since we do not rely on FMT_DEPRECATED_OSTREAM to define the
fmt::formatter for us anymore, let's stop defining `FMT_DEPRECATED_OSTREAM`.
in this change,
* utils: drop the range formatters in to_string.hh and to_string.c, as
we don't use them anymore. and the tests for them in
test/boost/string_format_test.cc are removed accordingly.
* utils: use fmt to print chunk_vector and small_vector. as
we are not able to print the elements using operator<< anymore
after switching to {fmt} formatters.
* test/boost: specialize fmt::details::is_std_string_like<bytes>
due to a bug in {fmt} v9, {fmt} fails to format a range whose
element type is `basic_sstring<uint8_t>`, as it considers it
as a string-like type, but `basic_sstring<uint8_t>`'s char type
is signed char, not char. this issue does not exist in {fmt} v10,
so, in this change, we add a workaround to explicitly specialize
the type trait to assure that {fmt} format this type using its
`fmt::formatter` specialization instead of trying to format it
as a string. also, {fmt}'s generic ranges formatter calls the
pair formatter's `set_brackets()` and `set_separator()` methods
when printing the range, but operator<< based formatter does not
provide these method, we have to include this change in the change
switching to {fmt}, otherwise the change specializing
`fmt::details::is_std_string_like<bytes>` won't compile.
* test/boost: in tests, we use `BOOST_REQUIRE_EQUAL()` and its friends
for comparing values. but without the operator<< based formatters,
Boost.Test would not be able to print them. after removing
the homebrew formatters, we need to use the generic
`boost_test_print_type()` helper to do this job. so we are
including `test_utils.hh` in tests so that we can print
the formattable types.
* treewide: add "#include "utils/to_string.hh" where
`fmt::formatter<optional<>>` is used.
* configure.py: do not define FMT_DEPRECATED_OSTREAM
* cmake: do not define FMT_DEPRECATED_OSTREAM
Refs #13245
Signed-off-by: Kefu Chai <kefu.chai@scylladb.com>
get0() dates back from the days where Seastar futures carried tuples, and
get0() was a way to get the first (and usually only) element. Now
it's a distraction, and Seastar is likely to deprecate and remove it.
Replace with seastar::future::get(), which does the same thing.
We have enabled the command line options without changing a
single line of code, we only had to replace old include
with scylla_test_case.hh.
Next step is to add x-log-compaction-groups options, which will
determine the number of compaction groups to be used by all
instantiations of replica::table.
Signed-off-by: Raphael S. Carvalho <raphaelsc@scylladb.com>
Instead of lengthy blurbs, switch to single-line, machine-readable
standardized (https://spdx.dev) license identifiers. The Linux kernel
switched long ago, so there is strong precedent.
Three cases are handled: AGPL-only, Apache-only, and dual licensed.
For the latter case, I chose (AGPL-3.0-or-later and Apache-2.0),
reasoning that our changes are extensive enough to apply our license.
The changes we applied mechanically with a script, except to
licenses/README.md.
Closes#9937
All the tests that need migration manager are run inside
cql_test_env context and can use the migration manager
from the env. For now this is still the global one, but
next patch will change this.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Emelyanov <xemul@scylladb.com>
1. Move tests to test (using singular seems to be a convention
in the rest of the code base)
2. Move boost tests to test/boost, other
(non-boost) unit tests to test/unit, tests which are
expected to be run manually to test/manual.
Update configure.py and test.py with new paths to tests.