Commit de5be0eb by Abseil Team Committed by Gennadiy Civil

Googletest export

Move FunctionMocker and MockFunction out of the pump file and implement with variadic templates. PiperOrigin-RevId: 220640265
parent 105579a6
......@@ -54,49 +54,7 @@ $var n = 10 $$ The maximum arity we support.
namespace testing {
namespace internal {
template <typename F>
class FunctionMockerBase;
// Note: class FunctionMocker really belongs to the ::testing
// namespace. However if we define it in ::testing, MSVC will
// complain when classes in ::testing::internal declare it as a
// friend class template. To workaround this compiler bug, we define
// FunctionMocker in ::testing::internal and import it into ::testing.
template <typename F>
class FunctionMocker;
$range i 0..n
$for i [[
$range j 1..i
$var typename_As = [[$for j [[, typename A$j]]]]
$var As = [[$for j, [[A$j]]]]
$var as = [[$for j, [[std::forward<A$j>(a$j)]]]]
$var Aas = [[$for j, [[A$j a$j]]]]
$var ms = [[$for j, [[m$j]]]]
$var matchers = [[$for j, [[const Matcher<A$j>& m$j]]]]
template <typename R$typename_As>
class FunctionMocker<R($As)> : public
internal::FunctionMockerBase<R($As)> {
public:
typedef R F($As);
typedef typename internal::Function<F>::ArgumentTuple ArgumentTuple;
MockSpec<F> With($matchers) {
return MockSpec<F>(this, ::std::make_tuple($ms));
}
R Invoke($Aas) {
// Even though gcc and MSVC don't enforce it, 'this->' is required
// by the C++ standard [14.6.4] here, as the base class type is
// dependent on the template argument (and thus shouldn't be
// looked into when resolving InvokeWith).
return this->InvokeWith(ArgumentTuple($as));
}
};
]]
// Removes the given pointer; this is a helper for the expectation setter method
// for parameterless matchers.
//
......@@ -269,82 +227,6 @@ $for i [[
]]
// A MockFunction<F> class has one mock method whose type is F. It is
// useful when you just want your test code to emit some messages and
// have Google Mock verify the right messages are sent (and perhaps at
// the right times). For example, if you are exercising code:
//
// Foo(1);
// Foo(2);
// Foo(3);
//
// and want to verify that Foo(1) and Foo(3) both invoke
// mock.Bar("a"), but Foo(2) doesn't invoke anything, you can write:
//
// TEST(FooTest, InvokesBarCorrectly) {
// MyMock mock;
// MockFunction<void(string check_point_name)> check;
// {
// InSequence s;
//
// EXPECT_CALL(mock, Bar("a"));
// EXPECT_CALL(check, Call("1"));
// EXPECT_CALL(check, Call("2"));
// EXPECT_CALL(mock, Bar("a"));
// }
// Foo(1);
// check.Call("1");
// Foo(2);
// check.Call("2");
// Foo(3);
// }
//
// The expectation spec says that the first Bar("a") must happen
// before check point "1", the second Bar("a") must happen after check
// point "2", and nothing should happen between the two check
// points. The explicit check points make it easy to tell which
// Bar("a") is called by which call to Foo().
//
// MockFunction<F> can also be used to exercise code that accepts
// std::function<F> callbacks. To do so, use AsStdFunction() method
// to create std::function proxy forwarding to original object's Call.
// Example:
//
// TEST(FooTest, RunsCallbackWithBarArgument) {
// MockFunction<int(string)> callback;
// EXPECT_CALL(callback, Call("bar")).WillOnce(Return(1));
// Foo(callback.AsStdFunction());
// }
template <typename F>
class MockFunction;
$for i [[
$range j 0..i-1
$var ArgTypes = [[$for j, [[A$j]]]]
$var ArgValues = [[$for j, [[::std::forward<A$j>(a$j)]]]]
$var ArgDecls = [[$for j, [[A$j a$j]]]]
template <typename R$for j [[, typename A$j]]>
class MockFunction<R($ArgTypes)> {
public:
MockFunction() {}
MOCK_METHOD$i[[]]_T(Call, R($ArgTypes));
#if GTEST_HAS_STD_FUNCTION_
::std::function<R($ArgTypes)> AsStdFunction() {
return [this]($ArgDecls) -> R {
return this->Call($ArgValues);
};
}
#endif // GTEST_HAS_STD_FUNCTION_
private:
GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(MockFunction);
};
]]
} // namespace testing
#endif // GMOCK_INCLUDE_GMOCK_GMOCK_GENERATED_FUNCTION_MOCKERS_H_
Markdown is supported
0% or
You are about to add 0 people to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Please register or to comment