Commit Graph

4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Dean Michael Berris b569e7e828 [unittests] Do not use llvm::sort in googlemock
Summary:
This reverts r329475 which applied to googlemock. This change makes the
googlemock implementation in LLVM dependent on LLVM unnecessarily.

Reviewers: echristo, mgrang

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52287

llvm-svn: 342612
2018-09-20 04:27:32 +00:00
Mandeep Singh Grang 13e70cb181 [unittests] Change std::sort to llvm::sort in response to r327219
r327219 added wrappers to std::sort which randomly shuffle the container before
sorting.  This will help in uncovering non-determinism caused due to undefined
sorting order of objects having the same key.

To make use of that infrastructure we need to invoke llvm::sort instead of
std::sort.

Note: This patch is one of a series of patches to replace *all* std::sort to
llvm::sort.  Refer the comments section in D44363 for a list of all the
required patches.

llvm-svn: 329475
2018-04-07 01:29:45 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 1b31646465 [gmock] Teach gmock ElementsAre and BeginEndDistanceIs matchers to
handle generic ranges by using std::begin and std::end rather than
requiring things to look exactly like an STL container.

Much of the credit for this goes to Dave Blaikie who helped me figure
out the right incantations.

This will probably be re-designed when I send this to the maintainers of
gmock, so I've instead structured it to change is little as possible
while it is a local patch. That makes it somewhat ugly, but I think a focused
change is better for getting this to work for LLVM today and letting the
upstream maintainers figure out the correct long-term pattern.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28288

llvm-svn: 291623
2017-01-11 00:16:03 +00:00
Chandler Carruth bf6a4e0b39 Add the 'googlemock' component of Google Test to LLVM's unittest libraries.
I have two immediate motivations for adding this:
1) It makes writing expectations in tests *dramatically* easier. A
   quick example that is a taste of what is possible:

     std::vector<int> v = ...;
     EXPECT_THAT(v, UnorderedElementsAre(1, 2, 3));

   This checks that v contains '1', '2', and '3' in some order. There
   are a wealth of other helpful matchers like this. They tend to be
   highly generic and STL-friendly so they will in almost all cases work
   out of the box even on custom LLVM data structures.

   I actually find the matcher syntax substantially easier to read even
   for simple assertions:

     EXPECT_THAT(a, Eq(b));
     EXPECT_THAT(b, Ne(c));

   Both of these make it clear what is being *tested* and what is being
   *expected*. With `EXPECT_EQ` this is implicit (the LHS is expected,
   the RHS is tested) and often confusing. With `EXPECT_NE` it is just
   not clear. Even the failure error messages are superior with the
   matcher based expectations.

2) When testing any kind of generic code, you are continually defining
   dummy types with interfaces and then trying to check that the
   interfaces are manipulated in a particular way. This is actually what
   mocks are *good* for -- testing *interface interactions*. With
   generic code, there is often no "fake" or other object that can be
   used.

   For a concrete example of where this is currently causing significant
   pain, look at the pass manager unittests which are riddled with
   counters incremented when methods are called. All of these could be
   replaced with mocks. The result would be more effective at testing
   the code by having tighter constraints. It would be substantially
   more readable and maintainable when updating the code. And the error
   messages on failure would have substantially more information as
   mocks automatically record stack traces and other information *when
   the API is misused* instead of trying to diagnose it after the fact.

I expect that #1 will be the overwhelming majority of the uses of gmock,
but I think that is sufficient to justify having it. I would actually
like to update the coding standards to encourage the use of matchers
rather than any other form of `EXPECT_...` macros as they are IMO
a strict superset in terms of functionality and readability.

I think that #2 is relatively rarely useful, but there *are* cases where
it is useful. Historically, I think misuse of actual mocking as
described in #2 has led to resistance towards this framework. I am
actually sympathetic to this -- mocking can easily be overused. However
I think this is not a significant concern in LLVM. First and foremost,
LLVM has very careful and rare exposure of abstract interfaces or
dependency injection, which are the most prone to abuse with mocks. So
there are few opportunities to abuse them. Second, a large fraction of
LLVM's unittests are testing *generic code* where mocks actually make
tremendous sense. And gmock is well suited to building interfaces that
exercise generic libraries. Finally, I still think we should be willing
to have testing utilities in tree even if they should be used rarely. We
can use code review to help guide the usage here.

For a longer and more complete discussion of this, see the llvm-dev
thread here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-January/108672.html

The general consensus seems that this is a reasonable direction to start
down, but that doesn't mean we should race ahead and use this
everywhere. I have one test that is blocked on this to land and that was
specifically used as an example. Before widespread adoption, I'm going
to work up some (brief) guidelines as some of these facilities should be
used sparingly and carefully.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28156

llvm-svn: 291606
2017-01-10 22:32:26 +00:00