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// Copyright 2008, Google Inc.
// All rights reserved.
//
// Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
// modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
// met:
//
// * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
// notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
// * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
// copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer
// in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
// distribution.
// * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its
// contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
// this software without specific prior written permission.
//
// THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
// "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
// LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
// A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
// OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
// SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
// LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
// DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
// THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
// (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
// OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
// Implements class templates NiceMock, NaggyMock, and StrictMock.
//
// Given a mock class MockFoo that is created using Google Mock,
// NiceMock<MockFoo> is a subclass of MockFoo that allows
// uninteresting calls (i.e. calls to mock methods that have no
// EXPECT_CALL specs), NaggyMock<MockFoo> is a subclass of MockFoo
// that prints a warning when an uninteresting call occurs, and
// StrictMock<MockFoo> is a subclass of MockFoo that treats all
// uninteresting calls as errors.
//
// Currently a mock is naggy by default, so MockFoo and
// NaggyMock<MockFoo> behave like the same. However, we will soon
// switch the default behavior of mocks to be nice, as that in general
// leads to more maintainable tests. When that happens, MockFoo will
// stop behaving like NaggyMock<MockFoo> and start behaving like
// NiceMock<MockFoo>.
//
// NiceMock, NaggyMock, and StrictMock "inherit" the constructors of
// their respective base class. Therefore you can write
// NiceMock<MockFoo>(5, "a") to construct a nice mock where MockFoo
// has a constructor that accepts (int, const char*), for example.
//
// A known limitation is that NiceMock<MockFoo>, NaggyMock<MockFoo>,
// and StrictMock<MockFoo> only works for mock methods defined using
// the MOCK_METHOD* family of macros DIRECTLY in the MockFoo class.
// If a mock method is defined in a base class of MockFoo, the "nice"
// or "strict" modifier may not affect it, depending on the compiler.
// In particular, nesting NiceMock, NaggyMock, and StrictMock is NOT
// supported.
// GOOGLETEST_CM0002 DO NOT DELETE
#ifndef GOOGLEMOCK_INCLUDE_GMOCK_GMOCK_NICE_STRICT_H_
#define GOOGLEMOCK_INCLUDE_GMOCK_GMOCK_NICE_STRICT_H_
#include <type_traits>
#include "gmock/gmock-spec-builders.h"
#include "gmock/internal/gmock-port.h"
namespace testing {
template <class MockClass>
class NiceMock;
template <class MockClass>
class NaggyMock;
template <class MockClass>
class StrictMock;
namespace internal {
template <typename T>
std::true_type StrictnessModifierProbe(const NiceMock<T>&);
template <typename T>
std::true_type StrictnessModifierProbe(const NaggyMock<T>&);
template <typename T>
std::true_type StrictnessModifierProbe(const StrictMock<T>&);
std::false_type StrictnessModifierProbe(...);
template <typename T>
constexpr bool HasStrictnessModifier() {
return decltype(StrictnessModifierProbe(std::declval<const T&>()))::value;
}
// Base classes that register and deregister with testing::Mock to alter the
// default behavior around uninteresting calls. Inheriting from one of these
// classes first and then MockClass ensures the MockClass constructor is run
// after registration, and that the MockClass destructor runs before
// deregistration. This guarantees that MockClass's constructor and destructor
// run with the same level of strictness as its instance methods.
#if GTEST_OS_WINDOWS && !GTEST_OS_WINDOWS_MINGW && \
(defined(_MSC_VER) || defined(__clang__))
// We need to mark these classes with this declspec to ensure that
// the empty base class optimization is performed.
#define GTEST_INTERNAL_EMPTY_BASE_CLASS __declspec(empty_bases)
#else
#define GTEST_INTERNAL_EMPTY_BASE_CLASS
#endif
template <typename Base>
class NiceMockImpl {
public:
NiceMockImpl() { ::testing::Mock::AllowUninterestingCalls(this); }
~NiceMockImpl() { ::testing::Mock::UnregisterCallReaction(this); }
};
template <typename Base>
class NaggyMockImpl {
public:
NaggyMockImpl() { ::testing::Mock::WarnUninterestingCalls(this); }
~NaggyMockImpl() { ::testing::Mock::UnregisterCallReaction(this); }
};
template <typename Base>
class StrictMockImpl {
public:
StrictMockImpl() { ::testing::Mock::FailUninterestingCalls(this); }
~StrictMockImpl() { ::testing::Mock::UnregisterCallReaction(this); }
};
} // namespace internal
template <class MockClass>
class GTEST_INTERNAL_EMPTY_BASE_CLASS NiceMock
: private internal::NiceMockImpl<MockClass>,
public MockClass {
public:
static_assert(!internal::HasStrictnessModifier<MockClass>(),
"Can't apply NiceMock to a class hierarchy that already has a "
"strictness modifier. See "
"https://google.github.io/googletest/"
"gmock_cook_book.html#NiceStrictNaggy");
NiceMock() : MockClass() {
static_assert(sizeof(*this) == sizeof(MockClass),
"The impl subclass shouldn't introduce any padding");
}
// Ideally, we would inherit base class's constructors through a using
// declaration, which would preserve their visibility. However, many existing
// tests rely on the fact that current implementation reexports protected
// constructors as public. These tests would need to be cleaned up first.
// Single argument constructor is special-cased so that it can be
// made explicit.
template <typename A>
explicit NiceMock(A&& arg) : MockClass(std::forward<A>(arg)) {
static_assert(sizeof(*this) == sizeof(MockClass),
"The impl subclass shouldn't introduce any padding");
}
template <typename TArg1, typename TArg2, typename... An>
NiceMock(TArg1&& arg1, TArg2&& arg2, An&&... args)
: MockClass(std::forward<TArg1>(arg1), std::forward<TArg2>(arg2),
std::forward<An>(args)...) {
static_assert(sizeof(*this) == sizeof(MockClass),
"The impl subclass shouldn't introduce any padding");
}
private:
GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(NiceMock);
};
template <class MockClass>
class GTEST_INTERNAL_EMPTY_BASE_CLASS NaggyMock
: private internal::NaggyMockImpl<MockClass>,
public MockClass {
static_assert(!internal::HasStrictnessModifier<MockClass>(),
"Can't apply NaggyMock to a class hierarchy that already has a "
"strictness modifier. See "
"https://google.github.io/googletest/"
"gmock_cook_book.html#NiceStrictNaggy");
public:
NaggyMock() : MockClass() {
static_assert(sizeof(*this) == sizeof(MockClass),
"The impl subclass shouldn't introduce any padding");
}
// Ideally, we would inherit base class's constructors through a using
// declaration, which would preserve their visibility. However, many existing
// tests rely on the fact that current implementation reexports protected
// constructors as public. These tests would need to be cleaned up first.
// Single argument constructor is special-cased so that it can be
// made explicit.
template <typename A>
explicit NaggyMock(A&& arg) : MockClass(std::forward<A>(arg)) {
static_assert(sizeof(*this) == sizeof(MockClass),
"The impl subclass shouldn't introduce any padding");
}
template <typename TArg1, typename TArg2, typename... An>
NaggyMock(TArg1&& arg1, TArg2&& arg2, An&&... args)
: MockClass(std::forward<TArg1>(arg1), std::forward<TArg2>(arg2),
std::forward<An>(args)...) {
static_assert(sizeof(*this) == sizeof(MockClass),
"The impl subclass shouldn't introduce any padding");
}
private:
GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(NaggyMock);
};
template <class MockClass>
class GTEST_INTERNAL_EMPTY_BASE_CLASS StrictMock
: private internal::StrictMockImpl<MockClass>,
public MockClass {
public:
static_assert(
!internal::HasStrictnessModifier<MockClass>(),
"Can't apply StrictMock to a class hierarchy that already has a "
"strictness modifier. See "
"https://google.github.io/googletest/"
"gmock_cook_book.html#NiceStrictNaggy");
StrictMock() : MockClass() {
static_assert(sizeof(*this) == sizeof(MockClass),
"The impl subclass shouldn't introduce any padding");
}
// Ideally, we would inherit base class's constructors through a using
// declaration, which would preserve their visibility. However, many existing
// tests rely on the fact that current implementation reexports protected
// constructors as public. These tests would need to be cleaned up first.
// Single argument constructor is special-cased so that it can be
// made explicit.
template <typename A>
explicit StrictMock(A&& arg) : MockClass(std::forward<A>(arg)) {
static_assert(sizeof(*this) == sizeof(MockClass),
"The impl subclass shouldn't introduce any padding");
}
template <typename TArg1, typename TArg2, typename... An>
StrictMock(TArg1&& arg1, TArg2&& arg2, An&&... args)
: MockClass(std::forward<TArg1>(arg1), std::forward<TArg2>(arg2),
std::forward<An>(args)...) {
static_assert(sizeof(*this) == sizeof(MockClass),
"The impl subclass shouldn't introduce any padding");
}
private:
GTEST_DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN_(StrictMock);
};
#undef GTEST_INTERNAL_EMPTY_BASE_CLASS
} // namespace testing
#endif // GOOGLEMOCK_INCLUDE_GMOCK_GMOCK_NICE_STRICT_H_