on such systems +// iff EXPECT_DEATH and ASSERT_DEATH compile with the same parameters on +// systems that support death tests. This allows one to write such a macro +// on a system that does not support death tests and be sure that it will +// compile on a death-test supporting system. It is exposed publicly so that +// systems that have death-tests with stricter requirements than +// GTEST_HAS_DEATH_TEST can write their own equivalent of +// EXPECT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED and ASSERT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED. +// +// Parameters: +// statement - A statement that a macro such as EXPECT_DEATH would test +// for program termination. This macro has to make sure this +// statement is compiled but not executed, to ensure that +// EXPECT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED compiles with a certain +// parameter iff EXPECT_DEATH compiles with it. +// regex - A regex that a macro such as EXPECT_DEATH would use to test +// the output of statement. This parameter has to be +// compiled but not evaluated by this macro, to ensure that +// this macro only accepts expressions that a macro such as +// EXPECT_DEATH would accept. +// terminator - Must be an empty statement for EXPECT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED +// and a return statement for ASSERT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED. +// This ensures that ASSERT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED will not +// compile inside functions where ASSERT_DEATH doesn't +// compile. +// +// The branch that has an always false condition is used to ensure that +// statement and regex are compiled (and thus syntactically correct) but +// never executed. The unreachable code macro protects the terminator +// statement from generating an 'unreachable code' warning in case +// statement unconditionally returns or throws. The Message constructor at +// the end allows the syntax of streaming additional messages into the +// macro, for compilational compatibility with EXPECT_DEATH/ASSERT_DEATH. +# define GTEST_UNSUPPORTED_DEATH_TEST(statement, regex, terminator) \ + GTEST_AMBIGUOUS_ELSE_BLOCKER_ \ + if (::testing::internal::AlwaysTrue()) { \ + GTEST_LOG_(WARNING) \ + << "Death tests are not supported on this platform.\n" \ + << "Statement '" #statement "' cannot be verified."; \ + } else if (::testing::internal::AlwaysFalse()) { \ + ::testing::internal::RE::PartialMatch(".*", (regex)); \ + GTEST_SUPPRESS_UNREACHABLE_CODE_WARNING_BELOW_(statement); \ + terminator; \ + } else \ + ::testing::Message() + // EXPECT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED(statement, regex) and // ASSERT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED(statement, regex) expand to real death tests if // death tests are supported; otherwise they just issue a warning. This is @@ -284,9 +334,9 @@ ASSERT_DEATH(statement, regex) #else # define EXPECT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED(statement, regex) \ - GTEST_UNSUPPORTED_DEATH_TEST_(statement, regex, ) + GTEST_UNSUPPORTED_DEATH_TEST(statement, regex, ) # define ASSERT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED(statement, regex) \ - GTEST_UNSUPPORTED_DEATH_TEST_(statement, regex, return) + GTEST_UNSUPPORTED_DEATH_TEST(statement, regex, return) #endif } // namespace testing