| Google C++ Testing Framework |
| ============================ |
| http://code.google.com/p/googletest/ |
| |
| Overview |
| -------- |
| Google's framework for writing C++ tests on a variety of platforms (Linux, Mac |
| OS X, Windows, Windows CE, and Symbian). Based on the xUnit architecture. |
| Supports automatic test discovery, a rich set of assertions, user-defined |
| assertions, death tests, fatal and non-fatal failures, various options for |
| running the tests, and XML test report generation. |
| |
| Please see the project page above for more information as well as mailing lists |
| for questions, discussions, and development. There is also an IRC channel on |
| OFTC (irc.oftc.net) #gtest available. Please join us! |
| |
| Requirements |
| ------------ |
| Google Test is designed to have fairly minimal requirements to build and use |
| with your projects, but there are some. Currently, the only Operating System |
| (OS) on which Google Test is known to build properly is Linux, but we are |
| actively working on Windows and Mac support as well. The source code itself is |
| already portable across many other platforms, but we are still developing |
| robust build systems for each. |
| |
| ### Linux Requirements ### |
| These are the base requirements to build and use Google Test from a source |
| package (as described below): |
| * GNU-compatible Make or "gmake" |
| * POSIX-standard shell |
| * POSIX(-2) Regular Expressions (regex.h) |
| * A C++98 standards compliant compiler |
| |
| Furthermore, if you are building Google Test from a VCS Checkout (also |
| described below), there are further requirements: |
| * Automake version 1.9 or newer |
| * Autoconf version 2.59 or newer |
| * Libtool / Libtoolize |
| * Python version 2.4 or newer |
| |
| ### Windows Requirements ### |
| * Microsoft Visual Studio 7.1 or newer |
| |
| ### Cygwin Requirements ### |
| * Cygwin 1.5.25-14 or newer |
| |
| ### Mac OS X Requirements ### |
| * Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger or newer |
| * Developer Tools Installed |
| * Optional: Xcode 2.5 or later for univeral-binary framework; see note below. |
| |
| Getting the Source |
| ------------------ |
| There are two primary ways of getting Google Test's source code: you can |
| download a source release in your preferred archive format, or directly check |
| out the source from a Version Control System (VCS, we use Google Code's |
| Subversion hosting). The VCS checkout requires a few extra steps and some extra |
| software packages on your system, but lets you track development, and make |
| patches to contribute much more easily, so we highly encourage it. |
| |
| ### VCS Checkout: ### |
| The first step is to select whether you want to check out the main line of |
| development on Google Test, or one of the released branches. The former will be |
| much more active and have the latest features, but the latter provides much |
| more stability and predictability. Choose whichever fits your needs best, and |
| proceed with the following Subversion commands: |
| |
| $ svn checkout http://googletest.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/ gtest-svn |
| |
| or for a release version X.Y.*'s branch: |
| |
| $ svn checkout http://googletest.googlecode.com/svn/branches/release-X.Y/ gtest-X.Y-svn |
| |
| Next you will need to prepare the GNU Autotools build system, if you |
| are using Linux, Mac OS X, or Cygwin. Enter the target directory of |
| the checkout command you used ('gtest-svn' or 'gtest-X.Y-svn' above) |
| and proceed with the following commands: |
| |
| $ aclocal-1.9 # Where "1.9" must match the following automake command. |
| $ libtoolize -c # Use "glibtoolize -c" instead on Mac OS X. |
| $ autoheader |
| $ automake-1.9 -ac # See Automake version requirements above. |
| $ autoconf |
| |
| While this is a bit complicated, it will most often be automatically re-run by |
| your "make" invocations, so in practice you shouldn't need to worry too much. |
| Once you have completed these steps, you are ready to build the library. |
| |
| ### Source Package: ### |
| Google Test is also released in source packages which can be downloaded from |
| its Google Code download page[1]. Several different archive formats are |
| provided, but the only difference is the tools used to manipulate them, and the |
| size of the resulting file. Download whichever you are most comfortable with. |
| |
| [1] Google Test Downloads: http://code.google.com/p/googletest/downloads/list |
| |
| Once downloaded expand the archive using whichever tools you prefer for that |
| type. This will always result in a new directory with the name "gtest-X.Y.Z" |
| which contains all of the source code. Here are some examples in Linux: |
| |
| $ tar -xvzf gtest-X.Y.Z.tar.gz |
| $ tar -xvjf gtest-X.Y.Z.tar.bz2 |
| $ unzip gtest-X.Y.Z.zip |
| |
| Building the Source |
| ------------------- |
| ### Linux, Mac OS X (without Xcode), and Cygwin ### |
| There are two primary options for building the source at this point: build it |
| inside the source code tree, or in a separate directory. We recommend building |
| in a separate directory as that tends to produce both more consistent results |
| and be easier to clean up should anything go wrong, but both patterns are |
| supported. The only hard restriction is that while the build directory can be |
| a subdirectory of the source directory, the opposite is not possible and will |
| result in errors. Once you have selected where you wish to build Google Test, |
| create the directory if necessary, and enter it. The following steps apply for |
| either approach by simply substituting the shell variable SRCDIR with "." for |
| building inside the source directory, and the relative path to the source |
| directory otherwise. |
| |
| $ ${SRCDIR}/configure # Standard GNU configure script, --help for more info |
| $ make # Standard makefile following GNU conventions |
| $ make check # Builds and runs all tests - all should pass |
| |
| Other programs will only be able to use Google Test's functionality if you |
| install it in a location which they can access, in Linux this is typically |
| under '/usr/local'. The following command will install all of the Google Test |
| libraries, public headers, and utilities necessary for other programs and |
| libraries to leverage it: |
| |
| $ sudo make install # Not necessary, but allows use by other programs |
| |
| TODO(chandlerc@google.com): This section needs to be expanded when the |
| 'gtest-config' script is finished and Autoconf macro's are provided (or not |
| provided) in order to properly reflect the process for other programs to |
| locate, include, and link against Google Test. |
| |
| Finally, should you need to remove Google Test from your system after having |
| installed it, run the following command, and it will back out its changes. |
| However, note carefully that you must run this command on the *same* Google |
| Test build that you ran the install from, or the results are not predictable. |
| If you install Google Test on your system, and are working from a VCS checkout, |
| make sure you run this *before* updating your checkout of the source in order |
| to uninstall the same version which you installed. |
| |
| $ sudo make uninstall # Must be run against the exact same build as "install" |
| |
| ### Windows ### |
| Open the gtest.sln file in the msvc/ folder using Visual Studio, and |
| you are ready to build Google Test the same way you build any Visual |
| Studio project. |
| |
| ### Mac OS X (universal-binary framework) ### |
| Open the gtest.xcodeproj in the xcode/ folder using Xcode. Build the "gtest" |
| target. The universal binary framework will end up in your selected build |
| directory (selected in the Xcode "Preferences..." -> "Building" pane and |
| defaults to xcode/build). Alternatively, at the command line, enter: |
| |
| $ xcodebuild |
| |
| This will build the "Release" configuration of the gtest.framework, but you can |
| select the "Debug" configuration with a command line option. See the |
| "xcodebuild" man page for more information. |
| |
| To test the gtest.framework in Xcode, change the active target to "Check" and |
| then build. This target builds all of the tests and then runs them. Don't worry |
| if you see some errors. Xcode reports all test failures (even the intentional |
| ones) as errors. However, you should see a "Build succeeded" message at the end |
| of the build log. To run all of the tests from the command line, enter: |
| |
| $ xcodebuid -target Check |
| |
| It is also possible to build and execute individual tests within Xcode. Each |
| test has its own Xcode "Target" and Xcode "Executable". To build any of the |
| tests, change the active target and the active executable to the test of |
| interest and then build and run. |
| |
| NOTE: many of the tests are executed from Python scripts. These tests are |
| indicated by a trailing underscore "_" in the test name. These tests should not |
| be executed directly. Instead a custom Xcode "Executable" was created to run the |
| Python script from within Xcode. These custom executables do not have the |
| trailing underscore in the name. For example, to run the gtest_color_test, set |
| the active target to "gtest_color_test_" (with a trailing underscore). This |
| target will build the gtest_color_test_, which should not be run directly. |
| Then set the active executable to "gtest_color_test" (no trailing underscore). |
| This executable will execute the gtest_color_test_ from within the |
| gtest_color_test.py script). |
| |
| Individual tests can be built from the command line using: |
| |
| $ xcodebuild -target <test_name> |
| |
| These tests can be executed from the command line by moving to the build |
| directory and then (in bash) |
| |
| $ export DYLD_FRAMEWORK_PATH=`pwd` |
| $ ./<test_name> # (e.g. ./gtest_unittest or ./gtest_color_test.py) |
| |
| To use the gtest.framework for your own tests, first, add the framework to Xcode |
| project. Next, create a new executable target and add the framework to the |
| "Link Binary With Libraries" build phase. Select "Edit Active Executable" from |
| the "Project" menu. In the "Arguments" tab, add |
| |
| "DYLD_FRAMEWORK_PATH" : "/real/framework/path" |
| |
| in the "Variables to be set in the environment:" list, where you replace |
| "/real/framework/path" with the actual location of the gtest.framework. Now |
| when you run your executable, it will load the framework and your test will |
| run as expected. |
| |
| Regenerating Source Files |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| Some of Google Test's source files are generated from templates (not |
| in the C++ sense) using a script. A template file is named FOO.pump, |
| where FOO is the name of the file it will generate. For example, the |
| file include/gtest/internal/gtest-type-util.h.pump is used to generate |
| gtest-type-util.h in the same directory. |
| |
| Normally you don't need to worry about regenerating the source files, |
| unless you need to modify them (e.g. if you are working on a patch for |
| Google Test). In that case, you should modify the corresponding .pump |
| files instead and run the 'pump' script (for Pump is Useful for Meta |
| Programming) to regenerate them. We are still working on releasing |
| the script and its documentation. If you need it now, please email |
| googletestframework@googlegroups.com such that we know to make it |
| happen sooner. |
| |
| Happy testing! |