94 KiB
Advanced googletest Topics
Introduction
Now that you have read the googletest Primer and learned how to write tests using googletest, it’s time to learn some new tricks. This document will show you more assertions as well as how to construct complex failure messages, propagate fatal failures, reuse and speed up your test fixtures, and use various flags with your tests.
More Assertions
This section covers some less frequently used, but still significant, assertions.
Explicit Success and Failure
These three assertions do not actually test a value or expression. Instead, they generate a success or failure directly. Like the macros that actually perform a test, you may stream a custom failure message into them.
(); SUCCEED
Generates a success. This does NOT make the overall test succeed. A test is considered successful only if none of its assertions fail during its execution.
NOTE: SUCCEED()
is purely documentary and currently
doesn’t generate any user-visible output. However, we may add
SUCCEED()
messages to googletest’s output in the
future.
();
FAIL();
ADD_FAILURE("file_path", line_number); ADD_FAILURE_AT
FAIL()
generates a fatal failure, while
ADD_FAILURE()
and ADD_FAILURE_AT()
generate a
nonfatal failure. These are useful when control flow, rather than a
Boolean expression, determines the test’s success or failure. For
example, you might want to write something like:
switch(expression) {
case 1:
... some checks ...
case 2:
... some other checks ...
default:
() << "We shouldn't get here.";
FAIL}
NOTE: you can only use FAIL()
in functions that return
void
. See the Assertion
Placement section for more information.
Exception Assertions
These are for verifying that a piece of code throws (or does not throw) an exception of the given type:
Fatal assertion | Nonfatal assertion | Verifies |
---|---|---|
ASSERT_THROW(statement, exception_type); |
EXPECT_THROW(statement, exception_type); |
statement throws an exception of the given type |
ASSERT_ANY_THROW(statement); |
EXPECT_ANY_THROW(statement); |
statement throws an exception of any type |
ASSERT_NO_THROW(statement); |
EXPECT_NO_THROW(statement); |
statement doesn’t throw any exception |
Examples:
(Foo(5), bar_exception);
ASSERT_THROW
({
EXPECT_NO_THROWint n = 5;
(&n);
Bar});
Availability: requires exceptions to be enabled in the build environment
Predicate Assertions for Better Error Messages
Even though googletest has a rich set of assertions, they can never
be complete, as it’s impossible (nor a good idea) to anticipate all
scenarios a user might run into. Therefore, sometimes a user has to use
EXPECT_TRUE()
to check a complex expression, for lack of a
better macro. This has the problem of not showing you the values of the
parts of the expression, making it hard to understand what went wrong.
As a workaround, some users choose to construct the failure message by
themselves, streaming it into EXPECT_TRUE()
. However, this
is awkward especially when the expression has side-effects or is
expensive to evaluate.
googletest gives you three different options to solve this problem:
Using an Existing Boolean Function
If you already have a function or functor that returns
bool
(or a type that can be implicitly converted to
bool
), you can use it in a predicate assertion to
get the function arguments printed for free:
Fatal assertion | Nonfatal assertion | Verifies |
---|---|---|
ASSERT_PRED1(pred1, val1) |
EXPECT_PRED1(pred1, val1) |
pred1(val1) is true |
ASSERT_PRED2(pred2, val1, val2) |
EXPECT_PRED2(pred2, val1, val2) |
pred1(val1, val2) is true |
... |
... |
... |
In the above, predn
is an n
-ary predicate
function or functor, where val1
, val2
, …, and
valn
are its arguments. The assertion succeeds if the
predicate returns true
when applied to the given arguments,
and fails otherwise. When the assertion fails, it prints the value of
each argument. In either case, the arguments are evaluated exactly
once.
Here’s an example. Given
// Returns true if m and n have no common divisors except 1.
bool MutuallyPrime(int m, int n) { ... }
const int a = 3;
const int b = 4;
const int c = 10;
the assertion
(MutuallyPrime, a, b); EXPECT_PRED2
will succeed, while the assertion
(MutuallyPrime, b, c); EXPECT_PRED2
will fail with the message
MutuallyPrime(b, c) is false, where
b is 4
c is 10
NOTE:
- If you see a compiler error “no matching function to call” when using
ASSERT_PRED*
orEXPECT_PRED*
, please see this for how to resolve it.
Using a Function That Returns an AssertionResult
While EXPECT_PRED*()
and friends are handy for a quick
job, the syntax is not satisfactory: you have to use different macros
for different arities, and it feels more like Lisp than C++. The
::testing::AssertionResult
class solves this problem.
An AssertionResult
object represents the result of an
assertion (whether it’s a success or a failure, and an associated
message). You can create an AssertionResult
using one of
these factory functions:
namespace testing {
// Returns an AssertionResult object to indicate that an assertion has
// succeeded.
();
AssertionResult AssertionSuccess
// Returns an AssertionResult object to indicate that an assertion has
// failed.
();
AssertionResult AssertionFailure
}
You can then use the <<
operator to stream
messages to the AssertionResult
object.
To provide more readable messages in Boolean assertions
(e.g. EXPECT_TRUE()
), write a predicate function that
returns AssertionResult
instead of bool
. For
example, if you define IsEven()
as:
::testing::AssertionResult IsEven(int n) {
if ((n % 2) == 0)
return ::testing::AssertionSuccess();
else
return ::testing::AssertionFailure() << n << " is odd";
}
instead of:
bool IsEven(int n) {
return (n % 2) == 0;
}
the failed assertion EXPECT_TRUE(IsEven(Fib(4)))
will
print:
Value of: IsEven(Fib(4))
Actual: false (3 is odd)
Expected: true
instead of a more opaque
Value of: IsEven(Fib(4))
Actual: false
Expected: true
If you want informative messages in EXPECT_FALSE
and
ASSERT_FALSE
as well (one third of Boolean assertions in
the Google code base are negative ones), and are fine with making the
predicate slower in the success case, you can supply a success
message:
::testing::AssertionResult IsEven(int n) {
if ((n % 2) == 0)
return ::testing::AssertionSuccess() << n << " is even";
else
return ::testing::AssertionFailure() << n << " is odd";
}
Then the statement EXPECT_FALSE(IsEven(Fib(6)))
will
print
Value of: IsEven(Fib(6))
Actual: true (8 is even)
Expected: false
Using a Predicate-Formatter
If you find the default message generated by
(ASSERT|EXPECT)_PRED*
and
(ASSERT|EXPECT)_(TRUE|FALSE)
unsatisfactory, or some
arguments to your predicate do not support streaming to
ostream
, you can instead use the following
predicate-formatter assertions to fully customize how
the message is formatted:
Fatal assertion | Nonfatal assertion | Verifies |
---|---|---|
ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT1(pred_format1, val1); |
EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT1(pred_format1, val1); |
pred_format1(val1) is successful |
ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2(pred_format2, val1, val2); |
EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(pred_format2, val1, val2); |
pred_format2(val1, val2) is successful |
... |
... |
… |
The difference between this and the previous group of macros is that
instead of a predicate, (ASSERT|EXPECT)_PRED_FORMAT*
take a
predicate-formatter (pred_formatn
), which is a
function or functor with the signature:
::testing::AssertionResult PredicateFormattern(const char* expr1,
const char* expr2,
...
const char* exprn,
,
T1 val1,
T2 val2...
); Tn valn
where val1
, val2
, …, and valn
are the values of the predicate arguments, and expr1
,
expr2
, …, and exprn
are the corresponding
expressions as they appear in the source code. The types
T1
, T2
, …, and Tn
can be either
value types or reference types. For example, if an argument has type
Foo
, you can declare it as either Foo
or
const Foo&
, whichever is appropriate.
As an example, let’s improve the failure message in
MutuallyPrime()
, which was used with
EXPECT_PRED2()
:
// Returns the smallest prime common divisor of m and n,
// or 1 when m and n are mutually prime.
int SmallestPrimeCommonDivisor(int m, int n) { ... }
// A predicate-formatter for asserting that two integers are mutually prime.
::testing::AssertionResult AssertMutuallyPrime(const char* m_expr,
const char* n_expr,
int m,
int n) {
if (MutuallyPrime(m, n)) return ::testing::AssertionSuccess();
return ::testing::AssertionFailure() << m_expr << " and " << n_expr
<< " (" << m << " and " << n << ") are not mutually prime, "
<< "as they have a common divisor " << SmallestPrimeCommonDivisor(m, n);
}
With this predicate-formatter, we can use
(AssertMutuallyPrime, b, c); EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2
to generate the message
b and c (4 and 10) are not mutually prime, as they have a common divisor 2.
As you may have realized, many of the built-in assertions we
introduced earlier are special cases of
(EXPECT|ASSERT)_PRED_FORMAT*
. In fact, most of them are
indeed defined using (EXPECT|ASSERT)_PRED_FORMAT*
.
Floating-Point Comparison
Comparing floating-point numbers is tricky. Due to round-off errors,
it is very unlikely that two floating-points will match exactly.
Therefore, ASSERT_EQ
’s naive comparison usually doesn’t
work. And since floating-points can have a wide value range, no single
fixed error bound works. It’s better to compare by a fixed relative
error bound, except for values close to 0 due to the loss of precision
there.
In general, for floating-point comparison to make sense, the user needs to carefully choose the error bound. If they don’t want or care to, comparing in terms of Units in the Last Place (ULPs) is a good default, and googletest provides assertions to do this. Full details about ULPs are quite long; if you want to learn more, see here.
Floating-Point Macros
Fatal assertion | Nonfatal assertion | Verifies |
---|---|---|
ASSERT_FLOAT_EQ(val1, val2); |
EXPECT_FLOAT_EQ(val1, val2); |
the two float values are almost equal |
ASSERT_DOUBLE_EQ(val1, val2); |
EXPECT_DOUBLE_EQ(val1, val2); |
the two double values are almost equal |
By “almost equal” we mean the values are within 4 ULP’s from each other.
The following assertions allow you to choose the acceptable error bound:
Fatal assertion | Nonfatal assertion | Verifies |
---|---|---|
ASSERT_NEAR(val1, val2, abs_error); |
EXPECT_NEAR(val1, val2, abs_error); |
the difference between val1 and val2
doesn’t exceed the given absolute error |
Floating-Point Predicate-Format Functions
Some floating-point operations are useful, but not that often used.
In order to avoid an explosion of new macros, we provide them as
predicate-format functions that can be used in predicate assertion
macros (e.g. EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2
, etc).
(::testing::FloatLE, val1, val2);
EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2(::testing::DoubleLE, val1, val2); EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2
Verifies that val1
is less than, or almost equal to,
val2
. You can replace EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT2
in
the above table with ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT2
.
Asserting Using gMock Matchers
gMock comes with a library of matchers for validating arguments passed to mock objects. A gMock matcher is basically a predicate that knows how to describe itself. It can be used in these assertion macros:
Fatal assertion | Nonfatal assertion | Verifies |
---|---|---|
ASSERT_THAT(value, matcher); |
EXPECT_THAT(value, matcher); |
value matches matcher |
For example, StartsWith(prefix)
is a matcher that
matches a string starting with prefix
, and you can
write:
using ::testing::StartsWith;
...
// Verifies that Foo() returns a string starting with "Hello".
(Foo(), StartsWith("Hello")); EXPECT_THAT
Read this recipe in the gMock Cookbook for more details.
gMock has a rich set of matchers. You can do many things googletest cannot do alone with them. For a list of matchers gMock provides, read this. It’s easy to write your own matchers too.
gMock is bundled with googletest, so you don’t need to add any build
dependency in order to take advantage of this. Just include
"testing/base/public/gmock.h"
and you’re ready to go.
More String Assertions
(Please read the previous section first if you haven’t.)
You can use the gMock string
matchers with EXPECT_THAT()
or
ASSERT_THAT()
to do more string comparison tricks
(sub-string, prefix, suffix, regular expression, and etc). For
example,
using ::testing::HasSubstr;
using ::testing::MatchesRegex;
...
(foo_string, HasSubstr("needle"));
ASSERT_THAT(bar_string, MatchesRegex("\\w*\\d+")); EXPECT_THAT
If the string contains a well-formed HTML or XML document, you can check whether its DOM tree matches an XPath expression:
// Currently still in //template/prototemplate/testing:xpath_matcher
#include "template/prototemplate/testing/xpath_matcher.h"
using prototemplate::testing::MatchesXPath;
(html_string, MatchesXPath("//a[text()='click here']")); EXPECT_THAT
Windows HRESULT assertions
These assertions test for HRESULT
success or
failure.
Fatal assertion | Nonfatal assertion | Verifies |
---|---|---|
ASSERT_HRESULT_SUCCEEDED(expression) |
EXPECT_HRESULT_SUCCEEDED(expression) |
expression is a success HRESULT |
ASSERT_HRESULT_FAILED(expression) |
EXPECT_HRESULT_FAILED(expression) |
expression is a failure HRESULT |
The generated output contains the human-readable error message
associated with the HRESULT
code returned by
expression
.
You might use them like this:
<IShellDispatch2> shell;
CComPtr(shell.CoCreateInstance(L"Shell.Application"));
ASSERT_HRESULT_SUCCEEDED;
CComVariant empty(shell->ShellExecute(CComBSTR(url), empty, empty, empty, empty)); ASSERT_HRESULT_SUCCEEDED
Type Assertions
You can call the function
::testing::StaticAssertTypeEq<T1, T2>();
to assert that types T1
and T2
are the
same. The function does nothing if the assertion is satisfied. If the
types are different, the function call will fail to compile, and the
compiler error message will likely (depending on the compiler) show you
the actual values of T1
and T2
. This is mainly
useful inside template code.
Caveat: When used inside a member function of a
class template or a function template,
StaticAssertTypeEq<T1, T2>()
is effective only if the
function is instantiated. For example, given:
template <typename T> class Foo {
public:
void Bar() { ::testing::StaticAssertTypeEq<int, T>(); }
};
the code:
void Test1() { Foo<bool> foo; }
will not generate a compiler error, as
Foo<bool>::Bar()
is never actually instantiated.
Instead, you need:
void Test2() { Foo<bool> foo; foo.Bar(); }
to cause a compiler error.
Assertion Placement
You can use assertions in any C++ function. In particular, it doesn’t
have to be a method of the test fixture class. The one constraint is
that assertions that generate a fatal failure (FAIL*
and
ASSERT_*
) can only be used in void-returning functions.
This is a consequence of Google’s not using exceptions. By placing it in
a non-void function you’ll get a confusing compile error like
"error: void value not ignored as it ought to be"
or
"cannot initialize return object of type 'bool' with an rvalue of type 'void'"
or
"error: no viable conversion from 'void' to 'string'"
.
If you need to use fatal assertions in a function that returns
non-void, one option is to make the function return the value in an out
parameter instead. For example, you can rewrite
T2 Foo(T1 x)
to void Foo(T1 x, T2* result)
.
You need to make sure that *result
contains some sensible
value even when the function returns prematurely. As the function now
returns void
, you can use any assertion inside of it.
If changing the function’s type is not an option, you should just use
assertions that generate non-fatal failures, such as
ADD_FAILURE*
and EXPECT_*
.
NOTE: Constructors and destructors are not considered void-returning
functions, according to the C++ language specification, and so you may
not use fatal assertions in them; you’ll get a compilation error if you
try. Instead, either call abort
and crash the entire test
executable, or put the fatal assertion in a
SetUp
/TearDown
function; see constructor/destructor
vs. SetUp
/TearDown
WARNING: A fatal assertion in a helper function (private
void-returning method) called from a constructor or destructor does not
does not terminate the current test, as your intuition might suggest: it
merely returns from the constructor or destructor early, possibly
leaving your object in a partially-constructed or partially-destructed
state! You almost certainly want to abort
or use
SetUp
/TearDown
instead.
Teaching googletest How to Print Your Values
When a test assertion such as EXPECT_EQ
fails,
googletest prints the argument values to help you debug. It does this
using a user-extensible value printer.
This printer knows how to print built-in C++ types, native arrays,
STL containers, and any type that supports the <<
operator. For other types, it prints the raw bytes in the value and
hopes that you the user can figure it out.
As mentioned earlier, the printer is extensible. That means
you can teach it to do a better job at printing your particular type
than to dump the bytes. To do that, define <<
for
your type:
#include <ostream>
namespace foo {
class Bar { // We want googletest to be able to print instances of this.
...
// Create a free inline friend function.
friend std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& os, const Bar& bar) {
return os << bar.DebugString(); // whatever needed to print bar to os
}
};
// If you can't declare the function in the class it's important that the
// << operator is defined in the SAME namespace that defines Bar. C++'s look-up
// rules rely on that.
std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& os, const Bar& bar) {
return os << bar.DebugString(); // whatever needed to print bar to os
}
} // namespace foo
Sometimes, this might not be an option: your team may consider it bad
style to have a <<
operator for Bar
, or
Bar
may already have a <<
operator that
doesn’t do what you want (and you cannot change it). If so, you can
instead define a PrintTo()
function like this:
#include <ostream>
namespace foo {
class Bar {
...
friend void PrintTo(const Bar& bar, std::ostream* os) {
*os << bar.DebugString(); // whatever needed to print bar to os
}
};
// If you can't declare the function in the class it's important that PrintTo()
// is defined in the SAME namespace that defines Bar. C++'s look-up rules rely
// on that.
void PrintTo(const Bar& bar, std::ostream* os) {
*os << bar.DebugString(); // whatever needed to print bar to os
}
} // namespace foo
If you have defined both <<
and
PrintTo()
, the latter will be used when googletest is
concerned. This allows you to customize how the value appears in
googletest’s output without affecting code that relies on the behavior
of its <<
operator.
If you want to print a value x
using googletest’s value
printer yourself, just call ::testing::PrintToString(x)
,
which returns an std::string
:
<pair<Bar, int> > bar_ints = GetBarIntVector();
vector
(IsCorrectBarIntVector(bar_ints))
EXPECT_TRUE<< "bar_ints = " << ::testing::PrintToString(bar_ints);
Death Tests
In many applications, there are assertions that can cause application failure if a condition is not met. These sanity checks, which ensure that the program is in a known good state, are there to fail at the earliest possible time after some program state is corrupted. If the assertion checks the wrong condition, then the program may proceed in an erroneous state, which could lead to memory corruption, security holes, or worse. Hence it is vitally important to test that such assertion statements work as expected.
Since these precondition checks cause the processes to die, we call such tests death tests. More generally, any test that checks that a program terminates (except by throwing an exception) in an expected fashion is also a death test.
Note that if a piece of code throws an exception, we don’t consider it “death” for the purpose of death tests, as the caller of the code could catch the exception and avoid the crash. If you want to verify exceptions thrown by your code, see Exception Assertions.
If you want to test EXPECT_*()/ASSERT_*()
failures in
your test code, see Catching Failures
How to Write a Death Test
googletest has the following macros to support death tests:
Fatal assertion | Nonfatal assertion | Verifies |
---|---|---|
ASSERT_DEATH(statement, matcher); |
EXPECT_DEATH(statement, matcher); |
statement crashes with the given error |
ASSERT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED(statement, matcher); |
EXPECT_DEATH_IF_SUPPORTED(statement, matcher); |
if death tests are supported, verifies that statement
crashes with the given error; otherwise verifies nothing |
ASSERT_EXIT(statement, predicate, matcher); |
EXPECT_EXIT(statement, predicate, matcher); |
statement exits with the given error, and its exit code
matches predicate |
where statement
is a statement that is expected to cause
the process to die, predicate
is a function or function
object that evaluates an integer exit status, and matcher
is either a GMock matcher matching a const std::string&
or a (Perl) regular expression - either of which is matched against the
stderr output of statement
. For legacy reasons, a bare
string (i.e. with no matcher) is interpreted as
ContainsRegex(str)
, not
Eq(str)
. Note that statement
can be any
valid statement (including compound statement) and doesn’t
have to be an expression.
As usual, the ASSERT
variants abort the current test
function, while the EXPECT
variants do not.
NOTE: We use the word “crash” here to mean that the process terminates with a non-zero exit status code. There are two possibilities: either the process has called
exit()
or_exit()
with a non-zero value, or it may be killed by a signal.This means that if
*statement*
terminates the process with a 0 exit code, it is not considered a crash byEXPECT_DEATH
. UseEXPECT_EXIT
instead if this is the case, or if you want to restrict the exit code more precisely.
A predicate here must accept an int
and return a
bool
. The death test succeeds only if the predicate returns
true
. googletest defines a few predicates that handle the
most common cases:
::testing::ExitedWithCode(exit_code)
This expression is true
if the program exited normally
with the given exit code.
::testing::KilledBySignal(signal_number) // Not available on Windows.
This expression is true
if the program was killed by the
given signal.
The *_DEATH
macros are convenient wrappers for
*_EXIT
that use a predicate that verifies the process’ exit
code is non-zero.
Note that a death test only cares about three things:
- does
statement
abort or exit the process? - (in the case of
ASSERT_EXIT
andEXPECT_EXIT
) does the exit status satisfypredicate
? Or (in the case ofASSERT_DEATH
andEXPECT_DEATH
) is the exit status non-zero? And - does the stderr output match
regex
?
In particular, if statement
generates an
ASSERT_*
or EXPECT_*
failure, it will
not cause the death test to fail, as googletest
assertions don’t abort the process.
To write a death test, simply use one of the above macros inside your test function. For example,
(MyDeathTest, Foo) {
TEST// This death test uses a compound statement.
({
ASSERT_DEATHint n = 5;
(&n);
Foo}, "Error on line .* of Foo()");
}
(MyDeathTest, NormalExit) {
TEST(NormalExit(), ::testing::ExitedWithCode(0), "Success");
EXPECT_EXIT}
(MyDeathTest, KillMyself) {
TEST(KillMyself(), ::testing::KilledBySignal(SIGKILL),
EXPECT_EXIT"Sending myself unblockable signal");
}
verifies that:
- calling
Foo(5)
causes the process to die with the given error message, - calling
NormalExit()
causes the process to print"Success"
to stderr and exit with exit code 0, and - calling
KillMyself()
kills the process with signalSIGKILL
.
The test function body may contain other assertions and statements as well, if necessary.
Death Test Naming
IMPORTANT: We strongly recommend you to follow the convention of
naming your test suite (not test)
*DeathTest
when it contains a death test, as demonstrated
in the above example. The Death Tests
And Threads section below explains why.
If a test fixture class is shared by normal tests and death tests,
you can use using
or typedef
to introduce an
alias for the fixture class and avoid duplicating its code:
class FooTest : public ::testing::Test { ... };
using FooDeathTest = FooTest;
(FooTest, DoesThis) {
TEST_F// normal test
}
(FooDeathTest, DoesThat) {
TEST_F// death test
}
Regular Expression Syntax
On POSIX systems (e.g. Linux, Cygwin, and Mac), googletest uses the POSIX extended regular expression syntax. To learn about this syntax, you may want to read this Wikipedia entry.
On Windows, googletest uses its own simple regular expression
implementation. It lacks many features. For example, we don’t support
union ("x|y"
), grouping ("(xy)"
), brackets
("[xy]"
), and repetition count ("x{5,7}"
),
among others. Below is what we do support (A
denotes a
literal character, period (.
), or a single \\
escape sequence; x
and y
denote regular
expressions.):
Expression | Meaning |
---|---|
c |
matches any literal character c |
\\d |
matches any decimal digit |
\\D |
matches any character that’s not a decimal digit |
\\f |
matches \f |
\\n |
matches \n |
\\r |
matches \r |
\\s |
matches any ASCII whitespace, including \n |
\\S |
matches any character that’s not a whitespace |
\\t |
matches \t |
\\v |
matches \v |
\\w |
matches any letter, _ , or decimal digit |
\\W |
matches any character that \\w doesn’t match |
\\c |
matches any literal character c , which must be a
punctuation |
. |
matches any single character except \n |
A? |
matches 0 or 1 occurrences of A |
A* |
matches 0 or many occurrences of A |
A+ |
matches 1 or many occurrences of A |
^ |
matches the beginning of a string (not that of each line) |
$ |
matches the end of a string (not that of each line) |
xy |
matches x followed by y |
To help you determine which capability is available on your system,
googletest defines macros to govern which regular expression it is
using. The macros are: GTEST_USES_SIMPLE_RE=1
or
GTEST_USES_POSIX_RE=1
. If you want your death tests to work
in all cases, you can either #if
on these macros or use the
more limited syntax only.
How It Works
Under the hood, ASSERT_EXIT()
spawns a new process and
executes the death test statement in that process. The details of how
precisely that happens depend on the platform and the variable
::testing::GTEST_FLAG(death_test_style) (which is initialized from the
command-line flag --gtest_death_test_style
).
- On POSIX systems,
fork()
(orclone()
on Linux) is used to spawn the child, after which:- If the variable’s value is
"fast"
, the death test statement is immediately executed. - If the variable’s value is
"threadsafe"
, the child process re-executes the unit test binary just as it was originally invoked, but with some extra flags to cause just the single death test under consideration to be run.
- If the variable’s value is
- On Windows, the child is spawned using the
CreateProcess()
API, and re-executes the binary to cause just the single death test under consideration to be run - much like thethreadsafe
mode on POSIX.
Other values for the variable are illegal and will cause the death test to fail. Currently, the flag’s default value is “fast”
- the child’s exit status satisfies the predicate, and
- the child’s stderr matches the regular expression.
If the death test statement runs to completion without dying, the child process will nonetheless terminate, and the assertion fails.
Death Tests And Threads
The reason for the two death test styles has to do with thread safety. Due to well-known problems with forking in the presence of threads, death tests should be run in a single-threaded context. Sometimes, however, it isn’t feasible to arrange that kind of environment. For example, statically-initialized modules may start threads before main is ever reached. Once threads have been created, it may be difficult or impossible to clean them up.
googletest has three features intended to raise awareness of threading issues.
- A warning is emitted if multiple threads are running when a death test is encountered.
- Test suites with a name ending in “DeathTest” are run before all other tests.
- It uses
clone()
instead offork()
to spawn the child process on Linux (clone()
is not available on Cygwin and Mac), asfork()
is more likely to cause the child to hang when the parent process has multiple threads.
It’s perfectly fine to create threads inside a death test statement; they are executed in a separate process and cannot affect the parent.
Death Test Styles
The “threadsafe” death test style was introduced in order to help mitigate the risks of testing in a possibly multithreaded environment. It trades increased test execution time (potentially dramatically so) for improved thread safety.
The automated testing framework does not set the style flag. You can choose a particular style of death tests by setting the flag programmatically:
::FLAGS_gtest_death_test_style="threadsafe" testing
You can do this in main()
to set the style for all death
tests in the binary, or in individual tests. Recall that flags are saved
before running each test and restored afterwards, so you need not do
that yourself. For example:
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
(argv[0], &argc, &argv, true);
InitGoogle::testing::FLAGS_gtest_death_test_style = "fast";
return RUN_ALL_TESTS();
}
(MyDeathTest, TestOne) {
TEST::testing::FLAGS_gtest_death_test_style = "threadsafe";
// This test is run in the "threadsafe" style:
(ThisShouldDie(), "");
ASSERT_DEATH}
(MyDeathTest, TestTwo) {
TEST// This test is run in the "fast" style:
(ThisShouldDie(), "");
ASSERT_DEATH}
Caveats
The statement
argument of ASSERT_EXIT()
can
be any valid C++ statement. If it leaves the current function via a
return
statement or by throwing an exception, the death
test is considered to have failed. Some googletest macros may return
from the current function (e.g. ASSERT_TRUE()
), so be sure
to avoid them in statement
.
Since statement
runs in the child process, any in-memory
side effect (e.g. modifying a variable, releasing memory, etc) it causes
will not be observable in the parent process. In particular, if
you release memory in a death test, your program will fail the heap
check as the parent process will never see the memory reclaimed. To
solve this problem, you can
- try not to free memory in a death test;
- free the memory again in the parent process; or
- do not use the heap checker in your program.
Due to an implementation detail, you cannot place multiple death test assertions on the same line; otherwise, compilation will fail with an unobvious error message.
Despite the improved thread safety afforded by the “threadsafe” style
of death test, thread problems such as deadlock are still possible in
the presence of handlers registered with
pthread_atfork(3)
.
Using Assertions in Sub-routines
Adding Traces to Assertions
If a test sub-routine is called from several places, when an
assertion inside it fails, it can be hard to tell which invocation of
the sub-routine the failure is from. You can alleviate this problem
using extra logging or custom failure messages, but that usually
clutters up your tests. A better solution is to use the
SCOPED_TRACE
macro or the ScopedTrace
utility:
(message);
SCOPED_TRACE("file_path", line_number, message); ScopedTrace trace
where message
can be anything streamable to
std::ostream
. SCOPED_TRACE
macro will cause
the current file name, line number, and the given message to be added in
every failure message. ScopedTrace
accepts explicit file
name and line number in arguments, which is useful for writing test
helpers. The effect will be undone when the control leaves the current
lexical scope.
For example,
10: void Sub1(int n) {
11: EXPECT_EQ(Bar(n), 1);
12: EXPECT_EQ(Bar(n + 1), 2);
13: }
14:
15: TEST(FooTest, Bar) {
16: {
17: SCOPED_TRACE("A"); // This trace point will be included in
18: // every failure in this scope.
19: Sub1(1);
20: }
21: // Now it won't.
22: Sub1(9);
23: }
could result in messages like these:
path/to/foo_test.cc:11: Failure
Value of: Bar(n)
Expected: 1
Actual: 2
Trace:
path/to/foo_test.cc:17: A
path/to/foo_test.cc:12: Failure
Value of: Bar(n + 1)
Expected: 2
Actual: 3
Without the trace, it would’ve been difficult to know which
invocation of Sub1()
the two failures come from
respectively. (You could add an extra message to each assertion in
Sub1()
to indicate the value of n
, but that’s
tedious.)
Some tips on using SCOPED_TRACE
:
- With a suitable message, it’s often enough to use
SCOPED_TRACE
at the beginning of a sub-routine, instead of at each call site. - When calling sub-routines inside a loop, make the loop iterator part
of the message in
SCOPED_TRACE
such that you can know which iteration the failure is from. - Sometimes the line number of the trace point is enough for
identifying the particular invocation of a sub-routine. In this case,
you don’t have to choose a unique message for
SCOPED_TRACE
. You can simply use""
. - You can use
SCOPED_TRACE
in an inner scope when there is one in the outer scope. In this case, all active trace points will be included in the failure messages, in reverse order they are encountered. - The trace dump is clickable in Emacs - hit
return
on a line number and you’ll be taken to that line in the source file!
Propagating Fatal Failures
A common pitfall when using ASSERT_*
and
FAIL*
is not understanding that when they fail they only
abort the current function, not the entire test. For example,
the following test will segfault:
void Subroutine() {
// Generates a fatal failure and aborts the current function.
(1, 2);
ASSERT_EQ
// The following won't be executed.
...
}
(FooTest, Bar) {
TEST(); // The intended behavior is for the fatal failure
Subroutine// in Subroutine() to abort the entire test.
// The actual behavior: the function goes on after Subroutine() returns.
int* p = NULL;
*p = 3; // Segfault!
}
To alleviate this, googletest provides three different solutions. You
could use either exceptions, the
(ASSERT|EXPECT)_NO_FATAL_FAILURE
assertions or the
HasFatalFailure()
function. They are described in the
following two subsections.
Asserting on Subroutines with an exception
The following code can turn ASSERT-failure into an exception:
class ThrowListener : public testing::EmptyTestEventListener {
void OnTestPartResult(const testing::TestPartResult& result) override {
if (result.type() == testing::TestPartResult::kFatalFailure) {
throw testing::AssertionException(result);
}
}
};
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
...
::UnitTest::GetInstance()->listeners().Append(new ThrowListener);
testingreturn RUN_ALL_TESTS();
}
This listener should be added after other listeners if you have any,
otherwise they won’t see failed OnTestPartResult
.
Asserting on Subroutines
As shown above, if your test calls a subroutine that has an
ASSERT_*
failure in it, the test will continue after the
subroutine returns. This may not be what you want.
Often people want fatal failures to propagate like exceptions. For that googletest offers the following macros:
Fatal assertion | Nonfatal assertion | Verifies |
---|---|---|
ASSERT_NO_FATAL_FAILURE(statement); |
EXPECT_NO_FATAL_FAILURE(statement); |
statement doesn’t generate any new fatal failures in
the current thread. |
Only failures in the thread that executes the assertion are checked
to determine the result of this type of assertions. If
statement
creates new threads, failures in these threads
are ignored.
Examples:
(Foo());
ASSERT_NO_FATAL_FAILURE
int i;
({
EXPECT_NO_FATAL_FAILURE= Bar();
i });
Assertions from multiple threads are currently not supported on Windows.
Checking for Failures in the Current Test
HasFatalFailure()
in the ::testing::Test
class returns true
if an assertion in the current test has
suffered a fatal failure. This allows functions to catch fatal failures
in a sub-routine and return early.
class Test {
public:
...
static bool HasFatalFailure();
};
The typical usage, which basically simulates the behavior of a thrown exception, is:
(FooTest, Bar) {
TEST();
Subroutine// Aborts if Subroutine() had a fatal failure.
if (HasFatalFailure()) return;
// The following won't be executed.
...
}
If HasFatalFailure()
is used outside of
TEST()
, TEST_F()
, or a test fixture, you
must add the ::testing::Test::
prefix, as in:
if (::testing::Test::HasFatalFailure()) return;
Similarly, HasNonfatalFailure()
returns
true
if the current test has at least one non-fatal
failure, and HasFailure()
returns true
if the
current test has at least one failure of either kind.
Logging Additional Information
In your test code, you can call
RecordProperty("key", value)
to log additional information,
where value
can be either a string or an int
.
The last value recorded for a key will be emitted to the XML output if you specify one. For
example, the test
(WidgetUsageTest, MinAndMaxWidgets) {
TEST_F("MaximumWidgets", ComputeMaxUsage());
RecordProperty("MinimumWidgets", ComputeMinUsage());
RecordProperty}
will output XML like this:
...testcase name="MinAndMaxWidgets" status="run" time="0.006" classname="WidgetUsageTest" MaximumWidgets="12" MinimumWidgets="9" />
< ...
NOTE:
RecordProperty()
is a static member of theTest
class. Therefore it needs to be prefixed with::testing::Test::
if used outside of theTEST
body and the test fixture class.*key*
must be a valid XML attribute name, and cannot conflict with the ones already used by googletest (name
,status
,time
,classname
,type_param
, andvalue_param
).- Calling
RecordProperty()
outside of the lifespan of a test is allowed. If it’s called outside of a test but between a test suite’sSetUpTestSuite()
andTearDownTestSuite()
methods, it will be attributed to the XML element for the test suite. If it’s called outside of all test suites (e.g. in a test environment), it will be attributed to the top-level XML element.
Sharing Resources Between Tests in the Same Test Suite
googletest creates a new test fixture object for each test in order to make tests independent and easier to debug. However, sometimes tests use resources that are expensive to set up, making the one-copy-per-test model prohibitively expensive.
If the tests don’t change the resource, there’s no harm in their sharing a single resource copy. So, in addition to per-test set-up/tear-down, googletest also supports per-test-suite set-up/tear-down. To use it:
- In your test fixture class (say
FooTest
), declare asstatic
some member variables to hold the shared resources. - Outside your test fixture class (typically just below it), define those member variables, optionally giving them initial values.
- In the same test fixture class, define a
static void SetUpTestSuite()
function (remember not to spell it asSetupTestSuite
with a smallu
!) to set up the shared resources and astatic void TearDownTestSuite()
function to tear them down.
That’s it! googletest automatically calls
SetUpTestSuite()
before running the first test in
the FooTest
test suite (i.e. before creating the first
FooTest
object), and calls TearDownTestSuite()
after running the last test in it (i.e. after deleting the last
FooTest
object). In between, the tests can use the shared
resources.
Remember that the test order is undefined, so your code can’t depend on a test preceding or following another. Also, the tests must either not modify the state of any shared resource, or, if they do modify the state, they must restore the state to its original value before passing control to the next test.
Here’s an example of per-test-suite set-up and tear-down:
class FooTest : public ::testing::Test {
protected:
// Per-test-suite set-up.
// Called before the first test in this test suite.
// Can be omitted if not needed.
static void SetUpTestSuite() {
shared_resource_ = new ...;
}
// Per-test-suite tear-down.
// Called after the last test in this test suite.
// Can be omitted if not needed.
static void TearDownTestSuite() {
delete shared_resource_;
shared_resource_ = NULL;
}
// You can define per-test set-up logic as usual.
virtual void SetUp() { ... }
// You can define per-test tear-down logic as usual.
virtual void TearDown() { ... }
// Some expensive resource shared by all tests.
static T* shared_resource_;
};
* FooTest::shared_resource_ = NULL;
T
(FooTest, Test1) {
TEST_F... you can refer to shared_resource_ here ...
}
(FooTest, Test2) {
TEST_F... you can refer to shared_resource_ here ...
}
NOTE: Though the above code declares SetUpTestSuite()
protected, it may sometimes be necessary to declare it public, such as
when using it with TEST_P
.
Global Set-Up and Tear-Down
Just as you can do set-up and tear-down at the test level and the test suite level, you can also do it at the test program level. Here’s how.
First, you subclass the ::testing::Environment
class to
define a test environment, which knows how to set-up and tear-down:
class Environment : public ::testing::Environment {
public:
virtual ~Environment() {}
// Override this to define how to set up the environment.
void SetUp() override {}
// Override this to define how to tear down the environment.
void TearDown() override {}
};
Then, you register an instance of your environment class with
googletest by calling the
::testing::AddGlobalTestEnvironment()
function:
* AddGlobalTestEnvironment(Environment* env); Environment
Now, when RUN_ALL_TESTS()
is called, it first calls the
SetUp()
method of each environment object, then runs the
tests if none of the environments reported fatal failures and
GTEST_SKIP()
was not called. RUN_ALL_TESTS()
always calls TearDown()
with each environment object,
regardless of whether or not the tests were run.
It’s OK to register multiple environment objects. In this suite,
their SetUp()
will be called in the order they are
registered, and their TearDown()
will be called in the
reverse order.
Note that googletest takes ownership of the registered environment objects. Therefore do not delete them by yourself.
You should call AddGlobalTestEnvironment()
before
RUN_ALL_TESTS()
is called, probably in main()
.
If you use gtest_main
, you need to call this before
main()
starts for it to take effect. One way to do this is
to define a global variable like this:
::testing::Environment* const foo_env =
::testing::AddGlobalTestEnvironment(new FooEnvironment);
However, we strongly recommend you to write your own
main()
and call AddGlobalTestEnvironment()
there, as relying on initialization of global variables makes the code
harder to read and may cause problems when you register multiple
environments from different translation units and the environments have
dependencies among them (remember that the compiler doesn’t guarantee
the order in which global variables from different translation units are
initialized).
Value-Parameterized Tests
Value-parameterized tests allow you to test your code with different parameters without writing multiple copies of the same test. This is useful in a number of situations, for example:
- You have a piece of code whose behavior is affected by one or more command-line flags. You want to make sure your code performs correctly for various values of those flags.
- You want to test different implementations of an OO interface.
- You want to test your code over various inputs (a.k.a. data-driven testing). This feature is easy to abuse, so please exercise your good sense when doing it!
How to Write Value-Parameterized Tests
To write value-parameterized tests, first you should define a fixture
class. It must be derived from both testing::Test
and
testing::WithParamInterface<T>
(the latter is a pure
interface), where T
is the type of your parameter values.
For convenience, you can just derive the fixture class from
testing::TestWithParam<T>
, which itself is derived
from both testing::Test
and
testing::WithParamInterface<T>
. T
can be
any copyable type. If it’s a raw pointer, you are responsible for
managing the lifespan of the pointed values.
NOTE: If your test fixture defines SetUpTestSuite()
or
TearDownTestSuite()
they must be declared
public rather than protected in order
to use TEST_P
.
class FooTest :
public testing::TestWithParam<const char*> {
// You can implement all the usual fixture class members here.
// To access the test parameter, call GetParam() from class
// TestWithParam<T>.
};
// Or, when you want to add parameters to a pre-existing fixture class:
class BaseTest : public testing::Test {
...
};
class BarTest : public BaseTest,
public testing::WithParamInterface<const char*> {
...
};
Then, use the TEST_P
macro to define as many test
patterns using this fixture as you want. The _P
suffix is
for “parameterized” or “pattern”, whichever you prefer to think.
(FooTest, DoesBlah) {
TEST_P// Inside a test, access the test parameter with the GetParam() method
// of the TestWithParam<T> class:
(foo.Blah(GetParam()));
EXPECT_TRUE...
}
(FooTest, HasBlahBlah) {
TEST_P...
}
Finally, you can use INSTANTIATE_TEST_SUITE_P
to
instantiate the test suite with any set of parameters you want.
googletest defines a number of functions for generating test parameters.
They return what we call (surprise!) parameter generators. Here
is a summary of them, which are all in the testing
namespace:
Parameter Generator | Behavior |
---|---|
Range(begin, end [, step]) |
Yields values
{begin, begin+step, begin+step+step, ...} . The values do
not include end . step defaults to 1. |
Values(v1, v2, ..., vN) |
Yields values {v1, v2, ..., vN} . |
ValuesIn(container) and
ValuesIn(begin,end) |
Yields values from a C-style array, an STL-style container, or an
iterator range [begin, end) |
Bool() |
Yields sequence {false, true} . |
Combine(g1, g2, ..., gN) |
Yields all combinations (Cartesian product) as std::tuples of the
values generated by the N generators. |
For more details, see the comments at the definitions of these functions.
The following statement will instantiate tests from the
FooTest
test suite each with parameter values
"meeny"
, "miny"
, and "moe"
.
(InstantiationName,
INSTANTIATE_TEST_SUITE_P,
FooTest::Values("meeny", "miny", "moe")); testing
NOTE: The code above must be placed at global or namespace scope, not at function scope.
NOTE: Don’t forget this step! If you do your test will silently pass, but none of its suites will ever run!
To distinguish different instances of the pattern (yes, you can
instantiate it more than once), the first argument to
INSTANTIATE_TEST_SUITE_P
is a prefix that will be added to
the actual test suite name. Remember to pick unique prefixes for
different instantiations. The tests from the instantiation above will
have these names:
InstantiationName/FooTest.DoesBlah/0
for"meeny"
InstantiationName/FooTest.DoesBlah/1
for"miny"
InstantiationName/FooTest.DoesBlah/2
for"moe"
InstantiationName/FooTest.HasBlahBlah/0
for"meeny"
InstantiationName/FooTest.HasBlahBlah/1
for"miny"
InstantiationName/FooTest.HasBlahBlah/2
for"moe"
You can use these names in --gtest_filter
.
This statement will instantiate all tests from FooTest
again, each with parameter values "cat"
and
"dog"
:
const char* pets[] = {"cat", "dog"};
(AnotherInstantiationName, FooTest,
INSTANTIATE_TEST_SUITE_P::ValuesIn(pets)); testing
The tests from the instantiation above will have these names:
AnotherInstantiationName/FooTest.DoesBlah/0
for"cat"
AnotherInstantiationName/FooTest.DoesBlah/1
for"dog"
AnotherInstantiationName/FooTest.HasBlahBlah/0
for"cat"
AnotherInstantiationName/FooTest.HasBlahBlah/1
for"dog"
Please note that INSTANTIATE_TEST_SUITE_P
will
instantiate all tests in the given test suite, whether their
definitions come before or after the
INSTANTIATE_TEST_SUITE_P
statement.
You can see sample7_unittest.cc and sample8_unittest.cc for more examples.
Creating Value-Parameterized Abstract Tests
In the above, we define and instantiate FooTest
in the
same source file. Sometimes you may want to define
value-parameterized tests in a library and let other people instantiate
them later. This pattern is known as abstract tests. As an
example of its application, when you are designing an interface you can
write a standard suite of abstract tests (perhaps using a factory
function as the test parameter) that all implementations of the
interface are expected to pass. When someone implements the interface,
they can instantiate your suite to get all the interface-conformance
tests for free.
To define abstract tests, you should organize your code like this:
- Put the definition of the parameterized test fixture class
(e.g.
FooTest
) in a header file, sayfoo_param_test.h
. Think of this as declaring your abstract tests. - Put the
TEST_P
definitions infoo_param_test.cc
, which includesfoo_param_test.h
. Think of this as implementing your abstract tests.
Once they are defined, you can instantiate them by including
foo_param_test.h
, invoking
INSTANTIATE_TEST_SUITE_P()
, and depending on the library
target that contains foo_param_test.cc
. You can instantiate
the same abstract test suite multiple times, possibly in different
source files.
Specifying Names for Value-Parameterized Test Parameters
The optional last argument to INSTANTIATE_TEST_SUITE_P()
allows the user to specify a function or functor that generates custom
test name suffixes based on the test parameters. The function should
accept one argument of type
testing::TestParamInfo<class ParamType>
, and return
std::string
.
testing::PrintToStringParamName
is a builtin test suffix
generator that returns the value of
testing::PrintToString(GetParam())
. It does not work for
std::string
or C strings.
NOTE: test names must be non-empty, unique, and may only contain ASCII alphanumeric characters. In particular, they should not contain underscores
class MyTestSuite : public testing::TestWithParam<int> {};
(MyTestSuite, MyTest)
TEST_P{
std::cout << "Example Test Param: " << GetParam() << std::endl;
}
(MyGroup, MyTestSuite, testing::Range(0, 10),
INSTANTIATE_TEST_SUITE_P::PrintToStringParamName()); testing
Providing a custom functor allows for more control over test parameter name generation, especially for types where the automatic conversion does not generate helpful parameter names (e.g. strings as demonstrated above). The following example illustrates this for multiple parameters, an enumeration type and a string, and also demonstrates how to combine generators. It uses a lambda for conciseness:
enum class MyType { MY_FOO = 0, MY_BAR = 1 };
class MyTestSuite : public testing::TestWithParam<std::tuple<MyType, string>> {
};
(
INSTANTIATE_TEST_SUITE_P, MyTestSuite,
MyGroup::Combine(
testing::Values(MyType::VALUE_0, MyType::VALUE_1),
testing::ValuesIn("", "")),
testing[](const testing::TestParamInfo<MyTestSuite::ParamType>& info) {
= absl::StrCat(
string name std::get<0>(info.param) == MY_FOO ? "Foo" : "Bar", "_",
std::get<1>(info.param));
::c_replace_if(name, [](char c) { return !std::isalnum(c); }, '_');
abslreturn name;
});
Typed Tests
Suppose you have multiple implementations of the same interface and want to make sure that all of them satisfy some common requirements. Or, you may have defined several types that are supposed to conform to the same “concept” and you want to verify it. In both cases, you want the same test logic repeated for different types.
While you can write one TEST
or TEST_F
for
each type you want to test (and you may even factor the test logic into
a function template that you invoke from the TEST
), it’s
tedious and doesn’t scale: if you want m
tests over
n
types, you’ll end up writing m*n
TEST
s.
Typed tests allow you to repeat the same test logic over a list of types. You only need to write the test logic once, although you must know the type list when writing typed tests. Here’s how you do it:
First, define a fixture class template. It should be parameterized by
a type. Remember to derive it from ::testing::Test
:
template <typename T>
class FooTest : public ::testing::Test {
public:
...
typedef std::list<T> List;
static T shared_;
value_;
T };
Next, associate a list of types with the test suite, which will be repeated for each type in the list:
using MyTypes = ::testing::Types<char, int, unsigned int>;
(FooTest, MyTypes); TYPED_TEST_SUITE
The type alias (using
or typedef
) is
necessary for the TYPED_TEST_SUITE
macro to parse
correctly. Otherwise the compiler will think that each comma in the type
list introduces a new macro argument.
Then, use TYPED_TEST()
instead of TEST_F()
to define a typed test for this test suite. You can repeat this as many
times as you want:
(FooTest, DoesBlah) {
TYPED_TEST// Inside a test, refer to the special name TypeParam to get the type
// parameter. Since we are inside a derived class template, C++ requires
// us to visit the members of FooTest via 'this'.
= this->value_;
TypeParam n
// To visit static members of the fixture, add the 'TestFixture::'
// prefix.
+= TestFixture::shared_;
n
// To refer to typedefs in the fixture, add the 'typename TestFixture::'
// prefix. The 'typename' is required to satisfy the compiler.
typename TestFixture::List values;
.push_back(n);
values...
}
(FooTest, HasPropertyA) { ... } TYPED_TEST
You can see sample6_unittest.cc for a complete example.
Type-Parameterized Tests
Type-parameterized tests are like typed tests, except that they don’t require you to know the list of types ahead of time. Instead, you can define the test logic first and instantiate it with different type lists later. You can even instantiate it more than once in the same program.
If you are designing an interface or concept, you can define a suite of type-parameterized tests to verify properties that any valid implementation of the interface/concept should have. Then, the author of each implementation can just instantiate the test suite with their type to verify that it conforms to the requirements, without having to write similar tests repeatedly. Here’s an example:
First, define a fixture class template, as we did with typed tests:
template <typename T>
class FooTest : public ::testing::Test {
...
};
Next, declare that you will define a type-parameterized test suite:
(FooTest); TYPED_TEST_SUITE_P
Then, use TYPED_TEST_P()
to define a type-parameterized
test. You can repeat this as many times as you want:
(FooTest, DoesBlah) {
TYPED_TEST_P// Inside a test, refer to TypeParam to get the type parameter.
= 0;
TypeParam n ...
}
(FooTest, HasPropertyA) { ... } TYPED_TEST_P
Now the tricky part: you need to register all test patterns using the
REGISTER_TYPED_TEST_SUITE_P
macro before you can
instantiate them. The first argument of the macro is the test suite
name; the rest are the names of the tests in this test suite:
(FooTest,
REGISTER_TYPED_TEST_SUITE_P, HasPropertyA); DoesBlah
Finally, you are free to instantiate the pattern with the types you
want. If you put the above code in a header file, you can
#include
it in multiple C++ source files and instantiate it
multiple times.
typedef ::testing::Types<char, int, unsigned int> MyTypes;
(My, FooTest, MyTypes); INSTANTIATE_TYPED_TEST_SUITE_P
To distinguish different instances of the pattern, the first argument
to the INSTANTIATE_TYPED_TEST_SUITE_P
macro is a prefix
that will be added to the actual test suite name. Remember to pick
unique prefixes for different instances.
In the special case where the type list contains only one type, you
can write that type directly without
::testing::Types<...>
, like this:
(My, FooTest, int); INSTANTIATE_TYPED_TEST_SUITE_P
You can see sample6_unittest.cc for a complete example.
Testing Private Code
If you change your software’s internal implementation, your tests should not break as long as the change is not observable by users. Therefore, per the black-box testing principle, most of the time you should test your code through its public interfaces.
If you still find yourself needing to test internal implementation code, consider if there’s a better design. The desire to test internal implementation is often a sign that the class is doing too much. Consider extracting an implementation class, and testing it. Then use that implementation class in the original class.
If you absolutely have to test non-public interface code though, you can. There are two cases to consider:
- Static functions ( not the same as static member functions!) or unnamed namespaces, and
- Private or protected class members
To test them, we use the following special techniques:
Both static functions and definitions/declarations in an unnamed namespace are only visible within the same translation unit. To test them, you can
#include
the entire.cc
file being tested in your*_test.cc
file. (#including.cc
files is not a good way to reuse code - you should not do this in production code!)However, a better approach is to move the private code into the
foo::internal
namespace, wherefoo
is the namespace your project normally uses, and put the private declarations in a*-internal.h
file. Your production.cc
files and your tests are allowed to include this internal header, but your clients are not. This way, you can fully test your internal implementation without leaking it to your clients.Private class members are only accessible from within the class or by friends. To access a class’ private members, you can declare your test fixture as a friend to the class and define accessors in your fixture. Tests using the fixture can then access the private members of your production class via the accessors in the fixture. Note that even though your fixture is a friend to your production class, your tests are not automatically friends to it, as they are technically defined in sub-classes of the fixture.
Another way to test private members is to refactor them into an implementation class, which is then declared in a
*-internal.h
file. Your clients aren’t allowed to include this header but your tests can. Such is called the Pimpl (Private Implementation) idiom.Or, you can declare an individual test as a friend of your class by adding this line in the class body:
(TestSuiteName, TestName); FRIEND_TEST
For example,
// foo.h class Foo { ... private: (FooTest, BarReturnsZeroOnNull); FRIEND_TEST int Bar(void* x); }; // foo_test.cc ... (FooTest, BarReturnsZeroOnNull) { TEST; Foo foo(foo.Bar(NULL), 0); // Uses Foo's private member Bar(). EXPECT_EQ}
Pay special attention when your class is defined in a namespace, as you should define your test fixtures and tests in the same namespace if you want them to be friends of your class. For example, if the code to be tested looks like:
namespace my_namespace { class Foo { friend class FooTest; (FooTest, Bar); FRIEND_TEST(FooTest, Baz); FRIEND_TEST... definition of the class Foo ... }; } // namespace my_namespace
Your test code should be something like:
namespace my_namespace { class FooTest : public ::testing::Test { protected: ... }; (FooTest, Bar) { ... } TEST_F(FooTest, Baz) { ... } TEST_F } // namespace my_namespace
“Catching” Failures
If you are building a testing utility on top of googletest, you’ll want to test your utility. What framework would you use to test it? googletest, of course.
The challenge is to verify that your testing utility reports failures correctly. In frameworks that report a failure by throwing an exception, you could catch the exception and assert on it. But googletest doesn’t use exceptions, so how do we test that a piece of code generates an expected failure?
gunit-spi.h contains some constructs to do this. After #including this header, you can use
(statement, substring); EXPECT_FATAL_FAILURE
to assert that statement
generates a fatal
(e.g. ASSERT_*
) failure in the current thread whose message
contains the given substring
, or use
(statement, substring); EXPECT_NONFATAL_FAILURE
if you are expecting a non-fatal (e.g. EXPECT_*
)
failure.
Only failures in the current thread are checked to determine the
result of this type of expectations. If statement
creates
new threads, failures in these threads are also ignored. If you want to
catch failures in other threads as well, use one of the following macros
instead:
(statement, substring);
EXPECT_FATAL_FAILURE_ON_ALL_THREADS(statement, substring); EXPECT_NONFATAL_FAILURE_ON_ALL_THREADS
NOTE: Assertions from multiple threads are currently not supported on Windows.
For technical reasons, there are some caveats:
You cannot stream a failure message to either macro.
statement
inEXPECT_FATAL_FAILURE{_ON_ALL_THREADS}()
cannot reference local non-static variables or non-static members ofthis
object.statement
inEXPECT_FATAL_FAILURE{_ON_ALL_THREADS}()
cannot return a value.
Registering tests programmatically
The TEST
macros handle the vast majority of all use
cases, but there are few were runtime registration logic is required.
For those cases, the framework provides the
::testing::RegisterTest
that allows callers to register
arbitrary tests dynamically.
This is an advanced API only to be used when the TEST
macros are insufficient. The macros should be preferred when possible,
as they avoid most of the complexity of calling this function.
It provides the following signature:
template <typename Factory>
* RegisterTest(const char* test_suite_name, const char* test_name,
TestInfoconst char* type_param, const char* value_param,
const char* file, int line, Factory factory);
The factory
argument is a factory callable
(move-constructible) object or function pointer that creates a new
instance of the Test object. It handles ownership to the caller. The
signature of the callable is Fixture*()
, where
Fixture
is the test fixture class for the test. All tests
registered with the same test_suite_name
must return the
same fixture type. This is checked at runtime.
The framework will infer the fixture class from the factory and will
call the SetUpTestSuite
and TearDownTestSuite
for it.
Must be called before RUN_ALL_TESTS()
is invoked,
otherwise behavior is undefined.
Use case example:
class MyFixture : public ::testing::Test {
public:
// All of these optional, just like in regular macro usage.
static void SetUpTestSuite() { ... }
static void TearDownTestSuite() { ... }
void SetUp() override { ... }
void TearDown() override { ... }
};
class MyTest : public MyFixture {
public:
explicit MyTest(int data) : data_(data) {}
void TestBody() override { ... }
private:
int data_;
};
void RegisterMyTests(const std::vector<int>& values) {
for (int v : values) {
::testing::RegisterTest(
"MyFixture", ("Test" + std::to_string(v)).c_str(), nullptr,
std::to_string(v).c_str(),
__FILE__, __LINE__,
// Important to use the fixture type as the return type here.
[=]() -> MyFixture* { return new MyTest(v); });
}
}
...
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
std::vector<int> values_to_test = LoadValuesFromConfig();
(values_to_test);
RegisterMyTests...
return RUN_ALL_TESTS();
}
Getting the Current Test’s Name
Sometimes a function may need to know the name of the currently
running test. For example, you may be using the SetUp()
method of your test fixture to set the golden file name based on which
test is running. The ::testing::TestInfo
class has this
information:
namespace testing {
class TestInfo {
public:
// Returns the test suite name and the test name, respectively.
//
// Do NOT delete or free the return value - it's managed by the
// TestInfo class.
const char* test_suite_name() const;
const char* name() const;
};
}
To obtain a TestInfo
object for the currently running
test, call current_test_info()
on the UnitTest
singleton object:
// Gets information about the currently running test.
// Do NOT delete the returned object - it's managed by the UnitTest class.
const ::testing::TestInfo* const test_info =
::testing::UnitTest::GetInstance()->current_test_info();
("We are in test %s of test suite %s.\n",
printf->name(),
test_info->test_suite_name()); test_info
current_test_info()
returns a null pointer if no test is
running. In particular, you cannot find the test suite name in
TestSuiteSetUp()
, TestSuiteTearDown()
(where
you know the test suite name implicitly), or functions called from
them.
Extending googletest by Handling Test Events
googletest provides an event listener API to let you receive notifications about the progress of a test program and test failures. The events you can listen to include the start and end of the test program, a test suite, or a test method, among others. You may use this API to augment or replace the standard console output, replace the XML output, or provide a completely different form of output, such as a GUI or a database. You can also use test events as checkpoints to implement a resource leak checker, for example.
Defining Event Listeners
To define a event listener, you subclass either
testing::TestEventListener or testing::EmptyTestEventListener The former
is an (abstract) interface, where each pure virtual method can be
overridden to handle a test event (For example, when a test starts,
the OnTestStart()
method will be called.). The latter
provides an empty implementation of all methods in the interface, such
that a subclass only needs to override the methods it cares about.
When an event is fired, its context is passed to the handler function as an argument. The following argument types are used:
- UnitTest reflects the state of the entire test program,
- TestSuite has information about a test suite, which can contain one or more tests,
- TestInfo contains the state of a test, and
- TestPartResult represents the result of a test assertion.
An event handler function can examine the argument it receives to find out interesting information about the event and the test program’s state.
Here’s an example:
class MinimalistPrinter : public ::testing::EmptyTestEventListener {
// Called before a test starts.
virtual void OnTestStart(const ::testing::TestInfo& test_info) {
("*** Test %s.%s starting.\n",
printf.test_suite_name(), test_info.name());
test_info}
// Called after a failed assertion or a SUCCESS().
virtual void OnTestPartResult(const ::testing::TestPartResult& test_part_result) {
("%s in %s:%d\n%s\n",
printf.failed() ? "*** Failure" : "Success",
test_part_result.file_name(),
test_part_result.line_number(),
test_part_result.summary());
test_part_result}
// Called after a test ends.
virtual void OnTestEnd(const ::testing::TestInfo& test_info) {
("*** Test %s.%s ending.\n",
printf.test_suite_name(), test_info.name());
test_info}
};
Using Event Listeners
To use the event listener you have defined, add an instance of it to
the googletest event listener list (represented by class
TestEventListeners - note the “s” at the end of the name) in your
main()
function, before calling
RUN_ALL_TESTS()
:
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
::testing::InitGoogleTest(&argc, argv);
// Gets hold of the event listener list.
::testing::TestEventListeners& listeners =
::testing::UnitTest::GetInstance()->listeners();
// Adds a listener to the end. googletest takes the ownership.
.Append(new MinimalistPrinter);
listenersreturn RUN_ALL_TESTS();
}
There’s only one problem: the default test result printer is still in effect, so its output will mingle with the output from your minimalist printer. To suppress the default printer, just release it from the event listener list and delete it. You can do so by adding one line:
...
delete listeners.Release(listeners.default_result_printer());
.Append(new MinimalistPrinter);
listenersreturn RUN_ALL_TESTS();
Now, sit back and enjoy a completely different output from your tests. For more details, see sample9_unittest.cc.
You may append more than one listener to the list. When an
On*Start()
or OnTestPartResult()
event is
fired, the listeners will receive it in the order they appear in the
list (since new listeners are added to the end of the list, the default
text printer and the default XML generator will receive the event
first). An On*End()
event will be received by the listeners
in the reverse order. This allows output by listeners added
later to be framed by output from listeners added earlier.
Generating Failures in Listeners
You may use failure-raising macros (EXPECT_*()
,
ASSERT_*()
, FAIL()
, etc) when processing an
event. There are some restrictions:
- You cannot generate any failure in
OnTestPartResult()
(otherwise it will causeOnTestPartResult()
to be called recursively). - A listener that handles
OnTestPartResult()
is not allowed to generate any failure.
When you add listeners to the listener list, you should put listeners
that handle OnTestPartResult()
before listeners
that can generate failures. This ensures that failures generated by the
latter are attributed to the right test by the former.
See sample10_unittest.cc for an example of a failure-raising listener.
Running Test Programs: Advanced Options
googletest test programs are ordinary executables. Once built, you
can run them directly and affect their behavior via the following
environment variables and/or command line flags. For the flags to work,
your programs must call ::testing::InitGoogleTest()
before
calling RUN_ALL_TESTS()
.
To see a list of supported flags and their usage, please run your
test program with the --help
flag. You can also use
-h
, -?
, or /?
for short.
If an option is specified both by an environment variable and by a flag, the latter takes precedence.
Selecting Tests
Listing Test Names
Sometimes it is necessary to list the available tests in a program
before running them so that a filter may be applied if needed. Including
the flag --gtest_list_tests
overrides all other flags and
lists tests in the following format:
TestSuite1.
TestName1
TestName2
TestSuite2.
TestName
None of the tests listed are actually run if the flag is provided. There is no corresponding environment variable for this flag.
Running a Subset of the Tests
By default, a googletest program runs all tests the user has defined.
Sometimes, you want to run only a subset of the tests (e.g. for
debugging or quickly verifying a change). If you set the
GTEST_FILTER
environment variable or the
--gtest_filter
flag to a filter string, googletest will
only run the tests whose full names (in the form of
TestSuiteName.TestName
) match the filter.
The format of a filter is a ‘:
’-separated list of
wildcard patterns (called the positive patterns) optionally
followed by a ‘-
’ and another ‘:
’-separated
pattern list (called the negative patterns). A test matches the
filter if and only if it matches any of the positive patterns but does
not match any of the negative patterns.
A pattern may contain '*'
(matches any string) or
'?'
(matches any single character). For convenience, the
filter '*-NegativePatterns'
can be also written as
'-NegativePatterns'
.
For example:
./foo_test
Has no flag, and thus runs all its tests../foo_test --gtest_filter=*
Also runs everything, due to the single match-everything*
value../foo_test --gtest_filter=FooTest.*
Runs everything in test suiteFooTest
../foo_test --gtest_filter=*Null*:*Constructor*
Runs any test whose full name contains either"Null"
or"Constructor"
../foo_test --gtest_filter=-*DeathTest.*
Runs all non-death tests../foo_test --gtest_filter=FooTest.*-FooTest.Bar
Runs everything in test suiteFooTest
exceptFooTest.Bar
../foo_test --gtest_filter=FooTest.*:BarTest.*-FooTest.Bar:BarTest.Foo
Runs everything in test suiteFooTest
exceptFooTest.Bar
and everything in test suiteBarTest
exceptBarTest.Foo
.
Temporarily Disabling Tests
If you have a broken test that you cannot fix right away, you can add
the DISABLED_
prefix to its name. This will exclude it from
execution. This is better than commenting out the code or using
#if 0
, as disabled tests are still compiled (and thus won’t
rot).
If you need to disable all tests in a test suite, you can either add
DISABLED_
to the front of the name of each test, or
alternatively add it to the front of the test suite name.
For example, the following tests won’t be run by googletest, even though they will still be compiled:
// Tests that Foo does Abc.
(FooTest, DISABLED_DoesAbc) { ... }
TEST
class DISABLED_BarTest : public ::testing::Test { ... };
// Tests that Bar does Xyz.
(DISABLED_BarTest, DoesXyz) { ... } TEST_F
NOTE: This feature should only be used for temporary pain-relief. You still have to fix the disabled tests at a later date. As a reminder, googletest will print a banner warning you if a test program contains any disabled tests.
TIP: You can easily count the number of disabled tests you have using
gsearch
and/or grep
. This number can be used
as a metric for improving your test quality.
Temporarily Enabling Disabled Tests
To include disabled tests in test execution, just invoke the test
program with the --gtest_also_run_disabled_tests
flag or
set the GTEST_ALSO_RUN_DISABLED_TESTS
environment variable
to a value other than 0
. You can combine this with the
--gtest_filter
flag to further select which disabled tests
to run.
Repeating the Tests
Once in a while you’ll run into a test whose result is hit-or-miss. Perhaps it will fail only 1% of the time, making it rather hard to reproduce the bug under a debugger. This can be a major source of frustration.
The --gtest_repeat
flag allows you to repeat all (or
selected) test methods in a program many times. Hopefully, a flaky test
will eventually fail and give you a chance to debug. Here’s how to use
it:
$ foo_test --gtest_repeat=1000
Repeat foo_test 1000 times and don't stop at failures.
$ foo_test --gtest_repeat=-1
A negative count means repeating forever.
$ foo_test --gtest_repeat=1000 --gtest_break_on_failure
Repeat foo_test 1000 times, stopping at the first failure. This
is especially useful when running under a debugger: when the test
fails, it will drop into the debugger and you can then inspect
variables and stacks.
$ foo_test --gtest_repeat=1000 --gtest_filter=FooBar.*
Repeat the tests whose name matches the filter 1000 times.
If your test program contains global set-up/tear-down code, it
will be repeated in each iteration as well, as the flakiness may be in
it. You can also specify the repeat count by setting the
GTEST_REPEAT
environment variable.
Shuffling the Tests
You can specify the --gtest_shuffle
flag (or set the
GTEST_SHUFFLE
environment variable to 1
) to
run the tests in a program in a random order. This helps to reveal bad
dependencies between tests.
By default, googletest uses a random seed calculated from the current
time. Therefore you’ll get a different order every time. The console
output includes the random seed value, such that you can reproduce an
order-related test failure later. To specify the random seed explicitly,
use the --gtest_random_seed=SEED
flag (or set the
GTEST_RANDOM_SEED
environment variable), where
SEED
is an integer in the range [0, 99999]. The seed value
0 is special: it tells googletest to do the default behavior of
calculating the seed from the current time.
If you combine this with --gtest_repeat=N
, googletest
will pick a different random seed and re-shuffle the tests in each
iteration.
Controlling Test Output
Colored Terminal Output
googletest can use colors in its terminal output to make it easier to spot the important information:
…
[———-] 1
test from FooTest
[ RUN
] FooTest.DoesAbc
[ OK ]
FooTest.DoesAbc
[———-] 2 tests from
BarTest
[ RUN
] BarTest.HasXyzProperty
[ OK ]
BarTest.HasXyzProperty
[ RUN
] BarTest.ReturnsTrueOnSuccess … some error
messages …
[ FAILED
] BarTest.ReturnsTrueOnSuccess …
[==========] 30 tests
from 14 test suites ran.
[ PASSED
] 28 tests.
[
FAILED ] 2 tests, listed below:
[ FAILED ]
BarTest.ReturnsTrueOnSuccess
[ FAILED
] AnotherTest.DoesXyz
2 FAILED
TESTS
You can set the GTEST_COLOR
environment variable or the
--gtest_color
command line flag to yes
,
no
, or auto
(the default) to enable colors,
disable colors, or let googletest decide. When the value is
auto
, googletest will use colors if and only if the output
goes to a terminal and (on non-Windows platforms) the TERM
environment variable is set to xterm
or
xterm-color
.
Suppressing the Elapsed Time
By default, googletest prints the time it takes to run each test. To
disable that, run the test program with the
--gtest_print_time=0
command line flag, or set the
GTEST_PRINT_TIME environment variable to 0
.
Suppressing UTF-8 Text Output
In case of assertion failures, googletest prints expected and actual
values of type string
both as hex-encoded strings as well
as in readable UTF-8 text if they contain valid non-ASCII UTF-8
characters. If you want to suppress the UTF-8 text because, for example,
you don’t have an UTF-8 compatible output medium, run the test program
with --gtest_print_utf8=0
or set the
GTEST_PRINT_UTF8
environment variable to
0
.
Generating an XML Report
googletest can emit a detailed XML report to a file in addition to its normal textual output. The report contains the duration of each test, and thus can help you identify slow tests. The report is also used by the http://unittest dashboard to show per-test-method error messages.
To generate the XML report, set the GTEST_OUTPUT
environment variable or the --gtest_output
flag to the
string "xml:path_to_output_file"
, which will create the
file at the given location. You can also just use the string
"xml"
, in which case the output can be found in the
test_detail.xml
file in the current directory.
If you specify a directory (for example,
"xml:output/directory/"
on Linux or
"xml:output\directory\"
on Windows), googletest will create
the XML file in that directory, named after the test executable
(e.g. foo_test.xml
for test program foo_test
or foo_test.exe
). If the file already exists (perhaps left
over from a previous run), googletest will pick a different name (e.g.
foo_test_1.xml
) to avoid overwriting it.
The report is based on the junitreport
Ant task. Since
that format was originally intended for Java, a little interpretation is
required to make it apply to googletest tests, as shown here:
testsuites name="AllTests" ...>
<testsuite name="test_case_name" ...>
<testcase name="test_name" ...>
<failure message="..."/>
<failure message="..."/>
<failure message="..."/>
<testcase>
</testsuite>
</testsuites> </
- The root
<testsuites>
element corresponds to the entire test program. <testsuite>
elements correspond to googletest test suites.<testcase>
elements correspond to googletest test functions.
For instance, the following program
(MathTest, Addition) { ... }
TEST(MathTest, Subtraction) { ... }
TEST(LogicTest, NonContradiction) { ... } TEST
could generate this report:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
testsuites tests="3" failures="1" errors="0" time="0.035" timestamp="2011-10-31T18:52:42" name="AllTests">
<testsuite name="MathTest" tests="2" failures="1" errors="0" time="0.015">
<testcase name="Addition" status="run" time="0.007" classname="">
<failure message="Value of: add(1, 1)
 Actual: 3
Expected: 2" type="">...</failure>
<failure message="Value of: add(1, -1)
 Actual: 1
Expected: 0" type="">...</failure>
<testcase>
</testcase name="Subtraction" status="run" time="0.005" classname="">
<testcase>
</testsuite>
</testsuite name="LogicTest" tests="1" failures="0" errors="0" time="0.005">
<testcase name="NonContradiction" status="run" time="0.005" classname="">
<testcase>
</testsuite>
</testsuites> </
Things to note:
The
tests
attribute of a<testsuites>
or<testsuite>
element tells how many test functions the googletest program or test suite contains, while thefailures
attribute tells how many of them failed.The
time
attribute expresses the duration of the test, test suite, or entire test program in seconds.The
timestamp
attribute records the local date and time of the test execution.Each
<failure>
element corresponds to a single failed googletest assertion.
Generating a JSON Report
googletest can also emit a JSON report as an alternative format to
XML. To generate the JSON report, set the GTEST_OUTPUT
environment variable or the --gtest_output
flag to the
string "json:path_to_output_file"
, which will create the
file at the given location. You can also just use the string
"json"
, in which case the output can be found in the
test_detail.json
file in the current directory.
The report format conforms to the following JSON Schema:
{
"$schema": "http://json-schema.org/schema#",
"type": "object",
"definitions": {
"TestCase": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"name": { "type": "string" },
"tests": { "type": "integer" },
"failures": { "type": "integer" },
"disabled": { "type": "integer" },
"time": { "type": "string" },
"testsuite": {
"type": "array",
"items": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/TestInfo"
}
}
}
},
"TestInfo": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"name": { "type": "string" },
"status": {
"type": "string",
"enum": ["RUN", "NOTRUN"]
},
"time": { "type": "string" },
"classname": { "type": "string" },
"failures": {
"type": "array",
"items": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/Failure"
}
}
}
},
"Failure": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"failures": { "type": "string" },
"type": { "type": "string" }
}
}
},
"properties": {
"tests": { "type": "integer" },
"failures": { "type": "integer" },
"disabled": { "type": "integer" },
"errors": { "type": "integer" },
"timestamp": {
"type": "string",
"format": "date-time"
},
"time": { "type": "string" },
"name": { "type": "string" },
"testsuites": {
"type": "array",
"items": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/TestCase"
}
}
}
}
The report uses the format that conforms to the following Proto3 using the JSON encoding:
"proto3";
syntax =
package googletest;
import "google/protobuf/timestamp.proto";
import "google/protobuf/duration.proto";
message UnitTest {
int32 tests = 1;
int32 failures = 2;
int32 disabled = 3;
int32 errors = 4;
5;
google.protobuf.Timestamp timestamp = 6;
google.protobuf.Duration time = string name = 7;
repeated TestCase testsuites = 8;
}
message TestCase {
string name = 1;
int32 tests = 2;
int32 failures = 3;
int32 disabled = 4;
int32 errors = 5;
6;
google.protobuf.Duration time = repeated TestInfo testsuite = 7;
}
message TestInfo {
string name = 1;
enum Status {
0;
RUN = 1;
NOTRUN =
}2;
Status status = 3;
google.protobuf.Duration time = string classname = 4;
message Failure {
string failures = 1;
string type = 2;
}repeated Failure failures = 5;
}
For instance, the following program
(MathTest, Addition) { ... }
TEST(MathTest, Subtraction) { ... }
TEST(LogicTest, NonContradiction) { ... } TEST
could generate this report:
{
"tests": 3,
"failures": 1,
"errors": 0,
"time": "0.035s",
"timestamp": "2011-10-31T18:52:42Z",
"name": "AllTests",
"testsuites": [
{
"name": "MathTest",
"tests": 2,
"failures": 1,
"errors": 0,
"time": "0.015s",
"testsuite": [
{
"name": "Addition",
"status": "RUN",
"time": "0.007s",
"classname": "",
"failures": [
{
"message": "Value of: add(1, 1)\n Actual: 3\nExpected: 2",
"type": ""
},
{
"message": "Value of: add(1, -1)\n Actual: 1\nExpected: 0",
"type": ""
}
]
},
{
"name": "Subtraction",
"status": "RUN",
"time": "0.005s",
"classname": ""
}
]
},
{
"name": "LogicTest",
"tests": 1,
"failures": 0,
"errors": 0,
"time": "0.005s",
"testsuite": [
{
"name": "NonContradiction",
"status": "RUN",
"time": "0.005s",
"classname": ""
}
]
}
]
}
IMPORTANT: The exact format of the JSON document is subject to change.
Controlling How Failures Are Reported
Turning Assertion Failures into Break-Points
When running test programs under a debugger, it’s very convenient if the debugger can catch an assertion failure and automatically drop into interactive mode. googletest’s break-on-failure mode supports this behavior.
To enable it, set the GTEST_BREAK_ON_FAILURE
environment
variable to a value other than 0
. Alternatively, you can
use the --gtest_break_on_failure
command line flag.
Disabling Catching Test-Thrown Exceptions
googletest can be used either with or without exceptions enabled. If a test throws a C++ exception or (on Windows) a structured exception (SEH), by default googletest catches it, reports it as a test failure, and continues with the next test method. This maximizes the coverage of a test run. Also, on Windows an uncaught exception will cause a pop-up window, so catching the exceptions allows you to run the tests automatically.
When debugging the test failures, however, you may instead want the
exceptions to be handled by the debugger, such that you can examine the
call stack when an exception is thrown. To achieve that, set the
GTEST_CATCH_EXCEPTIONS
environment variable to
0
, or use the --gtest_catch_exceptions=0
flag
when running the tests.