These are being removed from gtest, so stop using them.
Bug: chromium:1474588
Change-Id: I0d42da9f14dad5c5dc17d980146cb289d444dbda
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/crashpad/crashpad/+/4803329
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
Commit-Queue: Mike Frysinger <vapier@chromium.org>
sed -i '' -E -e 's/Copyright (.+) The Crashpad Authors\. All rights reserved\.$/Copyright \1 The Crashpad Authors/' $(git grep -El 'Copyright (.+) The Crashpad Authors\. All rights reserved\.$')
Bug: chromium:1098010
Change-Id: I8d6138469ddbe3d281a5d83f64cf918ec2491611
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/crashpad/crashpad/+/3878262
Reviewed-by: Joshua Peraza <jperaza@chromium.org>
Commit-Queue: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
This change was partially scripted and partially done manually with vim
regex + manually placing the deleted constructors.
The script change looked for destructors in the public: section of a
class, if that existed the deleted constructors would go before the
destructor.
For manual placement I looked for any constructor in the public: section
of the corresponding class. If there wasn't one, then it would ideally
have gone as the first entry except below enums, classes and typedefs.
This may not have been perfect, but is hopefully good enough. Fingers
crossed.
#include "base/macros.h" is removed from files that don't use
ignore_result, which is the only other thing defined in base/macros.h.
Bug: chromium:1010217
Change-Id: I099526255a40b1ac1264904b4ece2f3f503c9418
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/crashpad/crashpad/+/3171034
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
Commit-Queue: Peter Boström <pbos@chromium.org>
Remove unneeded base/strings/stringprintf.h includes.
ARCH_CPU_X86_64 macro is used without including build/build_config.h
Missing base/check.h
Change-Id: Ib7864ab7b30ef8fc37649783f7b90b618d0d6a0b
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/crashpad/crashpad/+/2920552
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
Commit-Queue: Justin Cohen <justincohen@chromium.org>
This change prepares crashpad for the upcoming switch of base::string16
to std::u16string on all platforms. It does so by replacing Windows-only
instances of base::string16 with std::wstring, and using appropriate
string utility functions.
Bug: chromium:911896
Change-Id: Ibb0b8a4e4dc7fae1d24d18823f8dbb6da31f8239
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/crashpad/crashpad/+/2332402
Commit-Queue: Jan Wilken Dörrie <jdoerrie@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
If the file just needs the CHECK/CHECK_OP/NOTREACHED
macros, use the appropriate header for that instead.
Or if logging.h is not needed at all, remove it.
This is both a nice cleanup (logging.h is a big header,
and including it unnecessarily has compile-time costs),
and part of the final step towards making logging.h no
longer include check.h and the others.
Bug: chromium:1031540
Change-Id: Ia46806bd95fe498bcf3cf6d2c13ffa4081678043
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/crashpad/crashpad/+/2255361
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
Commit-Queue: Hans Wennborg <hans@chromium.org>
Add direct includes for things provided transitively by logging.h
(or by other headers including logging.h).
This is in preparation for cleaning up unnecessary includes of
logging.h in header files (so if something depends on logging.h,
it needs include it explicitly), and for when Chromium's logging.h
no longer includes check.h, check_op.h, and notreached.h.
DEPS is also updated to roll mini_chromium to ae14a14ab4 which
includes these new header files.
Bug: chromium:1031540
Change-Id: I36f646d0a93854989dc602d0dc7139dd7a7b8621
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/crashpad/crashpad/+/2250251
Commit-Queue: Hans Wennborg <hans@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
I’m most interested in picking up 1b3eb6ef3462, “Explicitly define copy
constructors used in googletest tests.”
This also reorganizes files and rewrites text to refer to this project
as Google Test and googletest (and Google Mock and googlemock), as it
prefers to be known. Some filenames are left at gtest_* following the
precedent set by gtest itself. For example, #include "gtest/gtest.h" is
still used, so #include "test/gtest_death.h" is retained too.
gtest_all_test OutputFileHelpersTest.GetCurrentExecutableName hard-codes
the expected executable name as gtest_all_test among other options that
do not include googletest_all_test, so test executables retain their
names as well.
fb19f57880f6 Add GTEST_BRIEF option
3549237957a1 Ensure that gtest/gmock pkgconfig requirements specify
version
189299e957bb Merge branch 'master' into quiet-flag
5504ded3ab5c Fix a typo in .travis.yml
6ed4e7168f54 Replace the last instance of `throw()` with `noexcept`. NFC
879fd9b45299 Remove duplicate codes existed in get-nprocessors.sh
644f3a992c28 gtest-unittest-api_test - fix warning in clang build
0b6d567619fe Remove redundant .c_str()
be3ac45cf673 fix signed/unsigned comparison issue (on OpenBSD)
b51a49e0cb82 Merge pull request #2773 from Quuxplusone:replace-noexcept
c2032090f373 Merge pull request #2772 from Quuxplusone:travis
4fe5ac53337e Merge pull request #2756 from Conan-Kudo:fix-pkgconfig-reqs
373d72b6986f Googletest export
4c8e6a9fe1c8 Merge pull request #2810 from ptahmose:master
71d5df6c6b67 Merge pull request #2802 from e-i-n-s:fix_clang_warning
dcc92d0ab6c4 Merge pull request #2805 from pepsiman:patch-1
4f002f1e236c VariadicMatcher needs a non-defaulted move constructor for
compile-time performance
9d580ea80592 Enable protobuf printing for open-source proto messages
766ac2e1a413 Remove all uses of GTEST_DISALLOW_{MOVE_,}ASSIGN_
11b3cec177b1 Fix a -Wdeprecated warning
01c0ff5e2373 Fix a -Wdeprecated warning
c7d8ec72cc4b Fix a -Wdeprecated warning
1b066f4edfd5 Add -Wdeprecated to the build configuration
4bab55dc54b4 Removed a typo in README.md
a67701056425 Googletest export
fb5d9b66c5b0 Googletest export
1b3eb6ef3462 Googletest export
b0e53e2d64db Merge pull request #2797 from Jyun-Neng:master
d7ca9af0049e Googletest export
955552518b4e Googletest export
ef25d27d4604 Merge pull request #2815 from Quuxplusone:simple
129329787429 Googletest export
b99b421d8d68 Merge pull request #2818 from inazarenko:master
472cd8fd8b1c Merge pull request #2818 from inazarenko:master
3cfb4117f7e5 Googletest export
0eea2e9fc634 Googletest export
a9f6c1ed1401 Googletest export
1a9c3e441407 Merge pull request #2830 from keshavgbpecdelhi:patch-1
e589a3371705 Merge pull request #2751 from calumr:quiet-flag
Change-Id: Id788a27aa884ef68a21bae6c178cd456f5f6f2b0
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/crashpad/crashpad/+/2186009
Reviewed-by: Joshua Peraza <jperaza@chromium.org>
Commit-Queue: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
The design for running all Crashpad unit tests on Chromium’s try- and
buildbots involves pulling all tests into a single monolithic
crashpad_tests executable. Many Crashpad tests base the name of their
child executables or modules on the name of the main test executable.
Since the main test executable will have a different name in the
in-Chromium build, knowledge of the test executable name (referred to as
“module” here) needs to be added to the tests themselves.
This introduces TestPaths::BuildArtifact(), which allows the module name
to be specified. For Crashpad’s standalone build, the module name is
verified against the main test executable’s name.
TestPaths::BuildArtifact() can also locate paths in the alternate 32-bit
output directory for 64-bit Windows tests, taking on the responsibility
for what the new (5e9ed4cb9f69) TestPaths::Output32BitDirectory(), now
obsolete, did.
Bug: chromium:779790
Change-Id: I64c4a2190b6319e487c999812a7cfc512a75a700
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/747536
Reviewed-by: Scott Graham <scottmg@chromium.org>
As of
00a0654929,
crashpad_util_test is able to run in Chromium. It uses Chromium’s own
base::TestLauncher rather than gtest’s RUN_ALL_TESTS() for proper
integration with Swarming.
Launching WinMultiprocess test children out of the same test executable
via WinChildProcess is not compatible with Chromium’s parallel, shardy,
Swarmy test launcher. When running these children, the standard gtest
RUN_ALL_TESTS() launcher will now be used, even in Chromium.
Two tests disabled in Chromium are now enabled:
ExceptionHandlerServerTest.MultipleConnections and
ScopedProcessSuspend.ScopedProcessSuspend.
As part of this work, I discovered that disabled tests chosen to run via
--gtest_also_run_disabled_tests did not actually work for
WinMultiprocess-based tests, because gtest’s test launcher would refuse
to run the child side of the test, believing it was disabled. This is
fixed by always supplying --gtest_also_run_disabled_tests to
WinChildProcess children, on the basis that if the parent is managing to
run and it’s disabled, disabled tests must actually be enabled.
Bug: crashpad:205
Change-Id: Ied22f16b9329ee13b6b07fd29de704f6fe2a058e
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/742462
Reviewed-by: Scott Graham <scottmg@chromium.org>
Update mini_chromium to 7d6697ceb5cb5ca02fde3813496f48b9b1d76d0c
47ff9691450e Switch the language standard to C++14
7d6697ceb5cb Remove base/memory/ptr_util.h and base::WrapUnique
base::WrapUnique and std::make_unique are similar, but the latter is
standardized and preferred.
Most of the mechanical changes were made with this sed:
for f in $(git grep -l base::WrapUnique | uniq); do
sed -E \
-e 's%base::WrapUnique\(new ([^(]+)\((.*)\)\);%std::make_unique<\1>(\2);%g' \
-e 's%base::WrapUnique\(new ([^(]+)\);%std::make_unique<\1>();%g' \
-e 's%^#include "base/memory/ptr_util.h"$%#include <memory>%' \
-i '' "${f}"
done
Several uses of base::WrapUnique that did not fit on a single line and
were not matched by this sed were adjusted manually. All #include
changes were audited manually, to at least move <memory> into the
correct section. Where <memory> was already #included by a file (or its
corresponding header), the extra #include was removed. Where <memory>
should have been #included by a header, it was added. Other similar
adjustments to other #includes were also made.
Change-Id: Id4e0baad8b3652646bede4c3f30f41fcabfdbd4f
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/714658
Commit-Queue: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Leonard Mosescu <mosescu@chromium.org>
This uses “static” at function scope to avoid making local copies, even
in cases where the compiler can’t see that the local copy is
unnecessary. “constexpr” adds additional safety in that it prevents
global state from being initialized from any runtime dependencies, which
would be undesirable.
At namespace scope, “constexpr” is also used where appropriate.
For the most part, this was a mechanical transformation for things
matching '(^| )const [^=]*\['.
Similar transformations could be applied to non-arrays in some cases,
but there’s limited practical impact in most non-array cases relative to
arrays, there are far more use sites, and much more manual intervention
would be required.
Change-Id: I3513b739ee8b0be026f8285475cddc5f9cc81152
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/583997
Commit-Queue: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Leonard Mosescu <mosescu@chromium.org>
gtest used to require (expected, actual) ordering for arguments to
EXPECT_EQ and ASSERT_EQ, and in failed test assertions would identify
each side as “expected” or “actual.” Tests in Crashpad adhered to this
traditional ordering. After a gtest change in February 2016, it is now
agnostic with respect to the order of these arguments.
This change mechanically updates all uses of these macros to (actual,
expected) by reversing them. This provides consistency with our use of
the logging CHECK_EQ and DCHECK_EQ macros, and makes for better
readability by ordinary native speakers. The rough (but working!)
conversion tool is
https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/466727/1/rewrite_expectassert_eq.py,
and “git cl format” cleaned up its output.
EXPECT_NE and ASSERT_NE never had a preferred ordering. gtest never made
a judgment that one side or the other needed to provide an “unexpected”
value. Consequently, some code used (unexpected, actual) while other
code used (actual, unexpected). For consistency with the new EXPECT_EQ
and ASSERT_EQ usage, as well as consistency with CHECK_NE and DCHECK_NE,
this change also updates these use sites to (actual, unexpected) where
one side can be called “unexpected” as, for example, std::string::npos
can be. Unfortunately, this portion was a manual conversion.
References:
https://github.com/google/googletest/blob/master/googletest/docs/Primer.md#binary-comparison77d6b17338https://github.com/google/googletest/pull/713
Change-Id: I978fef7c94183b8b1ef63f12f5ab4d6693626be3
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/466727
Reviewed-by: Scott Graham <scottmg@chromium.org>
This supports the “double handler” or “double handler with low
probability” models from https://crashpad.chromium.org/bug/143.
For crashpad_handler to be become its own client, it needs access to its
own executable path to pass to CrashpadClient::StartHandler(). This was
formerly available in the test-only test::Paths::Executable(). Bring
that function’s implementation to the non-test Paths::Executable() in
util/misc, and rename test::Paths to test::TestPaths to avoid future
confusion.
test::TestPaths must still be used to access TestDataRoot(), which does
not make any sense to non-test code.
test::TestPaths::Executable() is retained for use by tests, which most
likely prefer the fatal semantics of that function. Paths::Executable()
is not fatal because for the purposes of implementing the double
handler, a failure to locate the executable path (which may happen on
some systems in deeply-nested directory hierarchies) shouldn’t cause the
initial crashpad_handler to abort, even if it does prevent a second
crashpad_handler from being started.
Bug: crashpad:143
Test: crashpad_util_test Paths.*, crashpad_test_test TestPaths.*
Change-Id: I9f75bf61839ce51e33c9f7c0d7031cebead6a156
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/466346
Reviewed-by: Scott Graham <scottmg@chromium.org>
Commit-Queue: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
Bug: crashpad:81
Change-Id: I3cb115440638df909d1c0cdfd01c824ac0d0b073
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/458592
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Scott Graham <scottmg@chromium.org>
Commit-Queue: Sigurður Ásgeirsson <siggi@chromium.org>
ReadFile() attempted to continue reading after a short read. In most
cases, this is fine. However, ReadFile() would keep trying to fill a
partially-filled buffer until experiencing a 0-length read(), signaling
end-of-file. For certain weird file descriptors like terminal input, EOF
is an ephemeral condition, and attempting to read beyond EOF doesn’t
actually return 0 (EOF) provided that they remain open, it will block
waiting for more input. Consequently, ReadFile() and anything based on
ReadFile() had an undocumented and quirky interface, which was that any
short read that it returned (not an underlying short read) actually
indicated EOF.
This facet of ReadFile() was unexpected, so it’s being removed. The new
behavior is that ReadFile() will return an underlying short read. The
behavior of FileReaderInterface::Read() is updated in accordance with
this change.
Upon experiencing a short read, the caller can determine the best
action. Most callers were already prepared for this behavior. Outside of
util/file, only crashpad_database_util properly implemented EOF
detection according to previous semantics, and adapting it to new
semantics is trivial.
Callers who require an exact-length read can use the new
ReadFileExactly(), or the newly renamed LoggingReadFileExactly() or
CheckedReadFileExactly(). These functions will retry following a short
read. The renamed functions were previously called LoggingReadFile() and
CheckedReadFile(), but those names implied that they were simply
wrapping ReadFile(), which is not the case. They wrapped ReadFile() and
further, insisted on a full read. Since ReadFile()’s semantics are now
changing but these functions’ are not, they’re now even more distinct
from ReadFile(), and must be renamed to avoid confusion.
Test: *
Change-Id: I06b77e0d6ad8719bd2eb67dab93a8740542dd908
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/456676
Reviewed-by: Robert Sesek <rsesek@chromium.org>
This makes Doxygen’s output more actionable by setting QUIET = YES to
suppress verbose progress spew, and WARN_IF_UNDOCUMENTED = NO to prevent
warnings for undocumented classes and members from being generated. The
latter is too noisy, producing 721 warnings in the current codebase.
The remaining warnings produced by Doxygen were useful and actionable.
They fell into two categories: abuses of Doxygen’s markup syntax, and
missing (or misspelled) parameter documentation. In a small number of
cases, pass-through parameters had intentionally been left undocumented.
In these cases, they are now given blank \param descriptions. This is
not optimal, but there doesn’t appear to be any other way to tell
Doxygen to allow a single parameter to be undocumented.
Some tricky Doxygen errors were resolved by asking it to not enter
directiores that we do not provide documentation in (such as the
“on-platform” compat directories, compat/mac and compat/win, as well as
compat/non_cxx11_lib) while allowing it to enter the
“off-platform” directories that we do document (compat/non_mac and
compat/non_win).
A Doxygen run (doc/support/generate_doxygen.sh) now produces no output
at all. It would produce warnings if any were triggered.
Not directly related, but still relevant to documentation,
doc/support/generate.sh is updated to remove temporary removals of
now-extinct files and directories. doc/appengine/README is updated so
that a consistent path to “goapp” is used throughout the file.
Change-Id: I300730c04de4d3340551ea3086ca70cc5ff862d1
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/408812
Reviewed-by: Robert Sesek <rsesek@chromium.org>
Previously, StartHandler() launched the handler process, then connected
over a pipe to register for crash handling. Instead, the initial client
can create and inherit handles to the handler and pass those handle
values and other data (addresses, etc.) on the command line.
This should improve startup time as there's no need to synchronize with
the process at startup, and allows avoiding a call to CreateProcess()
directly in StartHandler(), which is important for registration for
crash reporting from DllMain().
Incidentally adds new utility functions for string/number conversion and
string splitting.
Note: API change; UseHandler() is removed for all platforms.
BUG=chromium:567850,chromium:656800
Change-Id: I1602724183cb107f805f109674c53e95841b24fd
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/400015
Reviewed-by: Mark Mentovai <mark@chromium.org>
This was done in Chromium’s local copy of Crashpad in 562827afb599. This
change is similar to that one, except more care was taken to avoid
including headers from a .cc or _test.cc when already included by the
associated .h. Rather than using <stddef.h> for size_t, Crashpad has
always used <sys/types.h>, so that’s used here as well.
This updates mini_chromium to 8a2363f486e3a0dc562a68884832d06d28d38dcc,
which removes base/basictypes.h.
e128dcf10122 Remove base/move.h; use std::move() instead of Pass()
8a2363f486e3 Move basictypes.h to macros.h
R=avi@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1566713002 .
This more-natural spelling doesn’t require Crashpad developers to have
to remember anything special when writing code in Crashpad. It’s easier
to grep for and it’s easier to remove the “compat” part when pre-C++11
libraries are no longer relevant.
R=scottmg@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1513573005 .
This consolidates all of the twisted casts and comments that discuss how
HANDLEs are really only 32 bits wide even in 64-bit processes on 64-bit
operating systems into a single location.
R=scottmg@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1422503015 .
A few function implementations that were missing, various switches
for functions/functionality that didn't exist on XP, and far too long
figuring out what exactly was wrong with SYSTEM_PROCESS_INFORMATION
on x86 (the "alignment_for_x86" fields).
R=mark@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:1, crashpad:50, chromium:531663
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1336823002 .
Now that we have a multiprocess test harness, add a test for
ProcessReaderWin for reading from a child.
Parent test code wasn't closing handles properly; fix that.
R=rsesek@chromium.org
BUG=crashpad:1
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1160843006