Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Allan Odgaard
ca91ce58c6 Add options to generated test executable
The current options are:

 -b/--benchmark   Run benchmarks instead of tests.
 -m/--measure     Measure time of each test. This disables concurrency.
 -r/--repeat <n>  Number of times to repeat each test/benchmark.
 -v/--verbose     Be verbose.
 -h/--help        Show this help.
 -V/--version     Show version number.
2013-03-10 14:34:44 +01:00
Allan Odgaard
99969996c5 Ensure test assertions are only evaluated once 2013-03-10 14:34:43 +01:00
Allan Odgaard
1f4eecbab7 Always use system default ruby 1.8
Maybe fixes #845.
2013-02-27 13:42:23 +01:00
Allan Odgaard
2f3cd66a2b Support relative includes in tests
Since we inline the test file, rather than include it, relative includes from this inlined code would not work.
2013-02-23 09:19:45 +01:00
Allan Odgaard
9ebcfcbd79 Support to_s for most integer types
Here “most” refers to signed and unsigned 16, 32, and 64 bit integers.
2013-02-22 15:53:05 +01:00
Allan Odgaard
01417054cb Add test system supporting grand central dispatch
The motivation for introducing a new test generator is that CxxTest cannot be used with tests that (indirectly) schedule code to run in the main queue.

There are a few other advantages of breaking with CxxTest:

 1. Less boilerplate: A test file need only contain a
    function named with a ‘test_’ prefix. No classes,
    inheritance, or similar. If you need fixtures, use the
    multitude of ways that C/C++ allows that (constructor
    functions or non-POD types with static storage).

 2. Concurrent tests: Test functions are scheduled with
    ‘dispatch_apply’ and will thus run concurrently. If
    you need serial execution you can wrap your tests in a
    block and schedule that to run in the main queue.
    Though you should catch exceptions and re-throw these
    in the test’s original queue, as the test assertions
    are using exceptions.

 3. Easier output of custom types: The assertion macros
    will call ‘to_s’ on the arguments given, so the only
    thing required to make these output nicely is to
    provide a ‘to_s’ overload for your custom type /
    enumeration. I know that the standard way to do this
    is overloading operator<< for a stream, but the
    TextMate code-base already uses the ‘to_s’
    convention.

Long-term I can see a few other advantages, like calling preprocessor on the input files to support #if/#else/#endif to disable tests, better support for Cocoa code (NSRunLoop), and introducing test timeouts.
2013-02-21 15:54:37 +01:00