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diff --git a/lib/gtest/include/gmock/gmock-generated-matchers.h.pump b/lib/gtest/include/gmock/gmock-generated-matchers.h.pump new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8c09444 --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/gtest/include/gmock/gmock-generated-matchers.h.pump @@ -0,0 +1,651 @@ +$$ -*- mode: c++; -*- +$$ This is a Pump source file. Please use Pump to convert it to +$$ gmock-generated-actions.h. +$$ +$var n = 10 $$ The maximum arity we support. +$$ }} This line fixes auto-indentation of the following code in Emacs. +// Copyright 2008, Google Inc. +// All rights reserved. +// +// Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without +// modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are +// met: +// +// * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright +// notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. +// * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above +// copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer +// in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the +// distribution. +// * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its +// contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from +// this software without specific prior written permission. +// +// THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS +// "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT +// LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR +// A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT +// OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, +// SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT +// LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, +// DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY +// THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT +// (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE +// OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. + +// Google Mock - a framework for writing C++ mock classes. +// +// This file implements some commonly used variadic matchers. + +#ifndef GMOCK_INCLUDE_GMOCK_GMOCK_GENERATED_MATCHERS_H_ +#define GMOCK_INCLUDE_GMOCK_GMOCK_GENERATED_MATCHERS_H_ + +#include <sstream> +#include <string> +#include <vector> +#include "gmock/gmock-matchers.h" + +namespace testing { +namespace internal { + +$range i 0..n-1 + +// The type of the i-th (0-based) field of Tuple. +#define GMOCK_FIELD_TYPE_(Tuple, i) \ + typename ::std::tr1::tuple_element<i, Tuple>::type + +// TupleFields<Tuple, k0, ..., kn> is for selecting fields from a +// tuple of type Tuple. It has two members: +// +// type: a tuple type whose i-th field is the ki-th field of Tuple. +// GetSelectedFields(t): returns fields k0, ..., and kn of t as a tuple. +// +// For example, in class TupleFields<tuple<bool, char, int>, 2, 0>, we have: +// +// type is tuple<int, bool>, and +// GetSelectedFields(make_tuple(true, 'a', 42)) is (42, true). + +template <class Tuple$for i [[, int k$i = -1]]> +class TupleFields; + +// This generic version is used when there are $n selectors. +template <class Tuple$for i [[, int k$i]]> +class TupleFields { + public: + typedef ::std::tr1::tuple<$for i, [[GMOCK_FIELD_TYPE_(Tuple, k$i)]]> type; + static type GetSelectedFields(const Tuple& t) { + using ::std::tr1::get; + return type($for i, [[get<k$i>(t)]]); + } +}; + +// The following specialization is used for 0 ~ $(n-1) selectors. + +$for i [[ +$$ }}} +$range j 0..i-1 +$range k 0..n-1 + +template <class Tuple$for j [[, int k$j]]> +class TupleFields<Tuple, $for k, [[$if k < i [[k$k]] $else [[-1]]]]> { + public: + typedef ::std::tr1::tuple<$for j, [[GMOCK_FIELD_TYPE_(Tuple, k$j)]]> type; + static type GetSelectedFields(const Tuple& $if i==0 [[/* t */]] $else [[t]]) { + using ::std::tr1::get; + return type($for j, [[get<k$j>(t)]]); + } +}; + +]] + +#undef GMOCK_FIELD_TYPE_ + +// Implements the Args() matcher. + +$var ks = [[$for i, [[k$i]]]] +template <class ArgsTuple$for i [[, int k$i = -1]]> +class ArgsMatcherImpl : public MatcherInterface<ArgsTuple> { + public: + // ArgsTuple may have top-level const or reference modifiers. + typedef GTEST_REMOVE_REFERENCE_AND_CONST_(ArgsTuple) RawArgsTuple; + typedef typename internal::TupleFields<RawArgsTuple, $ks>::type SelectedArgs; + typedef Matcher<const SelectedArgs&> MonomorphicInnerMatcher; + + template <typename InnerMatcher> + explicit ArgsMatcherImpl(const InnerMatcher& inner_matcher) + : inner_matcher_(SafeMatcherCast<const SelectedArgs&>(inner_matcher)) {} + + virtual bool MatchAndExplain(ArgsTuple args, + MatchResultListener* listener) const { + const SelectedArgs& selected_args = GetSelectedArgs(args); + if (!listener->IsInterested()) + return inner_matcher_.Matches(selected_args); + + PrintIndices(listener->stream()); + *listener << "are " << PrintToString(selected_args); + + StringMatchResultListener inner_listener; + const bool match = inner_matcher_.MatchAndExplain(selected_args, + &inner_listener); + PrintIfNotEmpty(inner_listener.str(), listener->stream()); + return match; + } + + virtual void DescribeTo(::std::ostream* os) const { + *os << "are a tuple "; + PrintIndices(os); + inner_matcher_.DescribeTo(os); + } + + virtual void DescribeNegationTo(::std::ostream* os) const { + *os << "are a tuple "; + PrintIndices(os); + inner_matcher_.DescribeNegationTo(os); + } + + private: + static SelectedArgs GetSelectedArgs(ArgsTuple args) { + return TupleFields<RawArgsTuple, $ks>::GetSelectedFields(args); + } + + // Prints the indices of the selected fields. + static void PrintIndices(::std::ostream* os) { + *os << "whose fields ("; + const int indices[$n] = { $ks }; + for (int i = 0; i < $n; i++) { + if (indices[i] < 0) + break; + + if (i >= 1) + *os << ", "; + + *os << "#" << indices[i]; + } + *os << ") "; + } + + const MonomorphicInnerMatcher inner_matcher_; + + GTEST_DISALLOW_ASSIGN_(ArgsMatcherImpl); +}; + +template <class InnerMatcher$for i [[, int k$i = -1]]> +class ArgsMatcher { + public: + explicit ArgsMatcher(const InnerMatcher& inner_matcher) + : inner_matcher_(inner_matcher) {} + + template <typename ArgsTuple> + operator Matcher<ArgsTuple>() const { + return MakeMatcher(new ArgsMatcherImpl<ArgsTuple, $ks>(inner_matcher_)); + } + + private: + const InnerMatcher inner_matcher_; + + GTEST_DISALLOW_ASSIGN_(ArgsMatcher); +}; + +// Implements ElementsAre() of 1-$n arguments. + + +$range i 1..n +$for i [[ +$range j 1..i +template <$for j, [[typename T$j]]> +class ElementsAreMatcher$i { + public: + $if i==1 [[explicit ]]ElementsAreMatcher$i($for j, [[const T$j& e$j]])$if i > 0 [[ : ]] + $for j, [[e$j[[]]_(e$j)]] {} + + template <typename Container> + operator Matcher<Container>() const { + typedef GTEST_REMOVE_REFERENCE_AND_CONST_(Container) RawContainer; + typedef typename internal::StlContainerView<RawContainer>::type::value_type + Element; + +$if i==1 [[ + + // Nokia's Symbian Compiler has a nasty bug where the object put + // in a one-element local array is not destructed when the array + // goes out of scope. This leads to obvious badness as we've + // added the linked_ptr in it to our other linked_ptrs list. + // Hence we implement ElementsAreMatcher1 specially to avoid using + // a local array. + const Matcher<const Element&> matcher = + MatcherCast<const Element&>(e1_); + return MakeMatcher(new ElementsAreMatcherImpl<Container>(&matcher, 1)); +]] $else [[ + + const Matcher<const Element&> matchers[] = { + +$for j [[ + MatcherCast<const Element&>(e$j[[]]_), + +]] + }; + + return MakeMatcher(new ElementsAreMatcherImpl<Container>(matchers, $i)); +]] + + } + + private: + +$for j [[ + const T$j& e$j[[]]_; + +]] + + GTEST_DISALLOW_ASSIGN_(ElementsAreMatcher$i); +}; + + +]] +} // namespace internal + +// Args<N1, N2, ..., Nk>(a_matcher) matches a tuple if the selected +// fields of it matches a_matcher. C++ doesn't support default +// arguments for function templates, so we have to overload it. + +$range i 0..n +$for i [[ +$range j 1..i +template <$for j [[int k$j, ]]typename InnerMatcher> +inline internal::ArgsMatcher<InnerMatcher$for j [[, k$j]]> +Args(const InnerMatcher& matcher) { + return internal::ArgsMatcher<InnerMatcher$for j [[, k$j]]>(matcher); +} + + +]] +// ElementsAre(e0, e1, ..., e_n) matches an STL-style container with +// (n + 1) elements, where the i-th element in the container must +// match the i-th argument in the list. Each argument of +// ElementsAre() can be either a value or a matcher. We support up to +// $n arguments. +// +// NOTE: Since ElementsAre() cares about the order of the elements, it +// must not be used with containers whose elements's order is +// undefined (e.g. hash_map). + +inline internal::ElementsAreMatcher0 ElementsAre() { + return internal::ElementsAreMatcher0(); +} + +$range i 1..n +$for i [[ +$range j 1..i + +template <$for j, [[typename T$j]]> +inline internal::ElementsAreMatcher$i<$for j, [[T$j]]> ElementsAre($for j, [[const T$j& e$j]]) { + return internal::ElementsAreMatcher$i<$for j, [[T$j]]>($for j, [[e$j]]); +} + +]] + +// ElementsAreArray(array) and ElementAreArray(array, count) are like +// ElementsAre(), except that they take an array of values or +// matchers. The former form infers the size of 'array', which must +// be a static C-style array. In the latter form, 'array' can either +// be a static array or a pointer to a dynamically created array. + +template <typename T> +inline internal::ElementsAreArrayMatcher<T> ElementsAreArray( + const T* first, size_t count) { + return internal::ElementsAreArrayMatcher<T>(first, count); +} + +template <typename T, size_t N> +inline internal::ElementsAreArrayMatcher<T> +ElementsAreArray(const T (&array)[N]) { + return internal::ElementsAreArrayMatcher<T>(array, N); +} + +// AllOf(m1, m2, ..., mk) matches any value that matches all of the given +// sub-matchers. AllOf is called fully qualified to prevent ADL from firing. + +$range i 2..n +$for i [[ +$range j 1..i +$range k 1..i-1 + +template <$for j, [[typename Matcher$j]]> +inline $for k[[internal::BothOfMatcher<Matcher$k, ]]Matcher$i[[]]$for k [[> ]] + +AllOf($for j, [[Matcher$j m$j]]) { + +$if i == 2 [[ + return internal::BothOfMatcher<Matcher1, Matcher2>(m1, m2); +]] $else [[ + return ::testing::AllOf(m1, ::testing::AllOf($for k, [[m$(k + 1)]])); +]] + +} + +]] + +// AnyOf(m1, m2, ..., mk) matches any value that matches any of the given +// sub-matchers. AnyOf is called fully qualified to prevent ADL from firing. + +$range i 2..n +$for i [[ +$range j 1..i +$range k 1..i-1 + +template <$for j, [[typename Matcher$j]]> +inline $for k[[internal::EitherOfMatcher<Matcher$k, ]]Matcher$i[[]]$for k [[> ]] + +AnyOf($for j, [[Matcher$j m$j]]) { + +$if i == 2 [[ + return internal::EitherOfMatcher<Matcher1, Matcher2>(m1, m2); +]] $else [[ + return ::testing::AnyOf(m1, ::testing::AnyOf($for k, [[m$(k + 1)]])); +]] + +} + +]] + +} // namespace testing +$$ } // This Pump meta comment fixes auto-indentation in Emacs. It will not +$$ // show up in the generated code. + + +// The MATCHER* family of macros can be used in a namespace scope to +// define custom matchers easily. +// +// Basic Usage +// =========== +// +// The syntax +// +// MATCHER(name, description_string) { statements; } +// +// defines a matcher with the given name that executes the statements, +// which must return a bool to indicate if the match succeeds. Inside +// the statements, you can refer to the value being matched by 'arg', +// and refer to its type by 'arg_type'. +// +// The description string documents what the matcher does, and is used +// to generate the failure message when the match fails. Since a +// MATCHER() is usually defined in a header file shared by multiple +// C++ source files, we require the description to be a C-string +// literal to avoid possible side effects. It can be empty, in which +// case we'll use the sequence of words in the matcher name as the +// description. +// +// For example: +// +// MATCHER(IsEven, "") { return (arg % 2) == 0; } +// +// allows you to write +// +// // Expects mock_foo.Bar(n) to be called where n is even. +// EXPECT_CALL(mock_foo, Bar(IsEven())); +// +// or, +// +// // Verifies that the value of some_expression is even. +// EXPECT_THAT(some_expression, IsEven()); +// +// If the above assertion fails, it will print something like: +// +// Value of: some_expression +// Expected: is even +// Actual: 7 +// +// where the description "is even" is automatically calculated from the +// matcher name IsEven. +// +// Argument Type +// ============= +// +// Note that the type of the value being matched (arg_type) is +// determined by the context in which you use the matcher and is +// supplied to you by the compiler, so you don't need to worry about +// declaring it (nor can you). This allows the matcher to be +// polymorphic. For example, IsEven() can be used to match any type +// where the value of "(arg % 2) == 0" can be implicitly converted to +// a bool. In the "Bar(IsEven())" example above, if method Bar() +// takes an int, 'arg_type' will be int; if it takes an unsigned long, +// 'arg_type' will be unsigned long; and so on. +// +// Parameterizing Matchers +// ======================= +// +// Sometimes you'll want to parameterize the matcher. For that you +// can use another macro: +// +// MATCHER_P(name, param_name, description_string) { statements; } +// +// For example: +// +// MATCHER_P(HasAbsoluteValue, value, "") { return abs(arg) == value; } +// +// will allow you to write: +// +// EXPECT_THAT(Blah("a"), HasAbsoluteValue(n)); +// +// which may lead to this message (assuming n is 10): +// +// Value of: Blah("a") +// Expected: has absolute value 10 +// Actual: -9 +// +// Note that both the matcher description and its parameter are +// printed, making the message human-friendly. +// +// In the matcher definition body, you can write 'foo_type' to +// reference the type of a parameter named 'foo'. For example, in the +// body of MATCHER_P(HasAbsoluteValue, value) above, you can write +// 'value_type' to refer to the type of 'value'. +// +// We also provide MATCHER_P2, MATCHER_P3, ..., up to MATCHER_P$n to +// support multi-parameter matchers. +// +// Describing Parameterized Matchers +// ================================= +// +// The last argument to MATCHER*() is a string-typed expression. The +// expression can reference all of the matcher's parameters and a +// special bool-typed variable named 'negation'. When 'negation' is +// false, the expression should evaluate to the matcher's description; +// otherwise it should evaluate to the description of the negation of +// the matcher. For example, +// +// using testing::PrintToString; +// +// MATCHER_P2(InClosedRange, low, hi, +// string(negation ? "is not" : "is") + " in range [" + +// PrintToString(low) + ", " + PrintToString(hi) + "]") { +// return low <= arg && arg <= hi; +// } +// ... +// EXPECT_THAT(3, InClosedRange(4, 6)); +// EXPECT_THAT(3, Not(InClosedRange(2, 4))); +// +// would generate two failures that contain the text: +// +// Expected: is in range [4, 6] +// ... +// Expected: is not in range [2, 4] +// +// If you specify "" as the description, the failure message will +// contain the sequence of words in the matcher name followed by the +// parameter values printed as a tuple. For example, +// +// MATCHER_P2(InClosedRange, low, hi, "") { ... } +// ... +// EXPECT_THAT(3, InClosedRange(4, 6)); +// EXPECT_THAT(3, Not(InClosedRange(2, 4))); +// +// would generate two failures that contain the text: +// +// Expected: in closed range (4, 6) +// ... +// Expected: not (in closed range (2, 4)) +// +// Types of Matcher Parameters +// =========================== +// +// For the purpose of typing, you can view +// +// MATCHER_Pk(Foo, p1, ..., pk, description_string) { ... } +// +// as shorthand for +// +// template <typename p1_type, ..., typename pk_type> +// FooMatcherPk<p1_type, ..., pk_type> +// Foo(p1_type p1, ..., pk_type pk) { ... } +// +// When you write Foo(v1, ..., vk), the compiler infers the types of +// the parameters v1, ..., and vk for you. If you are not happy with +// the result of the type inference, you can specify the types by +// explicitly instantiating the template, as in Foo<long, bool>(5, +// false). As said earlier, you don't get to (or need to) specify +// 'arg_type' as that's determined by the context in which the matcher +// is used. You can assign the result of expression Foo(p1, ..., pk) +// to a variable of type FooMatcherPk<p1_type, ..., pk_type>. This +// can be useful when composing matchers. +// +// While you can instantiate a matcher template with reference types, +// passing the parameters by pointer usually makes your code more +// readable. If, however, you still want to pass a parameter by +// reference, be aware that in the failure message generated by the +// matcher you will see the value of the referenced object but not its +// address. +// +// Explaining Match Results +// ======================== +// +// Sometimes the matcher description alone isn't enough to explain why +// the match has failed or succeeded. For example, when expecting a +// long string, it can be very helpful to also print the diff between +// the expected string and the actual one. To achieve that, you can +// optionally stream additional information to a special variable +// named result_listener, whose type is a pointer to class +// MatchResultListener: +// +// MATCHER_P(EqualsLongString, str, "") { +// if (arg == str) return true; +// +// *result_listener << "the difference: " +/// << DiffStrings(str, arg); +// return false; +// } +// +// Overloading Matchers +// ==================== +// +// You can overload matchers with different numbers of parameters: +// +// MATCHER_P(Blah, a, description_string1) { ... } +// MATCHER_P2(Blah, a, b, description_string2) { ... } +// +// Caveats +// ======= +// +// When defining a new matcher, you should also consider implementing +// MatcherInterface or using MakePolymorphicMatcher(). These +// approaches require more work than the MATCHER* macros, but also +// give you more control on the types of the value being matched and +// the matcher parameters, which may leads to better compiler error +// messages when the matcher is used wrong. They also allow +// overloading matchers based on parameter types (as opposed to just +// based on the number of parameters). +// +// MATCHER*() can only be used in a namespace scope. The reason is +// that C++ doesn't yet allow function-local types to be used to +// instantiate templates. The up-coming C++0x standard will fix this. +// Once that's done, we'll consider supporting using MATCHER*() inside +// a function. +// +// More Information +// ================ +// +// To learn more about using these macros, please search for 'MATCHER' +// on http://code.google.com/p/googlemock/wiki/CookBook. + +$range i 0..n +$for i + +[[ +$var macro_name = [[$if i==0 [[MATCHER]] $elif i==1 [[MATCHER_P]] + $else [[MATCHER_P$i]]]] +$var class_name = [[name##Matcher[[$if i==0 [[]] $elif i==1 [[P]] + $else [[P$i]]]]]] +$range j 0..i-1 +$var template = [[$if i==0 [[]] $else [[ + + template <$for j, [[typename p$j##_type]]>\ +]]]] +$var ctor_param_list = [[$for j, [[p$j##_type gmock_p$j]]]] +$var impl_ctor_param_list = [[$for j, [[p$j##_type gmock_p$j]]]] +$var impl_inits = [[$if i==0 [[]] $else [[ : $for j, [[p$j(gmock_p$j)]]]]]] +$var inits = [[$if i==0 [[]] $else [[ : $for j, [[p$j(gmock_p$j)]]]]]] +$var params = [[$for j, [[p$j]]]] +$var param_types = [[$if i==0 [[]] $else [[<$for j, [[p$j##_type]]>]]]] +$var param_types_and_names = [[$for j, [[p$j##_type p$j]]]] +$var param_field_decls = [[$for j +[[ + + p$j##_type p$j;\ +]]]] +$var param_field_decls2 = [[$for j +[[ + + p$j##_type p$j;\ +]]]] + +#define $macro_name(name$for j [[, p$j]], description)\$template + class $class_name {\ + public:\ + template <typename arg_type>\ + class gmock_Impl : public ::testing::MatcherInterface<arg_type> {\ + public:\ + [[$if i==1 [[explicit ]]]]gmock_Impl($impl_ctor_param_list)\ + $impl_inits {}\ + virtual bool MatchAndExplain(\ + arg_type arg, ::testing::MatchResultListener* result_listener) const;\ + virtual void DescribeTo(::std::ostream* gmock_os) const {\ + *gmock_os << FormatDescription(false);\ + }\ + virtual void DescribeNegationTo(::std::ostream* gmock_os) const {\ + *gmock_os << FormatDescription(true);\ + }\$param_field_decls + private:\ + ::testing::internal::string FormatDescription(bool negation) const {\ + const ::testing::internal::string gmock_description = (description);\ + if (!gmock_description.empty())\ + return gmock_description;\ + return ::testing::internal::FormatMatcherDescription(\ + negation, #name,\ + ::testing::internal::UniversalTersePrintTupleFieldsToStrings(\ + ::std::tr1::tuple<$for j, [[p$j##_type]]>($for j, [[p$j]])));\ + }\ + GTEST_DISALLOW_ASSIGN_(gmock_Impl);\ + };\ + template <typename arg_type>\ + operator ::testing::Matcher<arg_type>() const {\ + return ::testing::Matcher<arg_type>(\ + new gmock_Impl<arg_type>($params));\ + }\ + $class_name($ctor_param_list)$inits {\ + }\$param_field_decls2 + private:\ + GTEST_DISALLOW_ASSIGN_($class_name);\ + };\$template + inline $class_name$param_types name($param_types_and_names) {\ + return $class_name$param_types($params);\ + }\$template + template <typename arg_type>\ + bool $class_name$param_types::gmock_Impl<arg_type>::MatchAndExplain(\ + arg_type arg,\ + ::testing::MatchResultListener* result_listener GTEST_ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED_)\ + const +]] + + +#endif // GMOCK_INCLUDE_GMOCK_GMOCK_GENERATED_MATCHERS_H_ |