1 Google C++ Testing Framework
2 ============================
3 http://code.google.com/p/googletest/
4
5 Overview
6 --------
7 Google's framework for writing C++ tests on a variety of platforms (Linux, Mac
8 OS X, Windows, Windows CE, Symbian, and etc). Based on the xUnit architecture.
9 Supports automatic test discovery, a rich set of assertions, user-defined
10 assertions, death tests, fatal and non-fatal failures, various options for
11 running the tests, and XML test report generation.
12
13 Please see the project page above for more information as well as mailing lists
14 for questions, discussions, and development. There is also an IRC channel on
15 OFTC (irc.oftc.net) #gtest available. Please join us!
16
17 Requirements
18 ------------
19 Google Test is designed to have fairly minimal requirements to build
20 and use with your projects, but there are some. Currently, we support
21 building Google Test on Linux, Windows, Mac OS X, and Cygwin. We will
22 also make our best effort to support other platforms (e.g. Solaris and
23 IBM z/OS). However, since core members of the Google Test project
24 have no access to them, Google Test may have outstanding issues on
25 these platforms. If you notice any problems on your platform, please
26 notify googletestframework (a] googlegroups.com (patches for fixing them
27 are even more welcome!).
28
29 ### Linux Requirements ###
30 These are the base requirements to build and use Google Test from a source
31 package (as described below):
32 * GNU-compatible Make or "gmake"
33 * POSIX-standard shell
34 * POSIX(-2) Regular Expressions (regex.h)
35 * A C++98 standards compliant compiler
36
37 Furthermore, if you are building Google Test from a VCS Checkout (also
38 described below), there are further requirements:
39 * Automake version 1.9 or newer
40 * Autoconf version 2.59 or newer
41 * Libtool / Libtoolize
42 * Python version 2.4 or newer
43
44 ### Windows Requirements ###
45 * Microsoft Visual Studio 7.1 or newer
46
47 ### Cygwin Requirements ###
48 * Cygwin 1.5.25-14 or newer
49
50 ### Mac OS X Requirements ###
51 * Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger or newer
52 * Developer Tools Installed
53 * Optional: Xcode 2.5 or later for univeral-binary framework; see note below.
54
55 Getting the Source
56 ------------------
57 There are two primary ways of getting Google Test's source code: you can
58 download a source release in your preferred archive format, or directly check
59 out the source from a Version Control System (VCS, we use Google Code's
60 Subversion hosting). The VCS checkout requires a few extra steps and some extra
61 software packages on your system, but lets you track development, and make
62 patches to contribute much more easily, so we highly encourage it.
63
64 ### VCS Checkout: ###
65 The first step is to select whether you want to check out the main line of
66 development on Google Test, or one of the released branches. The former will be
67 much more active and have the latest features, but the latter provides much
68 more stability and predictability. Choose whichever fits your needs best, and
69 proceed with the following Subversion commands:
70
71 svn checkout http://googletest.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/ gtest-svn
72
73 or for a release version X.Y.*'s branch:
74
75 svn checkout http://googletest.googlecode.com/svn/branches/release-X.Y/ \
76 gtest-X.Y-svn
77
78 Next you will need to prepare the GNU Autotools build system, if you
79 are using Linux, Mac OS X, or Cygwin. Enter the target directory of
80 the checkout command you used ('gtest-svn' or 'gtest-X.Y-svn' above)
81 and proceed with the following command:
82
83 autoreconf -fvi
84
85 Once you have completed this step, you are ready to build the library. Note
86 that you should only need to complete this step once. The subsequent `make'
87 invocations will automatically re-generate the bits of the build system that
88 need to be changed.
89
90 If your system uses older versions of the autotools, the above command will
91 fail. You may need to explicitly specify a version to use. For instance, if you
92 have both GNU Automake 1.4 and 1.9 installed and `automake' would invoke the
93 1.4, use instead:
94
95 AUTOMAKE=automake-1.9 ACLOCAL=aclocal-1.9 autoreconf -fvi
96
97 Make sure you're using the same version of automake and aclocal.
98
99 ### Source Package: ###
100 Google Test is also released in source packages which can be downloaded from
101 its Google Code download page[1]. Several different archive formats are
102 provided, but the only difference is the tools used to manipulate them, and the
103 size of the resulting file. Download whichever you are most comfortable with.
104
105 [1] Google Test Downloads: http://code.google.com/p/googletest/downloads/list
106
107 Once downloaded expand the archive using whichever tools you prefer for that
108 type. This will always result in a new directory with the name "gtest-X.Y.Z"
109 which contains all of the source code. Here are some examples in Linux:
110
111 tar -xvzf gtest-X.Y.Z.tar.gz
112 tar -xvjf gtest-X.Y.Z.tar.bz2
113 unzip gtest-X.Y.Z.zip
114
115 Choosing a TR1 Tuple Library
116 ----------------------------
117 Some Google Test features require the C++ Technical Report 1 (TR1)
118 tuple library, which is not yet widely available with all compilers.
119 The good news is that Google Test implements a subset of TR1 tuple
120 that's enough for its own need, and will automatically use this when
121 the compiler doesn't provide TR1 tuple.
122
123 Usually you don't need to care about which tuple library Google Test
124 uses. However, if your project already uses TR1 tuple, you need to
125 tell Google Test to use the same TR1 tuple library the rest of your
126 project uses (this requirement is new in Google Test 1.4.0, so you may
127 need to take care of it when upgrading from an earlier version), or
128 the two tuple implementations will clash. To do that, add
129
130 -DGTEST_USE_OWN_TR1_TUPLE=0
131
132 to the compiler flags while compiling Google Test and your tests.
133
134 If you don't want Google Test to use tuple at all, add
135
136 -DGTEST_HAS_TR1_TUPLE=0
137
138 to the compiler flags. All features using tuple will be disabled in
139 this mode.
140
141 Building the Source
142 -------------------
143 ### Linux, Mac OS X (without Xcode), and Cygwin ###
144 There are two primary options for building the source at this point: build it
145 inside the source code tree, or in a separate directory. We recommend building
146 in a separate directory as that tends to produce both more consistent results
147 and be easier to clean up should anything go wrong, but both patterns are
148 supported. The only hard restriction is that while the build directory can be
149 a subdirectory of the source directory, the opposite is not possible and will
150 result in errors. Once you have selected where you wish to build Google Test,
151 create the directory if necessary, and enter it. The following steps apply for
152 either approach by simply substituting the shell variable SRCDIR with "." for
153 building inside the source directory, and the relative path to the source
154 directory otherwise.
155
156 ${SRCDIR}/configure # Standard GNU configure script, --help for more info
157 make # Standard makefile following GNU conventions
158 make check # Builds and runs all tests - all should pass
159
160 Other programs will only be able to use Google Test's functionality if you
161 install it in a location which they can access, in Linux this is typically
162 under '/usr/local'. The following command will install all of the Google Test
163 libraries, public headers, and utilities necessary for other programs and
164 libraries to leverage it:
165
166 sudo make install # Not necessary, but allows use by other programs
167
168 Should you need to remove Google Test from your system after having installed
169 it, run the following command, and it will back out its changes. However, note
170 carefully that you must run this command on the *same* Google Test build that
171 you ran the install from, or the results are not predictable. If you install
172 Google Test on your system, and are working from a VCS checkout, make sure you
173 run this *before* updating your checkout of the source in order to uninstall
174 the same version which you installed.
175
176 sudo make uninstall # Must be run against the exact same build as "install"
177
178 Your project can build against Google Test simply by leveraging the
179 'gtest-config' script. This script can be invoked directly out of the 'scripts'
180 subdirectory of the build tree, and it will be installed in the binary
181 directory specified during the 'configure'. Here are some examples of its use,
182 see 'gtest-config --help' for more detailed information.
183
184 gtest-config --min-version=1.0 || echo "Insufficient Google Test version."
185
186 g++ $(gtest-config --cppflags --cxxflags) -o foo.o -c foo.cpp
187 g++ $(gtest-config --ldflags --libs) -o foo foo.o
188
189 # When using a built but not installed Google Test:
190 g++ $(../../my_gtest_build/scripts/gtest-config ...) ...
191
192 ### Windows ###
193 The msvc\ folder contains two solutions with Visual C++ projects. Open the
194 gtest.sln or gtest-md.sln file using Visual Studio, and you are ready to
195 build Google Test the same way you build any Visual Studio project. Files
196 that have names ending with -md use DLL versions of Microsoft runtime
197 libraries (the /MD or the /MDd compiler option). Files without that suffix
198 use static versions of the runtime libraries (the /MT or the /MTd option).
199 Please note that one must use the same option to compile both gtest and his
200 test code. If you use Visual Studio 2005 or above, we recommend the -md
201 version as /MD is the default for new projects in these versions of Visual
202 Studio.
203
204 ### Mac OS X (universal-binary framework) ###
205 Open the gtest.xcodeproj in the xcode/ folder using Xcode. Build the "gtest"
206 target. The universal binary framework will end up in your selected build
207 directory (selected in the Xcode "Preferences..." -> "Building" pane and
208 defaults to xcode/build). Alternatively, at the command line, enter:
209
210 xcodebuild
211
212 This will build the "Release" configuration of gtest.framework in your
213 default build location. See the "xcodebuild" man page for more information about
214 building different configurations and building in different locations.
215
216 To test the gtest.framework in Xcode, change the active target to "Check" and
217 then build. This target builds all of the tests and then runs them. Don't worry
218 if you see some errors. Xcode reports all test failures (even the intentional
219 ones) as errors. However, you should see a "Build succeeded" message at the end
220 of the build log. To run all of the tests from the command line, enter:
221
222 xcodebuild -target Check
223
224 Installation with xcodebuild requires specifying an installation desitination
225 directory, known as the DSTROOT. Three items will be installed when using
226 xcodebuild:
227
228 $DSTROOT/Library/Frameworks/gtest.framework
229 $DSTROOT/usr/local/lib/libgtest.a
230 $DSTROOT/usr/local/lib/libgtest_main.a
231
232 You specify the installation directory on the command line with the other
233 xcodebuild options. Here's how you would install in a user-visible location:
234
235 xcodebuild install DSTROOT=~
236
237 To perform a system-wide inistall, escalate to an administrator and specify
238 the file system root as the DSTROOT:
239
240 sudo xcodebuild install DSTROOT=/
241
242 To uninstall gtest.framework via the command line, you need to delete the three
243 items listed above. Remember to escalate to an administrator if deleting these
244 from the system-wide location using the commands listed below:
245
246 sudo rm -r /Library/Frameworks/gtest.framework
247 sudo rm /usr/local/lib/libgtest.a
248 sudo rm /usr/local/lib/libgtest_main.a
249
250 It is also possible to build and execute individual tests within Xcode. Each
251 test has its own Xcode "Target" and Xcode "Executable". To build any of the
252 tests, change the active target and the active executable to the test of
253 interest and then build and run.
254
255 Individual tests can be built from the command line using:
256
257 xcodebuild -target <test_name>
258
259 These tests can be executed from the command line by moving to the build
260 directory and then (in bash)
261
262 export DYLD_FRAMEWORK_PATH=`pwd`
263 ./<test_name> # (e.g. ./gtest_unittest)
264
265 To use gtest.framework for your own tests, first, install the framework using
266 the steps described above. Then add it to your Xcode project by selecting
267 Project->Add to Project... from the main menu. Next, add libgtest_main.a from
268 gtest.framework/Resources directory using the same menu command. Finally,
269 create a new executable target and add gtest.framework and libgtest_main.a to
270 the "Link Binary With Libraries" build phase.
271
272 ### Using GNU Make ###
273 The make/ directory contains a Makefile that you can use to build
274 Google Test on systems where GNU make is available (e.g. Linux, Mac OS
275 X, and Cygwin). It doesn't try to build Google Test's own tests.
276 Instead, it just builds the Google Test library and a sample test.
277 You can use it as a starting point for your own Makefile.
278
279 If the default settings are correct for your environment, the
280 following commands should succeed:
281
282 cd ${SRCDIR}/make
283 make
284 ./sample1_unittest
285
286 If you see errors, try to tweak the contents of make/Makefile to make
287 them go away. There are instructions in make/Makefile on how to do
288 it.
289
290 ### Using Your Own Build System ###
291 If none of the build solutions we provide works for you, or if you
292 prefer your own build system, you just need to compile
293 src/gtest-all.cc into a library and link your tests with it. Assuming
294 a Linux-like system and gcc, something like the following will do:
295
296 cd ${SRCDIR}
297 g++ -I. -I./include -c src/gtest-all.cc
298 ar -rv libgtest.a gtest-all.o
299 g++ -I. -I./include path/to/your_test.cc libgtest.a -o your_test
300
301 Regenerating Source Files
302 -------------------------
303 Some of Google Test's source files are generated from templates (not
304 in the C++ sense) using a script. A template file is named FOO.pump,
305 where FOO is the name of the file it will generate. For example, the
306 file include/gtest/internal/gtest-type-util.h.pump is used to generate
307 gtest-type-util.h in the same directory.
308
309 Normally you don't need to worry about regenerating the source files,
310 unless you need to modify them (e.g. if you are working on a patch for
311 Google Test). In that case, you should modify the corresponding .pump
312 files instead and run the 'pump' script (for Pump is Useful for Meta
313 Programming) to regenerate them. We are still working on releasing
314 the script and its documentation. If you need it now, please email
315 googletestframework (a] googlegroups.com such that we know to make it
316 happen sooner.
317
318 Happy testing!
319