about summary refs log tree commit diff
path: root/tests/run-coverage/assert.coverage
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'tests/run-coverage/assert.coverage')
-rw-r--r--tests/run-coverage/assert.coverage64
1 files changed, 32 insertions, 32 deletions
diff --git a/tests/run-coverage/assert.coverage b/tests/run-coverage/assert.coverage
index a7134a149e2..3c6108e436a 100644
--- a/tests/run-coverage/assert.coverage
+++ b/tests/run-coverage/assert.coverage
@@ -1,34 +1,34 @@
-    1|       |#![allow(unused_assignments)]
-    2|       |// failure-status: 101
-    3|       |
-    4|      4|fn might_fail_assert(one_plus_one: u32) {
-    5|      4|    println!("does 1 + 1 = {}?", one_plus_one);
-    6|      4|    assert_eq!(1 + 1, one_plus_one, "the argument was wrong");
+   LL|       |#![allow(unused_assignments)]
+   LL|       |// failure-status: 101
+   LL|       |
+   LL|      4|fn might_fail_assert(one_plus_one: u32) {
+   LL|      4|    println!("does 1 + 1 = {}?", one_plus_one);
+   LL|      4|    assert_eq!(1 + 1, one_plus_one, "the argument was wrong");
                                                   ^1
-    7|      3|}
-    8|       |
-    9|      1|fn main() -> Result<(),u8> {
-   10|      1|    let mut countdown = 10;
-   11|     11|    while countdown > 0 {
-   12|     11|        if countdown == 1 {
-   13|      1|            might_fail_assert(3);
-   14|     10|        } else if countdown < 5 {
-   15|      3|            might_fail_assert(2);
-   16|      6|        }
-   17|     10|        countdown -= 1;
-   18|       |    }
-   19|      0|    Ok(())
-   20|      0|}
-   21|       |
-   22|       |// Notes:
-   23|       |//   1. Compare this program and its coverage results to those of the very similar test
-   24|       |//      `panic_unwind.rs`, and similar tests `abort.rs` and `try_error_result.rs`.
-   25|       |//   2. This test confirms the coverage generated when a program passes or fails an `assert!()` or
-   26|       |//      related `assert_*!()` macro.
-   27|       |//   3. Notably, the `assert` macros *do not* generate `TerminatorKind::Assert`. The macros produce
-   28|       |//      conditional expressions, `TerminatorKind::SwitchInt` branches, and a possible call to
-   29|       |//      `begin_panic_fmt()` (that begins a panic unwind, if the assertion test fails).
-   30|       |//   4. `TerminatoKind::Assert` is, however, also present in the MIR generated for this test
-   31|       |//      (and in many other coverage tests). The `Assert` terminator is typically generated by the
-   32|       |//      Rust compiler to check for runtime failures, such as numeric overflows.
+   LL|      3|}
+   LL|       |
+   LL|      1|fn main() -> Result<(),u8> {
+   LL|      1|    let mut countdown = 10;
+   LL|     11|    while countdown > 0 {
+   LL|     11|        if countdown == 1 {
+   LL|      1|            might_fail_assert(3);
+   LL|     10|        } else if countdown < 5 {
+   LL|      3|            might_fail_assert(2);
+   LL|      6|        }
+   LL|     10|        countdown -= 1;
+   LL|       |    }
+   LL|      0|    Ok(())
+   LL|      0|}
+   LL|       |
+   LL|       |// Notes:
+   LL|       |//   1. Compare this program and its coverage results to those of the very similar test
+   LL|       |//      `panic_unwind.rs`, and similar tests `abort.rs` and `try_error_result.rs`.
+   LL|       |//   2. This test confirms the coverage generated when a program passes or fails an `assert!()` or
+   LL|       |//      related `assert_*!()` macro.
+   LL|       |//   3. Notably, the `assert` macros *do not* generate `TerminatorKind::Assert`. The macros produce
+   LL|       |//      conditional expressions, `TerminatorKind::SwitchInt` branches, and a possible call to
+   LL|       |//      `begin_panic_fmt()` (that begins a panic unwind, if the assertion test fails).
+   LL|       |//   4. `TerminatoKind::Assert` is, however, also present in the MIR generated for this test
+   LL|       |//      (and in many other coverage tests). The `Assert` terminator is typically generated by the
+   LL|       |//      Rust compiler to check for runtime failures, such as numeric overflows.