in 30e82a81, we add a contraint to the template parameter of
boost_test_print_type() to prevent it from being matched with
types which can be formatted with operator<<. but it failed to
work. we still have test failure reports like:
```
[Exception] - critical check ['s', 's', 't', '_', 'm', 'r', '.', 'i', 's', '_', 'e', 'n', 'd', '_', 'o', 'f', '_', 's', 't', 'r', 'e', 'a', 'm', '(', ')'] has failed
```
this is not what we expect. the reason is that we passed the template
parameters to the `has_left_shift` trait in the wrong order, see
https://live.boost.org/doc/libs/1_83_0/libs/type_traits/doc/html/boost_typetraits/reference/has_left_shift.html.
we should have passed the lhs of operator<< expression as first
parameter, and rhs the second.
so, in this change, we correct the type constraint by passing the
template parameter in the right order, now the error message looks
better, like:
```
test/boost/mutation_query_test.cc(110): error: in "test_partition_query_is_full": check !partition_slice_builder(*s) .with_range({}) .build() .is_full() has failed
```
it turns out boost::transformed_range<> is formattable with operator<<,
as it fulfills the constraints of `boost::has_left_shift<ostream, R>`,
but when printing it, the compiler fails when it tries to insert the
elements in the range to the output stream.
so, in order to workaround this issue, we add a specialization for
`boost::transformed_range<F, R`.
also, to improve the readability, we reimplement the `has_left_shift<>`
as a concept, so that it's obvious that we need to put both the output
stream as the first parameter.
Signed-off-by: Kefu Chai <kefu.chai@scylladb.com>
Closes scylladb/scylladb#20233
Scylla in-source tests.
For details on how to run the tests, see docs/dev/testing.md
Shared C++ utils, libraries are in lib/, for Python - pylib/
alternator - Python tests which connect to a single server and use the DynamoDB API unit, boost, raft - unit tests in C++ cql-pytest - Python tests which connect to a single server and use CQL topology* - tests that set up clusters and add/remove nodes cql - approval tests that use CQL and pre-recorded output rest_api - tests for Scylla REST API Port 9000 scylla-gdb - tests for scylla-gdb.py helper script nodetool - tests for C++ implementation of nodetool
If you can use an existing folder, consider adding your test to it. New folders should be used for new large categories/subsystems, or when the test environment is significantly different from some existing suite, e.g. you plan to start scylladb with different configuration, and you intend to add many tests and would like them to reuse an existing Scylla cluster (clusters can be reused for tests within the same folder).
To add a new folder, create a new directory, and then
copy & edit its suite.ini.