1// Copyright 2005, Google Inc.
2// All rights reserved.
3//
4// Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
5// modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
6// met:
7//
8//     * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
9// notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
10//     * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
11// copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer
12// in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
13// distribution.
14//     * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its
15// contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
16// this software without specific prior written permission.
17//
18// THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
19// "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
20// LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
21// A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
22// OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
23// SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
24// LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
25// DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
26// THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
27// (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
28// OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
29//
30// Authors: wan@google.com (Zhanyong Wan)
31//
32// Low-level types and utilities for porting Google Test to various
33// platforms.  They are subject to change without notice.  DO NOT USE
34// THEM IN USER CODE.
35//
36// This file is fundamental to Google Test.  All other Google Test source
37// files are expected to #include this.  Therefore, it cannot #include
38// any other Google Test header.
39
40#ifndef GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_INTERNAL_GTEST_PORT_H_
41#define GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_INTERNAL_GTEST_PORT_H_
42
43// The user can define the following macros in the build script to
44// control Google Test's behavior.  If the user doesn't define a macro
45// in this list, Google Test will define it.
46//
47//   GTEST_HAS_CLONE          - Define it to 1/0 to indicate that clone(2)
48//                              is/isn't available.
49//   GTEST_HAS_EXCEPTIONS     - Define it to 1/0 to indicate that exceptions
50//                              are enabled.
51//   GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING  - Define it to 1/0 to indicate that ::string
52//                              is/isn't available (some systems define
53//                              ::string, which is different to std::string).
54//   GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_WSTRING - Define it to 1/0 to indicate that ::string
55//                              is/isn't available (some systems define
56//                              ::wstring, which is different to std::wstring).
57//   GTEST_HAS_POSIX_RE       - Define it to 1/0 to indicate that POSIX regular
58//                              expressions are/aren't available.
59//   GTEST_HAS_PTHREAD        - Define it to 1/0 to indicate that <pthread.h>
60//                              is/isn't available.
61//   GTEST_HAS_RTTI           - Define it to 1/0 to indicate that RTTI is/isn't
62//                              enabled.
63//   GTEST_HAS_STD_WSTRING    - Define it to 1/0 to indicate that
64//                              std::wstring does/doesn't work (Google Test can
65//                              be used where std::wstring is unavailable).
66//   GTEST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE      - Define it to 1/0 to indicate tr1::tuple
67//                              is/isn't available.
68//   GTEST_HAS_SEH            - Define it to 1/0 to indicate whether the
69//                              compiler supports Microsoft's "Structured
70//                              Exception Handling".
71//   GTEST_HAS_STREAM_REDIRECTION
72//                            - Define it to 1/0 to indicate whether the
73//                              platform supports I/O stream redirection using
74//                              dup() and dup2().
75//   GTEST_USE_OWN_TR1_TUPLE  - Define it to 1/0 to indicate whether Google
76//                              Test's own tr1 tuple implementation should be
77//                              used.  Unused when the user sets
78//                              GTEST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE to 0.
79//   GTEST_LANG_CXX11         - Define it to 1/0 to indicate that Google Test
80//                              is building in C++11/C++98 mode.
81//   GTEST_LINKED_AS_SHARED_LIBRARY
82//                            - Define to 1 when compiling tests that use
83//                              Google Test as a shared library (known as
84//                              DLL on Windows).
85//   GTEST_CREATE_SHARED_LIBRARY
86//                            - Define to 1 when compiling Google Test itself
87//                              as a shared library.
88
89// This header defines the following utilities:
90//
91// Macros indicating the current platform (defined to 1 if compiled on
92// the given platform; otherwise undefined):
93//   GTEST_OS_AIX      - IBM AIX
94//   GTEST_OS_CYGWIN   - Cygwin
95//   GTEST_OS_HPUX     - HP-UX
96//   GTEST_OS_LINUX    - Linux
97//     GTEST_OS_LINUX_ANDROID - Google Android
98//   GTEST_OS_MAC      - Mac OS X
99//     GTEST_OS_IOS    - iOS
100//       GTEST_OS_IOS_SIMULATOR - iOS simulator
101//   GTEST_OS_NACL     - Google Native Client (NaCl)
102//   GTEST_OS_OPENBSD  - OpenBSD
103//   GTEST_OS_QNX      - QNX
104//   GTEST_OS_SOLARIS  - Sun Solaris
105//   GTEST_OS_SYMBIAN  - Symbian
106//   GTEST_OS_WINDOWS  - Windows (Desktop, MinGW, or Mobile)
107//     GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_DESKTOP  - Windows Desktop
108//     GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MINGW    - MinGW
109//     GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE   - Windows Mobile
110//   GTEST_OS_ZOS      - z/OS
111//
112// Among the platforms, Cygwin, Linux, Max OS X, and Windows have the
113// most stable support.  Since core members of the Google Test project
114// don't have access to other platforms, support for them may be less
115// stable.  If you notice any problems on your platform, please notify
116// googletestframework@googlegroups.com (patches for fixing them are
117// even more welcome!).
118//
119// Note that it is possible that none of the GTEST_OS_* macros are defined.
120//
121// Macros indicating available Google Test features (defined to 1 if
122// the corresponding feature is supported; otherwise undefined):
123//   GTEST_HAS_COMBINE      - the Combine() function (for value-parameterized
124//                            tests)
125//   GTEST_HAS_DEATH_TEST   - death tests
126//   GTEST_HAS_PARAM_TEST   - value-parameterized tests
127//   GTEST_HAS_TYPED_TEST   - typed tests
128//   GTEST_HAS_TYPED_TEST_P - type-parameterized tests
129//   GTEST_USES_POSIX_RE    - enhanced POSIX regex is used. Do not confuse with
130//                            GTEST_HAS_POSIX_RE (see above) which users can
131//                            define themselves.
132//   GTEST_USES_SIMPLE_RE   - our own simple regex is used;
133//                            the above two are mutually exclusive.
134//   GTEST_CAN_COMPARE_NULL - accepts untyped NULL in EXPECT_EQ().
135//
136// Macros for basic C++ coding:
137//   GTEST_AMBIGUOUS_ELSE_BLOCKER_ - for disabling a gcc warning.
138//   GTEST_ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED_  - declares that a class' instances or a
139//                              variable don't have to be used.
140//   GTEST_DISALLOW_ASSIGN_   - disables operator=.
141//   GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_ - disables copy ctor and operator=.
142//   GTEST_MUST_USE_RESULT_   - declares that a function's result must be used.
143//
144// Synchronization:
145//   Mutex, MutexLock, ThreadLocal, GetThreadCount()
146//                  - synchronization primitives.
147//   GTEST_IS_THREADSAFE - defined to 1 to indicate that the above
148//                         synchronization primitives have real implementations
149//                         and Google Test is thread-safe; or 0 otherwise.
150//
151// Template meta programming:
152//   is_pointer     - as in TR1; needed on Symbian and IBM XL C/C++ only.
153//   IteratorTraits - partial implementation of std::iterator_traits, which
154//                    is not available in libCstd when compiled with Sun C++.
155//
156// Smart pointers:
157//   scoped_ptr     - as in TR2.
158//
159// Regular expressions:
160//   RE             - a simple regular expression class using the POSIX
161//                    Extended Regular Expression syntax on UNIX-like
162//                    platforms, or a reduced regular exception syntax on
163//                    other platforms, including Windows.
164//
165// Logging:
166//   GTEST_LOG_()   - logs messages at the specified severity level.
167//   LogToStderr()  - directs all log messages to stderr.
168//   FlushInfoLog() - flushes informational log messages.
169//
170// Stdout and stderr capturing:
171//   CaptureStdout()     - starts capturing stdout.
172//   GetCapturedStdout() - stops capturing stdout and returns the captured
173//                         string.
174//   CaptureStderr()     - starts capturing stderr.
175//   GetCapturedStderr() - stops capturing stderr and returns the captured
176//                         string.
177//
178// Integer types:
179//   TypeWithSize   - maps an integer to a int type.
180//   Int32, UInt32, Int64, UInt64, TimeInMillis
181//                  - integers of known sizes.
182//   BiggestInt     - the biggest signed integer type.
183//
184// Command-line utilities:
185//   GTEST_FLAG()       - references a flag.
186//   GTEST_DECLARE_*()  - declares a flag.
187//   GTEST_DEFINE_*()   - defines a flag.
188//   GetInjectableArgvs() - returns the command line as a vector of strings.
189//
190// Environment variable utilities:
191//   GetEnv()             - gets the value of an environment variable.
192//   BoolFromGTestEnv()   - parses a bool environment variable.
193//   Int32FromGTestEnv()  - parses an Int32 environment variable.
194//   StringFromGTestEnv() - parses a string environment variable.
195
196#include <ctype.h>   // for isspace, etc
197#include <stddef.h>  // for ptrdiff_t
198#include <stdlib.h>
199#include <stdio.h>
200#include <string.h>
201#ifndef _WIN32_WCE
202# include <sys/types.h>
203# include <sys/stat.h>
204#endif  // !_WIN32_WCE
205
206#if defined __APPLE__
207# include <AvailabilityMacros.h>
208# include <TargetConditionals.h>
209#endif
210
211#include <iostream>  // NOLINT
212#include <sstream>  // NOLINT
213#include <string>  // NOLINT
214
215#define GTEST_DEV_EMAIL_ "googletestframework@@googlegroups.com"
216#define GTEST_FLAG_PREFIX_ "gtest_"
217#define GTEST_FLAG_PREFIX_DASH_ "gtest-"
218#define GTEST_FLAG_PREFIX_UPPER_ "GTEST_"
219#define GTEST_NAME_ "Google Test"
220#define GTEST_PROJECT_URL_ "http://code.google.com/p/googletest/"
221
222// Determines the version of gcc that is used to compile this.
223#ifdef __GNUC__
224// 40302 means version 4.3.2.
225# define GTEST_GCC_VER_ \
226    (__GNUC__*10000 + __GNUC_MINOR__*100 + __GNUC_PATCHLEVEL__)
227#endif  // __GNUC__
228
229// Determines the platform on which Google Test is compiled.
230#ifdef __CYGWIN__
231# define GTEST_OS_CYGWIN 1
232#elif defined __SYMBIAN32__
233# define GTEST_OS_SYMBIAN 1
234#elif defined _WIN32
235# define GTEST_OS_WINDOWS 1
236# ifdef _WIN32_WCE
237#  define GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE 1
238# elif defined(__MINGW__) || defined(__MINGW32__)
239#  define GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MINGW 1
240# else
241#  define GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_DESKTOP 1
242# endif  // _WIN32_WCE
243#elif defined __APPLE__
244# define GTEST_OS_MAC 1
245# if TARGET_OS_IPHONE
246#  define GTEST_OS_IOS 1
247#  if TARGET_IPHONE_SIMULATOR
248#   define GTEST_OS_IOS_SIMULATOR 1
249#  endif
250# endif
251#elif defined __linux__
252# define GTEST_OS_LINUX 1
253# if defined __ANDROID__
254#  define GTEST_OS_LINUX_ANDROID 1
255# endif
256#elif defined __MVS__
257# define GTEST_OS_ZOS 1
258#elif defined(__sun) && defined(__SVR4)
259# define GTEST_OS_SOLARIS 1
260#elif defined(_AIX)
261# define GTEST_OS_AIX 1
262#elif defined(__hpux)
263# define GTEST_OS_HPUX 1
264#elif defined __native_client__
265# define GTEST_OS_NACL 1
266#elif defined __OpenBSD__
267# define GTEST_OS_OPENBSD 1
268#elif defined __QNX__
269# define GTEST_OS_QNX 1
270#endif  // __CYGWIN__
271
272#ifndef GTEST_LANG_CXX11
273// gcc and clang define __GXX_EXPERIMENTAL_CXX0X__ when
274// -std={c,gnu}++{0x,11} is passed.  The C++11 standard specifies a
275// value for __cplusplus, and recent versions of clang, gcc, and
276// probably other compilers set that too in C++11 mode.
277# if __GXX_EXPERIMENTAL_CXX0X__ || __cplusplus >= 201103L
278// Compiling in at least C++11 mode.
279#  define GTEST_LANG_CXX11 1
280# else
281#  define GTEST_LANG_CXX11 0
282# endif
283#endif
284
285// Brings in definitions for functions used in the testing::internal::posix
286// namespace (read, write, close, chdir, isatty, stat). We do not currently
287// use them on Windows Mobile.
288#if !GTEST_OS_WINDOWS
289// This assumes that non-Windows OSes provide unistd.h. For OSes where this
290// is not the case, we need to include headers that provide the functions
291// mentioned above.
292# include <unistd.h>
293# include <strings.h>
294#elif !GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE
295# include <direct.h>
296# include <io.h>
297#endif
298
299#if GTEST_OS_LINUX_ANDROID
300// Used to define __ANDROID_API__ matching the target NDK API level.
301#  include <android/api-level.h>  // NOLINT
302#endif
303
304// Defines this to true iff Google Test can use POSIX regular expressions.
305#ifndef GTEST_HAS_POSIX_RE
306# if GTEST_OS_LINUX_ANDROID
307// On Android, <regex.h> is only available starting with Gingerbread.
308#  define GTEST_HAS_POSIX_RE (__ANDROID_API__ >= 9)
309# else
310#  define GTEST_HAS_POSIX_RE (!GTEST_OS_WINDOWS)
311# endif
312#endif
313
314#if GTEST_HAS_POSIX_RE
315
316// On some platforms, <regex.h> needs someone to define size_t, and
317// won't compile otherwise.  We can #include it here as we already
318// included <stdlib.h>, which is guaranteed to define size_t through
319// <stddef.h>.
320# include <regex.h>  // NOLINT
321
322# define GTEST_USES_POSIX_RE 1
323
324#elif GTEST_OS_WINDOWS
325
326// <regex.h> is not available on Windows.  Use our own simple regex
327// implementation instead.
328# define GTEST_USES_SIMPLE_RE 1
329
330#else
331
332// <regex.h> may not be available on this platform.  Use our own
333// simple regex implementation instead.
334# define GTEST_USES_SIMPLE_RE 1
335
336#endif  // GTEST_HAS_POSIX_RE
337
338#ifndef GTEST_HAS_EXCEPTIONS
339// The user didn't tell us whether exceptions are enabled, so we need
340// to figure it out.
341# if defined(_MSC_VER) || defined(__BORLANDC__)
342// MSVC's and C++Builder's implementations of the STL use the _HAS_EXCEPTIONS
343// macro to enable exceptions, so we'll do the same.
344// Assumes that exceptions are enabled by default.
345#  ifndef _HAS_EXCEPTIONS
346#   define _HAS_EXCEPTIONS 1
347#  endif  // _HAS_EXCEPTIONS
348#  define GTEST_HAS_EXCEPTIONS _HAS_EXCEPTIONS
349# elif defined(__GNUC__) && __EXCEPTIONS
350// gcc defines __EXCEPTIONS to 1 iff exceptions are enabled.
351#  define GTEST_HAS_EXCEPTIONS 1
352# elif defined(__SUNPRO_CC)
353// Sun Pro CC supports exceptions.  However, there is no compile-time way of
354// detecting whether they are enabled or not.  Therefore, we assume that
355// they are enabled unless the user tells us otherwise.
356#  define GTEST_HAS_EXCEPTIONS 1
357# elif defined(__IBMCPP__) && __EXCEPTIONS
358// xlC defines __EXCEPTIONS to 1 iff exceptions are enabled.
359#  define GTEST_HAS_EXCEPTIONS 1
360# elif defined(__HP_aCC)
361// Exception handling is in effect by default in HP aCC compiler. It has to
362// be turned of by +noeh compiler option if desired.
363#  define GTEST_HAS_EXCEPTIONS 1
364# else
365// For other compilers, we assume exceptions are disabled to be
366// conservative.
367#  define GTEST_HAS_EXCEPTIONS 0
368# endif  // defined(_MSC_VER) || defined(__BORLANDC__)
369#endif  // GTEST_HAS_EXCEPTIONS
370
371#if !defined(GTEST_HAS_STD_STRING)
372// Even though we don't use this macro any longer, we keep it in case
373// some clients still depend on it.
374# define GTEST_HAS_STD_STRING 1
375#elif !GTEST_HAS_STD_STRING
376// The user told us that ::std::string isn't available.
377# error "Google Test cannot be used where ::std::string isn't available."
378#endif  // !defined(GTEST_HAS_STD_STRING)
379
380#ifndef GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING
381// The user didn't tell us whether ::string is available, so we need
382// to figure it out.
383
384# define GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING 0
385
386#endif  // GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING
387
388#ifndef GTEST_HAS_STD_WSTRING
389// The user didn't tell us whether ::std::wstring is available, so we need
390// to figure it out.
391// TODO(wan@google.com): uses autoconf to detect whether ::std::wstring
392//   is available.
393
394// Cygwin 1.7 and below doesn't support ::std::wstring.
395// Solaris' libc++ doesn't support it either.  Android has
396// no support for it at least as recent as Froyo (2.2).
397# define GTEST_HAS_STD_WSTRING \
398    (!(GTEST_OS_LINUX_ANDROID || GTEST_OS_CYGWIN || GTEST_OS_SOLARIS))
399
400#endif  // GTEST_HAS_STD_WSTRING
401
402#ifndef GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_WSTRING
403// The user didn't tell us whether ::wstring is available, so we need
404// to figure it out.
405# define GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_WSTRING \
406    (GTEST_HAS_STD_WSTRING && GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING)
407#endif  // GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_WSTRING
408
409// Determines whether RTTI is available.
410#ifndef GTEST_HAS_RTTI
411// The user didn't tell us whether RTTI is enabled, so we need to
412// figure it out.
413
414# ifdef _MSC_VER
415
416#  ifdef _CPPRTTI  // MSVC defines this macro iff RTTI is enabled.
417#   define GTEST_HAS_RTTI 1
418#  else
419#   define GTEST_HAS_RTTI 0
420#  endif
421
422// Starting with version 4.3.2, gcc defines __GXX_RTTI iff RTTI is enabled.
423# elif defined(__GNUC__) && (GTEST_GCC_VER_ >= 40302)
424
425#  ifdef __GXX_RTTI
426// When building against STLport with the Android NDK and with
427// -frtti -fno-exceptions, the build fails at link time with undefined
428// references to __cxa_bad_typeid. Note sure if STL or toolchain bug,
429// so disable RTTI when detected.
430#   if GTEST_OS_LINUX_ANDROID && defined(_STLPORT_MAJOR) && \
431       !defined(__EXCEPTIONS)
432#    define GTEST_HAS_RTTI 0
433#   else
434#    define GTEST_HAS_RTTI 1
435#   endif  // GTEST_OS_LINUX_ANDROID && __STLPORT_MAJOR && !__EXCEPTIONS
436#  else
437#   define GTEST_HAS_RTTI 0
438#  endif  // __GXX_RTTI
439
440// Clang defines __GXX_RTTI starting with version 3.0, but its manual recommends
441// using has_feature instead. has_feature(cxx_rtti) is supported since 2.7, the
442// first version with C++ support.
443# elif defined(__clang__)
444
445#  define GTEST_HAS_RTTI __has_feature(cxx_rtti)
446
447// Starting with version 9.0 IBM Visual Age defines __RTTI_ALL__ to 1 if
448// both the typeid and dynamic_cast features are present.
449# elif defined(__IBMCPP__) && (__IBMCPP__ >= 900)
450
451#  ifdef __RTTI_ALL__
452#   define GTEST_HAS_RTTI 1
453#  else
454#   define GTEST_HAS_RTTI 0
455#  endif
456
457# else
458
459// For all other compilers, we assume RTTI is enabled.
460#  define GTEST_HAS_RTTI 1
461
462# endif  // _MSC_VER
463
464#endif  // GTEST_HAS_RTTI
465
466// It's this header's responsibility to #include <typeinfo> when RTTI
467// is enabled.
468#if GTEST_HAS_RTTI
469# include <typeinfo>
470#endif
471
472// Determines whether Google Test can use the pthreads library.
473#ifndef GTEST_HAS_PTHREAD
474// The user didn't tell us explicitly, so we assume pthreads support is
475// available on Linux and Mac.
476//
477// To disable threading support in Google Test, add -DGTEST_HAS_PTHREAD=0
478// to your compiler flags.
479# define GTEST_HAS_PTHREAD (GTEST_OS_LINUX || GTEST_OS_MAC || GTEST_OS_HPUX \
480    || GTEST_OS_QNX)
481#endif  // GTEST_HAS_PTHREAD
482
483#if GTEST_HAS_PTHREAD
484// gtest-port.h guarantees to #include <pthread.h> when GTEST_HAS_PTHREAD is
485// true.
486# include <pthread.h>  // NOLINT
487
488// For timespec and nanosleep, used below.
489# include <time.h>  // NOLINT
490#endif
491
492// Determines whether Google Test can use tr1/tuple.  You can define
493// this macro to 0 to prevent Google Test from using tuple (any
494// feature depending on tuple with be disabled in this mode).
495#ifndef GTEST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE
496# if GTEST_OS_LINUX_ANDROID && defined(_STLPORT_MAJOR)
497// STLport, provided with the Android NDK, has neither <tr1/tuple> or <tuple>.
498#  define GTEST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE 0
499# else
500// The user didn't tell us not to do it, so we assume it's OK.
501#  define GTEST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE 1
502# endif
503#endif  // GTEST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE
504
505// Determines whether Google Test's own tr1 tuple implementation
506// should be used.
507#ifndef GTEST_USE_OWN_TR1_TUPLE
508// The user didn't tell us, so we need to figure it out.
509
510// We use our own TR1 tuple if we aren't sure the user has an
511// implementation of it already.  At this time, libstdc++ 4.0.0+ and
512// MSVC 2010 are the only mainstream standard libraries that come
513// with a TR1 tuple implementation.  NVIDIA's CUDA NVCC compiler
514// pretends to be GCC by defining __GNUC__ and friends, but cannot
515// compile GCC's tuple implementation.  MSVC 2008 (9.0) provides TR1
516// tuple in a 323 MB Feature Pack download, which we cannot assume the
517// user has.  QNX's QCC compiler is a modified GCC but it doesn't
518// support TR1 tuple.  libc++ only provides std::tuple, in C++11 mode,
519// and it can be used with some compilers that define __GNUC__.
520# if (defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__CUDACC__) && (GTEST_GCC_VER_ >= 40000) \
521      && !GTEST_OS_QNX && !defined(_LIBCPP_VERSION)) || _MSC_VER >= 1600
522#  define GTEST_ENV_HAS_TR1_TUPLE_ 1
523# endif
524
525// C++11 specifies that <tuple> provides std::tuple. Use that if gtest is used
526// in C++11 mode and libstdc++ isn't very old (binaries targeting OS X 10.6
527// can build with clang but need to use gcc4.2's libstdc++).
528# if GTEST_LANG_CXX11 && (!defined(__GLIBCXX__) || __GLIBCXX__ > 20110325)
529#  define GTEST_ENV_HAS_STD_TUPLE_ 1
530# endif
531
532# if GTEST_ENV_HAS_TR1_TUPLE_ || GTEST_ENV_HAS_STD_TUPLE_
533#  define GTEST_USE_OWN_TR1_TUPLE 0
534# else
535#  define GTEST_USE_OWN_TR1_TUPLE 1
536# endif
537
538#endif  // GTEST_USE_OWN_TR1_TUPLE
539
540// To avoid conditional compilation everywhere, we make it
541// gtest-port.h's responsibility to #include the header implementing
542// tr1/tuple.
543#if GTEST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE
544
545# if GTEST_USE_OWN_TR1_TUPLE
546#  include "gtest/internal/gtest-tuple.h"
547# elif GTEST_ENV_HAS_STD_TUPLE_
548#  include <tuple>
549// C++11 puts its tuple into the ::std namespace rather than
550// ::std::tr1.  gtest expects tuple to live in ::std::tr1, so put it there.
551// This causes undefined behavior, but supported compilers react in
552// the way we intend.
553namespace std {
554namespace tr1 {
555using ::std::get;
556using ::std::make_tuple;
557using ::std::tuple;
558using ::std::tuple_element;
559using ::std::tuple_size;
560}
561}
562
563# elif GTEST_OS_SYMBIAN
564
565// On Symbian, BOOST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE causes Boost's TR1 tuple library to
566// use STLport's tuple implementation, which unfortunately doesn't
567// work as the copy of STLport distributed with Symbian is incomplete.
568// By making sure BOOST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE is undefined, we force Boost to
569// use its own tuple implementation.
570#  ifdef BOOST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE
571#   undef BOOST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE
572#  endif  // BOOST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE
573
574// This prevents <boost/tr1/detail/config.hpp>, which defines
575// BOOST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE, from being #included by Boost's <tuple>.
576#  define BOOST_TR1_DETAIL_CONFIG_HPP_INCLUDED
577#  include <tuple>
578
579# elif defined(__GNUC__) && (GTEST_GCC_VER_ >= 40000)
580// GCC 4.0+ implements tr1/tuple in the <tr1/tuple> header.  This does
581// not conform to the TR1 spec, which requires the header to be <tuple>.
582
583#  if !GTEST_HAS_RTTI && GTEST_GCC_VER_ < 40302
584// Until version 4.3.2, gcc has a bug that causes <tr1/functional>,
585// which is #included by <tr1/tuple>, to not compile when RTTI is
586// disabled.  _TR1_FUNCTIONAL is the header guard for
587// <tr1/functional>.  Hence the following #define is a hack to prevent
588// <tr1/functional> from being included.
589#   define _TR1_FUNCTIONAL 1
590#   include <tr1/tuple>
591#   undef _TR1_FUNCTIONAL  // Allows the user to #include
592                        // <tr1/functional> if he chooses to.
593#  else
594#   include <tr1/tuple>  // NOLINT
595#  endif  // !GTEST_HAS_RTTI && GTEST_GCC_VER_ < 40302
596
597# else
598// If the compiler is not GCC 4.0+, we assume the user is using a
599// spec-conforming TR1 implementation.
600#  include <tuple>  // NOLINT
601# endif  // GTEST_USE_OWN_TR1_TUPLE
602
603#endif  // GTEST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE
604
605// Determines whether clone(2) is supported.
606// Usually it will only be available on Linux, excluding
607// Linux on the Itanium architecture.
608// Also see http://linux.die.net/man/2/clone.
609#ifndef GTEST_HAS_CLONE
610// The user didn't tell us, so we need to figure it out.
611
612# if GTEST_OS_LINUX && !defined(__ia64__)
613#  if GTEST_OS_LINUX_ANDROID
614// On Android, clone() is only available on ARM starting with Gingerbread.
615#    if defined(__arm__) && __ANDROID_API__ >= 9
616#     define GTEST_HAS_CLONE 1
617#    else
618#     define GTEST_HAS_CLONE 0
619#    endif
620#  else
621#   define GTEST_HAS_CLONE 1
622#  endif
623# else
624#  define GTEST_HAS_CLONE 0
625# endif  // GTEST_OS_LINUX && !defined(__ia64__)
626
627#endif  // GTEST_HAS_CLONE
628
629// Determines whether to support stream redirection. This is used to test
630// output correctness and to implement death tests.
631#ifndef GTEST_HAS_STREAM_REDIRECTION
632// By default, we assume that stream redirection is supported on all
633// platforms except known mobile ones.
634# if GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE || GTEST_OS_SYMBIAN
635#  define GTEST_HAS_STREAM_REDIRECTION 0
636# else
637#  define GTEST_HAS_STREAM_REDIRECTION 1
638# endif  // !GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE && !GTEST_OS_SYMBIAN
639#endif  // GTEST_HAS_STREAM_REDIRECTION
640
641// Determines whether to support death tests.
642// Google Test does not support death tests for VC 7.1 and earlier as
643// abort() in a VC 7.1 application compiled as GUI in debug config
644// pops up a dialog window that cannot be suppressed programmatically.
645#if (GTEST_OS_LINUX || GTEST_OS_CYGWIN || GTEST_OS_SOLARIS || \
646     (GTEST_OS_MAC && !GTEST_OS_IOS) || GTEST_OS_IOS_SIMULATOR || \
647     (GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_DESKTOP && _MSC_VER >= 1400) || \
648     GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MINGW || GTEST_OS_AIX || GTEST_OS_HPUX || \
649     GTEST_OS_OPENBSD || GTEST_OS_QNX)
650# define GTEST_HAS_DEATH_TEST 1
651# include <vector>  // NOLINT
652#endif
653
654// We don't support MSVC 7.1 with exceptions disabled now.  Therefore
655// all the compilers we care about are adequate for supporting
656// value-parameterized tests.
657#define GTEST_HAS_PARAM_TEST 1
658
659// Determines whether to support type-driven tests.
660
661// Typed tests need <typeinfo> and variadic macros, which GCC, VC++ 8.0,
662// Sun Pro CC, IBM Visual Age, and HP aCC support.
663#if defined(__GNUC__) || (_MSC_VER >= 1400) || defined(__SUNPRO_CC) || \
664    defined(__IBMCPP__) || defined(__HP_aCC)
665# define GTEST_HAS_TYPED_TEST 1
666# define GTEST_HAS_TYPED_TEST_P 1
667#endif
668
669// Determines whether to support Combine(). This only makes sense when
670// value-parameterized tests are enabled.  The implementation doesn't
671// work on Sun Studio since it doesn't understand templated conversion
672// operators.
673#if GTEST_HAS_PARAM_TEST && GTEST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE && !defined(__SUNPRO_CC)
674# define GTEST_HAS_COMBINE 1
675#endif
676
677// Determines whether the system compiler uses UTF-16 for encoding wide strings.
678#define GTEST_WIDE_STRING_USES_UTF16_ \
679    (GTEST_OS_WINDOWS || GTEST_OS_CYGWIN || GTEST_OS_SYMBIAN || GTEST_OS_AIX)
680
681// Determines whether test results can be streamed to a socket.
682#if GTEST_OS_LINUX
683# define GTEST_CAN_STREAM_RESULTS_ 1
684#endif
685
686// Defines some utility macros.
687
688// The GNU compiler emits a warning if nested "if" statements are followed by
689// an "else" statement and braces are not used to explicitly disambiguate the
690// "else" binding.  This leads to problems with code like:
691//
692//   if (gate)
693//     ASSERT_*(condition) << "Some message";
694//
695// The "switch (0) case 0:" idiom is used to suppress this.
696#ifdef __INTEL_COMPILER
697# define GTEST_AMBIGUOUS_ELSE_BLOCKER_
698#else
699# define GTEST_AMBIGUOUS_ELSE_BLOCKER_ switch (0) case 0: default:  // NOLINT
700#endif
701
702// Use this annotation at the end of a struct/class definition to
703// prevent the compiler from optimizing away instances that are never
704// used.  This is useful when all interesting logic happens inside the
705// c'tor and / or d'tor.  Example:
706//
707//   struct Foo {
708//     Foo() { ... }
709//   } GTEST_ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED_;
710//
711// Also use it after a variable or parameter declaration to tell the
712// compiler the variable/parameter does not have to be used.
713#if defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(COMPILER_ICC)
714# define GTEST_ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED_ __attribute__ ((unused))
715#else
716# define GTEST_ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED_
717#endif
718
719// A macro to disallow operator=
720// This should be used in the private: declarations for a class.
721#define GTEST_DISALLOW_ASSIGN_(type)\
722  void operator=(type const &)
723
724// A macro to disallow copy constructor and operator=
725// This should be used in the private: declarations for a class.
726#define GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(type)\
727  type(type const &);\
728  GTEST_DISALLOW_ASSIGN_(type)
729
730// Tell the compiler to warn about unused return values for functions declared
731// with this macro.  The macro should be used on function declarations
732// following the argument list:
733//
734//   Sprocket* AllocateSprocket() GTEST_MUST_USE_RESULT_;
735#if defined(__GNUC__) && (GTEST_GCC_VER_ >= 30400) && !defined(COMPILER_ICC)
736# define GTEST_MUST_USE_RESULT_ __attribute__ ((warn_unused_result))
737#else
738# define GTEST_MUST_USE_RESULT_
739#endif  // __GNUC__ && (GTEST_GCC_VER_ >= 30400) && !COMPILER_ICC
740
741// Determine whether the compiler supports Microsoft's Structured Exception
742// Handling.  This is supported by several Windows compilers but generally
743// does not exist on any other system.
744#ifndef GTEST_HAS_SEH
745// The user didn't tell us, so we need to figure it out.
746
747# if defined(_MSC_VER) || defined(__BORLANDC__)
748// These two compilers are known to support SEH.
749#  define GTEST_HAS_SEH 1
750# else
751// Assume no SEH.
752#  define GTEST_HAS_SEH 0
753# endif
754
755#endif  // GTEST_HAS_SEH
756
757#ifdef _MSC_VER
758
759# if GTEST_LINKED_AS_SHARED_LIBRARY
760#  define GTEST_API_ __declspec(dllimport)
761# elif GTEST_CREATE_SHARED_LIBRARY
762#  define GTEST_API_ __declspec(dllexport)
763# endif
764
765#endif  // _MSC_VER
766
767#ifndef GTEST_API_
768# define GTEST_API_
769#endif
770
771#ifdef __GNUC__
772// Ask the compiler to never inline a given function.
773# define GTEST_NO_INLINE_ __attribute__((noinline))
774#else
775# define GTEST_NO_INLINE_
776#endif
777
778// _LIBCPP_VERSION is defined by the libc++ library from the LLVM project.
779#if defined(__GLIBCXX__) || defined(_LIBCPP_VERSION)
780# define GTEST_HAS_CXXABI_H_ 1
781#else
782# define GTEST_HAS_CXXABI_H_ 0
783#endif
784
785namespace testing {
786
787class Message;
788
789namespace internal {
790
791// A secret type that Google Test users don't know about.  It has no
792// definition on purpose.  Therefore it's impossible to create a
793// Secret object, which is what we want.
794class Secret;
795
796// The GTEST_COMPILE_ASSERT_ macro can be used to verify that a compile time
797// expression is true. For example, you could use it to verify the
798// size of a static array:
799//
800//   GTEST_COMPILE_ASSERT_(ARRAYSIZE(content_type_names) == CONTENT_NUM_TYPES,
801//                         content_type_names_incorrect_size);
802//
803// or to make sure a struct is smaller than a certain size:
804//
805//   GTEST_COMPILE_ASSERT_(sizeof(foo) < 128, foo_too_large);
806//
807// The second argument to the macro is the name of the variable. If
808// the expression is false, most compilers will issue a warning/error
809// containing the name of the variable.
810
811template <bool>
812struct CompileAssert {
813};
814
815#define GTEST_COMPILE_ASSERT_(expr, msg) \
816  typedef ::testing::internal::CompileAssert<(static_cast<bool>(expr))> \
817      msg[static_cast<bool>(expr) ? 1 : -1] GTEST_ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED_
818
819// Implementation details of GTEST_COMPILE_ASSERT_:
820//
821// - GTEST_COMPILE_ASSERT_ works by defining an array type that has -1
822//   elements (and thus is invalid) when the expression is false.
823//
824// - The simpler definition
825//
826//    #define GTEST_COMPILE_ASSERT_(expr, msg) typedef char msg[(expr) ? 1 : -1]
827//
828//   does not work, as gcc supports variable-length arrays whose sizes
829//   are determined at run-time (this is gcc's extension and not part
830//   of the C++ standard).  As a result, gcc fails to reject the
831//   following code with the simple definition:
832//
833//     int foo;
834//     GTEST_COMPILE_ASSERT_(foo, msg); // not supposed to compile as foo is
835//                                      // not a compile-time constant.
836//
837// - By using the type CompileAssert<(bool(expr))>, we ensures that
838//   expr is a compile-time constant.  (Template arguments must be
839//   determined at compile-time.)
840//
841// - The outter parentheses in CompileAssert<(bool(expr))> are necessary
842//   to work around a bug in gcc 3.4.4 and 4.0.1.  If we had written
843//
844//     CompileAssert<bool(expr)>
845//
846//   instead, these compilers will refuse to compile
847//
848//     GTEST_COMPILE_ASSERT_(5 > 0, some_message);
849//
850//   (They seem to think the ">" in "5 > 0" marks the end of the
851//   template argument list.)
852//
853// - The array size is (bool(expr) ? 1 : -1), instead of simply
854//
855//     ((expr) ? 1 : -1).
856//
857//   This is to avoid running into a bug in MS VC 7.1, which
858//   causes ((0.0) ? 1 : -1) to incorrectly evaluate to 1.
859
860// StaticAssertTypeEqHelper is used by StaticAssertTypeEq defined in gtest.h.
861//
862// This template is declared, but intentionally undefined.
863template <typename T1, typename T2>
864struct StaticAssertTypeEqHelper;
865
866template <typename T>
867struct StaticAssertTypeEqHelper<T, T> {};
868
869#if GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING
870typedef ::string string;
871#else
872typedef ::std::string string;
873#endif  // GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING
874
875#if GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_WSTRING
876typedef ::wstring wstring;
877#elif GTEST_HAS_STD_WSTRING
878typedef ::std::wstring wstring;
879#endif  // GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_WSTRING
880
881// A helper for suppressing warnings on constant condition.  It just
882// returns 'condition'.
883GTEST_API_ bool IsTrue(bool condition);
884
885// Defines scoped_ptr.
886
887// This implementation of scoped_ptr is PARTIAL - it only contains
888// enough stuff to satisfy Google Test's need.
889template <typename T>
890class scoped_ptr {
891 public:
892  typedef T element_type;
893
894  explicit scoped_ptr(T* p = NULL) : ptr_(p) {}
895  ~scoped_ptr() { reset(); }
896
897  T& operator*() const { return *ptr_; }
898  T* operator->() const { return ptr_; }
899  T* get() const { return ptr_; }
900
901  T* release() {
902    T* const ptr = ptr_;
903    ptr_ = NULL;
904    return ptr;
905  }
906
907  void reset(T* p = NULL) {
908    if (p != ptr_) {
909      if (IsTrue(sizeof(T) > 0)) {  // Makes sure T is a complete type.
910        delete ptr_;
911      }
912      ptr_ = p;
913    }
914  }
915
916 private:
917  T* ptr_;
918
919  GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(scoped_ptr);
920};
921
922// Defines RE.
923
924// A simple C++ wrapper for <regex.h>.  It uses the POSIX Extended
925// Regular Expression syntax.
926class GTEST_API_ RE {
927 public:
928  // A copy constructor is required by the Standard to initialize object
929  // references from r-values.
930  RE(const RE& other) { Init(other.pattern()); }
931
932  // Constructs an RE from a string.
933  RE(const ::std::string& regex) { Init(regex.c_str()); }  // NOLINT
934
935#if GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING
936
937  RE(const ::string& regex) { Init(regex.c_str()); }  // NOLINT
938
939#endif  // GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING
940
941  RE(const char* regex) { Init(regex); }  // NOLINT
942  ~RE();
943
944  // Returns the string representation of the regex.
945  const char* pattern() const { return pattern_; }
946
947  // FullMatch(str, re) returns true iff regular expression re matches
948  // the entire str.
949  // PartialMatch(str, re) returns true iff regular expression re
950  // matches a substring of str (including str itself).
951  //
952  // TODO(wan@google.com): make FullMatch() and PartialMatch() work
953  // when str contains NUL characters.
954  static bool FullMatch(const ::std::string& str, const RE& re) {
955    return FullMatch(str.c_str(), re);
956  }
957  static bool PartialMatch(const ::std::string& str, const RE& re) {
958    return PartialMatch(str.c_str(), re);
959  }
960
961#if GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING
962
963  static bool FullMatch(const ::string& str, const RE& re) {
964    return FullMatch(str.c_str(), re);
965  }
966  static bool PartialMatch(const ::string& str, const RE& re) {
967    return PartialMatch(str.c_str(), re);
968  }
969
970#endif  // GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING
971
972  static bool FullMatch(const char* str, const RE& re);
973  static bool PartialMatch(const char* str, const RE& re);
974
975 private:
976  void Init(const char* regex);
977
978  // We use a const char* instead of an std::string, as Google Test used to be
979  // used where std::string is not available.  TODO(wan@google.com): change to
980  // std::string.
981  const char* pattern_;
982  bool is_valid_;
983
984#if GTEST_USES_POSIX_RE
985
986  regex_t full_regex_;     // For FullMatch().
987  regex_t partial_regex_;  // For PartialMatch().
988
989#else  // GTEST_USES_SIMPLE_RE
990
991  const char* full_pattern_;  // For FullMatch();
992
993#endif
994
995  GTEST_DISALLOW_ASSIGN_(RE);
996};
997
998// Formats a source file path and a line number as they would appear
999// in an error message from the compiler used to compile this code.
1000GTEST_API_ ::std::string FormatFileLocation(const char* file, int line);
1001
1002// Formats a file location for compiler-independent XML output.
1003// Although this function is not platform dependent, we put it next to
1004// FormatFileLocation in order to contrast the two functions.
1005GTEST_API_ ::std::string FormatCompilerIndependentFileLocation(const char* file,
1006                                                               int line);
1007
1008// Defines logging utilities:
1009//   GTEST_LOG_(severity) - logs messages at the specified severity level. The
1010//                          message itself is streamed into the macro.
1011//   LogToStderr()  - directs all log messages to stderr.
1012//   FlushInfoLog() - flushes informational log messages.
1013
1014enum GTestLogSeverity {
1015  GTEST_INFO,
1016  GTEST_WARNING,
1017  GTEST_ERROR,
1018  GTEST_FATAL
1019};
1020
1021// Formats log entry severity, provides a stream object for streaming the
1022// log message, and terminates the message with a newline when going out of
1023// scope.
1024class GTEST_API_ GTestLog {
1025 public:
1026  GTestLog(GTestLogSeverity severity, const char* file, int line);
1027
1028  // Flushes the buffers and, if severity is GTEST_FATAL, aborts the program.
1029  ~GTestLog();
1030
1031  ::std::ostream& GetStream() { return ::std::cerr; }
1032
1033 private:
1034  const GTestLogSeverity severity_;
1035
1036  GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(GTestLog);
1037};
1038
1039#define GTEST_LOG_(severity) \
1040    ::testing::internal::GTestLog(::testing::internal::GTEST_##severity, \
1041                                  __FILE__, __LINE__).GetStream()
1042
1043inline void LogToStderr() {}
1044inline void FlushInfoLog() { fflush(NULL); }
1045
1046// INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE.
1047//
1048// GTEST_CHECK_ is an all-mode assert. It aborts the program if the condition
1049// is not satisfied.
1050//  Synopsys:
1051//    GTEST_CHECK_(boolean_condition);
1052//     or
1053//    GTEST_CHECK_(boolean_condition) << "Additional message";
1054//
1055//    This checks the condition and if the condition is not satisfied
1056//    it prints message about the condition violation, including the
1057//    condition itself, plus additional message streamed into it, if any,
1058//    and then it aborts the program. It aborts the program irrespective of
1059//    whether it is built in the debug mode or not.
1060#define GTEST_CHECK_(condition) \
1061    GTEST_AMBIGUOUS_ELSE_BLOCKER_ \
1062    if (::testing::internal::IsTrue(condition)) \
1063      ; \
1064    else \
1065      GTEST_LOG_(FATAL) << "Condition " #condition " failed. "
1066
1067// An all-mode assert to verify that the given POSIX-style function
1068// call returns 0 (indicating success).  Known limitation: this
1069// doesn't expand to a balanced 'if' statement, so enclose the macro
1070// in {} if you need to use it as the only statement in an 'if'
1071// branch.
1072#define GTEST_CHECK_POSIX_SUCCESS_(posix_call) \
1073  if (const int gtest_error = (posix_call)) \
1074    GTEST_LOG_(FATAL) << #posix_call << "failed with error " \
1075                      << gtest_error
1076
1077// INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN USER CODE.
1078//
1079// Use ImplicitCast_ as a safe version of static_cast for upcasting in
1080// the type hierarchy (e.g. casting a Foo* to a SuperclassOfFoo* or a
1081// const Foo*).  When you use ImplicitCast_, the compiler checks that
1082// the cast is safe.  Such explicit ImplicitCast_s are necessary in
1083// surprisingly many situations where C++ demands an exact type match
1084// instead of an argument type convertable to a target type.
1085//
1086// The syntax for using ImplicitCast_ is the same as for static_cast:
1087//
1088//   ImplicitCast_<ToType>(expr)
1089//
1090// ImplicitCast_ would have been part of the C++ standard library,
1091// but the proposal was submitted too late.  It will probably make
1092// its way into the language in the future.
1093//
1094// This relatively ugly name is intentional. It prevents clashes with
1095// similar functions users may have (e.g., implicit_cast). The internal
1096// namespace alone is not enough because the function can be found by ADL.
1097template<typename To>
1098inline To ImplicitCast_(To x) { return x; }
1099
1100// When you upcast (that is, cast a pointer from type Foo to type
1101// SuperclassOfFoo), it's fine to use ImplicitCast_<>, since upcasts
1102// always succeed.  When you downcast (that is, cast a pointer from
1103// type Foo to type SubclassOfFoo), static_cast<> isn't safe, because
1104// how do you know the pointer is really of type SubclassOfFoo?  It
1105// could be a bare Foo, or of type DifferentSubclassOfFoo.  Thus,
1106// when you downcast, you should use this macro.  In debug mode, we
1107// use dynamic_cast<> to double-check the downcast is legal (we die
1108// if it's not).  In normal mode, we do the efficient static_cast<>
1109// instead.  Thus, it's important to test in debug mode to make sure
1110// the cast is legal!
1111//    This is the only place in the code we should use dynamic_cast<>.
1112// In particular, you SHOULDN'T be using dynamic_cast<> in order to
1113// do RTTI (eg code like this:
1114//    if (dynamic_cast<Subclass1>(foo)) HandleASubclass1Object(foo);
1115//    if (dynamic_cast<Subclass2>(foo)) HandleASubclass2Object(foo);
1116// You should design the code some other way not to need this.
1117//
1118// This relatively ugly name is intentional. It prevents clashes with
1119// similar functions users may have (e.g., down_cast). The internal
1120// namespace alone is not enough because the function can be found by ADL.
1121template<typename To, typename From>  // use like this: DownCast_<T*>(foo);
1122inline To DownCast_(From* f) {  // so we only accept pointers
1123  // Ensures that To is a sub-type of From *.  This test is here only
1124  // for compile-time type checking, and has no overhead in an
1125  // optimized build at run-time, as it will be optimized away
1126  // completely.
1127  if (false) {
1128    const To to = NULL;
1129    ::testing::internal::ImplicitCast_<From*>(to);
1130  }
1131
1132#if GTEST_HAS_RTTI
1133  // RTTI: debug mode only!
1134  GTEST_CHECK_(f == NULL || dynamic_cast<To>(f) != NULL);
1135#endif
1136  return static_cast<To>(f);
1137}
1138
1139// Downcasts the pointer of type Base to Derived.
1140// Derived must be a subclass of Base. The parameter MUST
1141// point to a class of type Derived, not any subclass of it.
1142// When RTTI is available, the function performs a runtime
1143// check to enforce this.
1144template <class Derived, class Base>
1145Derived* CheckedDowncastToActualType(Base* base) {
1146#if GTEST_HAS_RTTI
1147  GTEST_CHECK_(typeid(*base) == typeid(Derived));
1148  return dynamic_cast<Derived*>(base);  // NOLINT
1149#else
1150  return static_cast<Derived*>(base);  // Poor man's downcast.
1151#endif
1152}
1153
1154#if GTEST_HAS_STREAM_REDIRECTION
1155
1156// Defines the stderr capturer:
1157//   CaptureStdout     - starts capturing stdout.
1158//   GetCapturedStdout - stops capturing stdout and returns the captured string.
1159//   CaptureStderr     - starts capturing stderr.
1160//   GetCapturedStderr - stops capturing stderr and returns the captured string.
1161//
1162GTEST_API_ void CaptureStdout();
1163GTEST_API_ std::string GetCapturedStdout();
1164GTEST_API_ void CaptureStderr();
1165GTEST_API_ std::string GetCapturedStderr();
1166
1167#endif  // GTEST_HAS_STREAM_REDIRECTION
1168
1169
1170#if GTEST_HAS_DEATH_TEST
1171
1172const ::std::vector<testing::internal::string>& GetInjectableArgvs();
1173void SetInjectableArgvs(const ::std::vector<testing::internal::string>*
1174                             new_argvs);
1175
1176// A copy of all command line arguments.  Set by InitGoogleTest().
1177extern ::std::vector<testing::internal::string> g_argvs;
1178
1179#endif  // GTEST_HAS_DEATH_TEST
1180
1181// Defines synchronization primitives.
1182
1183#if GTEST_HAS_PTHREAD
1184
1185// Sleeps for (roughly) n milli-seconds.  This function is only for
1186// testing Google Test's own constructs.  Don't use it in user tests,
1187// either directly or indirectly.
1188inline void SleepMilliseconds(int n) {
1189  const timespec time = {
1190    0,                  // 0 seconds.
1191    n * 1000L * 1000L,  // And n ms.
1192  };
1193  nanosleep(&time, NULL);
1194}
1195
1196// Allows a controller thread to pause execution of newly created
1197// threads until notified.  Instances of this class must be created
1198// and destroyed in the controller thread.
1199//
1200// This class is only for testing Google Test's own constructs. Do not
1201// use it in user tests, either directly or indirectly.
1202class Notification {
1203 public:
1204  Notification() : notified_(false) {
1205    GTEST_CHECK_POSIX_SUCCESS_(pthread_mutex_init(&mutex_, NULL));
1206  }
1207  ~Notification() {
1208    pthread_mutex_destroy(&mutex_);
1209  }
1210
1211  // Notifies all threads created with this notification to start. Must
1212  // be called from the controller thread.
1213  void Notify() {
1214    pthread_mutex_lock(&mutex_);
1215    notified_ = true;
1216    pthread_mutex_unlock(&mutex_);
1217  }
1218
1219  // Blocks until the controller thread notifies. Must be called from a test
1220  // thread.
1221  void WaitForNotification() {
1222    for (;;) {
1223      pthread_mutex_lock(&mutex_);
1224      const bool notified = notified_;
1225      pthread_mutex_unlock(&mutex_);
1226      if (notified)
1227        break;
1228      SleepMilliseconds(10);
1229    }
1230  }
1231
1232 private:
1233  pthread_mutex_t mutex_;
1234  bool notified_;
1235
1236  GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(Notification);
1237};
1238
1239// As a C-function, ThreadFuncWithCLinkage cannot be templated itself.
1240// Consequently, it cannot select a correct instantiation of ThreadWithParam
1241// in order to call its Run(). Introducing ThreadWithParamBase as a
1242// non-templated base class for ThreadWithParam allows us to bypass this
1243// problem.
1244class ThreadWithParamBase {
1245 public:
1246  virtual ~ThreadWithParamBase() {}
1247  virtual void Run() = 0;
1248};
1249
1250// pthread_create() accepts a pointer to a function type with the C linkage.
1251// According to the Standard (7.5/1), function types with different linkages
1252// are different even if they are otherwise identical.  Some compilers (for
1253// example, SunStudio) treat them as different types.  Since class methods
1254// cannot be defined with C-linkage we need to define a free C-function to
1255// pass into pthread_create().
1256extern "C" inline void* ThreadFuncWithCLinkage(void* thread) {
1257  static_cast<ThreadWithParamBase*>(thread)->Run();
1258  return NULL;
1259}
1260
1261// Helper class for testing Google Test's multi-threading constructs.
1262// To use it, write:
1263//
1264//   void ThreadFunc(int param) { /* Do things with param */ }
1265//   Notification thread_can_start;
1266//   ...
1267//   // The thread_can_start parameter is optional; you can supply NULL.
1268//   ThreadWithParam<int> thread(&ThreadFunc, 5, &thread_can_start);
1269//   thread_can_start.Notify();
1270//
1271// These classes are only for testing Google Test's own constructs. Do
1272// not use them in user tests, either directly or indirectly.
1273template <typename T>
1274class ThreadWithParam : public ThreadWithParamBase {
1275 public:
1276  typedef void (*UserThreadFunc)(T);
1277
1278  ThreadWithParam(
1279      UserThreadFunc func, T param, Notification* thread_can_start)
1280      : func_(func),
1281        param_(param),
1282        thread_can_start_(thread_can_start),
1283        finished_(false) {
1284    ThreadWithParamBase* const base = this;
1285    // The thread can be created only after all fields except thread_
1286    // have been initialized.
1287    GTEST_CHECK_POSIX_SUCCESS_(
1288        pthread_create(&thread_, 0, &ThreadFuncWithCLinkage, base));
1289  }
1290  ~ThreadWithParam() { Join(); }
1291
1292  void Join() {
1293    if (!finished_) {
1294      GTEST_CHECK_POSIX_SUCCESS_(pthread_join(thread_, 0));
1295      finished_ = true;
1296    }
1297  }
1298
1299  virtual void Run() {
1300    if (thread_can_start_ != NULL)
1301      thread_can_start_->WaitForNotification();
1302    func_(param_);
1303  }
1304
1305 private:
1306  const UserThreadFunc func_;  // User-supplied thread function.
1307  const T param_;  // User-supplied parameter to the thread function.
1308  // When non-NULL, used to block execution until the controller thread
1309  // notifies.
1310  Notification* const thread_can_start_;
1311  bool finished_;  // true iff we know that the thread function has finished.
1312  pthread_t thread_;  // The native thread object.
1313
1314  GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(ThreadWithParam);
1315};
1316
1317// MutexBase and Mutex implement mutex on pthreads-based platforms. They
1318// are used in conjunction with class MutexLock:
1319//
1320//   Mutex mutex;
1321//   ...
1322//   MutexLock lock(&mutex);  // Acquires the mutex and releases it at the end
1323//                            // of the current scope.
1324//
1325// MutexBase implements behavior for both statically and dynamically
1326// allocated mutexes.  Do not use MutexBase directly.  Instead, write
1327// the following to define a static mutex:
1328//
1329//   GTEST_DEFINE_STATIC_MUTEX_(g_some_mutex);
1330//
1331// You can forward declare a static mutex like this:
1332//
1333//   GTEST_DECLARE_STATIC_MUTEX_(g_some_mutex);
1334//
1335// To create a dynamic mutex, just define an object of type Mutex.
1336class MutexBase {
1337 public:
1338  // Acquires this mutex.
1339  void Lock() {
1340    GTEST_CHECK_POSIX_SUCCESS_(pthread_mutex_lock(&mutex_));
1341    owner_ = pthread_self();
1342    has_owner_ = true;
1343  }
1344
1345  // Releases this mutex.
1346  void Unlock() {
1347    // Since the lock is being released the owner_ field should no longer be
1348    // considered valid. We don't protect writing to has_owner_ here, as it's
1349    // the caller's responsibility to ensure that the current thread holds the
1350    // mutex when this is called.
1351    has_owner_ = false;
1352    GTEST_CHECK_POSIX_SUCCESS_(pthread_mutex_unlock(&mutex_));
1353  }
1354
1355  // Does nothing if the current thread holds the mutex. Otherwise, crashes
1356  // with high probability.
1357  void AssertHeld() const {
1358    GTEST_CHECK_(has_owner_ && pthread_equal(owner_, pthread_self()))
1359        << "The current thread is not holding the mutex @" << this;
1360  }
1361
1362  // A static mutex may be used before main() is entered.  It may even
1363  // be used before the dynamic initialization stage.  Therefore we
1364  // must be able to initialize a static mutex object at link time.
1365  // This means MutexBase has to be a POD and its member variables
1366  // have to be public.
1367 public:
1368  pthread_mutex_t mutex_;  // The underlying pthread mutex.
1369  // has_owner_ indicates whether the owner_ field below contains a valid thread
1370  // ID and is therefore safe to inspect (e.g., to use in pthread_equal()). All
1371  // accesses to the owner_ field should be protected by a check of this field.
1372  // An alternative might be to memset() owner_ to all zeros, but there's no
1373  // guarantee that a zero'd pthread_t is necessarily invalid or even different
1374  // from pthread_self().
1375  bool has_owner_;
1376  pthread_t owner_;  // The thread holding the mutex.
1377};
1378
1379// Forward-declares a static mutex.
1380# define GTEST_DECLARE_STATIC_MUTEX_(mutex) \
1381    extern ::testing::internal::MutexBase mutex
1382
1383// Defines and statically (i.e. at link time) initializes a static mutex.
1384// The initialization list here does not explicitly initialize each field,
1385// instead relying on default initialization for the unspecified fields. In
1386// particular, the owner_ field (a pthread_t) is not explicitly initialized.
1387// This allows initialization to work whether pthread_t is a scalar or struct.
1388// The flag -Wmissing-field-initializers must not be specified for this to work.
1389# define GTEST_DEFINE_STATIC_MUTEX_(mutex) \
1390    ::testing::internal::MutexBase mutex = { PTHREAD_MUTEX_INITIALIZER, false }
1391
1392// The Mutex class can only be used for mutexes created at runtime. It
1393// shares its API with MutexBase otherwise.
1394class Mutex : public MutexBase {
1395 public:
1396  Mutex() {
1397    GTEST_CHECK_POSIX_SUCCESS_(pthread_mutex_init(&mutex_, NULL));
1398    has_owner_ = false;
1399  }
1400  ~Mutex() {
1401    GTEST_CHECK_POSIX_SUCCESS_(pthread_mutex_destroy(&mutex_));
1402  }
1403
1404 private:
1405  GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(Mutex);
1406};
1407
1408// We cannot name this class MutexLock as the ctor declaration would
1409// conflict with a macro named MutexLock, which is defined on some
1410// platforms.  Hence the typedef trick below.
1411class GTestMutexLock {
1412 public:
1413  explicit GTestMutexLock(MutexBase* mutex)
1414      : mutex_(mutex) { mutex_->Lock(); }
1415
1416  ~GTestMutexLock() { mutex_->Unlock(); }
1417
1418 private:
1419  MutexBase* const mutex_;
1420
1421  GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(GTestMutexLock);
1422};
1423
1424typedef GTestMutexLock MutexLock;
1425
1426// Helpers for ThreadLocal.
1427
1428// pthread_key_create() requires DeleteThreadLocalValue() to have
1429// C-linkage.  Therefore it cannot be templatized to access
1430// ThreadLocal<T>.  Hence the need for class
1431// ThreadLocalValueHolderBase.
1432class ThreadLocalValueHolderBase {
1433 public:
1434  virtual ~ThreadLocalValueHolderBase() {}
1435};
1436
1437// Called by pthread to delete thread-local data stored by
1438// pthread_setspecific().
1439extern "C" inline void DeleteThreadLocalValue(void* value_holder) {
1440  delete static_cast<ThreadLocalValueHolderBase*>(value_holder);
1441}
1442
1443// Implements thread-local storage on pthreads-based systems.
1444//
1445//   // Thread 1
1446//   ThreadLocal<int> tl(100);  // 100 is the default value for each thread.
1447//
1448//   // Thread 2
1449//   tl.set(150);  // Changes the value for thread 2 only.
1450//   EXPECT_EQ(150, tl.get());
1451//
1452//   // Thread 1
1453//   EXPECT_EQ(100, tl.get());  // In thread 1, tl has the original value.
1454//   tl.set(200);
1455//   EXPECT_EQ(200, tl.get());
1456//
1457// The template type argument T must have a public copy constructor.
1458// In addition, the default ThreadLocal constructor requires T to have
1459// a public default constructor.
1460//
1461// An object managed for a thread by a ThreadLocal instance is deleted
1462// when the thread exits.  Or, if the ThreadLocal instance dies in
1463// that thread, when the ThreadLocal dies.  It's the user's
1464// responsibility to ensure that all other threads using a ThreadLocal
1465// have exited when it dies, or the per-thread objects for those
1466// threads will not be deleted.
1467//
1468// Google Test only uses global ThreadLocal objects.  That means they
1469// will die after main() has returned.  Therefore, no per-thread
1470// object managed by Google Test will be leaked as long as all threads
1471// using Google Test have exited when main() returns.
1472template <typename T>
1473class ThreadLocal {
1474 public:
1475  ThreadLocal() : key_(CreateKey()),
1476                  default_() {}
1477  explicit ThreadLocal(const T& value) : key_(CreateKey()),
1478                                         default_(value) {}
1479
1480  ~ThreadLocal() {
1481    // Destroys the managed object for the current thread, if any.
1482    DeleteThreadLocalValue(pthread_getspecific(key_));
1483
1484    // Releases resources associated with the key.  This will *not*
1485    // delete managed objects for other threads.
1486    GTEST_CHECK_POSIX_SUCCESS_(pthread_key_delete(key_));
1487  }
1488
1489  T* pointer() { return GetOrCreateValue(); }
1490  const T* pointer() const { return GetOrCreateValue(); }
1491  const T& get() const { return *pointer(); }
1492  void set(const T& value) { *pointer() = value; }
1493
1494 private:
1495  // Holds a value of type T.
1496  class ValueHolder : public ThreadLocalValueHolderBase {
1497   public:
1498    explicit ValueHolder(const T& value) : value_(value) {}
1499
1500    T* pointer() { return &value_; }
1501
1502   private:
1503    T value_;
1504    GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(ValueHolder);
1505  };
1506
1507  static pthread_key_t CreateKey() {
1508    pthread_key_t key;
1509    // When a thread exits, DeleteThreadLocalValue() will be called on
1510    // the object managed for that thread.
1511    GTEST_CHECK_POSIX_SUCCESS_(
1512        pthread_key_create(&key, &DeleteThreadLocalValue));
1513    return key;
1514  }
1515
1516  T* GetOrCreateValue() const {
1517    ThreadLocalValueHolderBase* const holder =
1518        static_cast<ThreadLocalValueHolderBase*>(pthread_getspecific(key_));
1519    if (holder != NULL) {
1520      return CheckedDowncastToActualType<ValueHolder>(holder)->pointer();
1521    }
1522
1523    ValueHolder* const new_holder = new ValueHolder(default_);
1524    ThreadLocalValueHolderBase* const holder_base = new_holder;
1525    GTEST_CHECK_POSIX_SUCCESS_(pthread_setspecific(key_, holder_base));
1526    return new_holder->pointer();
1527  }
1528
1529  // A key pthreads uses for looking up per-thread values.
1530  const pthread_key_t key_;
1531  const T default_;  // The default value for each thread.
1532
1533  GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(ThreadLocal);
1534};
1535
1536# define GTEST_IS_THREADSAFE 1
1537
1538#else  // GTEST_HAS_PTHREAD
1539
1540// A dummy implementation of synchronization primitives (mutex, lock,
1541// and thread-local variable).  Necessary for compiling Google Test where
1542// mutex is not supported - using Google Test in multiple threads is not
1543// supported on such platforms.
1544
1545class Mutex {
1546 public:
1547  Mutex() {}
1548  void Lock() {}
1549  void Unlock() {}
1550  void AssertHeld() const {}
1551};
1552
1553# define GTEST_DECLARE_STATIC_MUTEX_(mutex) \
1554  extern ::testing::internal::Mutex mutex
1555
1556# define GTEST_DEFINE_STATIC_MUTEX_(mutex) ::testing::internal::Mutex mutex
1557
1558class GTestMutexLock {
1559 public:
1560  explicit GTestMutexLock(Mutex*) {}  // NOLINT
1561};
1562
1563typedef GTestMutexLock MutexLock;
1564
1565template <typename T>
1566class ThreadLocal {
1567 public:
1568  ThreadLocal() : value_() {}
1569  explicit ThreadLocal(const T& value) : value_(value) {}
1570  T* pointer() { return &value_; }
1571  const T* pointer() const { return &value_; }
1572  const T& get() const { return value_; }
1573  void set(const T& value) { value_ = value; }
1574 private:
1575  T value_;
1576};
1577
1578// The above synchronization primitives have dummy implementations.
1579// Therefore Google Test is not thread-safe.
1580# define GTEST_IS_THREADSAFE 0
1581
1582#endif  // GTEST_HAS_PTHREAD
1583
1584// Returns the number of threads running in the process, or 0 to indicate that
1585// we cannot detect it.
1586GTEST_API_ size_t GetThreadCount();
1587
1588// Passing non-POD classes through ellipsis (...) crashes the ARM
1589// compiler and generates a warning in Sun Studio.  The Nokia Symbian
1590// and the IBM XL C/C++ compiler try to instantiate a copy constructor
1591// for objects passed through ellipsis (...), failing for uncopyable
1592// objects.  We define this to ensure that only POD is passed through
1593// ellipsis on these systems.
1594#if defined(__SYMBIAN32__) || defined(__IBMCPP__) || defined(__SUNPRO_CC)
1595// We lose support for NULL detection where the compiler doesn't like
1596// passing non-POD classes through ellipsis (...).
1597# define GTEST_ELLIPSIS_NEEDS_POD_ 1
1598#else
1599# define GTEST_CAN_COMPARE_NULL 1
1600#endif
1601
1602// The Nokia Symbian and IBM XL C/C++ compilers cannot decide between
1603// const T& and const T* in a function template.  These compilers
1604// _can_ decide between class template specializations for T and T*,
1605// so a tr1::type_traits-like is_pointer works.
1606#if defined(__SYMBIAN32__) || defined(__IBMCPP__)
1607# define GTEST_NEEDS_IS_POINTER_ 1
1608#endif
1609
1610template <bool bool_value>
1611struct bool_constant {
1612  typedef bool_constant<bool_value> type;
1613  static const bool value = bool_value;
1614};
1615template <bool bool_value> const bool bool_constant<bool_value>::value;
1616
1617typedef bool_constant<false> false_type;
1618typedef bool_constant<true> true_type;
1619
1620template <typename T>
1621struct is_pointer : public false_type {};
1622
1623template <typename T>
1624struct is_pointer<T*> : public true_type {};
1625
1626template <typename Iterator>
1627struct IteratorTraits {
1628  typedef typename Iterator::value_type value_type;
1629};
1630
1631template <typename T>
1632struct IteratorTraits<T*> {
1633  typedef T value_type;
1634};
1635
1636template <typename T>
1637struct IteratorTraits<const T*> {
1638  typedef T value_type;
1639};
1640
1641#if GTEST_OS_WINDOWS
1642# define GTEST_PATH_SEP_ "\\"
1643# define GTEST_HAS_ALT_PATH_SEP_ 1
1644// The biggest signed integer type the compiler supports.
1645typedef __int64 BiggestInt;
1646#else
1647# define GTEST_PATH_SEP_ "/"
1648# define GTEST_HAS_ALT_PATH_SEP_ 0
1649typedef long long BiggestInt;  // NOLINT
1650#endif  // GTEST_OS_WINDOWS
1651
1652// Utilities for char.
1653
1654// isspace(int ch) and friends accept an unsigned char or EOF.  char
1655// may be signed, depending on the compiler (or compiler flags).
1656// Therefore we need to cast a char to unsigned char before calling
1657// isspace(), etc.
1658
1659inline bool IsAlpha(char ch) {
1660  return isalpha(static_cast<unsigned char>(ch)) != 0;
1661}
1662inline bool IsAlNum(char ch) {
1663  return isalnum(static_cast<unsigned char>(ch)) != 0;
1664}
1665inline bool IsDigit(char ch) {
1666  return isdigit(static_cast<unsigned char>(ch)) != 0;
1667}
1668inline bool IsLower(char ch) {
1669  return islower(static_cast<unsigned char>(ch)) != 0;
1670}
1671inline bool IsSpace(char ch) {
1672  return isspace(static_cast<unsigned char>(ch)) != 0;
1673}
1674inline bool IsUpper(char ch) {
1675  return isupper(static_cast<unsigned char>(ch)) != 0;
1676}
1677inline bool IsXDigit(char ch) {
1678  return isxdigit(static_cast<unsigned char>(ch)) != 0;
1679}
1680inline bool IsXDigit(wchar_t ch) {
1681  const unsigned char low_byte = static_cast<unsigned char>(ch);
1682  return ch == low_byte && isxdigit(low_byte) != 0;
1683}
1684
1685inline char ToLower(char ch) {
1686  return static_cast<char>(tolower(static_cast<unsigned char>(ch)));
1687}
1688inline char ToUpper(char ch) {
1689  return static_cast<char>(toupper(static_cast<unsigned char>(ch)));
1690}
1691
1692// The testing::internal::posix namespace holds wrappers for common
1693// POSIX functions.  These wrappers hide the differences between
1694// Windows/MSVC and POSIX systems.  Since some compilers define these
1695// standard functions as macros, the wrapper cannot have the same name
1696// as the wrapped function.
1697
1698namespace posix {
1699
1700// Functions with a different name on Windows.
1701
1702#if GTEST_OS_WINDOWS
1703
1704typedef struct _stat StatStruct;
1705
1706# ifdef __BORLANDC__
1707inline int IsATTY(int fd) { return isatty(fd); }
1708inline int StrCaseCmp(const char* s1, const char* s2) {
1709  return stricmp(s1, s2);
1710}
1711inline char* StrDup(const char* src) { return strdup(src); }
1712# else  // !__BORLANDC__
1713#  if GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE
1714inline int IsATTY(int /* fd */) { return 0; }
1715#  else
1716inline int IsATTY(int fd) { return _isatty(fd); }
1717#  endif  // GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE
1718inline int StrCaseCmp(const char* s1, const char* s2) {
1719  return _stricmp(s1, s2);
1720}
1721inline char* StrDup(const char* src) { return _strdup(src); }
1722# endif  // __BORLANDC__
1723
1724# if GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE
1725inline int FileNo(FILE* file) { return reinterpret_cast<int>(_fileno(file)); }
1726// Stat(), RmDir(), and IsDir() are not needed on Windows CE at this
1727// time and thus not defined there.
1728# else
1729inline int FileNo(FILE* file) { return _fileno(file); }
1730inline int Stat(const char* path, StatStruct* buf) { return _stat(path, buf); }
1731inline int RmDir(const char* dir) { return _rmdir(dir); }
1732inline bool IsDir(const StatStruct& st) {
1733  return (_S_IFDIR & st.st_mode) != 0;
1734}
1735# endif  // GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE
1736
1737#else
1738
1739typedef struct stat StatStruct;
1740
1741inline int FileNo(FILE* file) { return fileno(file); }
1742inline int IsATTY(int fd) { return isatty(fd); }
1743inline int Stat(const char* path, StatStruct* buf) { return stat(path, buf); }
1744inline int StrCaseCmp(const char* s1, const char* s2) {
1745  return strcasecmp(s1, s2);
1746}
1747inline char* StrDup(const char* src) { return strdup(src); }
1748inline int RmDir(const char* dir) { return rmdir(dir); }
1749inline bool IsDir(const StatStruct& st) { return S_ISDIR(st.st_mode); }
1750
1751#endif  // GTEST_OS_WINDOWS
1752
1753// Functions deprecated by MSVC 8.0.
1754
1755#ifdef _MSC_VER
1756// Temporarily disable warning 4996 (deprecated function).
1757# pragma warning(push)
1758# pragma warning(disable:4996)
1759#endif
1760
1761inline const char* StrNCpy(char* dest, const char* src, size_t n) {
1762  return strncpy(dest, src, n);
1763}
1764
1765// ChDir(), FReopen(), FDOpen(), Read(), Write(), Close(), and
1766// StrError() aren't needed on Windows CE at this time and thus not
1767// defined there.
1768
1769#if !GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE
1770inline int ChDir(const char* dir) { return chdir(dir); }
1771#endif
1772inline FILE* FOpen(const char* path, const char* mode) {
1773  return fopen(path, mode);
1774}
1775#if !GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE
1776inline FILE *FReopen(const char* path, const char* mode, FILE* stream) {
1777  return freopen(path, mode, stream);
1778}
1779inline FILE* FDOpen(int fd, const char* mode) { return fdopen(fd, mode); }
1780#endif
1781inline int FClose(FILE* fp) { return fclose(fp); }
1782#if !GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE
1783inline int Read(int fd, void* buf, unsigned int count) {
1784  return static_cast<int>(read(fd, buf, count));
1785}
1786inline int Write(int fd, const void* buf, unsigned int count) {
1787  return static_cast<int>(write(fd, buf, count));
1788}
1789inline int Close(int fd) { return close(fd); }
1790inline const char* StrError(int errnum) { return strerror(errnum); }
1791#endif
1792inline const char* GetEnv(const char* name) {
1793#if GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE
1794  // We are on Windows CE, which has no environment variables.
1795  return NULL;
1796#elif defined(__BORLANDC__) || defined(__SunOS_5_8) || defined(__SunOS_5_9)
1797  // Environment variables which we programmatically clear will be set to the
1798  // empty string rather than unset (NULL).  Handle that case.
1799  const char* const env = getenv(name);
1800  return (env != NULL && env[0] != '\0') ? env : NULL;
1801#else
1802  return getenv(name);
1803#endif
1804}
1805
1806#ifdef _MSC_VER
1807# pragma warning(pop)  // Restores the warning state.
1808#endif
1809
1810#if GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE
1811// Windows CE has no C library. The abort() function is used in
1812// several places in Google Test. This implementation provides a reasonable
1813// imitation of standard behaviour.
1814void Abort();
1815#else
1816inline void Abort() { abort(); }
1817#endif  // GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE
1818
1819}  // namespace posix
1820
1821// MSVC "deprecates" snprintf and issues warnings wherever it is used.  In
1822// order to avoid these warnings, we need to use _snprintf or _snprintf_s on
1823// MSVC-based platforms.  We map the GTEST_SNPRINTF_ macro to the appropriate
1824// function in order to achieve that.  We use macro definition here because
1825// snprintf is a variadic function.
1826#if _MSC_VER >= 1400 && !GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE
1827// MSVC 2005 and above support variadic macros.
1828# define GTEST_SNPRINTF_(buffer, size, format, ...) \
1829     _snprintf_s(buffer, size, size, format, __VA_ARGS__)
1830#elif defined(_MSC_VER)
1831// Windows CE does not define _snprintf_s and MSVC prior to 2005 doesn't
1832// complain about _snprintf.
1833# define GTEST_SNPRINTF_ _snprintf
1834#else
1835# define GTEST_SNPRINTF_ snprintf
1836#endif
1837
1838// The maximum number a BiggestInt can represent.  This definition
1839// works no matter BiggestInt is represented in one's complement or
1840// two's complement.
1841//
1842// We cannot rely on numeric_limits in STL, as __int64 and long long
1843// are not part of standard C++ and numeric_limits doesn't need to be
1844// defined for them.
1845const BiggestInt kMaxBiggestInt =
1846    ~(static_cast<BiggestInt>(1) << (8*sizeof(BiggestInt) - 1));
1847
1848// This template class serves as a compile-time function from size to
1849// type.  It maps a size in bytes to a primitive type with that
1850// size. e.g.
1851//
1852//   TypeWithSize<4>::UInt
1853//
1854// is typedef-ed to be unsigned int (unsigned integer made up of 4
1855// bytes).
1856//
1857// Such functionality should belong to STL, but I cannot find it
1858// there.
1859//
1860// Google Test uses this class in the implementation of floating-point
1861// comparison.
1862//
1863// For now it only handles UInt (unsigned int) as that's all Google Test
1864// needs.  Other types can be easily added in the future if need
1865// arises.
1866template <size_t size>
1867class TypeWithSize {
1868 public:
1869  // This prevents the user from using TypeWithSize<N> with incorrect
1870  // values of N.
1871  typedef void UInt;
1872};
1873
1874// The specialization for size 4.
1875template <>
1876class TypeWithSize<4> {
1877 public:
1878  // unsigned int has size 4 in both gcc and MSVC.
1879  //
1880  // As base/basictypes.h doesn't compile on Windows, we cannot use
1881  // uint32, uint64, and etc here.
1882  typedef int Int;
1883  typedef unsigned int UInt;
1884};
1885
1886// The specialization for size 8.
1887template <>
1888class TypeWithSize<8> {
1889 public:
1890#if GTEST_OS_WINDOWS
1891  typedef __int64 Int;
1892  typedef unsigned __int64 UInt;
1893#else
1894  typedef long long Int;  // NOLINT
1895  typedef unsigned long long UInt;  // NOLINT
1896#endif  // GTEST_OS_WINDOWS
1897};
1898
1899// Integer types of known sizes.
1900typedef TypeWithSize<4>::Int Int32;
1901typedef TypeWithSize<4>::UInt UInt32;
1902typedef TypeWithSize<8>::Int Int64;
1903typedef TypeWithSize<8>::UInt UInt64;
1904typedef TypeWithSize<8>::Int TimeInMillis;  // Represents time in milliseconds.
1905
1906// Utilities for command line flags and environment variables.
1907
1908// Macro for referencing flags.
1909#define GTEST_FLAG(name) FLAGS_gtest_##name
1910
1911// Macros for declaring flags.
1912#define GTEST_DECLARE_bool_(name) GTEST_API_ extern bool GTEST_FLAG(name)
1913#define GTEST_DECLARE_int32_(name) \
1914    GTEST_API_ extern ::testing::internal::Int32 GTEST_FLAG(name)
1915#define GTEST_DECLARE_string_(name) \
1916    GTEST_API_ extern ::std::string GTEST_FLAG(name)
1917
1918// Macros for defining flags.
1919#define GTEST_DEFINE_bool_(name, default_val, doc) \
1920    GTEST_API_ bool GTEST_FLAG(name) = (default_val)
1921#define GTEST_DEFINE_int32_(name, default_val, doc) \
1922    GTEST_API_ ::testing::internal::Int32 GTEST_FLAG(name) = (default_val)
1923#define GTEST_DEFINE_string_(name, default_val, doc) \
1924    GTEST_API_ ::std::string GTEST_FLAG(name) = (default_val)
1925
1926// Thread annotations
1927#define GTEST_EXCLUSIVE_LOCK_REQUIRED_(locks)
1928#define GTEST_LOCK_EXCLUDED_(locks)
1929
1930// Parses 'str' for a 32-bit signed integer.  If successful, writes the result
1931// to *value and returns true; otherwise leaves *value unchanged and returns
1932// false.
1933// TODO(chandlerc): Find a better way to refactor flag and environment parsing
1934// out of both gtest-port.cc and gtest.cc to avoid exporting this utility
1935// function.
1936bool ParseInt32(const Message& src_text, const char* str, Int32* value);
1937
1938// Parses a bool/Int32/string from the environment variable
1939// corresponding to the given Google Test flag.
1940bool BoolFromGTestEnv(const char* flag, bool default_val);
1941GTEST_API_ Int32 Int32FromGTestEnv(const char* flag, Int32 default_val);
1942const char* StringFromGTestEnv(const char* flag, const char* default_val);
1943
1944}  // namespace internal
1945}  // namespace testing
1946
1947#endif  // GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_INTERNAL_GTEST_PORT_H_
1948