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31 KiB
# Googletest FAQ |
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<!-- GOOGLETEST_CM0014 DO NOT DELETE --> |
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<!-- GOOGLETEST_CM0035 DO NOT DELETE --> |
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## Why should test suite names and test names not contain underscore? |
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Note: Googletest reserves underscore (`_`) for special purpose keywords, such as |
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[the `DISABLED_` prefix](advanced.md#temporarily-disabling-tests), in addition |
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to the following rationale. |
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Underscore (`_`) is special, as C++ reserves the following to be used by the |
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compiler and the standard library: |
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1. any identifier that starts with an `_` followed by an upper-case letter, and |
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2. any identifier that contains two consecutive underscores (i.e. `__`) |
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*anywhere* in its name. |
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User code is *prohibited* from using such identifiers. |
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Now let's look at what this means for `TEST` and `TEST_F`. |
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Currently `TEST(TestSuiteName, TestName)` generates a class named |
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`TestSuiteName_TestName_Test`. What happens if `TestSuiteName` or `TestName` |
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contains `_`? |
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1. If `TestSuiteName` starts with an `_` followed by an upper-case letter (say, |
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`_Foo`), we end up with `_Foo_TestName_Test`, which is reserved and thus |
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invalid. |
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2. If `TestSuiteName` ends with an `_` (say, `Foo_`), we get |
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`Foo__TestName_Test`, which is invalid. |
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3. If `TestName` starts with an `_` (say, `_Bar`), we get |
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`TestSuiteName__Bar_Test`, which is invalid. |
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4. If `TestName` ends with an `_` (say, `Bar_`), we get |
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`TestSuiteName_Bar__Test`, which is invalid. |
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So clearly `TestSuiteName` and `TestName` cannot start or end with `_` |
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(Actually, `TestSuiteName` can start with `_` -- as long as the `_` isn't |
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followed by an upper-case letter. But that's getting complicated. So for |
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simplicity we just say that it cannot start with `_`.). |
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It may seem fine for `TestSuiteName` and `TestName` to contain `_` in the |
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middle. However, consider this: |
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```c++ |
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TEST(Time, Flies_Like_An_Arrow) { ... } |
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TEST(Time_Flies, Like_An_Arrow) { ... } |
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``` |
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Now, the two `TEST`s will both generate the same class |
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(`Time_Flies_Like_An_Arrow_Test`). That's not good. |
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So for simplicity, we just ask the users to avoid `_` in `TestSuiteName` and |
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`TestName`. The rule is more constraining than necessary, but it's simple and |
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easy to remember. It also gives googletest some wiggle room in case its |
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implementation needs to change in the future. |
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If you violate the rule, there may not be immediate consequences, but your test |
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may (just may) break with a new compiler (or a new version of the compiler you |
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are using) or with a new version of googletest. Therefore it's best to follow |
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the rule. |
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## Why does googletest support `EXPECT_EQ(NULL, ptr)` and `ASSERT_EQ(NULL, ptr)` but not `EXPECT_NE(NULL, ptr)` and `ASSERT_NE(NULL, ptr)`? |
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First of all you can use `EXPECT_NE(nullptr, ptr)` and `ASSERT_NE(nullptr, |
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ptr)`. This is the preferred syntax in the style guide because nullptr does not |
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have the type problems that NULL does. Which is why NULL does not work. |
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Due to some peculiarity of C++, it requires some non-trivial template meta |
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programming tricks to support using `NULL` as an argument of the `EXPECT_XX()` |
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and `ASSERT_XX()` macros. Therefore we only do it where it's most needed |
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(otherwise we make the implementation of googletest harder to maintain and more |
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error-prone than necessary). |
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The `EXPECT_EQ()` macro takes the *expected* value as its first argument and the |
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*actual* value as the second. It's reasonable that someone wants to write |
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`EXPECT_EQ(NULL, some_expression)`, and this indeed was requested several times. |
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Therefore we implemented it. |
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The need for `EXPECT_NE(NULL, ptr)` isn't nearly as strong. When the assertion |
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fails, you already know that `ptr` must be `NULL`, so it doesn't add any |
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information to print `ptr` in this case. That means `EXPECT_TRUE(ptr != NULL)` |
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works just as well. |
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If we were to support `EXPECT_NE(NULL, ptr)`, for consistency we'll have to |
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support `EXPECT_NE(ptr, NULL)` as well, as unlike `EXPECT_EQ`, we don't have a |
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convention on the order of the two arguments for `EXPECT_NE`. This means using |
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the template meta programming tricks twice in the implementation, making it even |
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harder to understand and maintain. We believe the benefit doesn't justify the |
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cost. |
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Finally, with the growth of the gMock matcher library, we are encouraging people |
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to use the unified `EXPECT_THAT(value, matcher)` syntax more often in tests. One |
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significant advantage of the matcher approach is that matchers can be easily |
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combined to form new matchers, while the `EXPECT_NE`, etc, macros cannot be |
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easily combined. Therefore we want to invest more in the matchers than in the |
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`EXPECT_XX()` macros. |
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## I need to test that different implementations of an interface satisfy some common requirements. Should I use typed tests or value-parameterized tests? |
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For testing various implementations of the same interface, either typed tests or |
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value-parameterized tests can get it done. It's really up to you the user to |
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decide which is more convenient for you, depending on your particular case. Some |
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rough guidelines: |
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* Typed tests can be easier to write if instances of the different |
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implementations can be created the same way, modulo the type. For example, |
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if all these implementations have a public default constructor (such that |
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you can write `new TypeParam`), or if their factory functions have the same |
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form (e.g. `CreateInstance<TypeParam>()`). |
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* Value-parameterized tests can be easier to write if you need different code |
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patterns to create different implementations' instances, e.g. `new Foo` vs |
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`new Bar(5)`. To accommodate for the differences, you can write factory |
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function wrappers and pass these function pointers to the tests as their |
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parameters. |
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* When a typed test fails, the default output includes the name of the type, |
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which can help you quickly identify which implementation is wrong. |
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Value-parameterized tests only show the number of the failed iteration by |
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default. You will need to define a function that returns the iteration name |
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and pass it as the third parameter to INSTANTIATE_TEST_SUITE_P to have more |
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useful output. |
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* When using typed tests, you need to make sure you are testing against the |
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interface type, not the concrete types (in other words, you want to make |
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sure `implicit_cast<MyInterface*>(my_concrete_impl)` works, not just that |
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`my_concrete_impl` works). It's less likely to make mistakes in this area |
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when using value-parameterized tests. |
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I hope I didn't confuse you more. :-) If you don't mind, I'd suggest you to give |
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both approaches a try. Practice is a much better way to grasp the subtle |
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differences between the two tools. Once you have some concrete experience, you |
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can much more easily decide which one to use the next time. |
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## I got some run-time errors about invalid proto descriptors when using `ProtocolMessageEquals`. Help! |
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**Note:** `ProtocolMessageEquals` and `ProtocolMessageEquiv` are *deprecated* |
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now. Please use `EqualsProto`, etc instead. |
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`ProtocolMessageEquals` and `ProtocolMessageEquiv` were redefined recently and |
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are now less tolerant of invalid protocol buffer definitions. In particular, if |
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you have a `foo.proto` that doesn't fully qualify the type of a protocol message |
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it references (e.g. `message<Bar>` where it should be `message<blah.Bar>`), you |
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will now get run-time errors like: |
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``` |
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... descriptor.cc:...] Invalid proto descriptor for file "path/to/foo.proto": |
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... descriptor.cc:...] blah.MyMessage.my_field: ".Bar" is not defined. |
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``` |
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If you see this, your `.proto` file is broken and needs to be fixed by making |
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the types fully qualified. The new definition of `ProtocolMessageEquals` and |
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`ProtocolMessageEquiv` just happen to reveal your bug. |
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## My death test modifies some state, but the change seems lost after the death test finishes. Why? |
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Death tests (`EXPECT_DEATH`, etc) are executed in a sub-process s.t. the |
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expected crash won't kill the test program (i.e. the parent process). As a |
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result, any in-memory side effects they incur are observable in their respective |
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sub-processes, but not in the parent process. You can think of them as running |
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in a parallel universe, more or less. |
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In particular, if you use mocking and the death test statement invokes some mock |
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methods, the parent process will think the calls have never occurred. Therefore, |
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you may want to move your `EXPECT_CALL` statements inside the `EXPECT_DEATH` |
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macro. |
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## EXPECT_EQ(htonl(blah), blah_blah) generates weird compiler errors in opt mode. Is this a googletest bug? |
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Actually, the bug is in `htonl()`. |
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According to `'man htonl'`, `htonl()` is a *function*, which means it's valid to |
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use `htonl` as a function pointer. However, in opt mode `htonl()` is defined as |
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a *macro*, which breaks this usage. |
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Worse, the macro definition of `htonl()` uses a `gcc` extension and is *not* |
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standard C++. That hacky implementation has some ad hoc limitations. In |
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particular, it prevents you from writing `Foo<sizeof(htonl(x))>()`, where `Foo` |
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is a template that has an integral argument. |
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The implementation of `EXPECT_EQ(a, b)` uses `sizeof(... a ...)` inside a |
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template argument, and thus doesn't compile in opt mode when `a` contains a call |
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to `htonl()`. It is difficult to make `EXPECT_EQ` bypass the `htonl()` bug, as |
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the solution must work with different compilers on various platforms. |
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`htonl()` has some other problems as described in `//util/endian/endian.h`, |
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which defines `ghtonl()` to replace it. `ghtonl()` does the same thing `htonl()` |
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does, only without its problems. We suggest you to use `ghtonl()` instead of |
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`htonl()`, both in your tests and production code. |
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`//util/endian/endian.h` also defines `ghtons()`, which solves similar problems |
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in `htons()`. |
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Don't forget to add `//util/endian` to the list of dependencies in the `BUILD` |
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file wherever `ghtonl()` and `ghtons()` are used. The library consists of a |
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single header file and will not bloat your binary. |
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## The compiler complains about "undefined references" to some static const member variables, but I did define them in the class body. What's wrong? |
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If your class has a static data member: |
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```c++ |
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// foo.h |
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class Foo { |
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... |
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static const int kBar = 100; |
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}; |
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``` |
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You also need to define it *outside* of the class body in `foo.cc`: |
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```c++ |
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const int Foo::kBar; // No initializer here. |
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``` |
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Otherwise your code is **invalid C++**, and may break in unexpected ways. In |
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particular, using it in googletest comparison assertions (`EXPECT_EQ`, etc) will |
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generate an "undefined reference" linker error. The fact that "it used to work" |
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doesn't mean it's valid. It just means that you were lucky. :-) |
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If the declaration of the static data member is `constexpr` then it is |
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implicitly an `inline` definition, and a separate definition in `foo.cc` is not |
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needed: |
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```c++ |
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// foo.h |
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class Foo { |
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... |
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static constexpr int kBar = 100; // Defines kBar, no need to do it in foo.cc. |
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}; |
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``` |
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## Can I derive a test fixture from another? |
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Yes. |
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Each test fixture has a corresponding and same named test suite. This means only |
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one test suite can use a particular fixture. Sometimes, however, multiple test |
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cases may want to use the same or slightly different fixtures. For example, you |
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may want to make sure that all of a GUI library's test suites don't leak |
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important system resources like fonts and brushes. |
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In googletest, you share a fixture among test suites by putting the shared logic |
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in a base test fixture, then deriving from that base a separate fixture for each |
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test suite that wants to use this common logic. You then use `TEST_F()` to write |
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tests using each derived fixture. |
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Typically, your code looks like this: |
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```c++ |
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// Defines a base test fixture. |
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class BaseTest : public ::testing::Test { |
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protected: |
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... |
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}; |
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// Derives a fixture FooTest from BaseTest. |
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class FooTest : public BaseTest { |
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protected: |
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void SetUp() override { |
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BaseTest::SetUp(); // Sets up the base fixture first. |
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... additional set-up work ... |
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} |
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void TearDown() override { |
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... clean-up work for FooTest ... |
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BaseTest::TearDown(); // Remember to tear down the base fixture |
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// after cleaning up FooTest! |
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} |
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... functions and variables for FooTest ... |
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}; |
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// Tests that use the fixture FooTest. |
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TEST_F(FooTest, Bar) { ... } |
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TEST_F(FooTest, Baz) { ... } |
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... additional fixtures derived from BaseTest ... |
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``` |
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If necessary, you can continue to derive test fixtures from a derived fixture. |
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googletest has no limit on how deep the hierarchy can be. |
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For a complete example using derived test fixtures, see |
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[sample5_unittest.cc](../samples/sample5_unittest.cc). |
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## My compiler complains "void value not ignored as it ought to be." What does this mean? |
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You're probably using an `ASSERT_*()` in a function that doesn't return `void`. |
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`ASSERT_*()` can only be used in `void` functions, due to exceptions being |
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disabled by our build system. Please see more details |
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[here](advanced.md#assertion-placement). |
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## My death test hangs (or seg-faults). How do I fix it? |
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In googletest, death tests are run in a child process and the way they work is |
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delicate. To write death tests you really need to understand how they work. |
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Please make sure you have read [this](advanced.md#how-it-works). |
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In particular, death tests don't like having multiple threads in the parent |
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process. So the first thing you can try is to eliminate creating threads outside |
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of `EXPECT_DEATH()`. For example, you may want to use mocks or fake objects |
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instead of real ones in your tests. |
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Sometimes this is impossible as some library you must use may be creating |
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threads before `main()` is even reached. In this case, you can try to minimize |
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the chance of conflicts by either moving as many activities as possible inside |
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`EXPECT_DEATH()` (in the extreme case, you want to move everything inside), or |
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leaving as few things as possible in it. Also, you can try to set the death test |
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style to `"threadsafe"`, which is safer but slower, and see if it helps. |
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If you go with thread-safe death tests, remember that they rerun the test |
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program from the beginning in the child process. Therefore make sure your |
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program can run side-by-side with itself and is deterministic. |
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In the end, this boils down to good concurrent programming. You have to make |
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sure that there are no race conditions or deadlocks in your program. No silver |
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bullet - sorry! |
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## Should I use the constructor/destructor of the test fixture or SetUp()/TearDown()? {#CtorVsSetUp} |
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The first thing to remember is that googletest does **not** reuse the same test |
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fixture object across multiple tests. For each `TEST_F`, googletest will create |
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a **fresh** test fixture object, immediately call `SetUp()`, run the test body, |
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call `TearDown()`, and then delete the test fixture object. |
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When you need to write per-test set-up and tear-down logic, you have the choice |
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between using the test fixture constructor/destructor or `SetUp()/TearDown()`. |
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The former is usually preferred, as it has the following benefits: |
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* By initializing a member variable in the constructor, we have the option to |
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make it `const`, which helps prevent accidental changes to its value and |
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makes the tests more obviously correct. |
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* In case we need to subclass the test fixture class, the subclass' |
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constructor is guaranteed to call the base class' constructor *first*, and |
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the subclass' destructor is guaranteed to call the base class' destructor |
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*afterward*. With `SetUp()/TearDown()`, a subclass may make the mistake of |
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forgetting to call the base class' `SetUp()/TearDown()` or call them at the |
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wrong time. |
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You may still want to use `SetUp()/TearDown()` in the following cases: |
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* C++ does not allow virtual function calls in constructors and destructors. |
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You can call a method declared as virtual, but it will not use dynamic |
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dispatch, it will use the definition from the class the constructor of which |
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is currently executing. This is because calling a virtual method before the |
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derived class constructor has a chance to run is very dangerous - the |
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virtual method might operate on uninitialized data. Therefore, if you need |
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to call a method that will be overridden in a derived class, you have to use |
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`SetUp()/TearDown()`. |
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* In the body of a constructor (or destructor), it's not possible to use the |
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`ASSERT_xx` macros. Therefore, if the set-up operation could cause a fatal |
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test failure that should prevent the test from running, it's necessary to |
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use `abort` <!-- GOOGLETEST_CM0015 DO NOT DELETE --> and abort the whole test executable, |
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or to use `SetUp()` instead of a constructor. |
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* If the tear-down operation could throw an exception, you must use |
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`TearDown()` as opposed to the destructor, as throwing in a destructor leads |
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to undefined behavior and usually will kill your program right away. Note |
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that many standard libraries (like STL) may throw when exceptions are |
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enabled in the compiler. Therefore you should prefer `TearDown()` if you |
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want to write portable tests that work with or without exceptions. |
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* The googletest team is considering making the assertion macros throw on |
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platforms where exceptions are enabled (e.g. Windows, Mac OS, and Linux |
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client-side), which will eliminate the need for the user to propagate |
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failures from a subroutine to its caller. Therefore, you shouldn't use |
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googletest assertions in a destructor if your code could run on such a |
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platform. |
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## The compiler complains "no matching function to call" when I use ASSERT_PRED*. How do I fix it? |
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If the predicate function you use in `ASSERT_PRED*` or `EXPECT_PRED*` is |
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overloaded or a template, the compiler will have trouble figuring out which |
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overloaded version it should use. `ASSERT_PRED_FORMAT*` and |
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`EXPECT_PRED_FORMAT*` don't have this problem. |
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If you see this error, you might want to switch to |
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`(ASSERT|EXPECT)_PRED_FORMAT*`, which will also give you a better failure |
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message. If, however, that is not an option, you can resolve the problem by |
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explicitly telling the compiler which version to pick. |
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For example, suppose you have |
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```c++ |
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bool IsPositive(int n) { |
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return n > 0; |
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} |
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bool IsPositive(double x) { |
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return x > 0; |
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} |
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``` |
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you will get a compiler error if you write |
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```c++ |
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EXPECT_PRED1(IsPositive, 5); |
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``` |
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However, this will work: |
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```c++ |
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EXPECT_PRED1(static_cast<bool (*)(int)>(IsPositive), 5); |
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``` |
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(The stuff inside the angled brackets for the `static_cast` operator is the type |
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of the function pointer for the `int`-version of `IsPositive()`.) |
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As another example, when you have a template function |
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```c++ |
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template <typename T> |
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bool IsNegative(T x) { |
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return x < 0; |
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} |
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``` |
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you can use it in a predicate assertion like this: |
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```c++ |
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ASSERT_PRED1(IsNegative<int>, -5); |
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``` |
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Things are more interesting if your template has more than one parameter. The |
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following won't compile: |
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```c++ |
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ASSERT_PRED2(GreaterThan<int, int>, 5, 0); |
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``` |
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as the C++ pre-processor thinks you are giving `ASSERT_PRED2` 4 arguments, which |
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is one more than expected. The workaround is to wrap the predicate function in |
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parentheses: |
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```c++ |
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ASSERT_PRED2((GreaterThan<int, int>), 5, 0); |
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``` |
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## My compiler complains about "ignoring return value" when I call RUN_ALL_TESTS(). Why? |
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Some people had been ignoring the return value of `RUN_ALL_TESTS()`. That is, |
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instead of |
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```c++ |
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return RUN_ALL_TESTS(); |
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``` |
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they write |
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```c++ |
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RUN_ALL_TESTS(); |
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``` |
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This is **wrong and dangerous**. The testing services needs to see the return |
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value of `RUN_ALL_TESTS()` in order to determine if a test has passed. If your |
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`main()` function ignores it, your test will be considered successful even if it |
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has a googletest assertion failure. Very bad. |
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We have decided to fix this (thanks to Michael Chastain for the idea). Now, your |
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code will no longer be able to ignore `RUN_ALL_TESTS()` when compiled with |
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`gcc`. If you do so, you'll get a compiler error. |
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If you see the compiler complaining about you ignoring the return value of |
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`RUN_ALL_TESTS()`, the fix is simple: just make sure its value is used as the |
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return value of `main()`. |
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But how could we introduce a change that breaks existing tests? Well, in this |
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case, the code was already broken in the first place, so we didn't break it. :-) |
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## My compiler complains that a constructor (or destructor) cannot return a value. What's going on? |
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Due to a peculiarity of C++, in order to support the syntax for streaming |
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messages to an `ASSERT_*`, e.g. |
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```c++ |
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ASSERT_EQ(1, Foo()) << "blah blah" << foo; |
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``` |
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we had to give up using `ASSERT*` and `FAIL*` (but not `EXPECT*` and |
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`ADD_FAILURE*`) in constructors and destructors. The workaround is to move the |
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content of your constructor/destructor to a private void member function, or |
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switch to `EXPECT_*()` if that works. This |
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[section](advanced.md#assertion-placement) in the user's guide explains it. |
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## My SetUp() function is not called. Why? |
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C++ is case-sensitive. Did you spell it as `Setup()`? |
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Similarly, sometimes people spell `SetUpTestSuite()` as `SetupTestSuite()` and |
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wonder why it's never called. |
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## I have several test suites which share the same test fixture logic, do I have to define a new test fixture class for each of them? This seems pretty tedious. |
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You don't have to. Instead of |
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```c++ |
|
class FooTest : public BaseTest {}; |
|
|
|
TEST_F(FooTest, Abc) { ... } |
|
TEST_F(FooTest, Def) { ... } |
|
|
|
class BarTest : public BaseTest {}; |
|
|
|
TEST_F(BarTest, Abc) { ... } |
|
TEST_F(BarTest, Def) { ... } |
|
``` |
|
|
|
you can simply `typedef` the test fixtures: |
|
|
|
```c++ |
|
typedef BaseTest FooTest; |
|
|
|
TEST_F(FooTest, Abc) { ... } |
|
TEST_F(FooTest, Def) { ... } |
|
|
|
typedef BaseTest BarTest; |
|
|
|
TEST_F(BarTest, Abc) { ... } |
|
TEST_F(BarTest, Def) { ... } |
|
``` |
|
|
|
## googletest output is buried in a whole bunch of LOG messages. What do I do? |
|
|
|
The googletest output is meant to be a concise and human-friendly report. If |
|
your test generates textual output itself, it will mix with the googletest |
|
output, making it hard to read. However, there is an easy solution to this |
|
problem. |
|
|
|
Since `LOG` messages go to stderr, we decided to let googletest output go to |
|
stdout. This way, you can easily separate the two using redirection. For |
|
example: |
|
|
|
```shell |
|
$ ./my_test > gtest_output.txt |
|
``` |
|
|
|
## Why should I prefer test fixtures over global variables? |
|
|
|
There are several good reasons: |
|
|
|
1. It's likely your test needs to change the states of its global variables. |
|
This makes it difficult to keep side effects from escaping one test and |
|
contaminating others, making debugging difficult. By using fixtures, each |
|
test has a fresh set of variables that's different (but with the same |
|
names). Thus, tests are kept independent of each other. |
|
2. Global variables pollute the global namespace. |
|
3. Test fixtures can be reused via subclassing, which cannot be done easily |
|
with global variables. This is useful if many test suites have something in |
|
common. |
|
|
|
## What can the statement argument in ASSERT_DEATH() be? |
|
|
|
`ASSERT_DEATH(statement, matcher)` (or any death assertion macro) can be used |
|
wherever *`statement`* is valid. So basically *`statement`* can be any C++ |
|
statement that makes sense in the current context. In particular, it can |
|
reference global and/or local variables, and can be: |
|
|
|
* a simple function call (often the case), |
|
* a complex expression, or |
|
* a compound statement. |
|
|
|
Some examples are shown here: |
|
|
|
```c++ |
|
// A death test can be a simple function call. |
|
TEST(MyDeathTest, FunctionCall) { |
|
ASSERT_DEATH(Xyz(5), "Xyz failed"); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Or a complex expression that references variables and functions. |
|
TEST(MyDeathTest, ComplexExpression) { |
|
const bool c = Condition(); |
|
ASSERT_DEATH((c ? Func1(0) : object2.Method("test")), |
|
"(Func1|Method) failed"); |
|
} |
|
|
|
// Death assertions can be used anywhere in a function. In |
|
// particular, they can be inside a loop. |
|
TEST(MyDeathTest, InsideLoop) { |
|
// Verifies that Foo(0), Foo(1), ..., and Foo(4) all die. |
|
for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++) { |
|
EXPECT_DEATH_M(Foo(i), "Foo has \\d+ errors", |
|
::testing::Message() << "where i is " << i); |
|
} |
|
} |
|
|
|
// A death assertion can contain a compound statement. |
|
TEST(MyDeathTest, CompoundStatement) { |
|
// Verifies that at lease one of Bar(0), Bar(1), ..., and |
|
// Bar(4) dies. |
|
ASSERT_DEATH({ |
|
for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++) { |
|
Bar(i); |
|
} |
|
}, |
|
"Bar has \\d+ errors"); |
|
} |
|
``` |
|
|
|
gtest-death-test_test.cc contains more examples if you are interested. |
|
|
|
## I have a fixture class `FooTest`, but `TEST_F(FooTest, Bar)` gives me error ``"no matching function for call to `FooTest::FooTest()'"``. Why? |
|
|
|
Googletest needs to be able to create objects of your test fixture class, so it |
|
must have a default constructor. Normally the compiler will define one for you. |
|
However, there are cases where you have to define your own: |
|
|
|
* If you explicitly declare a non-default constructor for class `FooTest` |
|
(`DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS()` does this), then you need to define a |
|
default constructor, even if it would be empty. |
|
* If `FooTest` has a const non-static data member, then you have to define the |
|
default constructor *and* initialize the const member in the initializer |
|
list of the constructor. (Early versions of `gcc` doesn't force you to |
|
initialize the const member. It's a bug that has been fixed in `gcc 4`.) |
|
|
|
## Why does ASSERT_DEATH complain about previous threads that were already joined? |
|
|
|
With the Linux pthread library, there is no turning back once you cross the line |
|
from a single thread to multiple threads. The first time you create a thread, a |
|
manager thread is created in addition, so you get 3, not 2, threads. Later when |
|
the thread you create joins the main thread, the thread count decrements by 1, |
|
but the manager thread will never be killed, so you still have 2 threads, which |
|
means you cannot safely run a death test. |
|
|
|
The new NPTL thread library doesn't suffer from this problem, as it doesn't |
|
create a manager thread. However, if you don't control which machine your test |
|
runs on, you shouldn't depend on this. |
|
|
|
## Why does googletest require the entire test suite, instead of individual tests, to be named *DeathTest when it uses ASSERT_DEATH? |
|
|
|
googletest does not interleave tests from different test suites. That is, it |
|
runs all tests in one test suite first, and then runs all tests in the next test |
|
suite, and so on. googletest does this because it needs to set up a test suite |
|
before the first test in it is run, and tear it down afterwards. Splitting up |
|
the test case would require multiple set-up and tear-down processes, which is |
|
inefficient and makes the semantics unclean. |
|
|
|
If we were to determine the order of tests based on test name instead of test |
|
case name, then we would have a problem with the following situation: |
|
|
|
```c++ |
|
TEST_F(FooTest, AbcDeathTest) { ... } |
|
TEST_F(FooTest, Uvw) { ... } |
|
|
|
TEST_F(BarTest, DefDeathTest) { ... } |
|
TEST_F(BarTest, Xyz) { ... } |
|
``` |
|
|
|
Since `FooTest.AbcDeathTest` needs to run before `BarTest.Xyz`, and we don't |
|
interleave tests from different test suites, we need to run all tests in the |
|
`FooTest` case before running any test in the `BarTest` case. This contradicts |
|
with the requirement to run `BarTest.DefDeathTest` before `FooTest.Uvw`. |
|
|
|
## But I don't like calling my entire test suite \*DeathTest when it contains both death tests and non-death tests. What do I do? |
|
|
|
You don't have to, but if you like, you may split up the test suite into |
|
`FooTest` and `FooDeathTest`, where the names make it clear that they are |
|
related: |
|
|
|
```c++ |
|
class FooTest : public ::testing::Test { ... }; |
|
|
|
TEST_F(FooTest, Abc) { ... } |
|
TEST_F(FooTest, Def) { ... } |
|
|
|
using FooDeathTest = FooTest; |
|
|
|
TEST_F(FooDeathTest, Uvw) { ... EXPECT_DEATH(...) ... } |
|
TEST_F(FooDeathTest, Xyz) { ... ASSERT_DEATH(...) ... } |
|
``` |
|
|
|
## googletest prints the LOG messages in a death test's child process only when the test fails. How can I see the LOG messages when the death test succeeds? |
|
|
|
Printing the LOG messages generated by the statement inside `EXPECT_DEATH()` |
|
makes it harder to search for real problems in the parent's log. Therefore, |
|
googletest only prints them when the death test has failed. |
|
|
|
If you really need to see such LOG messages, a workaround is to temporarily |
|
break the death test (e.g. by changing the regex pattern it is expected to |
|
match). Admittedly, this is a hack. We'll consider a more permanent solution |
|
after the fork-and-exec-style death tests are implemented. |
|
|
|
## The compiler complains about "no match for 'operator<<'" when I use an assertion. What gives? |
|
|
|
If you use a user-defined type `FooType` in an assertion, you must make sure |
|
there is an `std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream&, const FooType&)` function |
|
defined such that we can print a value of `FooType`. |
|
|
|
In addition, if `FooType` is declared in a name space, the `<<` operator also |
|
needs to be defined in the *same* name space. See https://abseil.io/tips/49 for details. |
|
|
|
## How do I suppress the memory leak messages on Windows? |
|
|
|
Since the statically initialized googletest singleton requires allocations on |
|
the heap, the Visual C++ memory leak detector will report memory leaks at the |
|
end of the program run. The easiest way to avoid this is to use the |
|
`_CrtMemCheckpoint` and `_CrtMemDumpAllObjectsSince` calls to not report any |
|
statically initialized heap objects. See MSDN for more details and additional |
|
heap check/debug routines. |
|
|
|
## How can my code detect if it is running in a test? |
|
|
|
If you write code that sniffs whether it's running in a test and does different |
|
things accordingly, you are leaking test-only logic into production code and |
|
there is no easy way to ensure that the test-only code paths aren't run by |
|
mistake in production. Such cleverness also leads to |
|
[Heisenbugs](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heisenbug). Therefore we strongly |
|
advise against the practice, and googletest doesn't provide a way to do it. |
|
|
|
In general, the recommended way to cause the code to behave differently under |
|
test is [Dependency Injection](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dependency_injection). You can inject |
|
different functionality from the test and from the production code. Since your |
|
production code doesn't link in the for-test logic at all (the |
|
[`testonly`](https://docs.bazel.build/versions/master/be/common-definitions.html#common.testonly) attribute for BUILD targets helps to ensure |
|
that), there is no danger in accidentally running it. |
|
|
|
However, if you *really*, *really*, *really* have no choice, and if you follow |
|
the rule of ending your test program names with `_test`, you can use the |
|
*horrible* hack of sniffing your executable name (`argv[0]` in `main()`) to know |
|
whether the code is under test. |
|
|
|
## How do I temporarily disable a test? |
|
|
|
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). |
|
|
|
To include disabled tests in test execution, just invoke the test program with |
|
the --gtest_also_run_disabled_tests flag. |
|
|
|
## Is it OK if I have two separate `TEST(Foo, Bar)` test methods defined in different namespaces? |
|
|
|
Yes. |
|
|
|
The rule is **all test methods in the same test suite must use the same fixture |
|
class.** This means that the following is **allowed** because both tests use the |
|
same fixture class (`::testing::Test`). |
|
|
|
```c++ |
|
namespace foo { |
|
TEST(CoolTest, DoSomething) { |
|
SUCCEED(); |
|
} |
|
} // namespace foo |
|
|
|
namespace bar { |
|
TEST(CoolTest, DoSomething) { |
|
SUCCEED(); |
|
} |
|
} // namespace bar |
|
``` |
|
|
|
However, the following code is **not allowed** and will produce a runtime error |
|
from googletest because the test methods are using different test fixture |
|
classes with the same test suite name. |
|
|
|
```c++ |
|
namespace foo { |
|
class CoolTest : public ::testing::Test {}; // Fixture foo::CoolTest |
|
TEST_F(CoolTest, DoSomething) { |
|
SUCCEED(); |
|
} |
|
} // namespace foo |
|
|
|
namespace bar { |
|
class CoolTest : public ::testing::Test {}; // Fixture: bar::CoolTest |
|
TEST_F(CoolTest, DoSomething) { |
|
SUCCEED(); |
|
} |
|
} // namespace bar |
|
```
|
|
|