Add test for various customization point object properties as defined by
the Standard. Test various CPOs from <ranges>, <iterator>,
<concepts>, etc.
The test is mostly from https://reviews.llvm.org/D107036 and split up
into this - thanks Arthur!
Differential D115588
[libcxx][test] Verify customization point object properties jloser on Dec 11 2021, 4:49 PM. Authored by
Details
Add test for various customization point object properties as defined by The test is mostly from https://reviews.llvm.org/D107036 and split up
Diff Detail
Event TimelineComment Actions Seems generally commendable, and will save me from having to touch D107036 again — in fact I'll go abandon it now. :) Take a look at my test in D107036, though — particularly lines 32–35. I think this PR can and should do something like those std::invocable checks. I have no particular opinion on whether these tests should be separated under all the different Standard sections like you did, or massed together like I did. The only real advantage of massing them together is that it saves a lot of duplication. Someone will have to add a test for each new CPO/niebloid either way, and either way might make it harder or easier to forget to do that, depending on your personal git-grepping style.
Comment Actions Remove union check in customization_point_object definition Comment Actions I like the addition of the concept, but why not add the tests to the files where we already test those CPOs? It could become just a section of that test, no? Comment Actions Generally LGTM, but consider adding the new tests either to existing test files or to a single new test file devoted to verifying customization points. Comment Actions I think I messed up updating this patch. Instead, it created a new revision at https://reviews.llvm.org/D115777 - sorry about that. I've addressed the feedback and decided to devote all the CPOs from the various headers (<concepts>, <iterator>, <ranges>, etc.) into one test file in that new PR. Thanks for pointing me at your tests from https://reviews.llvm.org/D107036, @Quuxplusone! I just force updated this revision, so I'll abandon the accidentally-opened-new one. Comment Actions Personally I quite liked the approach where we'd have a helper to check that a function object is a CPO and then we'd check it from each individual CPO test, but this is fine too. IMO this is just a bit easier to forget to update.
Comment Actions I may slightly prefer having the helper and just use it each test, but don't feel strongly. Arguably, for a "new" (not-yet-implemented CPO like the ones commented out here), it's just as easy to forget to call test_cpo (or whatever we call the helper function template). For the existing, but not-yet-implemented CPOs, this one file approach at least is a gentle TODO for "uncomment me when it's implemented". But, you need to know about the file in the first place from git-grepping around. Thoughts @Quuxplusone @var-const or others? Comment Actions When writing new CPOs, one rarely start from scratch. I think most people will look at the tests for existing CPOs and base their new tests on that. If they do it, then this test_cpo would nicely be discoverable. Comment Actions Mainly I'm ambivalent:
But, another advantage of the massed-together approach is that we can go ahead and add commented-out lines for all the unimplemented CPOs (as @jloser has done). This gives a "TODO" list that is more explicit rather than implicit. Which is good. Comment Actions
FWIW, I have a slight preference to the current single-file approach; from the readability perspective, I find "test for common behavior across a range of related types" to be a more natural structuring than "test a single type for a wide range of different unrelated behaviors". From the discoverability perspective, the one-file-per-class approach is probably slightly better because someone writing a new test will likely base it on an existing test. OTOH, verifying that the tests cover all existing CPOs is much easier with the single-file approach. Comment Actions Split test_cpo use into their respective individual files. Move iter_swap.pass.cpp into iterator.cust.swap directory to mirror its iter_move counterpart. Test the cpo there. Comment Actions We seem to be pretty split on the two approaches. I just updated the patch to see what others things of the approach of testing the CPO in each file. Let me know what you think. Still have the one-file approach sitting on a branch and we can stick with that instead if desired. Comment Actions This is fine, the other approach was fine too. I have a preference for the current one, but my comment was non-blocking so feel free to use whichever approach you prefer. Comment Actions Back to single cpo.compile.pass.cpp as discussed offline with ldionne. If CI passes still, I'll land this. |