9ea53f93e7
That way when declaring a test with DEF_TEST() macro, you don't have to uniquify the test name because it might colide with the class it is being testing. For example, if you are testing SkBase64 and do: DEF_TEST(SkBase64, reporter) { } That will generate an error because the macro will declare a function named SkBase64 which colides with the type SkBase64. By adding Test to the function name we avoid this problem. Fixed the entries found with the following command line: $ git grep "Test, r" | grep DEF BUG=None TEST=make tests && out/Debug/tests R=mtklein@google.com Author: tfarina@chromium.org Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/345753007
30 lines
810 B
C++
30 lines
810 B
C++
/*
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* Copyright 2014 Google Inc.
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*
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* Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
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* found in the LICENSE file.
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*/
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#include "Test.h"
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#include "../include/record/SkRecording.h"
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// Minimally exercise the public SkRecording API.
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DEF_TEST(SkRecording, r) {
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EXPERIMENTAL::SkRecording recording(1920, 1080);
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// Some very exciting commands here.
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recording.canvas()->clipRect(SkRect::MakeWH(320, 240));
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SkAutoTDelete<const EXPERIMENTAL::SkPlayback> playback(recording.releasePlayback());
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SkCanvas target;
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playback->draw(&target);
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// Here's another recording we never call releasePlayback().
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// However pointless, this should be safe.
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EXPERIMENTAL::SkRecording pointless(1920, 1080);
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pointless.canvas()->clipRect(SkRect::MakeWH(320, 240));
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}
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