thanks to Nico Werner, who did most of the porting work
2.5 KiB
Contributing
This library is free, and will stay free but needs your support to sustain its development. There are lots of new features and maintenance to do. If you work for a company using doctest or have the means to do so, please consider financial support.
Pull requests
Consider opening an issue for a discussion before making a pull request to make sure the contribution goes smoothly.
All pull requests should be made against the dev
branch because the master
is the stable one with the latest release.
If you're going to change something in the library itself - make sure you don't modify doctest/doctest.h
because it's generated from doctest/parts/doctest_fwd.h
and doctest/parts/doctest.cpp
- they get concatenated by CMake - so make sure you do a CMake build after you modify them so the assemble_single_header
target gets built. Also take into consideration how the change affects the code coverage - based on the project in examples/all_features
. Also update any relevant examples in the examples
folder.
This framework has some design goals which must be kept. Make sure you have read the features and design goals page.
If your changes also change the output of the library - you should also update the reference output for the tests or otherwise the CI builds (travis
and appveyor
) will fail when they compare the latest output to the outdated reference output (which is committed in the repository). To do this run CMake with the DOCTEST_TEST_MODE
variable set to COLLECT
(making the new reference output) and then run ctest
and commit the changed (or newly created) .txt
files in the test_output
folders too. The default DOCTEST_TEST_MODE
is COMPARE
.
Example: cmake -DDOCTEST_TEST_MODE=COLLECT path/to/sources && cmake --build . && ctest
Code should be formatted with a recent-enough clang-format
using the config file in the root of the repo (or I will do it...)
Testing with compilers different from GCC/Clang/MSVC (and more platforms) is something the project would benefit from.