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29
30//
31// The Google C++ Testing and Mocking Framework (Google Test)
32//
33// This header file defines the public API for death tests. It is
34// #included by gtest.h so a user doesn't need to include this
35// directly.
36// GOOGLETEST_CM0001 DO NOT DELETE
37
38#ifndef GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_GTEST_DEATH_TEST_H_
39#define GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_GTEST_DEATH_TEST_H_
40
41#include "gtest/internal/gtest-death-test-internal.h"
42
43namespace testing {
44
45// This flag controls the style of death tests. Valid values are "threadsafe",
46// meaning that the death test child process will re-execute the test binary
47// from the start, running only a single death test, or "fast",
48// meaning that the child process will execute the test logic immediately
49// after forking.
50GTEST_DECLARE_string_(death_test_style);
51
52#if GTEST_HAS_DEATH_TEST
53
54namespace internal {
55
56// Returns a Boolean value indicating whether the caller is currently
57// executing in the context of the death test child process. Tools such as
58// Valgrind heap checkers may need this to modify their behavior in death
59// tests. IMPORTANT: This is an internal utility. Using it may break the
60// implementation of death tests. User code MUST NOT use it.
61GTEST_API_ bool InDeathTestChild();
62
63} // namespace internal
64
65// The following macros are useful for writing death tests.
66
67// Here's what happens when an ASSERT_DEATH* or EXPECT_DEATH* is
68// executed:
69//
70// 1. It generates a warning if there is more than one active
71// thread. This is because it's safe to fork() or clone() only
72// when there is a single thread.
73//
74// 2. The parent process clone()s a sub-process and runs the death
75// test in it; the sub-process exits with code 0 at the end of the
76// death test, if it hasn't exited already.
77//
78// 3. The parent process waits for the sub-process to terminate.
79//
80// 4. The parent process checks the exit code and error message of
81// the sub-process.
82//
83// Examples:
84//
85// ASSERT_DEATH(server.SendMessage(56, "Hello"), "Invalid port number");
86// for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
87// EXPECT_DEATH(server.ProcessRequest(i),
88// "Invalid request .* in ProcessRequest()")
89// << "Failed to die on request " << i;
90// }
91//
92// ASSERT_EXIT(server.ExitNow(), ::testing::ExitedWithCode(0), "Exiting");
93//
94// bool KilledBySIGHUP(int exit_code) {
95// return WIFSIGNALED(exit_code) && WTERMSIG(exit_code) == SIGHUP;
96// }
97//
98// ASSERT_EXIT(client.HangUpServer(), KilledBySIGHUP, "Hanging up!");
99//
100// On the regular expressions used in death tests:
101//
102// GOOGLETEST_CM0005 DO NOT DELETE
103// On POSIX-compliant systems (*nix), we use the <regex.h> library,
104// which uses the POSIX extended regex syntax.
105//
106// On other platforms (e.g. Windows or Mac), we only support a simple regex
107// syntax implemented as part of Google Test. This limited
108// implementation should be enough most of the time when writing
109// death tests; though it lacks many features you can find in PCRE
110// or POSIX extended regex syntax. For example, we don't support
111// union ("x|y"), grouping ("(xy)"), brackets ("[xy]"), and
112// repetition count ("x{5,7}"), among others.
113//
114// Below is the syntax that we do support. We chose it to be a
115// subset of both PCRE and POSIX extended regex, so it's easy to
116// learn wherever you come from. In the following: 'A' denotes a
117// literal character, period (.), or a single \\ escape sequence;
118// 'x' and 'y' denote regular expressions; 'm' and 'n' are for
119// natural numbers.
120//
121// c matches any literal character c
122// \\d matches any decimal digit
123// \\D matches any character that's not a decimal digit
124// \\f matches \f
125// \\n matches \n
126// \\r matches \r
127// \\s matches any ASCII whitespace, including \n
128// \\S matches any character that's not a whitespace
129// \\t matches \t
130// \\v matches \v
131// \\w matches any letter, _, or decimal digit
132// \\W matches any character that \\w doesn't match
133// \\c matches any literal character c, which must be a punctuation
134// . matches any single character except \n
135// A? matches 0 or 1 occurrences of A
136// A* matches 0 or many occurrences of A
137// A+ matches 1 or many occurrences of A
138// ^ matches the beginning of a string (not that of each line)
139// $ matches the end of a string (not that of each line)
140// xy matches x followed by y
141//
142// If you accidentally use PCRE or POSIX extended regex features
143// not implemented by us, you will get a run-time failure. In that
144// case, please try to rewrite your regular expression within the
145// above syntax.
146//
147// This implementation is *not* meant to be as highly tuned or robust
148// as a compiled regex library, but should perform well enough for a
149// death test, which already incurs significant overhead by launching
150// a child process.
151//
152// Known caveats:
153//
154// A "threadsafe" style death test obtains the path to the test
155// program from argv[0] and re-executes it in the sub-process. For
156// simplicity, the current implementation doesn't search the PATH
157// when launching the sub-process. This means that the user must
158// invoke the test program via a path that contains at least one
159// path separator (e.g. path/to/foo_test and
160// /absolute/path/to/bar_test are fine, but foo_test is not). This
161// is rarely a problem as people usually don't put the test binary
162// directory in PATH.
163//
164
165// Asserts that a given statement causes the program to exit, with an
166// integer exit status that satisfies predicate, and emitting error output
167// that matches regex.
168# define ASSERT_EXIT(statement, predicate, regex) \
169 GTEST_DEATH_TEST_(statement, predicate, regex, GTEST_FATAL_FAILURE_)
170
171// Like ASSERT_EXIT, but continues on to successive tests in the
172// test suite, if any:
173# define EXPECT_EXIT(statement, predicate, regex) \
174 GTEST_DEATH_TEST_(statement, predicate, regex, GTEST_NONFATAL_FAILURE_)
175
176// Asserts that a given statement causes the program to exit, either by
177// explicitly exiting with a nonzero exit code or being killed by a
178// signal, and emitting error output that matches regex.
179# define ASSERT_DEATH(statement, regex) \
180 ASSERT_EXIT(statement, ::testing::internal::ExitedUnsuccessfully, regex)
181
182// Like ASSERT_DEATH, but continues on to successive tests in the
183// test suite, if any:
184# define EXPECT_DEATH(statement, regex) \
185 EXPECT_EXIT(statement, ::testing::internal::ExitedUnsuccessfully, regex)
186
187// Two predicate classes that can be used in {ASSERT,EXPECT}_EXIT*:
188
189// Tests that an exit code describes a normal exit with a given exit code.
190class GTEST_API_ ExitedWithCode {
191 public:
192 explicit ExitedWithCode(int exit_code);
193 ExitedWithCode(const ExitedWithCode&) = default;
194 void operator=(const ExitedWithCode& other) = delete;
195 bool operator()(int exit_status) const;
196 private:
197 const int exit_code_;
198};
199
200# if !GTEST_OS_WINDOWS && !GTEST_OS_FUCHSIA
201// Tests that an exit code describes an exit due to termination by a
202// given signal.
203// GOOGLETEST_CM0006 DO NOT DELETE
204class GTEST_API_ KilledBySignal {
205 public:
206 explicit KilledBySignal(int signum);
207 bool operator()(int exit_status) const;
208 private:
209 const int signum_;
210};
211# endif // !GTEST_OS_WINDOWS
212
213// EXPECT_DEBUG_DEATH asserts that the given statements die in debug mode.
214// The death testing framework causes this to have interesting semantics,
215// since the sideeffects of the call are only visible in opt mode, and not
216// in debug mode.
217//
218// In practice, this can be used to test functions that utilize the
219// LOG(DFATAL) macro using the following style:
220//
221// int DieInDebugOr12(int* sideeffect) {
222// if (sideeffect) {
223// *sideeffect = 12;
224// }
225// LOG(DFATAL) << "death";
226// return 12;
227// }
228//
229// TEST(TestSuite, TestDieOr12WorksInDgbAndOpt) {
230// int sideeffect = 0;
231// // Only asserts in dbg.
232// EXPECT_DEBUG_DEATH(DieInDebugOr12(&sideeffect), "death");
233//
234// #ifdef NDEBUG
235// // opt-mode has sideeffect visible.
236// EXPECT_EQ(12, sideeffect);
237// #else
238// // dbg-mode no visible sideeffect.
239// EXPECT_EQ(0, sideeffect);
240// #endif
241// }
242//
243// This will assert that DieInDebugReturn12InOpt() crashes in debug
244// mode, usually due to a DCHECK or LOG(DFATAL), but returns the
245// appropriate fallback value (12 in this case) in opt mode. If you
246// need to test that a function has appropriate side-effects in opt
247// mode, include assertions against the side-effects. A general
248// pattern for this is:
249//
250// EXPECT_DEBUG_DEATH({
251// // Side-effects here will have an effect after this statement in
252// // opt mode, but none in debug mode.
253// EXPECT_EQ(12, DieInDebugOr12(&sideeffect));
254// }, "death");
255//
256# ifdef NDEBUG
257
258# define EXPECT_DEBUG_DEATH(statement, regex) \
259 GTEST_EXECUTE_STATEMENT_(statement, regex)
260
261# define ASSERT_DEBUG_DEATH(statement, regex) \
262 GTEST_EXECUTE_STATEMENT_(statement, regex)
263
264# else
265
266# define EXPECT_DEBUG_DEATH(statement, regex) \
267 EXPECT_DEATH(statement, regex)
268
269# define ASSERT_DEBUG_DEATH(statement, regex) \
270 ASSERT_DEATH(statement, regex)
271
272# endif // NDEBUG for EXPECT_DEBUG_DEATH
273#endif // GTEST_HAS_DEATH_TEST
274
275// This macro is used for implementing macros such as
276// EXPECT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED and ASSERT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED on systems where
277// death tests are not supported. Those macros must compile on such systems
278// if and only if EXPECT_DEATH and ASSERT_DEATH compile with the same parameters
279// on systems that support death tests. This allows one to write such a macro on
280// a system that does not support death tests and be sure that it will compile
281// on a death-test supporting system. It is exposed publicly so that systems
282// that have death-tests with stricter requirements than GTEST_HAS_DEATH_TEST
283// can write their own equivalent of EXPECT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED and
284// ASSERT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED.
285//
286// Parameters:
287// statement - A statement that a macro such as EXPECT_DEATH would test
288// for program termination. This macro has to make sure this
289// statement is compiled but not executed, to ensure that
290// EXPECT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED compiles with a certain
291// parameter if and only if EXPECT_DEATH compiles with it.
292// regex - A regex that a macro such as EXPECT_DEATH would use to test
293// the output of statement. This parameter has to be
294// compiled but not evaluated by this macro, to ensure that
295// this macro only accepts expressions that a macro such as
296// EXPECT_DEATH would accept.
297// terminator - Must be an empty statement for EXPECT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED
298// and a return statement for ASSERT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED.
299// This ensures that ASSERT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED will not
300// compile inside functions where ASSERT_DEATH doesn't
301// compile.
302//
303// The branch that has an always false condition is used to ensure that
304// statement and regex are compiled (and thus syntactically correct) but
305// never executed. The unreachable code macro protects the terminator
306// statement from generating an 'unreachable code' warning in case
307// statement unconditionally returns or throws. The Message constructor at
308// the end allows the syntax of streaming additional messages into the
309// macro, for compilational compatibility with EXPECT_DEATH/ASSERT_DEATH.
310# define GTEST_UNSUPPORTED_DEATH_TEST(statement, regex, terminator) \
311 GTEST_AMBIGUOUS_ELSE_BLOCKER_ \
312 if (::testing::internal::AlwaysTrue()) { \
313 GTEST_LOG_(WARNING) \
314 << "Death tests are not supported on this platform.\n" \
315 << "Statement '" #statement "' cannot be verified."; \
316 } else if (::testing::internal::AlwaysFalse()) { \
317 ::testing::internal::RE::PartialMatch(".*", (regex)); \
318 GTEST_SUPPRESS_UNREACHABLE_CODE_WARNING_BELOW_(statement); \
319 terminator; \
320 } else \
321 ::testing::Message()
322
323// EXPECT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED(statement, regex) and
324// ASSERT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED(statement, regex) expand to real death tests if
325// death tests are supported; otherwise they just issue a warning. This is
326// useful when you are combining death test assertions with normal test
327// assertions in one test.
328#if GTEST_HAS_DEATH_TEST
329# define EXPECT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED(statement, regex) \
330 EXPECT_DEATH(statement, regex)
331# define ASSERT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED(statement, regex) \
332 ASSERT_DEATH(statement, regex)
333#else
334# define EXPECT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED(statement, regex) \
335 GTEST_UNSUPPORTED_DEATH_TEST(statement, regex, )
336# define ASSERT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED(statement, regex) \
337 GTEST_UNSUPPORTED_DEATH_TEST(statement, regex, return)
338#endif
339
340} // namespace testing
341
342#endif // GTEST_INCLUDE_GTEST_GTEST_DEATH_TEST_H_
343