GoogleTest - Google Testing and Mocking Framework (grpc protobuff依赖)
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2360 lines
88 KiB
2360 lines
88 KiB
// Copyright 2007, Google Inc. |
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// All rights reserved. |
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// |
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// Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without |
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// modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are |
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// met: |
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// |
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// * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright |
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// notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. |
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// * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above |
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// copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer |
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// in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the |
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// distribution. |
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// * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its |
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// contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from |
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// this software without specific prior written permission. |
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// |
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// THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS |
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// "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT |
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// LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR |
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// A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT |
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// OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, |
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// SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT |
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// LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, |
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// DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY |
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// THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT |
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// (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE |
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// OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. |
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|
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// Google Mock - a framework for writing C++ mock classes. |
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// |
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// The ACTION* family of macros can be used in a namespace scope to |
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// define custom actions easily. The syntax: |
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// |
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// ACTION(name) { statements; } |
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// |
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// will define an action with the given name that executes the |
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// statements. The value returned by the statements will be used as |
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// the return value of the action. Inside the statements, you can |
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// refer to the K-th (0-based) argument of the mock function by |
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// 'argK', and refer to its type by 'argK_type'. For example: |
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// |
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// ACTION(IncrementArg1) { |
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// arg1_type temp = arg1; |
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// return ++(*temp); |
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// } |
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// |
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// allows you to write |
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// |
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// ...WillOnce(IncrementArg1()); |
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// |
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// You can also refer to the entire argument tuple and its type by |
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// 'args' and 'args_type', and refer to the mock function type and its |
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// return type by 'function_type' and 'return_type'. |
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// |
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// Note that you don't need to specify the types of the mock function |
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// arguments. However rest assured that your code is still type-safe: |
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// you'll get a compiler error if *arg1 doesn't support the ++ |
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// operator, or if the type of ++(*arg1) isn't compatible with the |
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// mock function's return type, for example. |
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// |
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// Sometimes you'll want to parameterize the action. For that you can use |
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// another macro: |
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// |
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// ACTION_P(name, param_name) { statements; } |
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// |
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// For example: |
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// |
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// ACTION_P(Add, n) { return arg0 + n; } |
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// |
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// will allow you to write: |
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// |
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// ...WillOnce(Add(5)); |
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// |
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// Note that you don't need to provide the type of the parameter |
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// either. If you need to reference the type of a parameter named |
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// 'foo', you can write 'foo_type'. For example, in the body of |
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// ACTION_P(Add, n) above, you can write 'n_type' to refer to the type |
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// of 'n'. |
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// |
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// We also provide ACTION_P2, ACTION_P3, ..., up to ACTION_P10 to support |
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// multi-parameter actions. |
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// |
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// For the purpose of typing, you can view |
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// |
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// ACTION_Pk(Foo, p1, ..., pk) { ... } |
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// |
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// as shorthand for |
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// |
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// template <typename p1_type, ..., typename pk_type> |
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// FooActionPk<p1_type, ..., pk_type> Foo(p1_type p1, ..., pk_type pk) { ... } |
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// |
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// In particular, you can provide the template type arguments |
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// explicitly when invoking Foo(), as in Foo<long, bool>(5, false); |
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// although usually you can rely on the compiler to infer the types |
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// for you automatically. You can assign the result of expression |
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// Foo(p1, ..., pk) to a variable of type FooActionPk<p1_type, ..., |
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// pk_type>. This can be useful when composing actions. |
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// |
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// You can also overload actions with different numbers of parameters: |
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// |
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// ACTION_P(Plus, a) { ... } |
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// ACTION_P2(Plus, a, b) { ... } |
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// |
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// While it's tempting to always use the ACTION* macros when defining |
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// a new action, you should also consider implementing ActionInterface |
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// or using MakePolymorphicAction() instead, especially if you need to |
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// use the action a lot. While these approaches require more work, |
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// they give you more control on the types of the mock function |
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// arguments and the action parameters, which in general leads to |
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// better compiler error messages that pay off in the long run. They |
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// also allow overloading actions based on parameter types (as opposed |
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// to just based on the number of parameters). |
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// |
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// CAVEAT: |
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// |
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// ACTION*() can only be used in a namespace scope as templates cannot be |
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// declared inside of a local class. |
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// Users can, however, define any local functors (e.g. a lambda) that |
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// can be used as actions. |
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// |
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// MORE INFORMATION: |
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// |
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// To learn more about using these macros, please search for 'ACTION' on |
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// https://github.com/google/googletest/blob/main/docs/gmock_cook_book.md |
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// IWYU pragma: private, include "gmock/gmock.h" |
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// IWYU pragma: friend gmock/.* |
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#ifndef GOOGLEMOCK_INCLUDE_GMOCK_GMOCK_ACTIONS_H_ |
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#define GOOGLEMOCK_INCLUDE_GMOCK_GMOCK_ACTIONS_H_ |
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#ifndef _WIN32_WCE |
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#include <errno.h> |
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#endif |
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#include <algorithm> |
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#include <exception> |
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#include <functional> |
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#include <memory> |
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#include <string> |
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#include <tuple> |
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#include <type_traits> |
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#include <utility> |
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#include "gmock/internal/gmock-internal-utils.h" |
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#include "gmock/internal/gmock-port.h" |
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#include "gmock/internal/gmock-pp.h" |
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GTEST_DISABLE_MSC_WARNINGS_PUSH_(4100) |
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namespace testing { |
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// To implement an action Foo, define: |
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// 1. a class FooAction that implements the ActionInterface interface, and |
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// 2. a factory function that creates an Action object from a |
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// const FooAction*. |
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// |
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// The two-level delegation design follows that of Matcher, providing |
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// consistency for extension developers. It also eases ownership |
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// management as Action objects can now be copied like plain values. |
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namespace internal { |
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// BuiltInDefaultValueGetter<T, true>::Get() returns a |
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// default-constructed T value. BuiltInDefaultValueGetter<T, |
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// false>::Get() crashes with an error. |
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// |
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// This primary template is used when kDefaultConstructible is true. |
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template <typename T, bool kDefaultConstructible> |
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struct BuiltInDefaultValueGetter { |
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static T Get() { return T(); } |
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}; |
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template <typename T> |
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struct BuiltInDefaultValueGetter<T, false> { |
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static T Get() { |
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Assert(false, __FILE__, __LINE__, |
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"Default action undefined for the function return type."); |
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#if defined(__GNUC__) || defined(__clang__) |
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__builtin_unreachable(); |
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#elif defined(_MSC_VER) |
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__assume(0); |
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#else |
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return Invalid<T>(); |
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// The above statement will never be reached, but is required in |
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// order for this function to compile. |
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#endif |
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} |
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}; |
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// BuiltInDefaultValue<T>::Get() returns the "built-in" default value |
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// for type T, which is NULL when T is a raw pointer type, 0 when T is |
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// a numeric type, false when T is bool, or "" when T is string or |
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// std::string. In addition, in C++11 and above, it turns a |
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// default-constructed T value if T is default constructible. For any |
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// other type T, the built-in default T value is undefined, and the |
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// function will abort the process. |
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template <typename T> |
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class BuiltInDefaultValue { |
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public: |
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// This function returns true if and only if type T has a built-in default |
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// value. |
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static bool Exists() { return ::std::is_default_constructible<T>::value; } |
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static T Get() { |
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return BuiltInDefaultValueGetter< |
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T, ::std::is_default_constructible<T>::value>::Get(); |
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} |
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}; |
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// This partial specialization says that we use the same built-in |
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// default value for T and const T. |
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template <typename T> |
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class BuiltInDefaultValue<const T> { |
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public: |
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static bool Exists() { return BuiltInDefaultValue<T>::Exists(); } |
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static T Get() { return BuiltInDefaultValue<T>::Get(); } |
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}; |
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// This partial specialization defines the default values for pointer |
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// types. |
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template <typename T> |
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class BuiltInDefaultValue<T*> { |
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public: |
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static bool Exists() { return true; } |
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static T* Get() { return nullptr; } |
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}; |
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// The following specializations define the default values for |
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// specific types we care about. |
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#define GMOCK_DEFINE_DEFAULT_ACTION_FOR_RETURN_TYPE_(type, value) \ |
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template <> \ |
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class BuiltInDefaultValue<type> { \ |
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public: \ |
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static bool Exists() { return true; } \ |
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static type Get() { return value; } \ |
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} |
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GMOCK_DEFINE_DEFAULT_ACTION_FOR_RETURN_TYPE_(void, ); // NOLINT |
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GMOCK_DEFINE_DEFAULT_ACTION_FOR_RETURN_TYPE_(::std::string, ""); |
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GMOCK_DEFINE_DEFAULT_ACTION_FOR_RETURN_TYPE_(bool, false); |
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GMOCK_DEFINE_DEFAULT_ACTION_FOR_RETURN_TYPE_(unsigned char, '\0'); |
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GMOCK_DEFINE_DEFAULT_ACTION_FOR_RETURN_TYPE_(signed char, '\0'); |
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GMOCK_DEFINE_DEFAULT_ACTION_FOR_RETURN_TYPE_(char, '\0'); |
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// There's no need for a default action for signed wchar_t, as that |
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// type is the same as wchar_t for gcc, and invalid for MSVC. |
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// |
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// There's also no need for a default action for unsigned wchar_t, as |
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// that type is the same as unsigned int for gcc, and invalid for |
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// MSVC. |
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#if GMOCK_WCHAR_T_IS_NATIVE_ |
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GMOCK_DEFINE_DEFAULT_ACTION_FOR_RETURN_TYPE_(wchar_t, 0U); // NOLINT |
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#endif |
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GMOCK_DEFINE_DEFAULT_ACTION_FOR_RETURN_TYPE_(unsigned short, 0U); // NOLINT |
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GMOCK_DEFINE_DEFAULT_ACTION_FOR_RETURN_TYPE_(signed short, 0); // NOLINT |
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GMOCK_DEFINE_DEFAULT_ACTION_FOR_RETURN_TYPE_(unsigned int, 0U); |
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GMOCK_DEFINE_DEFAULT_ACTION_FOR_RETURN_TYPE_(signed int, 0); |
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GMOCK_DEFINE_DEFAULT_ACTION_FOR_RETURN_TYPE_(unsigned long, 0UL); // NOLINT |
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GMOCK_DEFINE_DEFAULT_ACTION_FOR_RETURN_TYPE_(signed long, 0L); // NOLINT |
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GMOCK_DEFINE_DEFAULT_ACTION_FOR_RETURN_TYPE_(unsigned long long, 0); // NOLINT |
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GMOCK_DEFINE_DEFAULT_ACTION_FOR_RETURN_TYPE_(signed long long, 0); // NOLINT |
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GMOCK_DEFINE_DEFAULT_ACTION_FOR_RETURN_TYPE_(float, 0); |
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GMOCK_DEFINE_DEFAULT_ACTION_FOR_RETURN_TYPE_(double, 0); |
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#undef GMOCK_DEFINE_DEFAULT_ACTION_FOR_RETURN_TYPE_ |
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// Partial implementations of metaprogramming types from the standard library |
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// not available in C++11. |
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template <typename P> |
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struct negation |
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// NOLINTNEXTLINE |
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: std::integral_constant<bool, bool(!P::value)> {}; |
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// Base case: with zero predicates the answer is always true. |
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template <typename...> |
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struct conjunction : std::true_type {}; |
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// With a single predicate, the answer is that predicate. |
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template <typename P1> |
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struct conjunction<P1> : P1 {}; |
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// With multiple predicates the answer is the first predicate if that is false, |
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// and we recurse otherwise. |
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template <typename P1, typename... Ps> |
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struct conjunction<P1, Ps...> |
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: std::conditional<bool(P1::value), conjunction<Ps...>, P1>::type {}; |
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template <typename...> |
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struct disjunction : std::false_type {}; |
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template <typename P1> |
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struct disjunction<P1> : P1 {}; |
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template <typename P1, typename... Ps> |
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struct disjunction<P1, Ps...> |
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// NOLINTNEXTLINE |
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: std::conditional<!bool(P1::value), disjunction<Ps...>, P1>::type {}; |
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template <typename...> |
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using void_t = void; |
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// Detects whether an expression of type `From` can be implicitly converted to |
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// `To` according to [conv]. In C++17, [conv]/3 defines this as follows: |
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// |
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// An expression e can be implicitly converted to a type T if and only if |
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// the declaration T t=e; is well-formed, for some invented temporary |
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// variable t ([dcl.init]). |
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// |
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// [conv]/2 implies we can use function argument passing to detect whether this |
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// initialization is valid. |
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// |
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// Note that this is distinct from is_convertible, which requires this be valid: |
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// |
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// To test() { |
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// return declval<From>(); |
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// } |
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// |
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// In particular, is_convertible doesn't give the correct answer when `To` and |
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// `From` are the same non-moveable type since `declval<From>` will be an rvalue |
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// reference, defeating the guaranteed copy elision that would otherwise make |
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// this function work. |
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// |
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// REQUIRES: `From` is not cv void. |
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template <typename From, typename To> |
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struct is_implicitly_convertible { |
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private: |
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// A function that accepts a parameter of type T. This can be called with type |
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// U successfully only if U is implicitly convertible to T. |
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template <typename T> |
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static void Accept(T); |
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// A function that creates a value of type T. |
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template <typename T> |
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static T Make(); |
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// An overload be selected when implicit conversion from T to To is possible. |
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template <typename T, typename = decltype(Accept<To>(Make<T>()))> |
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static std::true_type TestImplicitConversion(int); |
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// A fallback overload selected in all other cases. |
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template <typename T> |
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static std::false_type TestImplicitConversion(...); |
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public: |
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using type = decltype(TestImplicitConversion<From>(0)); |
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static constexpr bool value = type::value; |
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}; |
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// Like std::invoke_result_t from C++17, but works only for objects with call |
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// operators (not e.g. member function pointers, which we don't need specific |
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// support for in OnceAction because std::function deals with them). |
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template <typename F, typename... Args> |
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using call_result_t = decltype(std::declval<F>()(std::declval<Args>()...)); |
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template <typename Void, typename R, typename F, typename... Args> |
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struct is_callable_r_impl : std::false_type {}; |
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// Specialize the struct for those template arguments where call_result_t is |
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// well-formed. When it's not, the generic template above is chosen, resulting |
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// in std::false_type. |
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template <typename R, typename F, typename... Args> |
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struct is_callable_r_impl<void_t<call_result_t<F, Args...>>, R, F, Args...> |
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: std::conditional< |
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std::is_void<R>::value, // |
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std::true_type, // |
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is_implicitly_convertible<call_result_t<F, Args...>, R>>::type {}; |
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// Like std::is_invocable_r from C++17, but works only for objects with call |
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// operators. See the note on call_result_t. |
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template <typename R, typename F, typename... Args> |
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using is_callable_r = is_callable_r_impl<void, R, F, Args...>; |
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// Like std::as_const from C++17. |
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template <typename T> |
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typename std::add_const<T>::type& as_const(T& t) { |
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return t; |
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} |
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} // namespace internal |
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// Specialized for function types below. |
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template <typename F> |
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class OnceAction; |
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// An action that can only be used once. |
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// |
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// This is accepted by WillOnce, which doesn't require the underlying action to |
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// be copy-constructible (only move-constructible), and promises to invoke it as |
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// an rvalue reference. This allows the action to work with move-only types like |
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// std::move_only_function in a type-safe manner. |
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// |
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// For example: |
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// |
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// // Assume we have some API that needs to accept a unique pointer to some |
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// // non-copyable object Foo. |
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// void AcceptUniquePointer(std::unique_ptr<Foo> foo); |
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// |
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// // We can define an action that provides a Foo to that API. Because It |
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// // has to give away its unique pointer, it must not be called more than |
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// // once, so its call operator is &&-qualified. |
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// struct ProvideFoo { |
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// std::unique_ptr<Foo> foo; |
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// |
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// void operator()() && { |
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// AcceptUniquePointer(std::move(Foo)); |
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// } |
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// }; |
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// |
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// // This action can be used with WillOnce. |
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// EXPECT_CALL(mock, Call) |
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// .WillOnce(ProvideFoo{std::make_unique<Foo>(...)}); |
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// |
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// // But a call to WillRepeatedly will fail to compile. This is correct, |
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// // since the action cannot correctly be used repeatedly. |
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// EXPECT_CALL(mock, Call) |
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// .WillRepeatedly(ProvideFoo{std::make_unique<Foo>(...)}); |
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// |
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// A less-contrived example would be an action that returns an arbitrary type, |
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// whose &&-qualified call operator is capable of dealing with move-only types. |
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template <typename Result, typename... Args> |
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class OnceAction<Result(Args...)> final { |
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private: |
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// True iff we can use the given callable type (or lvalue reference) directly |
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// via StdFunctionAdaptor. |
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template <typename Callable> |
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using IsDirectlyCompatible = internal::conjunction< |
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// It must be possible to capture the callable in StdFunctionAdaptor. |
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std::is_constructible<typename std::decay<Callable>::type, Callable>, |
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// The callable must be compatible with our signature. |
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internal::is_callable_r<Result, typename std::decay<Callable>::type, |
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Args...>>; |
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// True iff we can use the given callable type via StdFunctionAdaptor once we |
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// ignore incoming arguments. |
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template <typename Callable> |
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using IsCompatibleAfterIgnoringArguments = internal::conjunction< |
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// It must be possible to capture the callable in a lambda. |
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std::is_constructible<typename std::decay<Callable>::type, Callable>, |
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// The callable must be invocable with zero arguments, returning something |
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// convertible to Result. |
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internal::is_callable_r<Result, typename std::decay<Callable>::type>>; |
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public: |
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// Construct from a callable that is directly compatible with our mocked |
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// signature: it accepts our function type's arguments and returns something |
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// convertible to our result type. |
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template <typename Callable, |
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typename std::enable_if< |
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internal::conjunction< |
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// Teach clang on macOS that we're not talking about a |
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// copy/move constructor here. Otherwise it gets confused |
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// when checking the is_constructible requirement of our |
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// traits above. |
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internal::negation<std::is_same< |
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OnceAction, typename std::decay<Callable>::type>>, |
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IsDirectlyCompatible<Callable>> // |
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::value, |
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int>::type = 0> |
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OnceAction(Callable&& callable) // NOLINT |
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: function_(StdFunctionAdaptor<typename std::decay<Callable>::type>( |
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{}, std::forward<Callable>(callable))) {} |
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|
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// As above, but for a callable that ignores the mocked function's arguments. |
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template <typename Callable, |
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typename std::enable_if< |
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internal::conjunction< |
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// Teach clang on macOS that we're not talking about a |
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// copy/move constructor here. Otherwise it gets confused |
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// when checking the is_constructible requirement of our |
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// traits above. |
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internal::negation<std::is_same< |
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OnceAction, typename std::decay<Callable>::type>>, |
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// Exclude callables for which the overload above works. |
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// We'd rather provide the arguments if possible. |
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internal::negation<IsDirectlyCompatible<Callable>>, |
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IsCompatibleAfterIgnoringArguments<Callable>>::value, |
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int>::type = 0> |
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OnceAction(Callable&& callable) // NOLINT |
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// Call the constructor above with a callable |
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// that ignores the input arguments. |
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: OnceAction(IgnoreIncomingArguments<typename std::decay<Callable>::type>{ |
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std::forward<Callable>(callable)}) {} |
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// We are naturally copyable because we store only an std::function, but |
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// semantically we should not be copyable. |
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OnceAction(const OnceAction&) = delete; |
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OnceAction& operator=(const OnceAction&) = delete; |
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OnceAction(OnceAction&&) = default; |
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// Invoke the underlying action callable with which we were constructed, |
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// handing it the supplied arguments. |
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Result Call(Args... args) && { |
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return function_(std::forward<Args>(args)...); |
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} |
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private: |
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// An adaptor that wraps a callable that is compatible with our signature and |
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// being invoked as an rvalue reference so that it can be used as an |
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// StdFunctionAdaptor. This throws away type safety, but that's fine because |
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// this is only used by WillOnce, which we know calls at most once. |
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// |
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// Once we have something like std::move_only_function from C++23, we can do |
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// away with this. |
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template <typename Callable> |
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class StdFunctionAdaptor final { |
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public: |
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// A tag indicating that the (otherwise universal) constructor is accepting |
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// the callable itself, instead of e.g. stealing calls for the move |
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// constructor. |
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struct CallableTag final {}; |
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template <typename F> |
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explicit StdFunctionAdaptor(CallableTag, F&& callable) |
|
: callable_(std::make_shared<Callable>(std::forward<F>(callable))) {} |
|
|
|
// Rather than explicitly returning Result, we return whatever the wrapped |
|
// callable returns. This allows for compatibility with existing uses like |
|
// the following, when the mocked function returns void: |
|
// |
|
// EXPECT_CALL(mock_fn_, Call) |
|
// .WillOnce([&] { |
|
// [...] |
|
// return 0; |
|
// }); |
|
// |
|
// Such a callable can be turned into std::function<void()>. If we use an |
|
// explicit return type of Result here then it *doesn't* work with |
|
// std::function, because we'll get a "void function should not return a |
|
// value" error. |
|
// |
|
// We need not worry about incompatible result types because the SFINAE on |
|
// OnceAction already checks this for us. std::is_invocable_r_v itself makes |
|
// the same allowance for void result types. |
|
template <typename... ArgRefs> |
|
internal::call_result_t<Callable, ArgRefs...> operator()( |
|
ArgRefs&&... args) const { |
|
return std::move(*callable_)(std::forward<ArgRefs>(args)...); |
|
} |
|
|
|
private: |
|
// We must put the callable on the heap so that we are copyable, which |
|
// std::function needs. |
|
std::shared_ptr<Callable> callable_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// An adaptor that makes a callable that accepts zero arguments callable with |
|
// our mocked arguments. |
|
template <typename Callable> |
|
struct IgnoreIncomingArguments { |
|
internal::call_result_t<Callable> operator()(Args&&...) { |
|
return std::move(callable)(); |
|
} |
|
|
|
Callable callable; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
std::function<Result(Args...)> function_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// When an unexpected function call is encountered, Google Mock will |
|
// let it return a default value if the user has specified one for its |
|
// return type, or if the return type has a built-in default value; |
|
// otherwise Google Mock won't know what value to return and will have |
|
// to abort the process. |
|
// |
|
// The DefaultValue<T> class allows a user to specify the |
|
// default value for a type T that is both copyable and publicly |
|
// destructible (i.e. anything that can be used as a function return |
|
// type). The usage is: |
|
// |
|
// // Sets the default value for type T to be foo. |
|
// DefaultValue<T>::Set(foo); |
|
template <typename T> |
|
class DefaultValue { |
|
public: |
|
// Sets the default value for type T; requires T to be |
|
// copy-constructable and have a public destructor. |
|
static void Set(T x) { |
|
delete producer_; |
|
producer_ = new FixedValueProducer(x); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Provides a factory function to be called to generate the default value. |
|
// This method can be used even if T is only move-constructible, but it is not |
|
// limited to that case. |
|
typedef T (*FactoryFunction)(); |
|
static void SetFactory(FactoryFunction factory) { |
|
delete producer_; |
|
producer_ = new FactoryValueProducer(factory); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Unsets the default value for type T. |
|
static void Clear() { |
|
delete producer_; |
|
producer_ = nullptr; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Returns true if and only if the user has set the default value for type T. |
|
static bool IsSet() { return producer_ != nullptr; } |
|
|
|
// Returns true if T has a default return value set by the user or there |
|
// exists a built-in default value. |
|
static bool Exists() { |
|
return IsSet() || internal::BuiltInDefaultValue<T>::Exists(); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Returns the default value for type T if the user has set one; |
|
// otherwise returns the built-in default value. Requires that Exists() |
|
// is true, which ensures that the return value is well-defined. |
|
static T Get() { |
|
return producer_ == nullptr ? internal::BuiltInDefaultValue<T>::Get() |
|
: producer_->Produce(); |
|
} |
|
|
|
private: |
|
class ValueProducer { |
|
public: |
|
virtual ~ValueProducer() = default; |
|
virtual T Produce() = 0; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
class FixedValueProducer : public ValueProducer { |
|
public: |
|
explicit FixedValueProducer(T value) : value_(value) {} |
|
T Produce() override { return value_; } |
|
|
|
private: |
|
const T value_; |
|
FixedValueProducer(const FixedValueProducer&) = delete; |
|
FixedValueProducer& operator=(const FixedValueProducer&) = delete; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
class FactoryValueProducer : public ValueProducer { |
|
public: |
|
explicit FactoryValueProducer(FactoryFunction factory) |
|
: factory_(factory) {} |
|
T Produce() override { return factory_(); } |
|
|
|
private: |
|
const FactoryFunction factory_; |
|
FactoryValueProducer(const FactoryValueProducer&) = delete; |
|
FactoryValueProducer& operator=(const FactoryValueProducer&) = delete; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
static ValueProducer* producer_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// This partial specialization allows a user to set default values for |
|
// reference types. |
|
template <typename T> |
|
class DefaultValue<T&> { |
|
public: |
|
// Sets the default value for type T&. |
|
static void Set(T& x) { // NOLINT |
|
address_ = &x; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Unsets the default value for type T&. |
|
static void Clear() { address_ = nullptr; } |
|
|
|
// Returns true if and only if the user has set the default value for type T&. |
|
static bool IsSet() { return address_ != nullptr; } |
|
|
|
// Returns true if T has a default return value set by the user or there |
|
// exists a built-in default value. |
|
static bool Exists() { |
|
return IsSet() || internal::BuiltInDefaultValue<T&>::Exists(); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Returns the default value for type T& if the user has set one; |
|
// otherwise returns the built-in default value if there is one; |
|
// otherwise aborts the process. |
|
static T& Get() { |
|
return address_ == nullptr ? internal::BuiltInDefaultValue<T&>::Get() |
|
: *address_; |
|
} |
|
|
|
private: |
|
static T* address_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// This specialization allows DefaultValue<void>::Get() to |
|
// compile. |
|
template <> |
|
class DefaultValue<void> { |
|
public: |
|
static bool Exists() { return true; } |
|
static void Get() {} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// Points to the user-set default value for type T. |
|
template <typename T> |
|
typename DefaultValue<T>::ValueProducer* DefaultValue<T>::producer_ = nullptr; |
|
|
|
// Points to the user-set default value for type T&. |
|
template <typename T> |
|
T* DefaultValue<T&>::address_ = nullptr; |
|
|
|
// Implement this interface to define an action for function type F. |
|
template <typename F> |
|
class ActionInterface { |
|
public: |
|
typedef typename internal::Function<F>::Result Result; |
|
typedef typename internal::Function<F>::ArgumentTuple ArgumentTuple; |
|
|
|
ActionInterface() = default; |
|
virtual ~ActionInterface() = default; |
|
|
|
// Performs the action. This method is not const, as in general an |
|
// action can have side effects and be stateful. For example, a |
|
// get-the-next-element-from-the-collection action will need to |
|
// remember the current element. |
|
virtual Result Perform(const ArgumentTuple& args) = 0; |
|
|
|
private: |
|
ActionInterface(const ActionInterface&) = delete; |
|
ActionInterface& operator=(const ActionInterface&) = delete; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
template <typename F> |
|
class Action; |
|
|
|
// An Action<R(Args...)> is a copyable and IMMUTABLE (except by assignment) |
|
// object that represents an action to be taken when a mock function of type |
|
// R(Args...) is called. The implementation of Action<T> is just a |
|
// std::shared_ptr to const ActionInterface<T>. Don't inherit from Action! You |
|
// can view an object implementing ActionInterface<F> as a concrete action |
|
// (including its current state), and an Action<F> object as a handle to it. |
|
template <typename R, typename... Args> |
|
class Action<R(Args...)> { |
|
private: |
|
using F = R(Args...); |
|
|
|
// Adapter class to allow constructing Action from a legacy ActionInterface. |
|
// New code should create Actions from functors instead. |
|
struct ActionAdapter { |
|
// Adapter must be copyable to satisfy std::function requirements. |
|
::std::shared_ptr<ActionInterface<F>> impl_; |
|
|
|
template <typename... InArgs> |
|
typename internal::Function<F>::Result operator()(InArgs&&... args) { |
|
return impl_->Perform( |
|
::std::forward_as_tuple(::std::forward<InArgs>(args)...)); |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
template <typename G> |
|
using IsCompatibleFunctor = std::is_constructible<std::function<F>, G>; |
|
|
|
public: |
|
typedef typename internal::Function<F>::Result Result; |
|
typedef typename internal::Function<F>::ArgumentTuple ArgumentTuple; |
|
|
|
// Constructs a null Action. Needed for storing Action objects in |
|
// STL containers. |
|
Action() = default; |
|
|
|
// Construct an Action from a specified callable. |
|
// This cannot take std::function directly, because then Action would not be |
|
// directly constructible from lambda (it would require two conversions). |
|
template < |
|
typename G, |
|
typename = typename std::enable_if<internal::disjunction< |
|
IsCompatibleFunctor<G>, std::is_constructible<std::function<Result()>, |
|
G>>::value>::type> |
|
Action(G&& fun) { // NOLINT |
|
Init(::std::forward<G>(fun), IsCompatibleFunctor<G>()); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Constructs an Action from its implementation. |
|
explicit Action(ActionInterface<F>* impl) |
|
: fun_(ActionAdapter{::std::shared_ptr<ActionInterface<F>>(impl)}) {} |
|
|
|
// This constructor allows us to turn an Action<Func> object into an |
|
// Action<F>, as long as F's arguments can be implicitly converted |
|
// to Func's and Func's return type can be implicitly converted to F's. |
|
template <typename Func> |
|
Action(const Action<Func>& action) // NOLINT |
|
: fun_(action.fun_) {} |
|
|
|
// Returns true if and only if this is the DoDefault() action. |
|
bool IsDoDefault() const { return fun_ == nullptr; } |
|
|
|
// Performs the action. Note that this method is const even though |
|
// the corresponding method in ActionInterface is not. The reason |
|
// is that a const Action<F> means that it cannot be re-bound to |
|
// another concrete action, not that the concrete action it binds to |
|
// cannot change state. (Think of the difference between a const |
|
// pointer and a pointer to const.) |
|
Result Perform(ArgumentTuple args) const { |
|
if (IsDoDefault()) { |
|
internal::IllegalDoDefault(__FILE__, __LINE__); |
|
} |
|
return internal::Apply(fun_, ::std::move(args)); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// An action can be used as a OnceAction, since it's obviously safe to call it |
|
// once. |
|
operator OnceAction<F>() const { // NOLINT |
|
// Return a OnceAction-compatible callable that calls Perform with the |
|
// arguments it is provided. We could instead just return fun_, but then |
|
// we'd need to handle the IsDoDefault() case separately. |
|
struct OA { |
|
Action<F> action; |
|
|
|
R operator()(Args... args) && { |
|
return action.Perform( |
|
std::forward_as_tuple(std::forward<Args>(args)...)); |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
return OA{*this}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
private: |
|
template <typename G> |
|
friend class Action; |
|
|
|
template <typename G> |
|
void Init(G&& g, ::std::true_type) { |
|
fun_ = ::std::forward<G>(g); |
|
} |
|
|
|
template <typename G> |
|
void Init(G&& g, ::std::false_type) { |
|
fun_ = IgnoreArgs<typename ::std::decay<G>::type>{::std::forward<G>(g)}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
template <typename FunctionImpl> |
|
struct IgnoreArgs { |
|
template <typename... InArgs> |
|
Result operator()(const InArgs&...) const { |
|
return function_impl(); |
|
} |
|
|
|
FunctionImpl function_impl; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// fun_ is an empty function if and only if this is the DoDefault() action. |
|
::std::function<F> fun_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// The PolymorphicAction class template makes it easy to implement a |
|
// polymorphic action (i.e. an action that can be used in mock |
|
// functions of than one type, e.g. Return()). |
|
// |
|
// To define a polymorphic action, a user first provides a COPYABLE |
|
// implementation class that has a Perform() method template: |
|
// |
|
// class FooAction { |
|
// public: |
|
// template <typename Result, typename ArgumentTuple> |
|
// Result Perform(const ArgumentTuple& args) const { |
|
// // Processes the arguments and returns a result, using |
|
// // std::get<N>(args) to get the N-th (0-based) argument in the tuple. |
|
// } |
|
// ... |
|
// }; |
|
// |
|
// Then the user creates the polymorphic action using |
|
// MakePolymorphicAction(object) where object has type FooAction. See |
|
// the definition of Return(void) and SetArgumentPointee<N>(value) for |
|
// complete examples. |
|
template <typename Impl> |
|
class PolymorphicAction { |
|
public: |
|
explicit PolymorphicAction(const Impl& impl) : impl_(impl) {} |
|
|
|
template <typename F> |
|
operator Action<F>() const { |
|
return Action<F>(new MonomorphicImpl<F>(impl_)); |
|
} |
|
|
|
private: |
|
template <typename F> |
|
class MonomorphicImpl : public ActionInterface<F> { |
|
public: |
|
typedef typename internal::Function<F>::Result Result; |
|
typedef typename internal::Function<F>::ArgumentTuple ArgumentTuple; |
|
|
|
explicit MonomorphicImpl(const Impl& impl) : impl_(impl) {} |
|
|
|
Result Perform(const ArgumentTuple& args) override { |
|
return impl_.template Perform<Result>(args); |
|
} |
|
|
|
private: |
|
Impl impl_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
Impl impl_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// Creates an Action from its implementation and returns it. The |
|
// created Action object owns the implementation. |
|
template <typename F> |
|
Action<F> MakeAction(ActionInterface<F>* impl) { |
|
return Action<F>(impl); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Creates a polymorphic action from its implementation. This is |
|
// easier to use than the PolymorphicAction<Impl> constructor as it |
|
// doesn't require you to explicitly write the template argument, e.g. |
|
// |
|
// MakePolymorphicAction(foo); |
|
// vs |
|
// PolymorphicAction<TypeOfFoo>(foo); |
|
template <typename Impl> |
|
inline PolymorphicAction<Impl> MakePolymorphicAction(const Impl& impl) { |
|
return PolymorphicAction<Impl>(impl); |
|
} |
|
|
|
namespace internal { |
|
|
|
// Helper struct to specialize ReturnAction to execute a move instead of a copy |
|
// on return. Useful for move-only types, but could be used on any type. |
|
template <typename T> |
|
struct ByMoveWrapper { |
|
explicit ByMoveWrapper(T value) : payload(std::move(value)) {} |
|
T payload; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// The general implementation of Return(R). Specializations follow below. |
|
template <typename R> |
|
class ReturnAction final { |
|
public: |
|
explicit ReturnAction(R value) : value_(std::move(value)) {} |
|
|
|
template <typename U, typename... Args, |
|
typename = typename std::enable_if<conjunction< |
|
// See the requirements documented on Return. |
|
negation<std::is_same<void, U>>, // |
|
negation<std::is_reference<U>>, // |
|
std::is_convertible<R, U>, // |
|
std::is_move_constructible<U>>::value>::type> |
|
operator OnceAction<U(Args...)>() && { // NOLINT |
|
return Impl<U>(std::move(value_)); |
|
} |
|
|
|
template <typename U, typename... Args, |
|
typename = typename std::enable_if<conjunction< |
|
// See the requirements documented on Return. |
|
negation<std::is_same<void, U>>, // |
|
negation<std::is_reference<U>>, // |
|
std::is_convertible<const R&, U>, // |
|
std::is_copy_constructible<U>>::value>::type> |
|
operator Action<U(Args...)>() const { // NOLINT |
|
return Impl<U>(value_); |
|
} |
|
|
|
private: |
|
// Implements the Return(x) action for a mock function that returns type U. |
|
template <typename U> |
|
class Impl final { |
|
public: |
|
// The constructor used when the return value is allowed to move from the |
|
// input value (i.e. we are converting to OnceAction). |
|
explicit Impl(R&& input_value) |
|
: state_(new State(std::move(input_value))) {} |
|
|
|
// The constructor used when the return value is not allowed to move from |
|
// the input value (i.e. we are converting to Action). |
|
explicit Impl(const R& input_value) : state_(new State(input_value)) {} |
|
|
|
U operator()() && { return std::move(state_->value); } |
|
U operator()() const& { return state_->value; } |
|
|
|
private: |
|
// We put our state on the heap so that the compiler-generated copy/move |
|
// constructors work correctly even when U is a reference-like type. This is |
|
// necessary only because we eagerly create State::value (see the note on |
|
// that symbol for details). If we instead had only the input value as a |
|
// member then the default constructors would work fine. |
|
// |
|
// For example, when R is std::string and U is std::string_view, value is a |
|
// reference to the string backed by input_value. The copy constructor would |
|
// copy both, so that we wind up with a new input_value object (with the |
|
// same contents) and a reference to the *old* input_value object rather |
|
// than the new one. |
|
struct State { |
|
explicit State(const R& input_value_in) |
|
: input_value(input_value_in), |
|
// Make an implicit conversion to Result before initializing the U |
|
// object we store, avoiding calling any explicit constructor of U |
|
// from R. |
|
// |
|
// This simulates the language rules: a function with return type U |
|
// that does `return R()` requires R to be implicitly convertible to |
|
// U, and uses that path for the conversion, even U Result has an |
|
// explicit constructor from R. |
|
value(ImplicitCast_<U>(internal::as_const(input_value))) {} |
|
|
|
// As above, but for the case where we're moving from the ReturnAction |
|
// object because it's being used as a OnceAction. |
|
explicit State(R&& input_value_in) |
|
: input_value(std::move(input_value_in)), |
|
// For the same reason as above we make an implicit conversion to U |
|
// before initializing the value. |
|
// |
|
// Unlike above we provide the input value as an rvalue to the |
|
// implicit conversion because this is a OnceAction: it's fine if it |
|
// wants to consume the input value. |
|
value(ImplicitCast_<U>(std::move(input_value))) {} |
|
|
|
// A copy of the value originally provided by the user. We retain this in |
|
// addition to the value of the mock function's result type below in case |
|
// the latter is a reference-like type. See the std::string_view example |
|
// in the documentation on Return. |
|
R input_value; |
|
|
|
// The value we actually return, as the type returned by the mock function |
|
// itself. |
|
// |
|
// We eagerly initialize this here, rather than lazily doing the implicit |
|
// conversion automatically each time Perform is called, for historical |
|
// reasons: in 2009-11, commit a070cbd91c (Google changelist 13540126) |
|
// made the Action<U()> conversion operator eagerly convert the R value to |
|
// U, but without keeping the R alive. This broke the use case discussed |
|
// in the documentation for Return, making reference-like types such as |
|
// std::string_view not safe to use as U where the input type R is a |
|
// value-like type such as std::string. |
|
// |
|
// The example the commit gave was not very clear, nor was the issue |
|
// thread (https://github.com/google/googlemock/issues/86), but it seems |
|
// the worry was about reference-like input types R that flatten to a |
|
// value-like type U when being implicitly converted. An example of this |
|
// is std::vector<bool>::reference, which is often a proxy type with an |
|
// reference to the underlying vector: |
|
// |
|
// // Helper method: have the mock function return bools according |
|
// // to the supplied script. |
|
// void SetActions(MockFunction<bool(size_t)>& mock, |
|
// const std::vector<bool>& script) { |
|
// for (size_t i = 0; i < script.size(); ++i) { |
|
// EXPECT_CALL(mock, Call(i)).WillOnce(Return(script[i])); |
|
// } |
|
// } |
|
// |
|
// TEST(Foo, Bar) { |
|
// // Set actions using a temporary vector, whose operator[] |
|
// // returns proxy objects that references that will be |
|
// // dangling once the call to SetActions finishes and the |
|
// // vector is destroyed. |
|
// MockFunction<bool(size_t)> mock; |
|
// SetActions(mock, {false, true}); |
|
// |
|
// EXPECT_FALSE(mock.AsStdFunction()(0)); |
|
// EXPECT_TRUE(mock.AsStdFunction()(1)); |
|
// } |
|
// |
|
// This eager conversion helps with a simple case like this, but doesn't |
|
// fully make these types work in general. For example the following still |
|
// uses a dangling reference: |
|
// |
|
// TEST(Foo, Baz) { |
|
// MockFunction<std::vector<std::string>()> mock; |
|
// |
|
// // Return the same vector twice, and then the empty vector |
|
// // thereafter. |
|
// auto action = Return(std::initializer_list<std::string>{ |
|
// "taco", "burrito", |
|
// }); |
|
// |
|
// EXPECT_CALL(mock, Call) |
|
// .WillOnce(action) |
|
// .WillOnce(action) |
|
// .WillRepeatedly(Return(std::vector<std::string>{})); |
|
// |
|
// EXPECT_THAT(mock.AsStdFunction()(), |
|
// ElementsAre("taco", "burrito")); |
|
// EXPECT_THAT(mock.AsStdFunction()(), |
|
// ElementsAre("taco", "burrito")); |
|
// EXPECT_THAT(mock.AsStdFunction()(), IsEmpty()); |
|
// } |
|
// |
|
U value; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
const std::shared_ptr<State> state_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
R value_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// A specialization of ReturnAction<R> when R is ByMoveWrapper<T> for some T. |
|
// |
|
// This version applies the type system-defeating hack of moving from T even in |
|
// the const call operator, checking at runtime that it isn't called more than |
|
// once, since the user has declared their intent to do so by using ByMove. |
|
template <typename T> |
|
class ReturnAction<ByMoveWrapper<T>> final { |
|
public: |
|
explicit ReturnAction(ByMoveWrapper<T> wrapper) |
|
: state_(new State(std::move(wrapper.payload))) {} |
|
|
|
T operator()() const { |
|
GTEST_CHECK_(!state_->called) |
|
<< "A ByMove() action must be performed at most once."; |
|
|
|
state_->called = true; |
|
return std::move(state_->value); |
|
} |
|
|
|
private: |
|
// We store our state on the heap so that we are copyable as required by |
|
// Action, despite the fact that we are stateful and T may not be copyable. |
|
struct State { |
|
explicit State(T&& value_in) : value(std::move(value_in)) {} |
|
|
|
T value; |
|
bool called = false; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
const std::shared_ptr<State> state_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// Implements the ReturnNull() action. |
|
class ReturnNullAction { |
|
public: |
|
// Allows ReturnNull() to be used in any pointer-returning function. In C++11 |
|
// this is enforced by returning nullptr, and in non-C++11 by asserting a |
|
// pointer type on compile time. |
|
template <typename Result, typename ArgumentTuple> |
|
static Result Perform(const ArgumentTuple&) { |
|
return nullptr; |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// Implements the Return() action. |
|
class ReturnVoidAction { |
|
public: |
|
// Allows Return() to be used in any void-returning function. |
|
template <typename Result, typename ArgumentTuple> |
|
static void Perform(const ArgumentTuple&) { |
|
static_assert(std::is_void<Result>::value, "Result should be void."); |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// Implements the polymorphic ReturnRef(x) action, which can be used |
|
// in any function that returns a reference to the type of x, |
|
// regardless of the argument types. |
|
template <typename T> |
|
class ReturnRefAction { |
|
public: |
|
// Constructs a ReturnRefAction object from the reference to be returned. |
|
explicit ReturnRefAction(T& ref) : ref_(ref) {} // NOLINT |
|
|
|
// This template type conversion operator allows ReturnRef(x) to be |
|
// used in ANY function that returns a reference to x's type. |
|
template <typename F> |
|
operator Action<F>() const { |
|
typedef typename Function<F>::Result Result; |
|
// Asserts that the function return type is a reference. This |
|
// catches the user error of using ReturnRef(x) when Return(x) |
|
// should be used, and generates some helpful error message. |
|
static_assert(std::is_reference<Result>::value, |
|
"use Return instead of ReturnRef to return a value"); |
|
return Action<F>(new Impl<F>(ref_)); |
|
} |
|
|
|
private: |
|
// Implements the ReturnRef(x) action for a particular function type F. |
|
template <typename F> |
|
class Impl : public ActionInterface<F> { |
|
public: |
|
typedef typename Function<F>::Result Result; |
|
typedef typename Function<F>::ArgumentTuple ArgumentTuple; |
|
|
|
explicit Impl(T& ref) : ref_(ref) {} // NOLINT |
|
|
|
Result Perform(const ArgumentTuple&) override { return ref_; } |
|
|
|
private: |
|
T& ref_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
T& ref_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// Implements the polymorphic ReturnRefOfCopy(x) action, which can be |
|
// used in any function that returns a reference to the type of x, |
|
// regardless of the argument types. |
|
template <typename T> |
|
class ReturnRefOfCopyAction { |
|
public: |
|
// Constructs a ReturnRefOfCopyAction object from the reference to |
|
// be returned. |
|
explicit ReturnRefOfCopyAction(const T& value) : value_(value) {} // NOLINT |
|
|
|
// This template type conversion operator allows ReturnRefOfCopy(x) to be |
|
// used in ANY function that returns a reference to x's type. |
|
template <typename F> |
|
operator Action<F>() const { |
|
typedef typename Function<F>::Result Result; |
|
// Asserts that the function return type is a reference. This |
|
// catches the user error of using ReturnRefOfCopy(x) when Return(x) |
|
// should be used, and generates some helpful error message. |
|
static_assert(std::is_reference<Result>::value, |
|
"use Return instead of ReturnRefOfCopy to return a value"); |
|
return Action<F>(new Impl<F>(value_)); |
|
} |
|
|
|
private: |
|
// Implements the ReturnRefOfCopy(x) action for a particular function type F. |
|
template <typename F> |
|
class Impl : public ActionInterface<F> { |
|
public: |
|
typedef typename Function<F>::Result Result; |
|
typedef typename Function<F>::ArgumentTuple ArgumentTuple; |
|
|
|
explicit Impl(const T& value) : value_(value) {} // NOLINT |
|
|
|
Result Perform(const ArgumentTuple&) override { return value_; } |
|
|
|
private: |
|
T value_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
const T value_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// Implements the polymorphic ReturnRoundRobin(v) action, which can be |
|
// used in any function that returns the element_type of v. |
|
template <typename T> |
|
class ReturnRoundRobinAction { |
|
public: |
|
explicit ReturnRoundRobinAction(std::vector<T> values) { |
|
GTEST_CHECK_(!values.empty()) |
|
<< "ReturnRoundRobin requires at least one element."; |
|
state_->values = std::move(values); |
|
} |
|
|
|
template <typename... Args> |
|
T operator()(Args&&...) const { |
|
return state_->Next(); |
|
} |
|
|
|
private: |
|
struct State { |
|
T Next() { |
|
T ret_val = values[i++]; |
|
if (i == values.size()) i = 0; |
|
return ret_val; |
|
} |
|
|
|
std::vector<T> values; |
|
size_t i = 0; |
|
}; |
|
std::shared_ptr<State> state_ = std::make_shared<State>(); |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// Implements the polymorphic DoDefault() action. |
|
class DoDefaultAction { |
|
public: |
|
// This template type conversion operator allows DoDefault() to be |
|
// used in any function. |
|
template <typename F> |
|
operator Action<F>() const { |
|
return Action<F>(); |
|
} // NOLINT |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// Implements the Assign action to set a given pointer referent to a |
|
// particular value. |
|
template <typename T1, typename T2> |
|
class AssignAction { |
|
public: |
|
AssignAction(T1* ptr, T2 value) : ptr_(ptr), value_(value) {} |
|
|
|
template <typename Result, typename ArgumentTuple> |
|
void Perform(const ArgumentTuple& /* args */) const { |
|
*ptr_ = value_; |
|
} |
|
|
|
private: |
|
T1* const ptr_; |
|
const T2 value_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
#ifndef GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE |
|
|
|
// Implements the SetErrnoAndReturn action to simulate return from |
|
// various system calls and libc functions. |
|
template <typename T> |
|
class SetErrnoAndReturnAction { |
|
public: |
|
SetErrnoAndReturnAction(int errno_value, T result) |
|
: errno_(errno_value), result_(result) {} |
|
template <typename Result, typename ArgumentTuple> |
|
Result Perform(const ArgumentTuple& /* args */) const { |
|
errno = errno_; |
|
return result_; |
|
} |
|
|
|
private: |
|
const int errno_; |
|
const T result_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
#endif // !GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE |
|
|
|
// Implements the SetArgumentPointee<N>(x) action for any function |
|
// whose N-th argument (0-based) is a pointer to x's type. |
|
template <size_t N, typename A, typename = void> |
|
struct SetArgumentPointeeAction { |
|
A value; |
|
|
|
template <typename... Args> |
|
void operator()(const Args&... args) const { |
|
*::std::get<N>(std::tie(args...)) = value; |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// Implements the Invoke(object_ptr, &Class::Method) action. |
|
template <class Class, typename MethodPtr> |
|
struct InvokeMethodAction { |
|
Class* const obj_ptr; |
|
const MethodPtr method_ptr; |
|
|
|
template <typename... Args> |
|
auto operator()(Args&&... args) const |
|
-> decltype((obj_ptr->*method_ptr)(std::forward<Args>(args)...)) { |
|
return (obj_ptr->*method_ptr)(std::forward<Args>(args)...); |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// Implements the InvokeWithoutArgs(f) action. The template argument |
|
// FunctionImpl is the implementation type of f, which can be either a |
|
// function pointer or a functor. InvokeWithoutArgs(f) can be used as an |
|
// Action<F> as long as f's type is compatible with F. |
|
template <typename FunctionImpl> |
|
struct InvokeWithoutArgsAction { |
|
FunctionImpl function_impl; |
|
|
|
// Allows InvokeWithoutArgs(f) to be used as any action whose type is |
|
// compatible with f. |
|
template <typename... Args> |
|
auto operator()(const Args&...) -> decltype(function_impl()) { |
|
return function_impl(); |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// Implements the InvokeWithoutArgs(object_ptr, &Class::Method) action. |
|
template <class Class, typename MethodPtr> |
|
struct InvokeMethodWithoutArgsAction { |
|
Class* const obj_ptr; |
|
const MethodPtr method_ptr; |
|
|
|
using ReturnType = |
|
decltype((std::declval<Class*>()->*std::declval<MethodPtr>())()); |
|
|
|
template <typename... Args> |
|
ReturnType operator()(const Args&...) const { |
|
return (obj_ptr->*method_ptr)(); |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// Implements the IgnoreResult(action) action. |
|
template <typename A> |
|
class IgnoreResultAction { |
|
public: |
|
explicit IgnoreResultAction(const A& action) : action_(action) {} |
|
|
|
template <typename F> |
|
operator Action<F>() const { |
|
// Assert statement belongs here because this is the best place to verify |
|
// conditions on F. It produces the clearest error messages |
|
// in most compilers. |
|
// Impl really belongs in this scope as a local class but can't |
|
// because MSVC produces duplicate symbols in different translation units |
|
// in this case. Until MS fixes that bug we put Impl into the class scope |
|
// and put the typedef both here (for use in assert statement) and |
|
// in the Impl class. But both definitions must be the same. |
|
typedef typename internal::Function<F>::Result Result; |
|
|
|
// Asserts at compile time that F returns void. |
|
static_assert(std::is_void<Result>::value, "Result type should be void."); |
|
|
|
return Action<F>(new Impl<F>(action_)); |
|
} |
|
|
|
private: |
|
template <typename F> |
|
class Impl : public ActionInterface<F> { |
|
public: |
|
typedef typename internal::Function<F>::Result Result; |
|
typedef typename internal::Function<F>::ArgumentTuple ArgumentTuple; |
|
|
|
explicit Impl(const A& action) : action_(action) {} |
|
|
|
void Perform(const ArgumentTuple& args) override { |
|
// Performs the action and ignores its result. |
|
action_.Perform(args); |
|
} |
|
|
|
private: |
|
// Type OriginalFunction is the same as F except that its return |
|
// type is IgnoredValue. |
|
typedef |
|
typename internal::Function<F>::MakeResultIgnoredValue OriginalFunction; |
|
|
|
const Action<OriginalFunction> action_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
const A action_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
template <typename InnerAction, size_t... I> |
|
struct WithArgsAction { |
|
InnerAction inner_action; |
|
|
|
// The signature of the function as seen by the inner action, given an out |
|
// action with the given result and argument types. |
|
template <typename R, typename... Args> |
|
using InnerSignature = |
|
R(typename std::tuple_element<I, std::tuple<Args...>>::type...); |
|
|
|
// Rather than a call operator, we must define conversion operators to |
|
// particular action types. This is necessary for embedded actions like |
|
// DoDefault(), which rely on an action conversion operators rather than |
|
// providing a call operator because even with a particular set of arguments |
|
// they don't have a fixed return type. |
|
|
|
template < |
|
typename R, typename... Args, |
|
typename std::enable_if< |
|
std::is_convertible<InnerAction, |
|
// Unfortunately we can't use the InnerSignature |
|
// alias here; MSVC complains about the I |
|
// parameter pack not being expanded (error C3520) |
|
// despite it being expanded in the type alias. |
|
// TupleElement is also an MSVC workaround. |
|
// See its definition for details. |
|
OnceAction<R(internal::TupleElement< |
|
I, std::tuple<Args...>>...)>>::value, |
|
int>::type = 0> |
|
operator OnceAction<R(Args...)>() && { // NOLINT |
|
struct OA { |
|
OnceAction<InnerSignature<R, Args...>> inner_action; |
|
|
|
R operator()(Args&&... args) && { |
|
return std::move(inner_action) |
|
.Call(std::get<I>( |
|
std::forward_as_tuple(std::forward<Args>(args)...))...); |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
return OA{std::move(inner_action)}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
template < |
|
typename R, typename... Args, |
|
typename std::enable_if< |
|
std::is_convertible<const InnerAction&, |
|
// Unfortunately we can't use the InnerSignature |
|
// alias here; MSVC complains about the I |
|
// parameter pack not being expanded (error C3520) |
|
// despite it being expanded in the type alias. |
|
// TupleElement is also an MSVC workaround. |
|
// See its definition for details. |
|
Action<R(internal::TupleElement< |
|
I, std::tuple<Args...>>...)>>::value, |
|
int>::type = 0> |
|
operator Action<R(Args...)>() const { // NOLINT |
|
Action<InnerSignature<R, Args...>> converted(inner_action); |
|
|
|
return [converted](Args&&... args) -> R { |
|
return converted.Perform(std::forward_as_tuple( |
|
std::get<I>(std::forward_as_tuple(std::forward<Args>(args)...))...)); |
|
}; |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
template <typename... Actions> |
|
class DoAllAction; |
|
|
|
// Base case: only a single action. |
|
template <typename FinalAction> |
|
class DoAllAction<FinalAction> { |
|
public: |
|
struct UserConstructorTag {}; |
|
|
|
template <typename T> |
|
explicit DoAllAction(UserConstructorTag, T&& action) |
|
: final_action_(std::forward<T>(action)) {} |
|
|
|
// Rather than a call operator, we must define conversion operators to |
|
// particular action types. This is necessary for embedded actions like |
|
// DoDefault(), which rely on an action conversion operators rather than |
|
// providing a call operator because even with a particular set of arguments |
|
// they don't have a fixed return type. |
|
|
|
// We support conversion to OnceAction whenever the sub-action does. |
|
template <typename R, typename... Args, |
|
typename std::enable_if< |
|
std::is_convertible<FinalAction, OnceAction<R(Args...)>>::value, |
|
int>::type = 0> |
|
operator OnceAction<R(Args...)>() && { // NOLINT |
|
return std::move(final_action_); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// We also support conversion to OnceAction whenever the sub-action supports |
|
// conversion to Action (since any Action can also be a OnceAction). |
|
template < |
|
typename R, typename... Args, |
|
typename std::enable_if< |
|
conjunction< |
|
negation< |
|
std::is_convertible<FinalAction, OnceAction<R(Args...)>>>, |
|
std::is_convertible<FinalAction, Action<R(Args...)>>>::value, |
|
int>::type = 0> |
|
operator OnceAction<R(Args...)>() && { // NOLINT |
|
return Action<R(Args...)>(std::move(final_action_)); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// We support conversion to Action whenever the sub-action does. |
|
template < |
|
typename R, typename... Args, |
|
typename std::enable_if< |
|
std::is_convertible<const FinalAction&, Action<R(Args...)>>::value, |
|
int>::type = 0> |
|
operator Action<R(Args...)>() const { // NOLINT |
|
return final_action_; |
|
} |
|
|
|
private: |
|
FinalAction final_action_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// Recursive case: support N actions by calling the initial action and then |
|
// calling through to the base class containing N-1 actions. |
|
template <typename InitialAction, typename... OtherActions> |
|
class DoAllAction<InitialAction, OtherActions...> |
|
: private DoAllAction<OtherActions...> { |
|
private: |
|
using Base = DoAllAction<OtherActions...>; |
|
|
|
// The type of reference that should be provided to an initial action for a |
|
// mocked function parameter of type T. |
|
// |
|
// There are two quirks here: |
|
// |
|
// * Unlike most forwarding functions, we pass scalars through by value. |
|
// This isn't strictly necessary because an lvalue reference would work |
|
// fine too and be consistent with other non-reference types, but it's |
|
// perhaps less surprising. |
|
// |
|
// For example if the mocked function has signature void(int), then it |
|
// might seem surprising for the user's initial action to need to be |
|
// convertible to Action<void(const int&)>. This is perhaps less |
|
// surprising for a non-scalar type where there may be a performance |
|
// impact, or it might even be impossible, to pass by value. |
|
// |
|
// * More surprisingly, `const T&` is often not a const reference type. |
|
// By the reference collapsing rules in C++17 [dcl.ref]/6, if T refers to |
|
// U& or U&& for some non-scalar type U, then InitialActionArgType<T> is |
|
// U&. In other words, we may hand over a non-const reference. |
|
// |
|
// So for example, given some non-scalar type Obj we have the following |
|
// mappings: |
|
// |
|
// T InitialActionArgType<T> |
|
// ------- ----------------------- |
|
// Obj const Obj& |
|
// Obj& Obj& |
|
// Obj&& Obj& |
|
// const Obj const Obj& |
|
// const Obj& const Obj& |
|
// const Obj&& const Obj& |
|
// |
|
// In other words, the initial actions get a mutable view of an non-scalar |
|
// argument if and only if the mock function itself accepts a non-const |
|
// reference type. They are never given an rvalue reference to an |
|
// non-scalar type. |
|
// |
|
// This situation makes sense if you imagine use with a matcher that is |
|
// designed to write through a reference. For example, if the caller wants |
|
// to fill in a reference argument and then return a canned value: |
|
// |
|
// EXPECT_CALL(mock, Call) |
|
// .WillOnce(DoAll(SetArgReferee<0>(17), Return(19))); |
|
// |
|
template <typename T> |
|
using InitialActionArgType = |
|
typename std::conditional<std::is_scalar<T>::value, T, const T&>::type; |
|
|
|
public: |
|
struct UserConstructorTag {}; |
|
|
|
template <typename T, typename... U> |
|
explicit DoAllAction(UserConstructorTag, T&& initial_action, |
|
U&&... other_actions) |
|
: Base({}, std::forward<U>(other_actions)...), |
|
initial_action_(std::forward<T>(initial_action)) {} |
|
|
|
// We support conversion to OnceAction whenever both the initial action and |
|
// the rest support conversion to OnceAction. |
|
template < |
|
typename R, typename... Args, |
|
typename std::enable_if< |
|
conjunction<std::is_convertible< |
|
InitialAction, |
|
OnceAction<void(InitialActionArgType<Args>...)>>, |
|
std::is_convertible<Base, OnceAction<R(Args...)>>>::value, |
|
int>::type = 0> |
|
operator OnceAction<R(Args...)>() && { // NOLINT |
|
// Return an action that first calls the initial action with arguments |
|
// filtered through InitialActionArgType, then forwards arguments directly |
|
// to the base class to deal with the remaining actions. |
|
struct OA { |
|
OnceAction<void(InitialActionArgType<Args>...)> initial_action; |
|
OnceAction<R(Args...)> remaining_actions; |
|
|
|
R operator()(Args... args) && { |
|
std::move(initial_action) |
|
.Call(static_cast<InitialActionArgType<Args>>(args)...); |
|
|
|
return std::move(remaining_actions).Call(std::forward<Args>(args)...); |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
return OA{ |
|
std::move(initial_action_), |
|
std::move(static_cast<Base&>(*this)), |
|
}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// We also support conversion to OnceAction whenever the initial action |
|
// supports conversion to Action (since any Action can also be a OnceAction). |
|
// |
|
// The remaining sub-actions must also be compatible, but we don't need to |
|
// special case them because the base class deals with them. |
|
template < |
|
typename R, typename... Args, |
|
typename std::enable_if< |
|
conjunction< |
|
negation<std::is_convertible< |
|
InitialAction, |
|
OnceAction<void(InitialActionArgType<Args>...)>>>, |
|
std::is_convertible<InitialAction, |
|
Action<void(InitialActionArgType<Args>...)>>, |
|
std::is_convertible<Base, OnceAction<R(Args...)>>>::value, |
|
int>::type = 0> |
|
operator OnceAction<R(Args...)>() && { // NOLINT |
|
return DoAll( |
|
Action<void(InitialActionArgType<Args>...)>(std::move(initial_action_)), |
|
std::move(static_cast<Base&>(*this))); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// We support conversion to Action whenever both the initial action and the |
|
// rest support conversion to Action. |
|
template < |
|
typename R, typename... Args, |
|
typename std::enable_if< |
|
conjunction< |
|
std::is_convertible<const InitialAction&, |
|
Action<void(InitialActionArgType<Args>...)>>, |
|
std::is_convertible<const Base&, Action<R(Args...)>>>::value, |
|
int>::type = 0> |
|
operator Action<R(Args...)>() const { // NOLINT |
|
// Return an action that first calls the initial action with arguments |
|
// filtered through InitialActionArgType, then forwards arguments directly |
|
// to the base class to deal with the remaining actions. |
|
struct OA { |
|
Action<void(InitialActionArgType<Args>...)> initial_action; |
|
Action<R(Args...)> remaining_actions; |
|
|
|
R operator()(Args... args) const { |
|
initial_action.Perform(std::forward_as_tuple( |
|
static_cast<InitialActionArgType<Args>>(args)...)); |
|
|
|
return remaining_actions.Perform( |
|
std::forward_as_tuple(std::forward<Args>(args)...)); |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
return OA{ |
|
initial_action_, |
|
static_cast<const Base&>(*this), |
|
}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
private: |
|
InitialAction initial_action_; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
template <typename T, typename... Params> |
|
struct ReturnNewAction { |
|
T* operator()() const { |
|
return internal::Apply( |
|
[](const Params&... unpacked_params) { |
|
return new T(unpacked_params...); |
|
}, |
|
params); |
|
} |
|
std::tuple<Params...> params; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
template <size_t k> |
|
struct ReturnArgAction { |
|
template <typename... Args, |
|
typename = typename std::enable_if<(k < sizeof...(Args))>::type> |
|
auto operator()(Args&&... args) const |
|
-> decltype(std::get<k>( |
|
std::forward_as_tuple(std::forward<Args>(args)...))) { |
|
return std::get<k>(std::forward_as_tuple(std::forward<Args>(args)...)); |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
template <size_t k, typename Ptr> |
|
struct SaveArgAction { |
|
Ptr pointer; |
|
|
|
template <typename... Args> |
|
void operator()(const Args&... args) const { |
|
*pointer = std::get<k>(std::tie(args...)); |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
template <size_t k, typename Ptr> |
|
struct SaveArgPointeeAction { |
|
Ptr pointer; |
|
|
|
template <typename... Args> |
|
void operator()(const Args&... args) const { |
|
*pointer = *std::get<k>(std::tie(args...)); |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
template <size_t k, typename T> |
|
struct SetArgRefereeAction { |
|
T value; |
|
|
|
template <typename... Args> |
|
void operator()(Args&&... args) const { |
|
using argk_type = |
|
typename ::std::tuple_element<k, std::tuple<Args...>>::type; |
|
static_assert(std::is_lvalue_reference<argk_type>::value, |
|
"Argument must be a reference type."); |
|
std::get<k>(std::tie(args...)) = value; |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
template <size_t k, typename I1, typename I2> |
|
struct SetArrayArgumentAction { |
|
I1 first; |
|
I2 last; |
|
|
|
template <typename... Args> |
|
void operator()(const Args&... args) const { |
|
auto value = std::get<k>(std::tie(args...)); |
|
for (auto it = first; it != last; ++it, (void)++value) { |
|
*value = *it; |
|
} |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
template <size_t k> |
|
struct DeleteArgAction { |
|
template <typename... Args> |
|
void operator()(const Args&... args) const { |
|
delete std::get<k>(std::tie(args...)); |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
template <typename Ptr> |
|
struct ReturnPointeeAction { |
|
Ptr pointer; |
|
template <typename... Args> |
|
auto operator()(const Args&...) const -> decltype(*pointer) { |
|
return *pointer; |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
#if GTEST_HAS_EXCEPTIONS |
|
template <typename T> |
|
struct ThrowAction { |
|
T exception; |
|
// We use a conversion operator to adapt to any return type. |
|
template <typename R, typename... Args> |
|
operator Action<R(Args...)>() const { // NOLINT |
|
T copy = exception; |
|
return [copy](Args...) -> R { throw copy; }; |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
struct RethrowAction { |
|
std::exception_ptr exception; |
|
template <typename R, typename... Args> |
|
operator Action<R(Args...)>() const { // NOLINT |
|
return [ex = exception](Args...) -> R { std::rethrow_exception(ex); }; |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
#endif // GTEST_HAS_EXCEPTIONS |
|
|
|
} // namespace internal |
|
|
|
// An Unused object can be implicitly constructed from ANY value. |
|
// This is handy when defining actions that ignore some or all of the |
|
// mock function arguments. For example, given |
|
// |
|
// MOCK_METHOD3(Foo, double(const string& label, double x, double y)); |
|
// MOCK_METHOD3(Bar, double(int index, double x, double y)); |
|
// |
|
// instead of |
|
// |
|
// double DistanceToOriginWithLabel(const string& label, double x, double y) { |
|
// return sqrt(x*x + y*y); |
|
// } |
|
// double DistanceToOriginWithIndex(int index, double x, double y) { |
|
// return sqrt(x*x + y*y); |
|
// } |
|
// ... |
|
// EXPECT_CALL(mock, Foo("abc", _, _)) |
|
// .WillOnce(Invoke(DistanceToOriginWithLabel)); |
|
// EXPECT_CALL(mock, Bar(5, _, _)) |
|
// .WillOnce(Invoke(DistanceToOriginWithIndex)); |
|
// |
|
// you could write |
|
// |
|
// // We can declare any uninteresting argument as Unused. |
|
// double DistanceToOrigin(Unused, double x, double y) { |
|
// return sqrt(x*x + y*y); |
|
// } |
|
// ... |
|
// EXPECT_CALL(mock, Foo("abc", _, _)).WillOnce(Invoke(DistanceToOrigin)); |
|
// EXPECT_CALL(mock, Bar(5, _, _)).WillOnce(Invoke(DistanceToOrigin)); |
|
typedef internal::IgnoredValue Unused; |
|
|
|
// Creates an action that does actions a1, a2, ..., sequentially in |
|
// each invocation. All but the last action will have a readonly view of the |
|
// arguments. |
|
template <typename... Action> |
|
internal::DoAllAction<typename std::decay<Action>::type...> DoAll( |
|
Action&&... action) { |
|
return internal::DoAllAction<typename std::decay<Action>::type...>( |
|
{}, std::forward<Action>(action)...); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// WithArg<k>(an_action) creates an action that passes the k-th |
|
// (0-based) argument of the mock function to an_action and performs |
|
// it. It adapts an action accepting one argument to one that accepts |
|
// multiple arguments. For convenience, we also provide |
|
// WithArgs<k>(an_action) (defined below) as a synonym. |
|
template <size_t k, typename InnerAction> |
|
internal::WithArgsAction<typename std::decay<InnerAction>::type, k> WithArg( |
|
InnerAction&& action) { |
|
return {std::forward<InnerAction>(action)}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// WithArgs<N1, N2, ..., Nk>(an_action) creates an action that passes |
|
// the selected arguments of the mock function to an_action and |
|
// performs it. It serves as an adaptor between actions with |
|
// different argument lists. |
|
template <size_t k, size_t... ks, typename InnerAction> |
|
internal::WithArgsAction<typename std::decay<InnerAction>::type, k, ks...> |
|
WithArgs(InnerAction&& action) { |
|
return {std::forward<InnerAction>(action)}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// WithoutArgs(inner_action) can be used in a mock function with a |
|
// non-empty argument list to perform inner_action, which takes no |
|
// argument. In other words, it adapts an action accepting no |
|
// argument to one that accepts (and ignores) arguments. |
|
template <typename InnerAction> |
|
internal::WithArgsAction<typename std::decay<InnerAction>::type> WithoutArgs( |
|
InnerAction&& action) { |
|
return {std::forward<InnerAction>(action)}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Creates an action that returns a value. |
|
// |
|
// The returned type can be used with a mock function returning a non-void, |
|
// non-reference type U as follows: |
|
// |
|
// * If R is convertible to U and U is move-constructible, then the action can |
|
// be used with WillOnce. |
|
// |
|
// * If const R& is convertible to U and U is copy-constructible, then the |
|
// action can be used with both WillOnce and WillRepeatedly. |
|
// |
|
// The mock expectation contains the R value from which the U return value is |
|
// constructed (a move/copy of the argument to Return). This means that the R |
|
// value will survive at least until the mock object's expectations are cleared |
|
// or the mock object is destroyed, meaning that U can safely be a |
|
// reference-like type such as std::string_view: |
|
// |
|
// // The mock function returns a view of a copy of the string fed to |
|
// // Return. The view is valid even after the action is performed. |
|
// MockFunction<std::string_view()> mock; |
|
// EXPECT_CALL(mock, Call).WillOnce(Return(std::string("taco"))); |
|
// const std::string_view result = mock.AsStdFunction()(); |
|
// EXPECT_EQ("taco", result); |
|
// |
|
template <typename R> |
|
internal::ReturnAction<R> Return(R value) { |
|
return internal::ReturnAction<R>(std::move(value)); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Creates an action that returns NULL. |
|
inline PolymorphicAction<internal::ReturnNullAction> ReturnNull() { |
|
return MakePolymorphicAction(internal::ReturnNullAction()); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Creates an action that returns from a void function. |
|
inline PolymorphicAction<internal::ReturnVoidAction> Return() { |
|
return MakePolymorphicAction(internal::ReturnVoidAction()); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Creates an action that returns the reference to a variable. |
|
template <typename R> |
|
inline internal::ReturnRefAction<R> ReturnRef(R& x) { // NOLINT |
|
return internal::ReturnRefAction<R>(x); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Prevent using ReturnRef on reference to temporary. |
|
template <typename R, R* = nullptr> |
|
internal::ReturnRefAction<R> ReturnRef(R&&) = delete; |
|
|
|
// Creates an action that returns the reference to a copy of the |
|
// argument. The copy is created when the action is constructed and |
|
// lives as long as the action. |
|
template <typename R> |
|
inline internal::ReturnRefOfCopyAction<R> ReturnRefOfCopy(const R& x) { |
|
return internal::ReturnRefOfCopyAction<R>(x); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// DEPRECATED: use Return(x) directly with WillOnce. |
|
// |
|
// Modifies the parent action (a Return() action) to perform a move of the |
|
// argument instead of a copy. |
|
// Return(ByMove()) actions can only be executed once and will assert this |
|
// invariant. |
|
template <typename R> |
|
internal::ByMoveWrapper<R> ByMove(R x) { |
|
return internal::ByMoveWrapper<R>(std::move(x)); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Creates an action that returns an element of `vals`. Calling this action will |
|
// repeatedly return the next value from `vals` until it reaches the end and |
|
// will restart from the beginning. |
|
template <typename T> |
|
internal::ReturnRoundRobinAction<T> ReturnRoundRobin(std::vector<T> vals) { |
|
return internal::ReturnRoundRobinAction<T>(std::move(vals)); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Creates an action that returns an element of `vals`. Calling this action will |
|
// repeatedly return the next value from `vals` until it reaches the end and |
|
// will restart from the beginning. |
|
template <typename T> |
|
internal::ReturnRoundRobinAction<T> ReturnRoundRobin( |
|
std::initializer_list<T> vals) { |
|
return internal::ReturnRoundRobinAction<T>(std::vector<T>(vals)); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Creates an action that does the default action for the give mock function. |
|
inline internal::DoDefaultAction DoDefault() { |
|
return internal::DoDefaultAction(); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Creates an action that sets the variable pointed by the N-th |
|
// (0-based) function argument to 'value'. |
|
template <size_t N, typename T> |
|
internal::SetArgumentPointeeAction<N, T> SetArgPointee(T value) { |
|
return {std::move(value)}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// The following version is DEPRECATED. |
|
template <size_t N, typename T> |
|
internal::SetArgumentPointeeAction<N, T> SetArgumentPointee(T value) { |
|
return {std::move(value)}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Creates an action that sets a pointer referent to a given value. |
|
template <typename T1, typename T2> |
|
PolymorphicAction<internal::AssignAction<T1, T2>> Assign(T1* ptr, T2 val) { |
|
return MakePolymorphicAction(internal::AssignAction<T1, T2>(ptr, val)); |
|
} |
|
|
|
#ifndef GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE |
|
|
|
// Creates an action that sets errno and returns the appropriate error. |
|
template <typename T> |
|
PolymorphicAction<internal::SetErrnoAndReturnAction<T>> SetErrnoAndReturn( |
|
int errval, T result) { |
|
return MakePolymorphicAction( |
|
internal::SetErrnoAndReturnAction<T>(errval, result)); |
|
} |
|
|
|
#endif // !GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MOBILE |
|
|
|
// Various overloads for Invoke(). |
|
|
|
// Legacy function. |
|
// Actions can now be implicitly constructed from callables. No need to create |
|
// wrapper objects. |
|
// This function exists for backwards compatibility. |
|
template <typename FunctionImpl> |
|
typename std::decay<FunctionImpl>::type Invoke(FunctionImpl&& function_impl) { |
|
return std::forward<FunctionImpl>(function_impl); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Creates an action that invokes the given method on the given object |
|
// with the mock function's arguments. |
|
template <class Class, typename MethodPtr> |
|
internal::InvokeMethodAction<Class, MethodPtr> Invoke(Class* obj_ptr, |
|
MethodPtr method_ptr) { |
|
return {obj_ptr, method_ptr}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Creates an action that invokes 'function_impl' with no argument. |
|
template <typename FunctionImpl> |
|
internal::InvokeWithoutArgsAction<typename std::decay<FunctionImpl>::type> |
|
InvokeWithoutArgs(FunctionImpl function_impl) { |
|
return {std::move(function_impl)}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Creates an action that invokes the given method on the given object |
|
// with no argument. |
|
template <class Class, typename MethodPtr> |
|
internal::InvokeMethodWithoutArgsAction<Class, MethodPtr> InvokeWithoutArgs( |
|
Class* obj_ptr, MethodPtr method_ptr) { |
|
return {obj_ptr, method_ptr}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Creates an action that performs an_action and throws away its |
|
// result. In other words, it changes the return type of an_action to |
|
// void. an_action MUST NOT return void, or the code won't compile. |
|
template <typename A> |
|
inline internal::IgnoreResultAction<A> IgnoreResult(const A& an_action) { |
|
return internal::IgnoreResultAction<A>(an_action); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Creates a reference wrapper for the given L-value. If necessary, |
|
// you can explicitly specify the type of the reference. For example, |
|
// suppose 'derived' is an object of type Derived, ByRef(derived) |
|
// would wrap a Derived&. If you want to wrap a const Base& instead, |
|
// where Base is a base class of Derived, just write: |
|
// |
|
// ByRef<const Base>(derived) |
|
// |
|
// N.B. ByRef is redundant with std::ref, std::cref and std::reference_wrapper. |
|
// However, it may still be used for consistency with ByMove(). |
|
template <typename T> |
|
inline ::std::reference_wrapper<T> ByRef(T& l_value) { // NOLINT |
|
return ::std::reference_wrapper<T>(l_value); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// The ReturnNew<T>(a1, a2, ..., a_k) action returns a pointer to a new |
|
// instance of type T, constructed on the heap with constructor arguments |
|
// a1, a2, ..., and a_k. The caller assumes ownership of the returned value. |
|
template <typename T, typename... Params> |
|
internal::ReturnNewAction<T, typename std::decay<Params>::type...> ReturnNew( |
|
Params&&... params) { |
|
return {std::forward_as_tuple(std::forward<Params>(params)...)}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Action ReturnArg<k>() returns the k-th argument of the mock function. |
|
template <size_t k> |
|
internal::ReturnArgAction<k> ReturnArg() { |
|
return {}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Action SaveArg<k>(pointer) saves the k-th (0-based) argument of the |
|
// mock function to *pointer. |
|
template <size_t k, typename Ptr> |
|
internal::SaveArgAction<k, Ptr> SaveArg(Ptr pointer) { |
|
return {pointer}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Action SaveArgPointee<k>(pointer) saves the value pointed to |
|
// by the k-th (0-based) argument of the mock function to *pointer. |
|
template <size_t k, typename Ptr> |
|
internal::SaveArgPointeeAction<k, Ptr> SaveArgPointee(Ptr pointer) { |
|
return {pointer}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Action SetArgReferee<k>(value) assigns 'value' to the variable |
|
// referenced by the k-th (0-based) argument of the mock function. |
|
template <size_t k, typename T> |
|
internal::SetArgRefereeAction<k, typename std::decay<T>::type> SetArgReferee( |
|
T&& value) { |
|
return {std::forward<T>(value)}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Action SetArrayArgument<k>(first, last) copies the elements in |
|
// source range [first, last) to the array pointed to by the k-th |
|
// (0-based) argument, which can be either a pointer or an |
|
// iterator. The action does not take ownership of the elements in the |
|
// source range. |
|
template <size_t k, typename I1, typename I2> |
|
internal::SetArrayArgumentAction<k, I1, I2> SetArrayArgument(I1 first, |
|
I2 last) { |
|
return {first, last}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Action DeleteArg<k>() deletes the k-th (0-based) argument of the mock |
|
// function. |
|
template <size_t k> |
|
internal::DeleteArgAction<k> DeleteArg() { |
|
return {}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
// This action returns the value pointed to by 'pointer'. |
|
template <typename Ptr> |
|
internal::ReturnPointeeAction<Ptr> ReturnPointee(Ptr pointer) { |
|
return {pointer}; |
|
} |
|
|
|
#if GTEST_HAS_EXCEPTIONS |
|
// Action Throw(exception) can be used in a mock function of any type |
|
// to throw the given exception. Any copyable value can be thrown, |
|
// except for std::exception_ptr, which is likely a mistake if |
|
// thrown directly. |
|
template <typename T> |
|
typename std::enable_if< |
|
!std::is_base_of<std::exception_ptr, typename std::decay<T>::type>::value, |
|
internal::ThrowAction<typename std::decay<T>::type>>::type |
|
Throw(T&& exception) { |
|
return {std::forward<T>(exception)}; |
|
} |
|
// Action Rethrow(exception_ptr) can be used in a mock function of any type |
|
// to rethrow any exception_ptr. Note that the same object is thrown each time. |
|
inline internal::RethrowAction Rethrow(std::exception_ptr exception) { |
|
return {std::move(exception)}; |
|
} |
|
#endif // GTEST_HAS_EXCEPTIONS |
|
|
|
namespace internal { |
|
|
|
// A macro from the ACTION* family (defined later in gmock-generated-actions.h) |
|
// defines an action that can be used in a mock function. Typically, |
|
// these actions only care about a subset of the arguments of the mock |
|
// function. For example, if such an action only uses the second |
|
// argument, it can be used in any mock function that takes >= 2 |
|
// arguments where the type of the second argument is compatible. |
|
// |
|
// Therefore, the action implementation must be prepared to take more |
|
// arguments than it needs. The ExcessiveArg type is used to |
|
// represent those excessive arguments. In order to keep the compiler |
|
// error messages tractable, we define it in the testing namespace |
|
// instead of testing::internal. However, this is an INTERNAL TYPE |
|
// and subject to change without notice, so a user MUST NOT USE THIS |
|
// TYPE DIRECTLY. |
|
struct ExcessiveArg {}; |
|
|
|
// Builds an implementation of an Action<> for some particular signature, using |
|
// a class defined by an ACTION* macro. |
|
template <typename F, typename Impl> |
|
struct ActionImpl; |
|
|
|
template <typename Impl> |
|
struct ImplBase { |
|
struct Holder { |
|
// Allows each copy of the Action<> to get to the Impl. |
|
explicit operator const Impl&() const { return *ptr; } |
|
std::shared_ptr<Impl> ptr; |
|
}; |
|
using type = typename std::conditional<std::is_constructible<Impl>::value, |
|
Impl, Holder>::type; |
|
}; |
|
|
|
template <typename R, typename... Args, typename Impl> |
|
struct ActionImpl<R(Args...), Impl> : ImplBase<Impl>::type { |
|
using Base = typename ImplBase<Impl>::type; |
|
using function_type = R(Args...); |
|
using args_type = std::tuple<Args...>; |
|
|
|
ActionImpl() = default; // Only defined if appropriate for Base. |
|
explicit ActionImpl(std::shared_ptr<Impl> impl) : Base{std::move(impl)} {} |
|
|
|
R operator()(Args&&... arg) const { |
|
static constexpr size_t kMaxArgs = |
|
sizeof...(Args) <= 10 ? sizeof...(Args) : 10; |
|
return Apply(std::make_index_sequence<kMaxArgs>{}, |
|
std::make_index_sequence<10 - kMaxArgs>{}, |
|
args_type{std::forward<Args>(arg)...}); |
|
} |
|
|
|
template <std::size_t... arg_id, std::size_t... excess_id> |
|
R Apply(std::index_sequence<arg_id...>, std::index_sequence<excess_id...>, |
|
const args_type& args) const { |
|
// Impl need not be specific to the signature of action being implemented; |
|
// only the implementing function body needs to have all of the specific |
|
// types instantiated. Up to 10 of the args that are provided by the |
|
// args_type get passed, followed by a dummy of unspecified type for the |
|
// remainder up to 10 explicit args. |
|
static constexpr ExcessiveArg kExcessArg{}; |
|
return static_cast<const Impl&>(*this) |
|
.template gmock_PerformImpl< |
|
/*function_type=*/function_type, /*return_type=*/R, |
|
/*args_type=*/args_type, |
|
/*argN_type=*/ |
|
typename std::tuple_element<arg_id, args_type>::type...>( |
|
/*args=*/args, std::get<arg_id>(args)..., |
|
((void)excess_id, kExcessArg)...); |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
// Stores a default-constructed Impl as part of the Action<>'s |
|
// std::function<>. The Impl should be trivial to copy. |
|
template <typename F, typename Impl> |
|
::testing::Action<F> MakeAction() { |
|
return ::testing::Action<F>(ActionImpl<F, Impl>()); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Stores just the one given instance of Impl. |
|
template <typename F, typename Impl> |
|
::testing::Action<F> MakeAction(std::shared_ptr<Impl> impl) { |
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return ::testing::Action<F>(ActionImpl<F, Impl>(std::move(impl))); |
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} |
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#define GMOCK_INTERNAL_ARG_UNUSED(i, data, el) \ |
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, GTEST_INTERNAL_ATTRIBUTE_MAYBE_UNUSED const arg##i##_type& arg##i |
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#define GMOCK_ACTION_ARG_TYPES_AND_NAMES_UNUSED_ \ |
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GTEST_INTERNAL_ATTRIBUTE_MAYBE_UNUSED const args_type& args GMOCK_PP_REPEAT( \ |
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GMOCK_INTERNAL_ARG_UNUSED, , 10) |
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#define GMOCK_INTERNAL_ARG(i, data, el) , const arg##i##_type& arg##i |
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#define GMOCK_ACTION_ARG_TYPES_AND_NAMES_ \ |
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const args_type& args GMOCK_PP_REPEAT(GMOCK_INTERNAL_ARG, , 10) |
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#define GMOCK_INTERNAL_TEMPLATE_ARG(i, data, el) , typename arg##i##_type |
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#define GMOCK_ACTION_TEMPLATE_ARGS_NAMES_ \ |
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GMOCK_PP_TAIL(GMOCK_PP_REPEAT(GMOCK_INTERNAL_TEMPLATE_ARG, , 10)) |
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#define GMOCK_INTERNAL_TYPENAME_PARAM(i, data, param) , typename param##_type |
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#define GMOCK_ACTION_TYPENAME_PARAMS_(params) \ |
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GMOCK_PP_TAIL(GMOCK_PP_FOR_EACH(GMOCK_INTERNAL_TYPENAME_PARAM, , params)) |
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#define GMOCK_INTERNAL_TYPE_PARAM(i, data, param) , param##_type |
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#define GMOCK_ACTION_TYPE_PARAMS_(params) \ |
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GMOCK_PP_TAIL(GMOCK_PP_FOR_EACH(GMOCK_INTERNAL_TYPE_PARAM, , params)) |
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#define GMOCK_INTERNAL_TYPE_GVALUE_PARAM(i, data, param) \ |
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, param##_type gmock_p##i |
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#define GMOCK_ACTION_TYPE_GVALUE_PARAMS_(params) \ |
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GMOCK_PP_TAIL(GMOCK_PP_FOR_EACH(GMOCK_INTERNAL_TYPE_GVALUE_PARAM, , params)) |
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#define GMOCK_INTERNAL_GVALUE_PARAM(i, data, param) \ |
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, std::forward<param##_type>(gmock_p##i) |
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#define GMOCK_ACTION_GVALUE_PARAMS_(params) \ |
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GMOCK_PP_TAIL(GMOCK_PP_FOR_EACH(GMOCK_INTERNAL_GVALUE_PARAM, , params)) |
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#define GMOCK_INTERNAL_INIT_PARAM(i, data, param) \ |
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, param(::std::forward<param##_type>(gmock_p##i)) |
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#define GMOCK_ACTION_INIT_PARAMS_(params) \ |
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GMOCK_PP_TAIL(GMOCK_PP_FOR_EACH(GMOCK_INTERNAL_INIT_PARAM, , params)) |
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#define GMOCK_INTERNAL_FIELD_PARAM(i, data, param) param##_type param; |
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#define GMOCK_ACTION_FIELD_PARAMS_(params) \ |
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GMOCK_PP_FOR_EACH(GMOCK_INTERNAL_FIELD_PARAM, , params) |
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#define GMOCK_INTERNAL_ACTION(name, full_name, params) \ |
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template <GMOCK_ACTION_TYPENAME_PARAMS_(params)> \ |
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class full_name { \ |
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public: \ |
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explicit full_name(GMOCK_ACTION_TYPE_GVALUE_PARAMS_(params)) \ |
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: impl_(std::make_shared<gmock_Impl>( \ |
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GMOCK_ACTION_GVALUE_PARAMS_(params))) {} \ |
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full_name(const full_name&) = default; \ |
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full_name(full_name&&) noexcept = default; \ |
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template <typename F> \ |
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operator ::testing::Action<F>() const { \ |
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return ::testing::internal::MakeAction<F>(impl_); \ |
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} \ |
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\ |
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private: \ |
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class gmock_Impl { \ |
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public: \ |
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explicit gmock_Impl(GMOCK_ACTION_TYPE_GVALUE_PARAMS_(params)) \ |
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: GMOCK_ACTION_INIT_PARAMS_(params) {} \ |
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template <typename function_type, typename return_type, \ |
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typename args_type, GMOCK_ACTION_TEMPLATE_ARGS_NAMES_> \ |
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return_type gmock_PerformImpl(GMOCK_ACTION_ARG_TYPES_AND_NAMES_) const; \ |
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GMOCK_ACTION_FIELD_PARAMS_(params) \ |
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}; \ |
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std::shared_ptr<const gmock_Impl> impl_; \ |
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}; \ |
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template <GMOCK_ACTION_TYPENAME_PARAMS_(params)> \ |
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inline full_name<GMOCK_ACTION_TYPE_PARAMS_(params)> name( \ |
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GMOCK_ACTION_TYPE_GVALUE_PARAMS_(params)) GTEST_MUST_USE_RESULT_; \ |
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template <GMOCK_ACTION_TYPENAME_PARAMS_(params)> \ |
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inline full_name<GMOCK_ACTION_TYPE_PARAMS_(params)> name( \ |
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GMOCK_ACTION_TYPE_GVALUE_PARAMS_(params)) { \ |
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return full_name<GMOCK_ACTION_TYPE_PARAMS_(params)>( \ |
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GMOCK_ACTION_GVALUE_PARAMS_(params)); \ |
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} \ |
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template <GMOCK_ACTION_TYPENAME_PARAMS_(params)> \ |
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template <typename function_type, typename return_type, typename args_type, \ |
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GMOCK_ACTION_TEMPLATE_ARGS_NAMES_> \ |
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return_type \ |
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full_name<GMOCK_ACTION_TYPE_PARAMS_(params)>::gmock_Impl::gmock_PerformImpl( \ |
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GMOCK_ACTION_ARG_TYPES_AND_NAMES_UNUSED_) const |
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} // namespace internal |
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// Similar to GMOCK_INTERNAL_ACTION, but no bound parameters are stored. |
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#define ACTION(name) \ |
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class name##Action { \ |
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public: \ |
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explicit name##Action() noexcept {} \ |
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name##Action(const name##Action&) noexcept {} \ |
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template <typename F> \ |
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operator ::testing::Action<F>() const { \ |
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return ::testing::internal::MakeAction<F, gmock_Impl>(); \ |
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} \ |
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\ |
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private: \ |
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class gmock_Impl { \ |
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public: \ |
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template <typename function_type, typename return_type, \ |
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typename args_type, GMOCK_ACTION_TEMPLATE_ARGS_NAMES_> \ |
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return_type gmock_PerformImpl(GMOCK_ACTION_ARG_TYPES_AND_NAMES_) const; \ |
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}; \ |
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}; \ |
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inline name##Action name() GTEST_MUST_USE_RESULT_; \ |
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inline name##Action name() { return name##Action(); } \ |
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template <typename function_type, typename return_type, typename args_type, \ |
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GMOCK_ACTION_TEMPLATE_ARGS_NAMES_> \ |
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return_type name##Action::gmock_Impl::gmock_PerformImpl( \ |
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GMOCK_ACTION_ARG_TYPES_AND_NAMES_UNUSED_) const |
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#define ACTION_P(name, ...) \ |
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GMOCK_INTERNAL_ACTION(name, name##ActionP, (__VA_ARGS__)) |
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#define ACTION_P2(name, ...) \ |
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GMOCK_INTERNAL_ACTION(name, name##ActionP2, (__VA_ARGS__)) |
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#define ACTION_P3(name, ...) \ |
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GMOCK_INTERNAL_ACTION(name, name##ActionP3, (__VA_ARGS__)) |
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#define ACTION_P4(name, ...) \ |
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GMOCK_INTERNAL_ACTION(name, name##ActionP4, (__VA_ARGS__)) |
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#define ACTION_P5(name, ...) \ |
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GMOCK_INTERNAL_ACTION(name, name##ActionP5, (__VA_ARGS__)) |
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#define ACTION_P6(name, ...) \ |
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GMOCK_INTERNAL_ACTION(name, name##ActionP6, (__VA_ARGS__)) |
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#define ACTION_P7(name, ...) \ |
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GMOCK_INTERNAL_ACTION(name, name##ActionP7, (__VA_ARGS__)) |
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#define ACTION_P8(name, ...) \ |
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GMOCK_INTERNAL_ACTION(name, name##ActionP8, (__VA_ARGS__)) |
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#define ACTION_P9(name, ...) \ |
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GMOCK_INTERNAL_ACTION(name, name##ActionP9, (__VA_ARGS__)) |
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#define ACTION_P10(name, ...) \ |
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GMOCK_INTERNAL_ACTION(name, name##ActionP10, (__VA_ARGS__)) |
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} // namespace testing |
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GTEST_DISABLE_MSC_WARNINGS_POP_() // 4100 |
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#endif // GOOGLEMOCK_INCLUDE_GMOCK_GMOCK_ACTIONS_H_
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