1// Copyright 2005, Google Inc.
2// All rights reserved.
3//
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5// modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
6// met:
7//
8//     * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
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13// distribution.
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16// this software without specific prior written permission.
17//
18// THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
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24// LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
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28// OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
29//
30// Author: wan@google.com (Zhanyong Wan)
31//
32// The Google C++ Testing Framework (Google Test)
33//
34// This header file defines the public API for Google Test.  It should be
35// included by any test program that uses Google Test.
36//
37// IMPORTANT NOTE: Due to limitation of the C++ language, we have to
38// leave some internal implementation details in this header file.
39// They are clearly marked by comments like this:
40//
41//   // INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM.
42//
43// Such code is NOT meant to be used by a user directly, and is subject
44// to CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE.  Therefore DO NOT DEPEND ON IT in a user
45// program!
46//
47// Acknowledgment: Google Test borrowed the idea of automatic test
48// registration from Barthelemy Dagenais' (barthelemy@prologique.com)
49// easyUnit framework.
50
51#ifndef GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_GTEST_H_
52#define GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_GTEST_H_
53
54#include <limits>
55#include <ostream>
56#include <vector>
57
58#include "gtest/internal/gtest-internal.h"
59#include "gtest/internal/gtest-string.h"
60#include "gtest/gtest-death-test.h"
61#include "gtest/gtest-message.h"
62#include "gtest/gtest-param-test.h"
63#include "gtest/gtest-printers.h"
64#include "gtest/gtest_prod.h"
65#include "gtest/gtest-test-part.h"
66#include "gtest/gtest-typed-test.h"
67
68// Depending on the platform, different string classes are available.
69// On Linux, in addition to ::std::string, Google also makes use of
70// class ::string, which has the same interface as ::std::string, but
71// has a different implementation.
72//
73// The user can define GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING to 1 to indicate that
74// ::string is available AND is a distinct type to ::std::string, or
75// define it to 0 to indicate otherwise.
76//
77// If the user's ::std::string and ::string are the same class due to
78// aliasing, he should define GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING to 0.
79//
80// If the user doesn't define GTEST_HAS_GLOBAL_STRING, it is defined
81// heuristically.
82
83namespace testing {
84
85// Declares the flags.
86
87// This flag temporary enables the disabled tests.
88GTEST_DECLARE_bool_(also_run_disabled_tests);
89
90// This flag brings the debugger on an assertion failure.
91GTEST_DECLARE_bool_(break_on_failure);
92
93// This flag controls whether Google Test catches all test-thrown exceptions
94// and logs them as failures.
95GTEST_DECLARE_bool_(catch_exceptions);
96
97// This flag enables using colors in terminal output. Available values are
98// "yes" to enable colors, "no" (disable colors), or "auto" (the default)
99// to let Google Test decide.
100GTEST_DECLARE_string_(color);
101
102// This flag sets up the filter to select by name using a glob pattern
103// the tests to run. If the filter is not given all tests are executed.
104GTEST_DECLARE_string_(filter);
105
106// This flag causes the Google Test to list tests. None of the tests listed
107// are actually run if the flag is provided.
108GTEST_DECLARE_bool_(list_tests);
109
110// This flag controls whether Google Test emits a detailed XML report to a file
111// in addition to its normal textual output.
112GTEST_DECLARE_string_(output);
113
114// This flags control whether Google Test prints the elapsed time for each
115// test.
116GTEST_DECLARE_bool_(print_time);
117
118// This flag specifies the random number seed.
119GTEST_DECLARE_int32_(random_seed);
120
121// This flag sets how many times the tests are repeated. The default value
122// is 1. If the value is -1 the tests are repeating forever.
123GTEST_DECLARE_int32_(repeat);
124
125// This flag controls whether Google Test includes Google Test internal
126// stack frames in failure stack traces.
127GTEST_DECLARE_bool_(show_internal_stack_frames);
128
129// When this flag is specified, tests' order is randomized on every iteration.
130GTEST_DECLARE_bool_(shuffle);
131
132// This flag specifies the maximum number of stack frames to be
133// printed in a failure message.
134GTEST_DECLARE_int32_(stack_trace_depth);
135
136// When this flag is specified, a failed assertion will throw an
137// exception if exceptions are enabled, or exit the program with a
138// non-zero code otherwise.
139GTEST_DECLARE_bool_(throw_on_failure);
140
141// When this flag is set with a "host:port" string, on supported
142// platforms test results are streamed to the specified port on
143// the specified host machine.
144GTEST_DECLARE_string_(stream_result_to);
145
146// The upper limit for valid stack trace depths.
147const int kMaxStackTraceDepth = 100;
148
149namespace internal {
150
151class AssertHelper;
152class DefaultGlobalTestPartResultReporter;
153class ExecDeathTest;
154class NoExecDeathTest;
155class FinalSuccessChecker;
156class GTestFlagSaver;
157class TestResultAccessor;
158class TestEventListenersAccessor;
159class TestEventRepeater;
160class WindowsDeathTest;
161class UnitTestImpl* GetUnitTestImpl();
162void ReportFailureInUnknownLocation(TestPartResult::Type result_type,
163                                    const String& message);
164
165// Converts a streamable value to a String.  A NULL pointer is
166// converted to "(null)".  When the input value is a ::string,
167// ::std::string, ::wstring, or ::std::wstring object, each NUL
168// character in it is replaced with "\\0".
169// Declared in gtest-internal.h but defined here, so that it has access
170// to the definition of the Message class, required by the ARM
171// compiler.
172template <typename T>
173String StreamableToString(const T& streamable) {
174  return (Message() << streamable).GetString();
175}
176
177}  // namespace internal
178
179// The friend relationship of some of these classes is cyclic.
180// If we don't forward declare them the compiler might confuse the classes
181// in friendship clauses with same named classes on the scope.
182class Test;
183class TestCase;
184class TestInfo;
185class UnitTest;
186
187// A class for indicating whether an assertion was successful.  When
188// the assertion wasn't successful, the AssertionResult object
189// remembers a non-empty message that describes how it failed.
190//
191// To create an instance of this class, use one of the factory functions
192// (AssertionSuccess() and AssertionFailure()).
193//
194// This class is useful for two purposes:
195//   1. Defining predicate functions to be used with Boolean test assertions
196//      EXPECT_TRUE/EXPECT_FALSE and their ASSERT_ counterparts
197//   2. Defining predicate-format functions to be
198//      used with predicate assertions (ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT*, etc).
199//
200// For example, if you define IsEven predicate:
201//
202//   testing::AssertionResult IsEven(int n) {
203//     if ((n % 2) == 0)
204//       return testing::AssertionSuccess();
205//     else
206//       return testing::AssertionFailure() << n << " is odd";
207//   }
208//
209// Then the failed expectation EXPECT_TRUE(IsEven(Fib(5)))
210// will print the message
211//
212//   Value of: IsEven(Fib(5))
213//     Actual: false (5 is odd)
214//   Expected: true
215//
216// instead of a more opaque
217//
218//   Value of: IsEven(Fib(5))
219//     Actual: false
220//   Expected: true
221//
222// in case IsEven is a simple Boolean predicate.
223//
224// If you expect your predicate to be reused and want to support informative
225// messages in EXPECT_FALSE and ASSERT_FALSE (negative assertions show up
226// about half as often as positive ones in our tests), supply messages for
227// both success and failure cases:
228//
229//   testing::AssertionResult IsEven(int n) {
230//     if ((n % 2) == 0)
231//       return testing::AssertionSuccess() << n << " is even";
232//     else
233//       return testing::AssertionFailure() << n << " is odd";
234//   }
235//
236// Then a statement EXPECT_FALSE(IsEven(Fib(6))) will print
237//
238//   Value of: IsEven(Fib(6))
239//     Actual: true (8 is even)
240//   Expected: false
241//
242// NB: Predicates that support negative Boolean assertions have reduced
243// performance in positive ones so be careful not to use them in tests
244// that have lots (tens of thousands) of positive Boolean assertions.
245//
246// To use this class with EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT assertions such as:
247//
248//   // Verifies that Foo() returns an even number.
249//   EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT1(IsEven, Foo());
250//
251// you need to define:
252//
253//   testing::AssertionResult IsEven(const char* expr, int n) {
254//     if ((n % 2) == 0)
255//       return testing::AssertionSuccess();
256//     else
257//       return testing::AssertionFailure()
258//         << "Expected: " << expr << " is even\n  Actual: it's " << n;
259//   }
260//
261// If Foo() returns 5, you will see the following message:
262//
263//   Expected: Foo() is even
264//     Actual: it's 5
265//
266class GTEST_API_ AssertionResult {
267 public:
268  // Copy constructor.
269  // Used in EXPECT_TRUE/FALSE(assertion_result).
270  AssertionResult(const AssertionResult& other);
271  // Used in the EXPECT_TRUE/FALSE(bool_expression).
272  explicit AssertionResult(bool success) : success_(success) {}
273
274  // Returns true iff the assertion succeeded.
275  operator bool() const { return success_; }  // NOLINT
276
277  // Returns the assertion's negation. Used with EXPECT/ASSERT_FALSE.
278  AssertionResult operator!() const;
279
280  // Returns the text streamed into this AssertionResult. Test assertions
281  // use it when they fail (i.e., the predicate's outcome doesn't match the
282  // assertion's expectation). When nothing has been streamed into the
283  // object, returns an empty string.
284  const char* message() const {
285    return message_.get() != NULL ?  message_->c_str() : "";
286  }
287  // TODO(vladl@google.com): Remove this after making sure no clients use it.
288  // Deprecated; please use message() instead.
289  const char* failure_message() const { return message(); }
290
291  // Streams a custom failure message into this object.
292  template <typename T> AssertionResult& operator<<(const T& value) {
293    AppendMessage(Message() << value);
294    return *this;
295  }
296
297  // Allows streaming basic output manipulators such as endl or flush into
298  // this object.
299  AssertionResult& operator<<(
300      ::std::ostream& (*basic_manipulator)(::std::ostream& stream)) {
301    AppendMessage(Message() << basic_manipulator);
302    return *this;
303  }
304
305 private:
306  // Appends the contents of message to message_.
307  void AppendMessage(const Message& a_message) {
308    if (message_.get() == NULL)
309      message_.reset(new ::std::string);
310    message_->append(a_message.GetString().c_str());
311  }
312
313  // Stores result of the assertion predicate.
314  bool success_;
315  // Stores the message describing the condition in case the expectation
316  // construct is not satisfied with the predicate's outcome.
317  // Referenced via a pointer to avoid taking too much stack frame space
318  // with test assertions.
319  internal::scoped_ptr< ::std::string> message_;
320
321  GTEST_DISALLOW_ASSIGN_(AssertionResult);
322};
323
324// Makes a successful assertion result.
325GTEST_API_ AssertionResult AssertionSuccess();
326
327// Makes a failed assertion result.
328GTEST_API_ AssertionResult AssertionFailure();
329
330// Makes a failed assertion result with the given failure message.
331// Deprecated; use AssertionFailure() << msg.
332GTEST_API_ AssertionResult AssertionFailure(const Message& msg);
333
334// The abstract class that all tests inherit from.
335//
336// In Google Test, a unit test program contains one or many TestCases, and
337// each TestCase contains one or many Tests.
338//
339// When you define a test using the TEST macro, you don't need to
340// explicitly derive from Test - the TEST macro automatically does
341// this for you.
342//
343// The only time you derive from Test is when defining a test fixture
344// to be used a TEST_F.  For example:
345//
346//   class FooTest : public testing::Test {
347//    protected:
348//     virtual void SetUp() { ... }
349//     virtual void TearDown() { ... }
350//     ...
351//   };
352//
353//   TEST_F(FooTest, Bar) { ... }
354//   TEST_F(FooTest, Baz) { ... }
355//
356// Test is not copyable.
357class GTEST_API_ Test {
358 public:
359  friend class TestInfo;
360
361  // Defines types for pointers to functions that set up and tear down
362  // a test case.
363  typedef internal::SetUpTestCaseFunc SetUpTestCaseFunc;
364  typedef internal::TearDownTestCaseFunc TearDownTestCaseFunc;
365
366  // The d'tor is virtual as we intend to inherit from Test.
367  virtual ~Test();
368
369  // Sets up the stuff shared by all tests in this test case.
370  //
371  // Google Test will call Foo::SetUpTestCase() before running the first
372  // test in test case Foo.  Hence a sub-class can define its own
373  // SetUpTestCase() method to shadow the one defined in the super
374  // class.
375  static void SetUpTestCase() {}
376
377  // Tears down the stuff shared by all tests in this test case.
378  //
379  // Google Test will call Foo::TearDownTestCase() after running the last
380  // test in test case Foo.  Hence a sub-class can define its own
381  // TearDownTestCase() method to shadow the one defined in the super
382  // class.
383  static void TearDownTestCase() {}
384
385  // Returns true iff the current test has a fatal failure.
386  static bool HasFatalFailure();
387
388  // Returns true iff the current test has a non-fatal failure.
389  static bool HasNonfatalFailure();
390
391  // Returns true iff the current test has a (either fatal or
392  // non-fatal) failure.
393  static bool HasFailure() { return HasFatalFailure() || HasNonfatalFailure(); }
394
395  // Logs a property for the current test.  Only the last value for a given
396  // key is remembered.
397  // These are public static so they can be called from utility functions
398  // that are not members of the test fixture.
399  // The arguments are const char* instead strings, as Google Test is used
400  // on platforms where string doesn't compile.
401  //
402  // Note that a driving consideration for these RecordProperty methods
403  // was to produce xml output suited to the Greenspan charting utility,
404  // which at present will only chart values that fit in a 32-bit int. It
405  // is the user's responsibility to restrict their values to 32-bit ints
406  // if they intend them to be used with Greenspan.
407  static void RecordProperty(const char* key, const char* value);
408  static void RecordProperty(const char* key, int value);
409
410 protected:
411  // Creates a Test object.
412  Test();
413
414  // Sets up the test fixture.
415  virtual void SetUp();
416
417  // Tears down the test fixture.
418  virtual void TearDown();
419
420 private:
421  // Returns true iff the current test has the same fixture class as
422  // the first test in the current test case.
423  static bool HasSameFixtureClass();
424
425  // Runs the test after the test fixture has been set up.
426  //
427  // A sub-class must implement this to define the test logic.
428  //
429  // DO NOT OVERRIDE THIS FUNCTION DIRECTLY IN A USER PROGRAM.
430  // Instead, use the TEST or TEST_F macro.
431  virtual void TestBody() = 0;
432
433  // Sets up, executes, and tears down the test.
434  void Run();
435
436  // Deletes self.  We deliberately pick an unusual name for this
437  // internal method to avoid clashing with names used in user TESTs.
438  void DeleteSelf_() { delete this; }
439
440  // Uses a GTestFlagSaver to save and restore all Google Test flags.
441  const internal::GTestFlagSaver* const gtest_flag_saver_;
442
443  // Often a user mis-spells SetUp() as Setup() and spends a long time
444  // wondering why it is never called by Google Test.  The declaration of
445  // the following method is solely for catching such an error at
446  // compile time:
447  //
448  //   - The return type is deliberately chosen to be not void, so it
449  //   will be a conflict if a user declares void Setup() in his test
450  //   fixture.
451  //
452  //   - This method is private, so it will be another compiler error
453  //   if a user calls it from his test fixture.
454  //
455  // DO NOT OVERRIDE THIS FUNCTION.
456  //
457  // If you see an error about overriding the following function or
458  // about it being private, you have mis-spelled SetUp() as Setup().
459  struct Setup_should_be_spelled_SetUp {};
460  virtual Setup_should_be_spelled_SetUp* Setup() { return NULL; }
461
462  // We disallow copying Tests.
463  GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(Test);
464};
465
466typedef internal::TimeInMillis TimeInMillis;
467
468// A copyable object representing a user specified test property which can be
469// output as a key/value string pair.
470//
471// Don't inherit from TestProperty as its destructor is not virtual.
472class TestProperty {
473 public:
474  // C'tor.  TestProperty does NOT have a default constructor.
475  // Always use this constructor (with parameters) to create a
476  // TestProperty object.
477  TestProperty(const char* a_key, const char* a_value) :
478    key_(a_key), value_(a_value) {
479  }
480
481  // Gets the user supplied key.
482  const char* key() const {
483    return key_.c_str();
484  }
485
486  // Gets the user supplied value.
487  const char* value() const {
488    return value_.c_str();
489  }
490
491  // Sets a new value, overriding the one supplied in the constructor.
492  void SetValue(const char* new_value) {
493    value_ = new_value;
494  }
495
496 private:
497  // The key supplied by the user.
498  internal::String key_;
499  // The value supplied by the user.
500  internal::String value_;
501};
502
503// The result of a single Test.  This includes a list of
504// TestPartResults, a list of TestProperties, a count of how many
505// death tests there are in the Test, and how much time it took to run
506// the Test.
507//
508// TestResult is not copyable.
509class GTEST_API_ TestResult {
510 public:
511  // Creates an empty TestResult.
512  TestResult();
513
514  // D'tor.  Do not inherit from TestResult.
515  ~TestResult();
516
517  // Gets the number of all test parts.  This is the sum of the number
518  // of successful test parts and the number of failed test parts.
519  int total_part_count() const;
520
521  // Returns the number of the test properties.
522  int test_property_count() const;
523
524  // Returns true iff the test passed (i.e. no test part failed).
525  bool Passed() const { return !Failed(); }
526
527  // Returns true iff the test failed.
528  bool Failed() const;
529
530  // Returns true iff the test fatally failed.
531  bool HasFatalFailure() const;
532
533  // Returns true iff the test has a non-fatal failure.
534  bool HasNonfatalFailure() const;
535
536  // Returns the elapsed time, in milliseconds.
537  TimeInMillis elapsed_time() const { return elapsed_time_; }
538
539  // Returns the i-th test part result among all the results. i can range
540  // from 0 to test_property_count() - 1. If i is not in that range, aborts
541  // the program.
542  const TestPartResult& GetTestPartResult(int i) const;
543
544  // Returns the i-th test property. i can range from 0 to
545  // test_property_count() - 1. If i is not in that range, aborts the
546  // program.
547  const TestProperty& GetTestProperty(int i) const;
548
549 private:
550  friend class TestInfo;
551  friend class UnitTest;
552  friend class internal::DefaultGlobalTestPartResultReporter;
553  friend class internal::ExecDeathTest;
554  friend class internal::TestResultAccessor;
555  friend class internal::UnitTestImpl;
556  friend class internal::WindowsDeathTest;
557
558  // Gets the vector of TestPartResults.
559  const std::vector<TestPartResult>& test_part_results() const {
560    return test_part_results_;
561  }
562
563  // Gets the vector of TestProperties.
564  const std::vector<TestProperty>& test_properties() const {
565    return test_properties_;
566  }
567
568  // Sets the elapsed time.
569  void set_elapsed_time(TimeInMillis elapsed) { elapsed_time_ = elapsed; }
570
571  // Adds a test property to the list. The property is validated and may add
572  // a non-fatal failure if invalid (e.g., if it conflicts with reserved
573  // key names). If a property is already recorded for the same key, the
574  // value will be updated, rather than storing multiple values for the same
575  // key.
576  void RecordProperty(const TestProperty& test_property);
577
578  // Adds a failure if the key is a reserved attribute of Google Test
579  // testcase tags.  Returns true if the property is valid.
580  // TODO(russr): Validate attribute names are legal and human readable.
581  static bool ValidateTestProperty(const TestProperty& test_property);
582
583  // Adds a test part result to the list.
584  void AddTestPartResult(const TestPartResult& test_part_result);
585
586  // Returns the death test count.
587  int death_test_count() const { return death_test_count_; }
588
589  // Increments the death test count, returning the new count.
590  int increment_death_test_count() { return ++death_test_count_; }
591
592  // Clears the test part results.
593  void ClearTestPartResults();
594
595  // Clears the object.
596  void Clear();
597
598  // Protects mutable state of the property vector and of owned
599  // properties, whose values may be updated.
600  internal::Mutex test_properites_mutex_;
601
602  // The vector of TestPartResults
603  std::vector<TestPartResult> test_part_results_;
604  // The vector of TestProperties
605  std::vector<TestProperty> test_properties_;
606  // Running count of death tests.
607  int death_test_count_;
608  // The elapsed time, in milliseconds.
609  TimeInMillis elapsed_time_;
610
611  // We disallow copying TestResult.
612  GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(TestResult);
613};  // class TestResult
614
615// A TestInfo object stores the following information about a test:
616//
617//   Test case name
618//   Test name
619//   Whether the test should be run
620//   A function pointer that creates the test object when invoked
621//   Test result
622//
623// The constructor of TestInfo registers itself with the UnitTest
624// singleton such that the RUN_ALL_TESTS() macro knows which tests to
625// run.
626class GTEST_API_ TestInfo {
627 public:
628  // Destructs a TestInfo object.  This function is not virtual, so
629  // don't inherit from TestInfo.
630  ~TestInfo();
631
632  // Returns the test case name.
633  const char* test_case_name() const { return test_case_name_.c_str(); }
634
635  // Returns the test name.
636  const char* name() const { return name_.c_str(); }
637
638  // Returns the name of the parameter type, or NULL if this is not a typed
639  // or a type-parameterized test.
640  const char* type_param() const {
641    if (type_param_.get() != NULL)
642      return type_param_->c_str();
643    return NULL;
644  }
645
646  // Returns the text representation of the value parameter, or NULL if this
647  // is not a value-parameterized test.
648  const char* value_param() const {
649    if (value_param_.get() != NULL)
650      return value_param_->c_str();
651    return NULL;
652  }
653
654  // Returns true if this test should run, that is if the test is not disabled
655  // (or it is disabled but the also_run_disabled_tests flag has been specified)
656  // and its full name matches the user-specified filter.
657  //
658  // Google Test allows the user to filter the tests by their full names.
659  // The full name of a test Bar in test case Foo is defined as
660  // "Foo.Bar".  Only the tests that match the filter will run.
661  //
662  // A filter is a colon-separated list of glob (not regex) patterns,
663  // optionally followed by a '-' and a colon-separated list of
664  // negative patterns (tests to exclude).  A test is run if it
665  // matches one of the positive patterns and does not match any of
666  // the negative patterns.
667  //
668  // For example, *A*:Foo.* is a filter that matches any string that
669  // contains the character 'A' or starts with "Foo.".
670  bool should_run() const { return should_run_; }
671
672  // Returns the result of the test.
673  const TestResult* result() const { return &result_; }
674
675 private:
676#if GTEST_HAS_DEATH_TEST
677  friend class internal::DefaultDeathTestFactory;
678#endif  // GTEST_HAS_DEATH_TEST
679  friend class Test;
680  friend class TestCase;
681  friend class internal::UnitTestImpl;
682  friend TestInfo* internal::MakeAndRegisterTestInfo(
683      const char* test_case_name, const char* name,
684      const char* type_param,
685      const char* value_param,
686      internal::TypeId fixture_class_id,
687      Test::SetUpTestCaseFunc set_up_tc,
688      Test::TearDownTestCaseFunc tear_down_tc,
689      internal::TestFactoryBase* factory);
690
691  // Constructs a TestInfo object. The newly constructed instance assumes
692  // ownership of the factory object.
693  TestInfo(const char* test_case_name, const char* name,
694           const char* a_type_param,
695           const char* a_value_param,
696           internal::TypeId fixture_class_id,
697           internal::TestFactoryBase* factory);
698
699  // Increments the number of death tests encountered in this test so
700  // far.
701  int increment_death_test_count() {
702    return result_.increment_death_test_count();
703  }
704
705  // Creates the test object, runs it, records its result, and then
706  // deletes it.
707  void Run();
708
709  static void ClearTestResult(TestInfo* test_info) {
710    test_info->result_.Clear();
711  }
712
713  // These fields are immutable properties of the test.
714  const std::string test_case_name_;     // Test case name
715  const std::string name_;               // Test name
716  // Name of the parameter type, or NULL if this is not a typed or a
717  // type-parameterized test.
718  const internal::scoped_ptr<const ::std::string> type_param_;
719  // Text representation of the value parameter, or NULL if this is not a
720  // value-parameterized test.
721  const internal::scoped_ptr<const ::std::string> value_param_;
722  const internal::TypeId fixture_class_id_;   // ID of the test fixture class
723  bool should_run_;                 // True iff this test should run
724  bool is_disabled_;                // True iff this test is disabled
725  bool matches_filter_;             // True if this test matches the
726                                    // user-specified filter.
727  internal::TestFactoryBase* const factory_;  // The factory that creates
728                                              // the test object
729
730  // This field is mutable and needs to be reset before running the
731  // test for the second time.
732  TestResult result_;
733
734  GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(TestInfo);
735};
736
737// A test case, which consists of a vector of TestInfos.
738//
739// TestCase is not copyable.
740class GTEST_API_ TestCase {
741 public:
742  // Creates a TestCase with the given name.
743  //
744  // TestCase does NOT have a default constructor.  Always use this
745  // constructor to create a TestCase object.
746  //
747  // Arguments:
748  //
749  //   name:         name of the test case
750  //   a_type_param: the name of the test's type parameter, or NULL if
751  //                 this is not a type-parameterized test.
752  //   set_up_tc:    pointer to the function that sets up the test case
753  //   tear_down_tc: pointer to the function that tears down the test case
754  TestCase(const char* name, const char* a_type_param,
755           Test::SetUpTestCaseFunc set_up_tc,
756           Test::TearDownTestCaseFunc tear_down_tc);
757
758  // Destructor of TestCase.
759  virtual ~TestCase();
760
761  // Gets the name of the TestCase.
762  const char* name() const { return name_.c_str(); }
763
764  // Returns the name of the parameter type, or NULL if this is not a
765  // type-parameterized test case.
766  const char* type_param() const {
767    if (type_param_.get() != NULL)
768      return type_param_->c_str();
769    return NULL;
770  }
771
772  // Returns true if any test in this test case should run.
773  bool should_run() const { return should_run_; }
774
775  // Gets the number of successful tests in this test case.
776  int successful_test_count() const;
777
778  // Gets the number of failed tests in this test case.
779  int failed_test_count() const;
780
781  // Gets the number of disabled tests in this test case.
782  int disabled_test_count() const;
783
784  // Get the number of tests in this test case that should run.
785  int test_to_run_count() const;
786
787  // Gets the number of all tests in this test case.
788  int total_test_count() const;
789
790  // Returns true iff the test case passed.
791  bool Passed() const { return !Failed(); }
792
793  // Returns true iff the test case failed.
794  bool Failed() const { return failed_test_count() > 0; }
795
796  // Returns the elapsed time, in milliseconds.
797  TimeInMillis elapsed_time() const { return elapsed_time_; }
798
799  // Returns the i-th test among all the tests. i can range from 0 to
800  // total_test_count() - 1. If i is not in that range, returns NULL.
801  const TestInfo* GetTestInfo(int i) const;
802
803 private:
804  friend class Test;
805  friend class internal::UnitTestImpl;
806
807  // Gets the (mutable) vector of TestInfos in this TestCase.
808  std::vector<TestInfo*>& test_info_list() { return test_info_list_; }
809
810  // Gets the (immutable) vector of TestInfos in this TestCase.
811  const std::vector<TestInfo*>& test_info_list() const {
812    return test_info_list_;
813  }
814
815  // Returns the i-th test among all the tests. i can range from 0 to
816  // total_test_count() - 1. If i is not in that range, returns NULL.
817  TestInfo* GetMutableTestInfo(int i);
818
819  // Sets the should_run member.
820  void set_should_run(bool should) { should_run_ = should; }
821
822  // Adds a TestInfo to this test case.  Will delete the TestInfo upon
823  // destruction of the TestCase object.
824  void AddTestInfo(TestInfo * test_info);
825
826  // Clears the results of all tests in this test case.
827  void ClearResult();
828
829  // Clears the results of all tests in the given test case.
830  static void ClearTestCaseResult(TestCase* test_case) {
831    test_case->ClearResult();
832  }
833
834  // Runs every test in this TestCase.
835  void Run();
836
837  // Runs SetUpTestCase() for this TestCase.  This wrapper is needed
838  // for catching exceptions thrown from SetUpTestCase().
839  void RunSetUpTestCase() { (*set_up_tc_)(); }
840
841  // Runs TearDownTestCase() for this TestCase.  This wrapper is
842  // needed for catching exceptions thrown from TearDownTestCase().
843  void RunTearDownTestCase() { (*tear_down_tc_)(); }
844
845  // Returns true iff test passed.
846  static bool TestPassed(const TestInfo* test_info) {
847    return test_info->should_run() && test_info->result()->Passed();
848  }
849
850  // Returns true iff test failed.
851  static bool TestFailed(const TestInfo* test_info) {
852    return test_info->should_run() && test_info->result()->Failed();
853  }
854
855  // Returns true iff test is disabled.
856  static bool TestDisabled(const TestInfo* test_info) {
857    return test_info->is_disabled_;
858  }
859
860  // Returns true if the given test should run.
861  static bool ShouldRunTest(const TestInfo* test_info) {
862    return test_info->should_run();
863  }
864
865  // Shuffles the tests in this test case.
866  void ShuffleTests(internal::Random* random);
867
868  // Restores the test order to before the first shuffle.
869  void UnshuffleTests();
870
871  // Name of the test case.
872  internal::String name_;
873  // Name of the parameter type, or NULL if this is not a typed or a
874  // type-parameterized test.
875  const internal::scoped_ptr<const ::std::string> type_param_;
876  // The vector of TestInfos in their original order.  It owns the
877  // elements in the vector.
878  std::vector<TestInfo*> test_info_list_;
879  // Provides a level of indirection for the test list to allow easy
880  // shuffling and restoring the test order.  The i-th element in this
881  // vector is the index of the i-th test in the shuffled test list.
882  std::vector<int> test_indices_;
883  // Pointer to the function that sets up the test case.
884  Test::SetUpTestCaseFunc set_up_tc_;
885  // Pointer to the function that tears down the test case.
886  Test::TearDownTestCaseFunc tear_down_tc_;
887  // True iff any test in this test case should run.
888  bool should_run_;
889  // Elapsed time, in milliseconds.
890  TimeInMillis elapsed_time_;
891
892  // We disallow copying TestCases.
893  GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(TestCase);
894};
895
896// An Environment object is capable of setting up and tearing down an
897// environment.  The user should subclass this to define his own
898// environment(s).
899//
900// An Environment object does the set-up and tear-down in virtual
901// methods SetUp() and TearDown() instead of the constructor and the
902// destructor, as:
903//
904//   1. You cannot safely throw from a destructor.  This is a problem
905//      as in some cases Google Test is used where exceptions are enabled, and
906//      we may want to implement ASSERT_* using exceptions where they are
907//      available.
908//   2. You cannot use ASSERT_* directly in a constructor or
909//      destructor.
910class Environment {
911 public:
912  // The d'tor is virtual as we need to subclass Environment.
913  virtual ~Environment() {}
914
915  // Override this to define how to set up the environment.
916  virtual void SetUp() {}
917
918  // Override this to define how to tear down the environment.
919  virtual void TearDown() {}
920 private:
921  // If you see an error about overriding the following function or
922  // about it being private, you have mis-spelled SetUp() as Setup().
923  struct Setup_should_be_spelled_SetUp {};
924  virtual Setup_should_be_spelled_SetUp* Setup() { return NULL; }
925};
926
927// The interface for tracing execution of tests. The methods are organized in
928// the order the corresponding events are fired.
929class TestEventListener {
930 public:
931  virtual ~TestEventListener() {}
932
933  // Fired before any test activity starts.
934  virtual void OnTestProgramStart(const UnitTest& unit_test) = 0;
935
936  // Fired before each iteration of tests starts.  There may be more than
937  // one iteration if GTEST_FLAG(repeat) is set. iteration is the iteration
938  // index, starting from 0.
939  virtual void OnTestIterationStart(const UnitTest& unit_test,
940                                    int iteration) = 0;
941
942  // Fired before environment set-up for each iteration of tests starts.
943  virtual void OnEnvironmentsSetUpStart(const UnitTest& unit_test) = 0;
944
945  // Fired after environment set-up for each iteration of tests ends.
946  virtual void OnEnvironmentsSetUpEnd(const UnitTest& unit_test) = 0;
947
948  // Fired before the test case starts.
949  virtual void OnTestCaseStart(const TestCase& test_case) = 0;
950
951  // Fired before the test starts.
952  virtual void OnTestStart(const TestInfo& test_info) = 0;
953
954  // Fired after a failed assertion or a SUCCEED() invocation.
955  virtual void OnTestPartResult(const TestPartResult& test_part_result) = 0;
956
957  // Fired after the test ends.
958  virtual void OnTestEnd(const TestInfo& test_info) = 0;
959
960  // Fired after the test case ends.
961  virtual void OnTestCaseEnd(const TestCase& test_case) = 0;
962
963  // Fired before environment tear-down for each iteration of tests starts.
964  virtual void OnEnvironmentsTearDownStart(const UnitTest& unit_test) = 0;
965
966  // Fired after environment tear-down for each iteration of tests ends.
967  virtual void OnEnvironmentsTearDownEnd(const UnitTest& unit_test) = 0;
968
969  // Fired after each iteration of tests finishes.
970  virtual void OnTestIterationEnd(const UnitTest& unit_test,
971                                  int iteration) = 0;
972
973  // Fired after all test activities have ended.
974  virtual void OnTestProgramEnd(const UnitTest& unit_test) = 0;
975};
976
977// The convenience class for users who need to override just one or two
978// methods and are not concerned that a possible change to a signature of
979// the methods they override will not be caught during the build.  For
980// comments about each method please see the definition of TestEventListener
981// above.
982class EmptyTestEventListener : public TestEventListener {
983 public:
984  virtual void OnTestProgramStart(const UnitTest& /*unit_test*/) {}
985  virtual void OnTestIterationStart(const UnitTest& /*unit_test*/,
986                                    int /*iteration*/) {}
987  virtual void OnEnvironmentsSetUpStart(const UnitTest& /*unit_test*/) {}
988  virtual void OnEnvironmentsSetUpEnd(const UnitTest& /*unit_test*/) {}
989  virtual void OnTestCaseStart(const TestCase& /*test_case*/) {}
990  virtual void OnTestStart(const TestInfo& /*test_info*/) {}
991  virtual void OnTestPartResult(const TestPartResult& /*test_part_result*/) {}
992  virtual void OnTestEnd(const TestInfo& /*test_info*/) {}
993  virtual void OnTestCaseEnd(const TestCase& /*test_case*/) {}
994  virtual void OnEnvironmentsTearDownStart(const UnitTest& /*unit_test*/) {}
995  virtual void OnEnvironmentsTearDownEnd(const UnitTest& /*unit_test*/) {}
996  virtual void OnTestIterationEnd(const UnitTest& /*unit_test*/,
997                                  int /*iteration*/) {}
998  virtual void OnTestProgramEnd(const UnitTest& /*unit_test*/) {}
999};
1000
1001// TestEventListeners lets users add listeners to track events in Google Test.
1002class GTEST_API_ TestEventListeners {
1003 public:
1004  TestEventListeners();
1005  ~TestEventListeners();
1006
1007  // Appends an event listener to the end of the list. Google Test assumes
1008  // the ownership of the listener (i.e. it will delete the listener when
1009  // the test program finishes).
1010  void Append(TestEventListener* listener);
1011
1012  // Removes the given event listener from the list and returns it.  It then
1013  // becomes the caller's responsibility to delete the listener. Returns
1014  // NULL if the listener is not found in the list.
1015  TestEventListener* Release(TestEventListener* listener);
1016
1017  // Returns the standard listener responsible for the default console
1018  // output.  Can be removed from the listeners list to shut down default
1019  // console output.  Note that removing this object from the listener list
1020  // with Release transfers its ownership to the caller and makes this
1021  // function return NULL the next time.
1022  TestEventListener* default_result_printer() const {
1023    return default_result_printer_;
1024  }
1025
1026  // Returns the standard listener responsible for the default XML output
1027  // controlled by the --gtest_output=xml flag.  Can be removed from the
1028  // listeners list by users who want to shut down the default XML output
1029  // controlled by this flag and substitute it with custom one.  Note that
1030  // removing this object from the listener list with Release transfers its
1031  // ownership to the caller and makes this function return NULL the next
1032  // time.
1033  TestEventListener* default_xml_generator() const {
1034    return default_xml_generator_;
1035  }
1036
1037 private:
1038  friend class TestCase;
1039  friend class TestInfo;
1040  friend class internal::DefaultGlobalTestPartResultReporter;
1041  friend class internal::NoExecDeathTest;
1042  friend class internal::TestEventListenersAccessor;
1043  friend class internal::UnitTestImpl;
1044
1045  // Returns repeater that broadcasts the TestEventListener events to all
1046  // subscribers.
1047  TestEventListener* repeater();
1048
1049  // Sets the default_result_printer attribute to the provided listener.
1050  // The listener is also added to the listener list and previous
1051  // default_result_printer is removed from it and deleted. The listener can
1052  // also be NULL in which case it will not be added to the list. Does
1053  // nothing if the previous and the current listener objects are the same.
1054  void SetDefaultResultPrinter(TestEventListener* listener);
1055
1056  // Sets the default_xml_generator attribute to the provided listener.  The
1057  // listener is also added to the listener list and previous
1058  // default_xml_generator is removed from it and deleted. The listener can
1059  // also be NULL in which case it will not be added to the list. Does
1060  // nothing if the previous and the current listener objects are the same.
1061  void SetDefaultXmlGenerator(TestEventListener* listener);
1062
1063  // Controls whether events will be forwarded by the repeater to the
1064  // listeners in the list.
1065  bool EventForwardingEnabled() const;
1066  void SuppressEventForwarding();
1067
1068  // The actual list of listeners.
1069  internal::TestEventRepeater* repeater_;
1070  // Listener responsible for the standard result output.
1071  TestEventListener* default_result_printer_;
1072  // Listener responsible for the creation of the XML output file.
1073  TestEventListener* default_xml_generator_;
1074
1075  // We disallow copying TestEventListeners.
1076  GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(TestEventListeners);
1077};
1078
1079// A UnitTest consists of a vector of TestCases.
1080//
1081// This is a singleton class.  The only instance of UnitTest is
1082// created when UnitTest::GetInstance() is first called.  This
1083// instance is never deleted.
1084//
1085// UnitTest is not copyable.
1086//
1087// This class is thread-safe as long as the methods are called
1088// according to their specification.
1089class GTEST_API_ UnitTest {
1090 public:
1091  // Gets the singleton UnitTest object.  The first time this method
1092  // is called, a UnitTest object is constructed and returned.
1093  // Consecutive calls will return the same object.
1094  static UnitTest* GetInstance();
1095
1096  // Runs all tests in this UnitTest object and prints the result.
1097  // Returns 0 if successful, or 1 otherwise.
1098  //
1099  // This method can only be called from the main thread.
1100  //
1101  // INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM.
1102  int Run() GTEST_MUST_USE_RESULT_;
1103
1104  // Returns the working directory when the first TEST() or TEST_F()
1105  // was executed.  The UnitTest object owns the string.
1106  const char* original_working_dir() const;
1107
1108  // Returns the TestCase object for the test that's currently running,
1109  // or NULL if no test is running.
1110  const TestCase* current_test_case() const
1111      GTEST_LOCK_EXCLUDED_(mutex_);
1112
1113  // Returns the TestInfo object for the test that's currently running,
1114  // or NULL if no test is running.
1115  const TestInfo* current_test_info() const
1116      GTEST_LOCK_EXCLUDED_(mutex_);
1117
1118  // Returns the random seed used at the start of the current test run.
1119  int random_seed() const;
1120
1121#if GTEST_HAS_PARAM_TEST
1122  // Returns the ParameterizedTestCaseRegistry object used to keep track of
1123  // value-parameterized tests and instantiate and register them.
1124  //
1125  // INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM.
1126  internal::ParameterizedTestCaseRegistry& parameterized_test_registry()
1127      GTEST_LOCK_EXCLUDED_(mutex_);
1128#endif  // GTEST_HAS_PARAM_TEST
1129
1130  // Gets the number of successful test cases.
1131  int successful_test_case_count() const;
1132
1133  // Gets the number of failed test cases.
1134  int failed_test_case_count() const;
1135
1136  // Gets the number of all test cases.
1137  int total_test_case_count() const;
1138
1139  // Gets the number of all test cases that contain at least one test
1140  // that should run.
1141  int test_case_to_run_count() const;
1142
1143  // Gets the number of successful tests.
1144  int successful_test_count() const;
1145
1146  // Gets the number of failed tests.
1147  int failed_test_count() const;
1148
1149  // Gets the number of disabled tests.
1150  int disabled_test_count() const;
1151
1152  // Gets the number of all tests.
1153  int total_test_count() const;
1154
1155  // Gets the number of tests that should run.
1156  int test_to_run_count() const;
1157
1158  // Gets the time of the test program start, in ms from the start of the
1159  // UNIX epoch.
1160  TimeInMillis start_timestamp() const;
1161
1162  // Gets the elapsed time, in milliseconds.
1163  TimeInMillis elapsed_time() const;
1164
1165  // Returns true iff the unit test passed (i.e. all test cases passed).
1166  bool Passed() const;
1167
1168  // Returns true iff the unit test failed (i.e. some test case failed
1169  // or something outside of all tests failed).
1170  bool Failed() const;
1171
1172  // Gets the i-th test case among all the test cases. i can range from 0 to
1173  // total_test_case_count() - 1. If i is not in that range, returns NULL.
1174  const TestCase* GetTestCase(int i) const;
1175
1176  // Returns the list of event listeners that can be used to track events
1177  // inside Google Test.
1178  TestEventListeners& listeners();
1179
1180 private:
1181  // Registers and returns a global test environment.  When a test
1182  // program is run, all global test environments will be set-up in
1183  // the order they were registered.  After all tests in the program
1184  // have finished, all global test environments will be torn-down in
1185  // the *reverse* order they were registered.
1186  //
1187  // The UnitTest object takes ownership of the given environment.
1188  //
1189  // This method can only be called from the main thread.
1190  Environment* AddEnvironment(Environment* env);
1191
1192  // Adds a TestPartResult to the current TestResult object.  All
1193  // Google Test assertion macros (e.g. ASSERT_TRUE, EXPECT_EQ, etc)
1194  // eventually call this to report their results.  The user code
1195  // should use the assertion macros instead of calling this directly.
1196  void AddTestPartResult(TestPartResult::Type result_type,
1197                         const char* file_name,
1198                         int line_number,
1199                         const internal::String& message,
1200                         const internal::String& os_stack_trace)
1201      GTEST_LOCK_EXCLUDED_(mutex_);
1202
1203  // Adds a TestProperty to the current TestResult object. If the result already
1204  // contains a property with the same key, the value will be updated.
1205  void RecordPropertyForCurrentTest(const char* key, const char* value);
1206
1207  // Gets the i-th test case among all the test cases. i can range from 0 to
1208  // total_test_case_count() - 1. If i is not in that range, returns NULL.
1209  TestCase* GetMutableTestCase(int i);
1210
1211  // Accessors for the implementation object.
1212  internal::UnitTestImpl* impl() { return impl_; }
1213  const internal::UnitTestImpl* impl() const { return impl_; }
1214
1215  // These classes and funcions are friends as they need to access private
1216  // members of UnitTest.
1217  friend class Test;
1218  friend class internal::AssertHelper;
1219  friend class internal::ScopedTrace;
1220  friend Environment* AddGlobalTestEnvironment(Environment* env);
1221  friend internal::UnitTestImpl* internal::GetUnitTestImpl();
1222  friend void internal::ReportFailureInUnknownLocation(
1223      TestPartResult::Type result_type,
1224      const internal::String& message);
1225
1226  // Creates an empty UnitTest.
1227  UnitTest();
1228
1229  // D'tor
1230  virtual ~UnitTest();
1231
1232  // Pushes a trace defined by SCOPED_TRACE() on to the per-thread
1233  // Google Test trace stack.
1234  void PushGTestTrace(const internal::TraceInfo& trace)
1235      GTEST_LOCK_EXCLUDED_(mutex_);
1236
1237  // Pops a trace from the per-thread Google Test trace stack.
1238  void PopGTestTrace()
1239      GTEST_LOCK_EXCLUDED_(mutex_);
1240
1241  // Protects mutable state in *impl_.  This is mutable as some const
1242  // methods need to lock it too.
1243  mutable internal::Mutex mutex_;
1244
1245  // Opaque implementation object.  This field is never changed once
1246  // the object is constructed.  We don't mark it as const here, as
1247  // doing so will cause a warning in the constructor of UnitTest.
1248  // Mutable state in *impl_ is protected by mutex_.
1249  internal::UnitTestImpl* impl_;
1250
1251  // We disallow copying UnitTest.
1252  GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(UnitTest);
1253};
1254
1255// A convenient wrapper for adding an environment for the test
1256// program.
1257//
1258// You should call this before RUN_ALL_TESTS() is called, probably in
1259// main().  If you use gtest_main, you need to call this before main()
1260// starts for it to take effect.  For example, you can define a global
1261// variable like this:
1262//
1263//   testing::Environment* const foo_env =
1264//       testing::AddGlobalTestEnvironment(new FooEnvironment);
1265//
1266// However, we strongly recommend you to write your own main() and
1267// call AddGlobalTestEnvironment() there, as relying on initialization
1268// of global variables makes the code harder to read and may cause
1269// problems when you register multiple environments from different
1270// translation units and the environments have dependencies among them
1271// (remember that the compiler doesn't guarantee the order in which
1272// global variables from different translation units are initialized).
1273inline Environment* AddGlobalTestEnvironment(Environment* env) {
1274  return UnitTest::GetInstance()->AddEnvironment(env);
1275}
1276
1277// Initializes Google Test.  This must be called before calling
1278// RUN_ALL_TESTS().  In particular, it parses a command line for the
1279// flags that Google Test recognizes.  Whenever a Google Test flag is
1280// seen, it is removed from argv, and *argc is decremented.
1281//
1282// No value is returned.  Instead, the Google Test flag variables are
1283// updated.
1284//
1285// Calling the function for the second time has no user-visible effect.
1286GTEST_API_ void InitGoogleTest(int* argc, char** argv);
1287
1288// This overloaded version can be used in Windows programs compiled in
1289// UNICODE mode.
1290GTEST_API_ void InitGoogleTest(int* argc, wchar_t** argv);
1291
1292namespace internal {
1293
1294// Formats a comparison assertion (e.g. ASSERT_EQ, EXPECT_LT, and etc)
1295// operand to be used in a failure message.  The type (but not value)
1296// of the other operand may affect the format.  This allows us to
1297// print a char* as a raw pointer when it is compared against another
1298// char*, and print it as a C string when it is compared against an
1299// std::string object, for example.
1300//
1301// The default implementation ignores the type of the other operand.
1302// Some specialized versions are used to handle formatting wide or
1303// narrow C strings.
1304//
1305// INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM.
1306template <typename T1, typename T2>
1307String FormatForComparisonFailureMessage(const T1& value,
1308                                         const T2& /* other_operand */) {
1309  // C++Builder compiles this incorrectly if the namespace isn't explicitly
1310  // given.
1311  return ::testing::PrintToString(value);
1312}
1313
1314// The helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_EQ.
1315template <typename T1, typename T2>
1316AssertionResult CmpHelperEQ(const char* expected_expression,
1317                            const char* actual_expression,
1318                            const T1& expected,
1319                            const T2& actual) {
1320#ifdef _MSC_VER
1321# pragma warning(push)          // Saves the current warning state.
1322# pragma warning(disable:4389)  // Temporarily disables warning on
1323                               // signed/unsigned mismatch.
1324#endif
1325
1326  if (expected == actual) {
1327    return AssertionSuccess();
1328  }
1329
1330#ifdef _MSC_VER
1331# pragma warning(pop)          // Restores the warning state.
1332#endif
1333
1334  return EqFailure(expected_expression,
1335                   actual_expression,
1336                   FormatForComparisonFailureMessage(expected, actual),
1337                   FormatForComparisonFailureMessage(actual, expected),
1338                   false);
1339}
1340
1341// With this overloaded version, we allow anonymous enums to be used
1342// in {ASSERT|EXPECT}_EQ when compiled with gcc 4, as anonymous enums
1343// can be implicitly cast to BiggestInt.
1344GTEST_API_ AssertionResult CmpHelperEQ(const char* expected_expression,
1345                                       const char* actual_expression,
1346                                       BiggestInt expected,
1347                                       BiggestInt actual);
1348
1349// The helper class for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_EQ.  The template argument
1350// lhs_is_null_literal is true iff the first argument to ASSERT_EQ()
1351// is a null pointer literal.  The following default implementation is
1352// for lhs_is_null_literal being false.
1353template <bool lhs_is_null_literal>
1354class EqHelper {
1355 public:
1356  // This templatized version is for the general case.
1357  template <typename T1, typename T2>
1358  static AssertionResult Compare(const char* expected_expression,
1359                                 const char* actual_expression,
1360                                 const T1& expected,
1361                                 const T2& actual) {
1362    return CmpHelperEQ(expected_expression, actual_expression, expected,
1363                       actual);
1364  }
1365
1366  // With this overloaded version, we allow anonymous enums to be used
1367  // in {ASSERT|EXPECT}_EQ when compiled with gcc 4, as anonymous
1368  // enums can be implicitly cast to BiggestInt.
1369  //
1370  // Even though its body looks the same as the above version, we
1371  // cannot merge the two, as it will make anonymous enums unhappy.
1372  static AssertionResult Compare(const char* expected_expression,
1373                                 const char* actual_expression,
1374                                 BiggestInt expected,
1375                                 BiggestInt actual) {
1376    return CmpHelperEQ(expected_expression, actual_expression, expected,
1377                       actual);
1378  }
1379};
1380
1381// This specialization is used when the first argument to ASSERT_EQ()
1382// is a null pointer literal, like NULL, false, or 0.
1383template <>
1384class EqHelper<true> {
1385 public:
1386  // We define two overloaded versions of Compare().  The first
1387  // version will be picked when the second argument to ASSERT_EQ() is
1388  // NOT a pointer, e.g. ASSERT_EQ(0, AnIntFunction()) or
1389  // EXPECT_EQ(false, a_bool).
1390  template <typename T1, typename T2>
1391  static AssertionResult Compare(
1392      const char* expected_expression,
1393      const char* actual_expression,
1394      const T1& expected,
1395      const T2& actual,
1396      // The following line prevents this overload from being considered if T2
1397      // is not a pointer type.  We need this because ASSERT_EQ(NULL, my_ptr)
1398      // expands to Compare("", "", NULL, my_ptr), which requires a conversion
1399      // to match the Secret* in the other overload, which would otherwise make
1400      // this template match better.
1401      typename EnableIf<!is_pointer<T2>::value>::type* = 0) {
1402    return CmpHelperEQ(expected_expression, actual_expression, expected,
1403                       actual);
1404  }
1405
1406  // This version will be picked when the second argument to ASSERT_EQ() is a
1407  // pointer, e.g. ASSERT_EQ(NULL, a_pointer).
1408  template <typename T>
1409  static AssertionResult Compare(
1410      const char* expected_expression,
1411      const char* actual_expression,
1412      // We used to have a second template parameter instead of Secret*.  That
1413      // template parameter would deduce to 'long', making this a better match
1414      // than the first overload even without the first overload's EnableIf.
1415      // Unfortunately, gcc with -Wconversion-null warns when "passing NULL to
1416      // non-pointer argument" (even a deduced integral argument), so the old
1417      // implementation caused warnings in user code.
1418      Secret* /* expected (NULL) */,
1419      T* actual) {
1420    // We already know that 'expected' is a null pointer.
1421    return CmpHelperEQ(expected_expression, actual_expression,
1422                       static_cast<T*>(NULL), actual);
1423  }
1424};
1425
1426// A macro for implementing the helper functions needed to implement
1427// ASSERT_?? and EXPECT_??.  It is here just to avoid copy-and-paste
1428// of similar code.
1429//
1430// For each templatized helper function, we also define an overloaded
1431// version for BiggestInt in order to reduce code bloat and allow
1432// anonymous enums to be used with {ASSERT|EXPECT}_?? when compiled
1433// with gcc 4.
1434//
1435// INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM.
1436#define GTEST_IMPL_CMP_HELPER_(op_name, op)\
1437template <typename T1, typename T2>\
1438AssertionResult CmpHelper##op_name(const char* expr1, const char* expr2, \
1439                                   const T1& val1, const T2& val2) {\
1440  if (val1 op val2) {\
1441    return AssertionSuccess();\
1442  } else {\
1443    return AssertionFailure() \
1444        << "Expected: (" << expr1 << ") " #op " (" << expr2\
1445        << "), actual: " << FormatForComparisonFailureMessage(val1, val2)\
1446        << " vs " << FormatForComparisonFailureMessage(val2, val1);\
1447  }\
1448}\
1449GTEST_API_ AssertionResult CmpHelper##op_name(\
1450    const char* expr1, const char* expr2, BiggestInt val1, BiggestInt val2)
1451
1452// INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM.
1453
1454// Implements the helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_NE
1455GTEST_IMPL_CMP_HELPER_(NE, !=);
1456// Implements the helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_LE
1457GTEST_IMPL_CMP_HELPER_(LE, <=);
1458// Implements the helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_LT
1459GTEST_IMPL_CMP_HELPER_(LT, <);
1460// Implements the helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_GE
1461GTEST_IMPL_CMP_HELPER_(GE, >=);
1462// Implements the helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_GT
1463GTEST_IMPL_CMP_HELPER_(GT, >);
1464
1465#undef GTEST_IMPL_CMP_HELPER_
1466
1467// The helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_STREQ.
1468//
1469// INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM.
1470GTEST_API_ AssertionResult CmpHelperSTREQ(const char* expected_expression,
1471                                          const char* actual_expression,
1472                                          const char* expected,
1473                                          const char* actual);
1474
1475// The helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_STRCASEEQ.
1476//
1477// INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM.
1478GTEST_API_ AssertionResult CmpHelperSTRCASEEQ(const char* expected_expression,
1479                                              const char* actual_expression,
1480                                              const char* expected,
1481                                              const char* actual);
1482
1483// The helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_STRNE.
1484//
1485// INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM.
1486GTEST_API_ AssertionResult CmpHelperSTRNE(const char* s1_expression,
1487                                          const char* s2_expression,
1488                                          const char* s1,
1489                                          const char* s2);
1490
1491// The helper function for {ASSERT|EXPECT}_STRCASENE.
1492//
1493// INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM.
1494GTEST_API_ AssertionResult CmpHelperSTRCASENE(const char* s1_expression,
1495                                              const char* s2_expression,
1496                                              const char* s1,
1497                                              const char* s2);
1498
1499
1500// Helper function for *_STREQ on wide strings.
1501//
1502// INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM.
1503GTEST_API_ AssertionResult CmpHelperSTREQ(const char* expected_expression,
1504                                          const char* actual_expression,
1505                                          const wchar_t* expected,
1506                                          const wchar_t* actual);
1507
1508// Helper function for *_STRNE on wide strings.
1509//
1510// INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM.
1511GTEST_API_ AssertionResult CmpHelperSTRNE(const char* s1_expression,
1512                                          const char* s2_expression,
1513                                          const wchar_t* s1,
1514                                          const wchar_t* s2);
1515
1516}  // namespace internal
1517
1518// IsSubstring() and IsNotSubstring() are intended to be used as the
1519// first argument to {EXPECT,ASSERT}_PRED_FORMAT2(), not by
1520// themselves.  They check whether needle is a substring of haystack
1521// (NULL is considered a substring of itself only), and return an
1522// appropriate error message when they fail.
1523//
1524// The {needle,haystack}_expr arguments are the stringified
1525// expressions that generated the two real arguments.
1526GTEST_API_ AssertionResult IsSubstring(
1527    const char* needle_expr, const char* haystack_expr,
1528    const char* needle, const char* haystack);
1529GTEST_API_ AssertionResult IsSubstring(
1530    const char* needle_expr, const char* haystack_expr,
1531    const wchar_t* needle, const wchar_t* haystack);
1532GTEST_API_ AssertionResult IsNotSubstring(
1533    const char* needle_expr, const char* haystack_expr,
1534    const char* needle, const char* haystack);
1535GTEST_API_ AssertionResult IsNotSubstring(
1536    const char* needle_expr, const char* haystack_expr,
1537    const wchar_t* needle, const wchar_t* haystack);
1538GTEST_API_ AssertionResult IsSubstring(
1539    const char* needle_expr, const char* haystack_expr,
1540    const ::std::string& needle, const ::std::string& haystack);
1541GTEST_API_ AssertionResult IsNotSubstring(
1542    const char* needle_expr, const char* haystack_expr,
1543    const ::std::string& needle, const ::std::string& haystack);
1544
1545#if GTEST_HAS_STD_WSTRING
1546GTEST_API_ AssertionResult IsSubstring(
1547    const char* needle_expr, const char* haystack_expr,
1548    const ::std::wstring& needle, const ::std::wstring& haystack);
1549GTEST_API_ AssertionResult IsNotSubstring(
1550    const char* needle_expr, const char* haystack_expr,
1551    const ::std::wstring& needle, const ::std::wstring& haystack);
1552#endif  // GTEST_HAS_STD_WSTRING
1553
1554namespace internal {
1555
1556// Helper template function for comparing floating-points.
1557//
1558// Template parameter:
1559//
1560//   RawType: the raw floating-point type (either float or double)
1561//
1562// INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM.
1563template <typename RawType>
1564AssertionResult CmpHelperFloatingPointEQ(const char* expected_expression,
1565                                         const char* actual_expression,
1566                                         RawType expected,
1567                                         RawType actual) {
1568  const FloatingPoint<RawType> lhs(expected), rhs(actual);
1569
1570  if (lhs.AlmostEquals(rhs)) {
1571    return AssertionSuccess();
1572  }
1573
1574  ::std::stringstream expected_ss;
1575  expected_ss << std::setprecision(std::numeric_limits<RawType>::digits10 + 2)
1576              << expected;
1577
1578  ::std::stringstream actual_ss;
1579  actual_ss << std::setprecision(std::numeric_limits<RawType>::digits10 + 2)
1580            << actual;
1581
1582  return EqFailure(expected_expression,
1583                   actual_expression,
1584                   StringStreamToString(&expected_ss),
1585                   StringStreamToString(&actual_ss),
1586                   false);
1587}
1588
1589// Helper function for implementing ASSERT_NEAR.
1590//
1591// INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN A USER PROGRAM.
1592GTEST_API_ AssertionResult DoubleNearPredFormat(const char* expr1,
1593                                                const char* expr2,
1594                                                const char* abs_error_expr,
1595                                                double val1,
1596                                                double val2,
1597                                                double abs_error);
1598
1599// INTERNAL IMPLEMENTATION - DO NOT USE IN USER CODE.
1600// A class that enables one to stream messages to assertion macros
1601class GTEST_API_ AssertHelper {
1602 public:
1603  // Constructor.
1604  AssertHelper(TestPartResult::Type type,
1605               const char* file,
1606               int line,
1607               const char* message);
1608  ~AssertHelper();
1609
1610  // Message assignment is a semantic trick to enable assertion
1611  // streaming; see the GTEST_MESSAGE_ macro below.
1612  void operator=(const Message& message) const;
1613
1614 private:
1615  // We put our data in a struct so that the size of the AssertHelper class can
1616  // be as small as possible.  This is important because gcc is incapable of
1617  // re-using stack space even for temporary variables, so every EXPECT_EQ
1618  // reserves stack space for another AssertHelper.
1619  struct AssertHelperData {
1620    AssertHelperData(TestPartResult::Type t,
1621                     const char* srcfile,
1622                     int line_num,
1623                     const char* msg)
1624        : type(t), file(srcfile), line(line_num), message(msg) { }
1625
1626    TestPartResult::Type const type;
1627    const char*        const file;
1628    int                const line;
1629    String             const message;
1630
1631   private:
1632    GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(AssertHelperData);
1633  };
1634
1635  AssertHelperData* const data_;
1636
1637  GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(AssertHelper);
1638};
1639
1640}  // namespace internal
1641
1642#if GTEST_HAS_PARAM_TEST
1643// The pure interface class that all value-parameterized tests inherit from.
1644// A value-parameterized class must inherit from both ::testing::Test and
1645// ::testing::WithParamInterface. In most cases that just means inheriting
1646// from ::testing::TestWithParam, but more complicated test hierarchies
1647// may need to inherit from Test and WithParamInterface at different levels.
1648//
1649// This interface has support for accessing the test parameter value via
1650// the GetParam() method.
1651//
1652// Use it with one of the parameter generator defining functions, like Range(),
1653// Values(), ValuesIn(), Bool(), and Combine().
1654//
1655// class FooTest : public ::testing::TestWithParam<int> {
1656//  protected:
1657//   FooTest() {
1658//     // Can use GetParam() here.
1659//   }
1660//   virtual ~FooTest() {
1661//     // Can use GetParam() here.
1662//   }
1663//   virtual void SetUp() {
1664//     // Can use GetParam() here.
1665//   }
1666//   virtual void TearDown {
1667//     // Can use GetParam() here.
1668//   }
1669// };
1670// TEST_P(FooTest, DoesBar) {
1671//   // Can use GetParam() method here.
1672//   Foo foo;
1673//   ASSERT_TRUE(foo.DoesBar(GetParam()));
1674// }
1675// INSTANTIATE_TEST_CASE_P(OneToTenRange, FooTest, ::testing::Range(1, 10));
1676
1677template <typename T>
1678class WithParamInterface {
1679 public:
1680  typedef T ParamType;
1681  virtual ~WithParamInterface() {}
1682
1683  // The current parameter value. Is also available in the test fixture's
1684  // constructor. This member function is non-static, even though it only
1685  // references static data, to reduce the opportunity for incorrect uses
1686  // like writing 'WithParamInterface<bool>::GetParam()' for a test that
1687  // uses a fixture whose parameter type is int.
1688  const ParamType& GetParam() const { return *parameter_; }
1689
1690 private:
1691  // Sets parameter value. The caller is responsible for making sure the value
1692  // remains alive and unchanged throughout the current test.
1693  static void SetParam(const ParamType* parameter) {
1694    parameter_ = parameter;
1695  }
1696
1697  // Static value used for accessing parameter during a test lifetime.
1698  static const ParamType* parameter_;
1699
1700  // TestClass must be a subclass of WithParamInterface<T> and Test.
1701  template <class TestClass> friend class internal::ParameterizedTestFactory;
1702};
1703
1704template <typename T>
1705const T* WithParamInterface<T>::parameter_ = NULL;
1706
1707// Most value-parameterized classes can ignore the existence of
1708// WithParamInterface, and can just inherit from ::testing::TestWithParam.
1709
1710template <typename T>
1711class TestWithParam : public Test, public WithParamInterface<T> {
1712};
1713
1714#endif  // GTEST_HAS_PARAM_TEST
1715
1716// Macros for indicating success/failure in test code.
1717
1718// ADD_FAILURE unconditionally adds a failure to the current test.
1719// SUCCEED generates a success - it doesn't automatically make the
1720// current test successful, as a test is only successful when it has
1721// no failure.
1722//
1723// EXPECT_* verifies that a certain condition is satisfied.  If not,
1724// it behaves like ADD_FAILURE.  In particular:
1725//
1726//   EXPECT_TRUE  verifies that a Boolean condition is true.
1727//   EXPECT_FALSE verifies that a Boolean condition is false.
1728//
1729// FAIL and ASSERT_* are similar to ADD_FAILURE and EXPECT_*, except
1730// that they will also abort the current function on failure.  People
1731// usually want the fail-fast behavior of FAIL and ASSERT_*, but those
1732// writing data-driven tests often find themselves using ADD_FAILURE
1733// and EXPECT_* more.
1734
1735// Generates a nonfatal failure with a generic message.
1736#define ADD_FAILURE() GTEST_NONFATAL_FAILURE_("Failed")
1737
1738// Generates a nonfatal failure at the given source file location with
1739// a generic message.
1740#define ADD_FAILURE_AT(file, line) \
1741  GTEST_MESSAGE_AT_(file, line, "Failed", \
1742                    ::testing::TestPartResult::kNonFatalFailure)
1743
1744// Generates a fatal failure with a generic message.
1745#define GTEST_FAIL() GTEST_FATAL_FAILURE_("Failed")
1746
1747// Define this macro to 1 to omit the definition of FAIL(), which is a
1748// generic name and clashes with some other libraries.
1749#if !GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_FAIL
1750# define FAIL() GTEST_FAIL()
1751#endif
1752
1753// Generates a success with a generic message.
1754#define GTEST_SUCCEED() GTEST_SUCCESS_("Succeeded")
1755
1756// Define this macro to 1 to omit the definition of SUCCEED(), which
1757// is a generic name and clashes with some other libraries.
1758#if !GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_SUCCEED
1759# define SUCCEED() GTEST_SUCCEED()
1760#endif
1761
1762// Macros for testing exceptions.
1763//
1764//    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_THROW(statement, expected_exception):
1765//         Tests that the statement throws the expected exception.
1766//    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_NO_THROW(statement):
1767//         Tests that the statement doesn't throw any exception.
1768//    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_ANY_THROW(statement):
1769//         Tests that the statement throws an exception.
1770
1771#define EXPECT_THROW(statement, expected_exception) \
1772  GTEST_TEST_THROW_(statement, expected_exception, GTEST_NONFATAL_FAILURE_)
1773#define EXPECT_NO_THROW(statement) \
1774  GTEST_TEST_NO_THROW_(statement, GTEST_NONFATAL_FAILURE_)
1775#define EXPECT_ANY_THROW(statement) \
1776  GTEST_TEST_ANY_THROW_(statement, GTEST_NONFATAL_FAILURE_)
1777#define ASSERT_THROW(statement, expected_exception) \
1778  GTEST_TEST_THROW_(statement, expected_exception, GTEST_FATAL_FAILURE_)
1779#define ASSERT_NO_THROW(statement) \
1780  GTEST_TEST_NO_THROW_(statement, GTEST_FATAL_FAILURE_)
1781#define ASSERT_ANY_THROW(statement) \
1782  GTEST_TEST_ANY_THROW_(statement, GTEST_FATAL_FAILURE_)
1783
1784// Boolean assertions. Condition can be either a Boolean expression or an
1785// AssertionResult. For more information on how to use AssertionResult with
1786// these macros see comments on that class.
1787#define EXPECT_TRUE(condition) \
1788  GTEST_TEST_BOOLEAN_(condition, #condition, false, true, \
1789                      GTEST_NONFATAL_FAILURE_)
1790#define EXPECT_FALSE(condition) \
1791  GTEST_TEST_BOOLEAN_(!(condition), #condition, true, false, \
1792                      GTEST_NONFATAL_FAILURE_)
1793#define ASSERT_TRUE(condition) \
1794  GTEST_TEST_BOOLEAN_(condition, #condition, false, true, \
1795                      GTEST_FATAL_FAILURE_)
1796#define ASSERT_FALSE(condition) \
1797  GTEST_TEST_BOOLEAN_(!(condition), #condition, true, false, \
1798                      GTEST_FATAL_FAILURE_)
1799
1800// Includes the auto-generated header that implements a family of
1801// generic predicate assertion macros.
1802#include "gtest/gtest_pred_impl.h"
1803
1804// Macros for testing equalities and inequalities.
1805//
1806//    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_EQ(expected, actual): Tests that expected == actual
1807//    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_NE(v1, v2):           Tests that v1 != v2
1808//    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_LT(v1, v2):           Tests that v1 < v2
1809//    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_LE(v1, v2):           Tests that v1 <= v2
1810//    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_GT(v1, v2):           Tests that v1 > v2
1811//    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_GE(v1, v2):           Tests that v1 >= v2
1812//
1813// When they are not, Google Test prints both the tested expressions and
1814// their actual values.  The values must be compatible built-in types,
1815// or you will get a compiler error.  By "compatible" we mean that the
1816// values can be compared by the respective operator.
1817//
1818// Note:
1819//
1820//   1. It is possible to make a user-defined type work with
1821//   {ASSERT|EXPECT}_??(), but that requires overloading the
1822//   comparison operators and is thus discouraged by the Google C++
1823//   Usage Guide.  Therefore, you are advised to use the
1824//   {ASSERT|EXPECT}_TRUE() macro to assert that two objects are
1825//   equal.
1826//
1827//   2. The {ASSERT|EXPECT}_??() macros do pointer comparisons on
1828//   pointers (in particular, C strings).  Therefore, if you use it
1829//   with two C strings, you are testing how their locations in memory
1830//   are related, not how their content is related.  To compare two C
1831//   strings by content, use {ASSERT|EXPECT}_STR*().
1832//
1833//   3. {ASSERT|EXPECT}_EQ(expected, actual) is preferred to
1834//   {ASSERT|EXPECT}_TRUE(expected == actual), as the former tells you
1835//   what the actual value is when it fails, and similarly for the
1836//   other comparisons.
1837//
1838//   4. Do not depend on the order in which {ASSERT|EXPECT}_??()
1839//   evaluate their arguments, which is undefined.
1840//
1841//   5. These macros evaluate their arguments exactly once.
1842//
1843// Examples:
1844//
1845//   EXPECT_NE(5, Foo());
1846//   EXPECT_EQ(NULL, a_pointer);
1847//   ASSERT_LT(i, array_size);
1848//   ASSERT_GT(records.size(), 0) << "There is no record left.";
1849
1850#define EXPECT_EQ(expected, actual) \
1851  EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal:: \
1852                      EqHelper<GTEST_IS_NULL_LITERAL_(expected)>::Compare, \
1853                      expected, actual)
1854#define EXPECT_NE(expected, actual) \
1855  EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperNE, expected, actual)
1856#define EXPECT_LE(val1, val2) \
1857  EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperLE, val1, val2)
1858#define EXPECT_LT(val1, val2) \
1859  EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperLT, val1, val2)
1860#define EXPECT_GE(val1, val2) \
1861  EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperGE, val1, val2)
1862#define EXPECT_GT(val1, val2) \
1863  EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperGT, val1, val2)
1864
1865#define GTEST_ASSERT_EQ(expected, actual) \
1866  ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal:: \
1867                      EqHelper<GTEST_IS_NULL_LITERAL_(expected)>::Compare, \
1868                      expected, actual)
1869#define GTEST_ASSERT_NE(val1, val2) \
1870  ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperNE, val1, val2)
1871#define GTEST_ASSERT_LE(val1, val2) \
1872  ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperLE, val1, val2)
1873#define GTEST_ASSERT_LT(val1, val2) \
1874  ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperLT, val1, val2)
1875#define GTEST_ASSERT_GE(val1, val2) \
1876  ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperGE, val1, val2)
1877#define GTEST_ASSERT_GT(val1, val2) \
1878  ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperGT, val1, val2)
1879
1880// Define macro GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_ASSERT_XY to 1 to omit the definition of
1881// ASSERT_XY(), which clashes with some users' own code.
1882
1883#if !GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_ASSERT_EQ
1884# define ASSERT_EQ(val1, val2) GTEST_ASSERT_EQ(val1, val2)
1885#endif
1886
1887#if !GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_ASSERT_NE
1888# define ASSERT_NE(val1, val2) GTEST_ASSERT_NE(val1, val2)
1889#endif
1890
1891#if !GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_ASSERT_LE
1892# define ASSERT_LE(val1, val2) GTEST_ASSERT_LE(val1, val2)
1893#endif
1894
1895#if !GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_ASSERT_LT
1896# define ASSERT_LT(val1, val2) GTEST_ASSERT_LT(val1, val2)
1897#endif
1898
1899#if !GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_ASSERT_GE
1900# define ASSERT_GE(val1, val2) GTEST_ASSERT_GE(val1, val2)
1901#endif
1902
1903#if !GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_ASSERT_GT
1904# define ASSERT_GT(val1, val2) GTEST_ASSERT_GT(val1, val2)
1905#endif
1906
1907// C String Comparisons.  All tests treat NULL and any non-NULL string
1908// as different.  Two NULLs are equal.
1909//
1910//    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_STREQ(s1, s2):     Tests that s1 == s2
1911//    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_STRNE(s1, s2):     Tests that s1 != s2
1912//    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_STRCASEEQ(s1, s2): Tests that s1 == s2, ignoring case
1913//    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_STRCASENE(s1, s2): Tests that s1 != s2, ignoring case
1914//
1915// For wide or narrow string objects, you can use the
1916// {ASSERT|EXPECT}_??() macros.
1917//
1918// Don't depend on the order in which the arguments are evaluated,
1919// which is undefined.
1920//
1921// These macros evaluate their arguments exactly once.
1922
1923#define EXPECT_STREQ(expected, actual) \
1924  EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperSTREQ, expected, actual)
1925#define EXPECT_STRNE(s1, s2) \
1926  EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperSTRNE, s1, s2)
1927#define EXPECT_STRCASEEQ(expected, actual) \
1928  EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperSTRCASEEQ, expected, actual)
1929#define EXPECT_STRCASENE(s1, s2)\
1930  EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperSTRCASENE, s1, s2)
1931
1932#define ASSERT_STREQ(expected, actual) \
1933  ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperSTREQ, expected, actual)
1934#define ASSERT_STRNE(s1, s2) \
1935  ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperSTRNE, s1, s2)
1936#define ASSERT_STRCASEEQ(expected, actual) \
1937  ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperSTRCASEEQ, expected, actual)
1938#define ASSERT_STRCASENE(s1, s2)\
1939  ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperSTRCASENE, s1, s2)
1940
1941// Macros for comparing floating-point numbers.
1942//
1943//    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_FLOAT_EQ(expected, actual):
1944//         Tests that two float values are almost equal.
1945//    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_DOUBLE_EQ(expected, actual):
1946//         Tests that two double values are almost equal.
1947//    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_NEAR(v1, v2, abs_error):
1948//         Tests that v1 and v2 are within the given distance to each other.
1949//
1950// Google Test uses ULP-based comparison to automatically pick a default
1951// error bound that is appropriate for the operands.  See the
1952// FloatingPoint template class in gtest-internal.h if you are
1953// interested in the implementation details.
1954
1955#define EXPECT_FLOAT_EQ(expected, actual)\
1956  EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperFloatingPointEQ<float>, \
1957                      expected, actual)
1958
1959#define EXPECT_DOUBLE_EQ(expected, actual)\
1960  EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperFloatingPointEQ<double>, \
1961                      expected, actual)
1962
1963#define ASSERT_FLOAT_EQ(expected, actual)\
1964  ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperFloatingPointEQ<float>, \
1965                      expected, actual)
1966
1967#define ASSERT_DOUBLE_EQ(expected, actual)\
1968  ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::internal::CmpHelperFloatingPointEQ<double>, \
1969                      expected, actual)
1970
1971#define EXPECT_NEAR(val1, val2, abs_error)\
1972  EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT3(::testing::internal::DoubleNearPredFormat, \
1973                      val1, val2, abs_error)
1974
1975#define ASSERT_NEAR(val1, val2, abs_error)\
1976  ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT3(::testing::internal::DoubleNearPredFormat, \
1977                      val1, val2, abs_error)
1978
1979// These predicate format functions work on floating-point values, and
1980// can be used in {ASSERT|EXPECT}_PRED_FORMAT2*(), e.g.
1981//
1982//   EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(testing::DoubleLE, Foo(), 5.0);
1983
1984// Asserts that val1 is less than, or almost equal to, val2.  Fails
1985// otherwise.  In particular, it fails if either val1 or val2 is NaN.
1986GTEST_API_ AssertionResult FloatLE(const char* expr1, const char* expr2,
1987                                   float val1, float val2);
1988GTEST_API_ AssertionResult DoubleLE(const char* expr1, const char* expr2,
1989                                    double val1, double val2);
1990
1991
1992#if GTEST_OS_WINDOWS
1993
1994// Macros that test for HRESULT failure and success, these are only useful
1995// on Windows, and rely on Windows SDK macros and APIs to compile.
1996//
1997//    * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_HRESULT_{SUCCEEDED|FAILED}(expr)
1998//
1999// When expr unexpectedly fails or succeeds, Google Test prints the
2000// expected result and the actual result with both a human-readable
2001// string representation of the error, if available, as well as the
2002// hex result code.
2003# define EXPECT_HRESULT_SUCCEEDED(expr) \
2004    EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT1(::testing::internal::IsHRESULTSuccess, (expr))
2005
2006# define ASSERT_HRESULT_SUCCEEDED(expr) \
2007    ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT1(::testing::internal::IsHRESULTSuccess, (expr))
2008
2009# define EXPECT_HRESULT_FAILED(expr) \
2010    EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT1(::testing::internal::IsHRESULTFailure, (expr))
2011
2012# define ASSERT_HRESULT_FAILED(expr) \
2013    ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT1(::testing::internal::IsHRESULTFailure, (expr))
2014
2015#endif  // GTEST_OS_WINDOWS
2016
2017// Macros that execute statement and check that it doesn't generate new fatal
2018// failures in the current thread.
2019//
2020//   * {ASSERT|EXPECT}_NO_FATAL_FAILURE(statement);
2021//
2022// Examples:
2023//
2024//   EXPECT_NO_FATAL_FAILURE(Process());
2025//   ASSERT_NO_FATAL_FAILURE(Process()) << "Process() failed";
2026//
2027#define ASSERT_NO_FATAL_FAILURE(statement) \
2028    GTEST_TEST_NO_FATAL_FAILURE_(statement, GTEST_FATAL_FAILURE_)
2029#define EXPECT_NO_FATAL_FAILURE(statement) \
2030    GTEST_TEST_NO_FATAL_FAILURE_(statement, GTEST_NONFATAL_FAILURE_)
2031
2032// Causes a trace (including the source file path, the current line
2033// number, and the given message) to be included in every test failure
2034// message generated by code in the current scope.  The effect is
2035// undone when the control leaves the current scope.
2036//
2037// The message argument can be anything streamable to std::ostream.
2038//
2039// In the implementation, we include the current line number as part
2040// of the dummy variable name, thus allowing multiple SCOPED_TRACE()s
2041// to appear in the same block - as long as they are on different
2042// lines.
2043#define SCOPED_TRACE(message) \
2044  ::testing::internal::ScopedTrace GTEST_CONCAT_TOKEN_(gtest_trace_, __LINE__)(\
2045    __FILE__, __LINE__, ::testing::Message() << (message))
2046
2047// Compile-time assertion for type equality.
2048// StaticAssertTypeEq<type1, type2>() compiles iff type1 and type2 are
2049// the same type.  The value it returns is not interesting.
2050//
2051// Instead of making StaticAssertTypeEq a class template, we make it a
2052// function template that invokes a helper class template.  This
2053// prevents a user from misusing StaticAssertTypeEq<T1, T2> by
2054// defining objects of that type.
2055//
2056// CAVEAT:
2057//
2058// When used inside a method of a class template,
2059// StaticAssertTypeEq<T1, T2>() is effective ONLY IF the method is
2060// instantiated.  For example, given:
2061//
2062//   template <typename T> class Foo {
2063//    public:
2064//     void Bar() { testing::StaticAssertTypeEq<int, T>(); }
2065//   };
2066//
2067// the code:
2068//
2069//   void Test1() { Foo<bool> foo; }
2070//
2071// will NOT generate a compiler error, as Foo<bool>::Bar() is never
2072// actually instantiated.  Instead, you need:
2073//
2074//   void Test2() { Foo<bool> foo; foo.Bar(); }
2075//
2076// to cause a compiler error.
2077template <typename T1, typename T2>
2078bool StaticAssertTypeEq() {
2079  (void)internal::StaticAssertTypeEqHelper<T1, T2>();
2080  return true;
2081}
2082
2083// Defines a test.
2084//
2085// The first parameter is the name of the test case, and the second
2086// parameter is the name of the test within the test case.
2087//
2088// The convention is to end the test case name with "Test".  For
2089// example, a test case for the Foo class can be named FooTest.
2090//
2091// The user should put his test code between braces after using this
2092// macro.  Example:
2093//
2094//   TEST(FooTest, InitializesCorrectly) {
2095//     Foo foo;
2096//     EXPECT_TRUE(foo.StatusIsOK());
2097//   }
2098
2099// Note that we call GetTestTypeId() instead of GetTypeId<
2100// ::testing::Test>() here to get the type ID of testing::Test.  This
2101// is to work around a suspected linker bug when using Google Test as
2102// a framework on Mac OS X.  The bug causes GetTypeId<
2103// ::testing::Test>() to return different values depending on whether
2104// the call is from the Google Test framework itself or from user test
2105// code.  GetTestTypeId() is guaranteed to always return the same
2106// value, as it always calls GetTypeId<>() from the Google Test
2107// framework.
2108#define GTEST_TEST(test_case_name, test_name)\
2109  GTEST_TEST_(test_case_name, test_name, \
2110              ::testing::Test, ::testing::internal::GetTestTypeId())
2111
2112// Define this macro to 1 to omit the definition of TEST(), which
2113// is a generic name and clashes with some other libraries.
2114#if !GTEST_DONT_DEFINE_TEST
2115# define TEST(test_case_name, test_name) GTEST_TEST(test_case_name, test_name)
2116#endif
2117
2118// Defines a test that uses a test fixture.
2119//
2120// The first parameter is the name of the test fixture class, which
2121// also doubles as the test case name.  The second parameter is the
2122// name of the test within the test case.
2123//
2124// A test fixture class must be declared earlier.  The user should put
2125// his test code between braces after using this macro.  Example:
2126//
2127//   class FooTest : public testing::Test {
2128//    protected:
2129//     virtual void SetUp() { b_.AddElement(3); }
2130//
2131//     Foo a_;
2132//     Foo b_;
2133//   };
2134//
2135//   TEST_F(FooTest, InitializesCorrectly) {
2136//     EXPECT_TRUE(a_.StatusIsOK());
2137//   }
2138//
2139//   TEST_F(FooTest, ReturnsElementCountCorrectly) {
2140//     EXPECT_EQ(0, a_.size());
2141//     EXPECT_EQ(1, b_.size());
2142//   }
2143
2144#define TEST_F(test_fixture, test_name)\
2145  GTEST_TEST_(test_fixture, test_name, test_fixture, \
2146              ::testing::internal::GetTypeId<test_fixture>())
2147
2148// Use this macro in main() to run all tests.  It returns 0 if all
2149// tests are successful, or 1 otherwise.
2150//
2151// RUN_ALL_TESTS() should be invoked after the command line has been
2152// parsed by InitGoogleTest().
2153
2154#define RUN_ALL_TESTS()\
2155  (::testing::UnitTest::GetInstance()->Run())
2156
2157}  // namespace testing
2158
2159#endif  // GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_GTEST_H_
2160