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CMakeLists.txt | D | 12-May-2024 | 11.7 KiB | 324 | 266 | |
README.md | D | 12-May-2024 | 8.5 KiB | 216 | 157 |
README.md
1### Generic Build Instructions 2 3#### Setup 4 5To build GoogleTest and your tests that use it, you need to tell your build 6system where to find its headers and source files. The exact way to do it 7depends on which build system you use, and is usually straightforward. 8 9### Build with CMake 10 11GoogleTest comes with a CMake build script 12([CMakeLists.txt](https://github.com/google/googletest/blob/master/CMakeLists.txt)) 13that can be used on a wide range of platforms ("C" stands for cross-platform.). 14If you don't have CMake installed already, you can download it for free from 15<http://www.cmake.org/>. 16 17CMake works by generating native makefiles or build projects that can be used in 18the compiler environment of your choice. You can either build GoogleTest as a 19standalone project or it can be incorporated into an existing CMake build for 20another project. 21 22#### Standalone CMake Project 23 24When building GoogleTest as a standalone project, the typical workflow starts 25with 26 27``` 28git clone https://github.com/google/googletest.git -b release-1.10.0 29cd googletest # Main directory of the cloned repository. 30mkdir build # Create a directory to hold the build output. 31cd build 32cmake .. # Generate native build scripts for GoogleTest. 33``` 34 35The above command also includes GoogleMock by default. And so, if you want to 36build only GoogleTest, you should replace the last command with 37 38``` 39cmake .. -DBUILD_GMOCK=OFF 40``` 41 42If you are on a \*nix system, you should now see a Makefile in the current 43directory. Just type `make` to build GoogleTest. And then you can simply install 44GoogleTest if you are a system administrator. 45 46``` 47make 48sudo make install # Install in /usr/local/ by default 49``` 50 51If you use Windows and have Visual Studio installed, a `gtest.sln` file and 52several `.vcproj` files will be created. You can then build them using Visual 53Studio. 54 55On Mac OS X with Xcode installed, a `.xcodeproj` file will be generated. 56 57#### Incorporating Into An Existing CMake Project 58 59If you want to use GoogleTest in a project which already uses CMake, the easiest 60way is to get installed libraries and headers. 61 62* Import GoogleTest by using `find_package` (or `pkg_check_modules`). For 63 example, if `find_package(GTest CONFIG REQUIRED)` succeeds, you can use the 64 libraries as `GTest::gtest`, `GTest::gmock`. 65 66And a more robust and flexible approach is to build GoogleTest as part of that 67project directly. This is done by making the GoogleTest source code available to 68the main build and adding it using CMake's `add_subdirectory()` command. This 69has the significant advantage that the same compiler and linker settings are 70used between GoogleTest and the rest of your project, so issues associated with 71using incompatible libraries (eg debug/release), etc. are avoided. This is 72particularly useful on Windows. Making GoogleTest's source code available to the 73main build can be done a few different ways: 74 75* Download the GoogleTest source code manually and place it at a known 76 location. This is the least flexible approach and can make it more difficult 77 to use with continuous integration systems, etc. 78* Embed the GoogleTest source code as a direct copy in the main project's 79 source tree. This is often the simplest approach, but is also the hardest to 80 keep up to date. Some organizations may not permit this method. 81* Add GoogleTest as a git submodule or equivalent. This may not always be 82 possible or appropriate. Git submodules, for example, have their own set of 83 advantages and drawbacks. 84* Use CMake to download GoogleTest as part of the build's configure step. This 85 approach doesn't have the limitations of the other methods. 86 87The last of the above methods is implemented with a small piece of CMake code 88that downloads and pulls the GoogleTest code into the main build. 89 90Just add to your `CMakeLists.txt`: 91 92```cmake 93include(FetchContent) 94FetchContent_Declare( 95 googletest 96 # Specify the commit you depend on and update it regularly. 97 URL https://github.com/google/googletest/archive/609281088cfefc76f9d0ce82e1ff6c30cc3591e5.zip 98) 99# For Windows: Prevent overriding the parent project's compiler/linker settings 100set(gtest_force_shared_crt ON CACHE BOOL "" FORCE) 101FetchContent_MakeAvailable(googletest) 102 103# Now simply link against gtest or gtest_main as needed. Eg 104add_executable(example example.cpp) 105target_link_libraries(example gtest_main) 106add_test(NAME example_test COMMAND example) 107``` 108 109Note that this approach requires CMake 3.14 or later due to its use of the 110`FetchContent_MakeAvailable()` command. 111 112##### Visual Studio Dynamic vs Static Runtimes 113 114By default, new Visual Studio projects link the C runtimes dynamically but 115GoogleTest links them statically. This will generate an error that looks 116something like the following: gtest.lib(gtest-all.obj) : error LNK2038: mismatch 117detected for 'RuntimeLibrary': value 'MTd_StaticDebug' doesn't match value 118'MDd_DynamicDebug' in main.obj 119 120GoogleTest already has a CMake option for this: `gtest_force_shared_crt` 121 122Enabling this option will make gtest link the runtimes dynamically too, and 123match the project in which it is included. 124 125#### C++ Standard Version 126 127An environment that supports C++11 is required in order to successfully build 128GoogleTest. One way to ensure this is to specify the standard in the top-level 129project, for example by using the `set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 11)` command. If this 130is not feasible, for example in a C project using GoogleTest for validation, 131then it can be specified by adding it to the options for cmake via the 132`DCMAKE_CXX_FLAGS` option. 133 134### Tweaking GoogleTest 135 136GoogleTest can be used in diverse environments. The default configuration may 137not work (or may not work well) out of the box in some environments. However, 138you can easily tweak GoogleTest by defining control macros on the compiler 139command line. Generally, these macros are named like `GTEST_XYZ` and you define 140them to either 1 or 0 to enable or disable a certain feature. 141 142We list the most frequently used macros below. For a complete list, see file 143[include/gtest/internal/gtest-port.h](https://github.com/google/googletest/blob/master/googletest/include/gtest/internal/gtest-port.h). 144 145### Multi-threaded Tests 146 147GoogleTest is thread-safe where the pthread library is available. After 148`#include "gtest/gtest.h"`, you can check the 149`GTEST_IS_THREADSAFE` macro to see whether this is the case (yes if the macro is 150`#defined` to 1, no if it's undefined.). 151 152If GoogleTest doesn't correctly detect whether pthread is available in your 153environment, you can force it with 154 155 -DGTEST_HAS_PTHREAD=1 156 157or 158 159 -DGTEST_HAS_PTHREAD=0 160 161When GoogleTest uses pthread, you may need to add flags to your compiler and/or 162linker to select the pthread library, or you'll get link errors. If you use the 163CMake script, this is taken care of for you. If you use your own build script, 164you'll need to read your compiler and linker's manual to figure out what flags 165to add. 166 167### As a Shared Library (DLL) 168 169GoogleTest is compact, so most users can build and link it as a static library 170for the simplicity. You can choose to use GoogleTest as a shared library (known 171as a DLL on Windows) if you prefer. 172 173To compile *gtest* as a shared library, add 174 175 -DGTEST_CREATE_SHARED_LIBRARY=1 176 177to the compiler flags. You'll also need to tell the linker to produce a shared 178library instead - consult your linker's manual for how to do it. 179 180To compile your *tests* that use the gtest shared library, add 181 182 -DGTEST_LINKED_AS_SHARED_LIBRARY=1 183 184to the compiler flags. 185 186Note: while the above steps aren't technically necessary today when using some 187compilers (e.g. GCC), they may become necessary in the future, if we decide to 188improve the speed of loading the library (see 189<http://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/Visibility> for details). Therefore you are recommended 190to always add the above flags when using GoogleTest as a shared library. 191Otherwise a future release of GoogleTest may break your build script. 192 193### Avoiding Macro Name Clashes 194 195In C++, macros don't obey namespaces. Therefore two libraries that both define a 196macro of the same name will clash if you `#include` both definitions. In case a 197GoogleTest macro clashes with another library, you can force GoogleTest to 198rename its macro to avoid the conflict. 199 200Specifically, if both GoogleTest and some other code define macro FOO, you can 201add 202 203 -DGTEST_DONT_DEFINE_FOO=1 204 205to the compiler flags to tell GoogleTest to change the macro's name from `FOO` 206to `GTEST_FOO`. Currently `FOO` can be `FAIL`, `SUCCEED`, or `TEST`. For 207example, with `-DGTEST_DONT_DEFINE_TEST=1`, you'll need to write 208 209 GTEST_TEST(SomeTest, DoesThis) { ... } 210 211instead of 212 213 TEST(SomeTest, DoesThis) { ... } 214 215in order to define a test. 216