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1# Googletest Primer
2
3
4## Introduction: Why googletest?
5
6*googletest* helps you write better C++ tests.
7
8googletest is a testing framework developed by the Testing
9Technology team with Google's specific
10requirements and constraints in mind. No matter whether you work on Linux,
11Windows, or a Mac, if you write C++ code, googletest can help you. And it
12supports *any* kind of tests, not just unit tests.
13
14So what makes a good test, and how does googletest fit in? We believe:
15
161.  Tests should be *independent* and *repeatable*. It's a pain to debug a test
17    that succeeds or fails as a result of other tests. googletest isolates the
18    tests by running each of them on a different object. When a test fails,
19    googletest allows you to run it in isolation for quick debugging.
201.  Tests should be well *organized* and reflect the structure of the tested
21    code. googletest groups related tests into test cases that can share data
22    and subroutines. This common pattern is easy to recognize and makes tests
23    easy to maintain. Such consistency is especially helpful when people switch
24    projects and start to work on a new code base.
251.  Tests should be *portable* and *reusable*. Google has a lot of code that is
26    platform-neutral, its tests should also be platform-neutral. googletest
27    works on different OSes, with different compilers (gcc, icc, and MSVC), with
28    or without exceptions, so googletest tests can easily work with a variety of
29    configurations.
301.  When tests fail, they should provide as much *information* about the problem
31    as possible. googletest doesn't stop at the first test failure. Instead, it
32    only stops the current test and continues with the next. You can also set up
33    tests that report non-fatal failures after which the current test continues.
34    Thus, you can detect and fix multiple bugs in a single run-edit-compile
35    cycle.
361.  The testing framework should liberate test writers from housekeeping chores
37    and let them focus on the test *content*. googletest automatically keeps
38    track of all tests defined, and doesn't require the user to enumerate them
39    in order to run them.
401.  Tests should be *fast*. With googletest, you can reuse shared resources
41    across tests and pay for the set-up/tear-down only once, without making
42    tests depend on each other.
43
44Since googletest is based on the popular xUnit architecture, you'll feel right
45at home if you've used JUnit or PyUnit before. If not, it will take you about 10
46minutes to learn the basics and get started. So let's go!
47
48## Beware of the nomenclature
49
50_Note:_ There might be some confusion of idea due to different
51definitions of the terms _Test_, _Test Case_ and _Test Suite_, so beware
52of misunderstanding these.
53
54Historically, googletest started to use the term _Test Case_ for grouping
55related tests, whereas current publications including the International Software
56Testing Qualifications Board ([ISTQB](http://www.istqb.org/)) and various
57textbooks on Software Quality use the term _[Test
58Suite](http://glossary.istqb.org/search/test%20suite)_ for this.
59
60The related term _Test_, as it is used in the googletest, is corresponding to
61the term _[Test Case](http://glossary.istqb.org/search/test%20case)_ of ISTQB
62and others.
63
64The term _Test_ is commonly of broad enough sense, including ISTQB's definition
65of _Test Case_, so it's not much of a problem here. But the term _Test Case_ as
66was used in Google Test is of contradictory sense and thus confusing.
67
68googletest recently started replacing the term _Test Case_ by _Test Suite_ The
69preferred API is TestSuite*. The older TestCase* API is being slowly deprecated
70and refactored away
71
72So please be aware of the different definitions of the terms:
73
74Meaning                                                                              | googletest Term                                                                                            | [ISTQB](http://www.istqb.org/) Term
75:----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | :--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | :----------------------------------
76Exercise a particular program path with specific input values and verify the results | [TEST()](#simple-tests)                                                                                    | [Test Case](http://glossary.istqb.org/search/test%20case)
77
78## Basic Concepts
79
80When using googletest, you start by writing *assertions*, which are statements
81that check whether a condition is true. An assertion's result can be *success*,
82*nonfatal failure*, or *fatal failure*. If a fatal failure occurs, it aborts the
83current function; otherwise the program continues normally.
84
85*Tests* use assertions to verify the tested code's behavior. If a test crashes
86or has a failed assertion, then it *fails*; otherwise it *succeeds*.
87
88A *test case* contains one or many tests. You should group your tests into test
89cases that reflect the structure of the tested code. When multiple tests in a
90test case need to share common objects and subroutines, you can put them into a
91*test fixture* class.
92
93A *test program* can contain multiple test cases.
94
95We'll now explain how to write a test program, starting at the individual
96assertion level and building up to tests and test cases.
97
98## Assertions
99
100googletest assertions are macros that resemble function calls. You test a class
101or function by making assertions about its behavior. When an assertion fails,
102googletest prints the assertion's source file and line number location, along
103with a failure message. You may also supply a custom failure message which will
104be appended to googletest's message.
105
106The assertions come in pairs that test the same thing but have different effects
107on the current function. `ASSERT_*` versions generate fatal failures when they
108fail, and **abort the current function**. `EXPECT_*` versions generate nonfatal
109failures, which don't abort the current function. Usually `EXPECT_*` are
110preferred, as they allow more than one failure to be reported in a test.
111However, you should use `ASSERT_*` if it doesn't make sense to continue when the
112assertion in question fails.
113
114Since a failed `ASSERT_*` returns from the current function immediately,
115possibly skipping clean-up code that comes after it, it may cause a space leak.
116Depending on the nature of the leak, it may or may not be worth fixing - so keep
117this in mind if you get a heap checker error in addition to assertion errors.
118
119To provide a custom failure message, simply stream it into the macro using the
120`<<` operator, or a sequence of such operators. An example:
121
122```c++
123ASSERT_EQ(x.size(), y.size()) << "Vectors x and y are of unequal length";
124
125for (int i = 0; i < x.size(); ++i) {
126  EXPECT_EQ(x[i], y[i]) << "Vectors x and y differ at index " << i;
127}
128```
129
130Anything that can be streamed to an `ostream` can be streamed to an assertion
131macro--in particular, C strings and `string` objects. If a wide string
132(`wchar_t*`, `TCHAR*` in `UNICODE` mode on Windows, or `std::wstring`) is
133streamed to an assertion, it will be translated to UTF-8 when printed.
134
135### Basic Assertions
136
137These assertions do basic true/false condition testing.
138
139Fatal assertion            | Nonfatal assertion         | Verifies
140-------------------------- | -------------------------- | --------------------
141`ASSERT_TRUE(condition);`  | `EXPECT_TRUE(condition);`  | `condition` is true
142`ASSERT_FALSE(condition);` | `EXPECT_FALSE(condition);` | `condition` is false
143
144Remember, when they fail, `ASSERT_*` yields a fatal failure and returns from the
145current function, while `EXPECT_*` yields a nonfatal failure, allowing the
146function to continue running. In either case, an assertion failure means its
147containing test fails.
148
149**Availability**: Linux, Windows, Mac.
150
151### Binary Comparison
152
153This section describes assertions that compare two values.
154
155Fatal assertion          | Nonfatal assertion       | Verifies
156------------------------ | ------------------------ | --------------
157`ASSERT_EQ(val1, val2);` | `EXPECT_EQ(val1, val2);` | `val1 == val2`
158`ASSERT_NE(val1, val2);` | `EXPECT_NE(val1, val2);` | `val1 != val2`
159`ASSERT_LT(val1, val2);` | `EXPECT_LT(val1, val2);` | `val1 < val2`
160`ASSERT_LE(val1, val2);` | `EXPECT_LE(val1, val2);` | `val1 <= val2`
161`ASSERT_GT(val1, val2);` | `EXPECT_GT(val1, val2);` | `val1 > val2`
162`ASSERT_GE(val1, val2);` | `EXPECT_GE(val1, val2);` | `val1 >= val2`
163
164Value arguments must be comparable by the assertion's comparison operator or
165you'll get a compiler error. We used to require the arguments to support the
166`<<` operator for streaming to an `ostream`, but it's no longer necessary. If
167`<<` is supported, it will be called to print the arguments when the assertion
168fails; otherwise googletest will attempt to print them in the best way it can.
169For more details and how to customize the printing of the arguments, see
170gMock [recipe](../../googlemock/docs/CookBook.md#teaching-google-mock-how-to-print-your-values).).
171
172These assertions can work with a user-defined type, but only if you define the
173corresponding comparison operator (e.g. `==`, `<`, etc). Since this is
174discouraged by the Google [C++ Style
175Guide](https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html#Operator_Overloading),
176you may need to use `ASSERT_TRUE()` or `EXPECT_TRUE()` to assert the equality of
177two objects of a user-defined type.
178
179However, when possible, `ASSERT_EQ(actual, expected)` is preferred to
180`ASSERT_TRUE(actual == expected)`, since it tells you `actual` and `expected`'s
181values on failure.
182
183Arguments are always evaluated exactly once. Therefore, it's OK for the
184arguments to have side effects. However, as with any ordinary C/C++ function,
185the arguments' evaluation order is undefined (i.e. the compiler is free to
186choose any order) and your code should not depend on any particular argument
187evaluation order.
188
189`ASSERT_EQ()` does pointer equality on pointers. If used on two C strings, it
190tests if they are in the same memory location, not if they have the same value.
191Therefore, if you want to compare C strings (e.g. `const char*`) by value, use
192`ASSERT_STREQ()`, which will be described later on. In particular, to assert
193that a C string is `NULL`, use `ASSERT_STREQ(c_string, NULL)`. Consider using
194`ASSERT_EQ(c_string, nullptr)` if c++11 is supported. To compare two `string`
195objects, you should use `ASSERT_EQ`.
196
197When doing pointer comparisons use `*_EQ(ptr, nullptr)` and `*_NE(ptr, nullptr)`
198instead of `*_EQ(ptr, NULL)` and `*_NE(ptr, NULL)`. This is because `nullptr` is
199typed while `NULL` is not. See [FAQ](faq.md#why-does-googletest-support-expect_eqnull-ptr-and-assert_eqnull-ptr-but-not-expect_nenull-ptr-and-assert_nenull-ptr)
200for more details.
201
202If you're working with floating point numbers, you may want to use the floating
203point variations of some of these macros in order to avoid problems caused by
204rounding. See [Advanced googletest Topics](advanced.md) for details.
205
206Macros in this section work with both narrow and wide string objects (`string`
207and `wstring`).
208
209**Availability**: Linux, Windows, Mac.
210
211**Historical note**: Before February 2016 `*_EQ` had a convention of calling it
212as `ASSERT_EQ(expected, actual)`, so lots of existing code uses this order. Now
213`*_EQ` treats both parameters in the same way.
214
215### String Comparison
216
217The assertions in this group compare two **C strings**. If you want to compare
218two `string` objects, use `EXPECT_EQ`, `EXPECT_NE`, and etc instead.
219
220| Fatal assertion                 | Nonfatal assertion              | Verifies                                                 |
221| ------------------------------- | ------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------------- |
222| `ASSERT_STREQ(str1, str2);`     | `EXPECT_STREQ(str1, str2);`     | the two C strings have the same content                  |
223| `ASSERT_STRNE(str1, str2);`     | `EXPECT_STRNE(str1, str2);`     | the two C strings have different contents                |
224| `ASSERT_STRCASEEQ(str1, str2);` | `EXPECT_STRCASEEQ(str1, str2);` | the two C strings have the same content, ignoring case   |
225| `ASSERT_STRCASENE(str1, str2);` | `EXPECT_STRCASENE(str1, str2);` | the two C strings have different contents, ignoring case |
226
227Note that "CASE" in an assertion name means that case is ignored. A `NULL`
228pointer and an empty string are considered *different*.
229
230`*STREQ*` and `*STRNE*` also accept wide C strings (`wchar_t*`). If a comparison
231of two wide strings fails, their values will be printed as UTF-8 narrow strings.
232
233**Availability**: Linux, Windows, Mac.
234
235**See also**: For more string comparison tricks (substring, prefix, suffix, and
236regular expression matching, for example), see
237[this](https://github.com/google/googletest/blob/master/googletest/docs/advanced.md)
238in the Advanced googletest Guide.
239
240## Simple Tests
241
242To create a test:
243
2441.  Use the `TEST()` macro to define and name a test function, These are
245    ordinary C++ functions that don't return a value.
2461.  In this function, along with any valid C++ statements you want to include,
247    use the various googletest assertions to check values.
2481.  The test's result is determined by the assertions; if any assertion in the
249    test fails (either fatally or non-fatally), or if the test crashes, the
250    entire test fails. Otherwise, it succeeds.
251
252```c++
253TEST(TestSuiteName, TestName) {
254  ... test body ...
255}
256```
257
258`TEST()` arguments go from general to specific. The *first* argument is the name
259of the test case, and the *second* argument is the test's name within the test
260case. Both names must be valid C++ identifiers, and they should not contain
261underscore (`_`). A test's *full name* consists of its containing test case and
262its individual name. Tests from different test cases can have the same
263individual name.
264
265For example, let's take a simple integer function:
266
267```c++
268int Factorial(int n);  // Returns the factorial of n
269```
270
271A test case for this function might look like:
272
273```c++
274// Tests factorial of 0.
275TEST(FactorialTest, HandlesZeroInput) {
276  EXPECT_EQ(Factorial(0), 1);
277}
278
279// Tests factorial of positive numbers.
280TEST(FactorialTest, HandlesPositiveInput) {
281  EXPECT_EQ(Factorial(1), 1);
282  EXPECT_EQ(Factorial(2), 2);
283  EXPECT_EQ(Factorial(3), 6);
284  EXPECT_EQ(Factorial(8), 40320);
285}
286```
287
288googletest groups the test results by test cases, so logically-related tests
289should be in the same test case; in other words, the first argument to their
290`TEST()` should be the same. In the above example, we have two tests,
291`HandlesZeroInput` and `HandlesPositiveInput`, that belong to the same test case
292`FactorialTest`.
293
294When naming your test cases and tests, you should follow the same convention as
295for [naming functions and
296classes](https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html#Function_Names).
297
298**Availability**: Linux, Windows, Mac.
299
300## Test Fixtures: Using the Same Data Configuration for Multiple Tests
301
302If you find yourself writing two or more tests that operate on similar data, you
303can use a *test fixture*. It allows you to reuse the same configuration of
304objects for several different tests.
305
306To create a fixture:
307
3081.  Derive a class from `::testing::Test` . Start its body with `protected:` as
309    we'll want to access fixture members from sub-classes.
3101.  Inside the class, declare any objects you plan to use.
3111.  If necessary, write a default constructor or `SetUp()` function to prepare
312    the objects for each test. A common mistake is to spell `SetUp()` as
313    **`Setup()`** with a small `u` - Use `override` in C++11 to make sure you
314    spelled it correctly
3151.  If necessary, write a destructor or `TearDown()` function to release any
316    resources you allocated in `SetUp()` . To learn when you should use the
317    constructor/destructor and when you should use `SetUp()/TearDown()`, read
318    this [FAQ](faq.md#should-i-use-the-constructordestructor-of-the-test-fixture-or-setupteardown) entry.
3191.  If needed, define subroutines for your tests to share.
320
321When using a fixture, use `TEST_F()` instead of `TEST()` as it allows you to
322access objects and subroutines in the test fixture:
323
324```c++
325TEST_F(TestSuiteName, TestName) {
326  ... test body ...
327}
328```
329
330Like `TEST()`, the first argument is the test case name, but for `TEST_F()` this
331must be the name of the test fixture class. You've probably guessed: `_F` is for
332fixture.
333
334Unfortunately, the C++ macro system does not allow us to create a single macro
335that can handle both types of tests. Using the wrong macro causes a compiler
336error.
337
338Also, you must first define a test fixture class before using it in a
339`TEST_F()`, or you'll get the compiler error "`virtual outside class
340declaration`".
341
342For each test defined with `TEST_F()` , googletest will create a *fresh* test
343fixture at runtime, immediately initialize it via `SetUp()` , run the test,
344clean up by calling `TearDown()` , and then delete the test fixture. Note that
345different tests in the same test case have different test fixture objects, and
346googletest always deletes a test fixture before it creates the next one.
347googletest does **not** reuse the same test fixture for multiple tests. Any
348changes one test makes to the fixture do not affect other tests.
349
350As an example, let's write tests for a FIFO queue class named `Queue`, which has
351the following interface:
352
353```c++
354template <typename E>  // E is the element type.
355class Queue {
356 public:
357  Queue();
358  void Enqueue(const E& element);
359  E* Dequeue();  // Returns NULL if the queue is empty.
360  size_t size() const;
361  ...
362};
363```
364
365First, define a fixture class. By convention, you should give it the name
366`FooTest` where `Foo` is the class being tested.
367
368```c++
369class QueueTest : public ::testing::Test {
370 protected:
371  void SetUp() override {
372     q1_.Enqueue(1);
373     q2_.Enqueue(2);
374     q2_.Enqueue(3);
375  }
376
377  // void TearDown() override {}
378
379  Queue<int> q0_;
380  Queue<int> q1_;
381  Queue<int> q2_;
382};
383```
384
385In this case, `TearDown()` is not needed since we don't have to clean up after
386each test, other than what's already done by the destructor.
387
388Now we'll write tests using `TEST_F()` and this fixture.
389
390```c++
391TEST_F(QueueTest, IsEmptyInitially) {
392  EXPECT_EQ(q0_.size(), 0);
393}
394
395TEST_F(QueueTest, DequeueWorks) {
396  int* n = q0_.Dequeue();
397  EXPECT_EQ(n, nullptr);
398
399  n = q1_.Dequeue();
400  ASSERT_NE(n, nullptr);
401  EXPECT_EQ(*n, 1);
402  EXPECT_EQ(q1_.size(), 0);
403  delete n;
404
405  n = q2_.Dequeue();
406  ASSERT_NE(n, nullptr);
407  EXPECT_EQ(*n, 2);
408  EXPECT_EQ(q2_.size(), 1);
409  delete n;
410}
411```
412
413The above uses both `ASSERT_*` and `EXPECT_*` assertions. The rule of thumb is
414to use `EXPECT_*` when you want the test to continue to reveal more errors after
415the assertion failure, and use `ASSERT_*` when continuing after failure doesn't
416make sense. For example, the second assertion in the `Dequeue` test is
417=ASSERT_NE(nullptr, n)=, as we need to dereference the pointer `n` later, which
418would lead to a segfault when `n` is `NULL`.
419
420When these tests run, the following happens:
421
4221.  googletest constructs a `QueueTest` object (let's call it `t1` ).
4231.  `t1.SetUp()` initializes `t1` .
4241.  The first test ( `IsEmptyInitially` ) runs on `t1` .
4251.  `t1.TearDown()` cleans up after the test finishes.
4261.  `t1` is destructed.
4271.  The above steps are repeated on another `QueueTest` object, this time
428    running the `DequeueWorks` test.
429
430**Availability**: Linux, Windows, Mac.
431
432
433## Invoking the Tests
434
435`TEST()` and `TEST_F()` implicitly register their tests with googletest. So,
436unlike with many other C++ testing frameworks, you don't have to re-list all
437your defined tests in order to run them.
438
439After defining your tests, you can run them with `RUN_ALL_TESTS()` , which
440returns `0` if all the tests are successful, or `1` otherwise. Note that
441`RUN_ALL_TESTS()` runs *all tests* in your link unit -- they can be from
442different test cases, or even different source files.
443
444When invoked, the `RUN_ALL_TESTS()` macro:
445
4461. Saves the state of all googletest flags
447
448*   Creates a test fixture object for the first test.
449
450*   Initializes it via `SetUp()`.
451
452*   Runs the test on the fixture object.
453
454*   Cleans up the fixture via `TearDown()`.
455
456*   Deletes the fixture.
457
458* Restores the state of all googletest flags
459
460*   Repeats the above steps for the next test, until all tests have run.
461
462If a fatal failure happens the subsequent steps will be skipped.
463
464> IMPORTANT: You must **not** ignore the return value of `RUN_ALL_TESTS()`, or
465> you will get a compiler error. The rationale for this design is that the
466> automated testing service determines whether a test has passed based on its
467> exit code, not on its stdout/stderr output; thus your `main()` function must
468> return the value of `RUN_ALL_TESTS()`.
469>
470> Also, you should call `RUN_ALL_TESTS()` only **once**. Calling it more than
471> once conflicts with some advanced googletest features (e.g. thread-safe [death
472> tests](advanced.md#death-tests)) and thus is not supported.
473
474**Availability**: Linux, Windows, Mac.
475
476## Writing the main() Function
477
478Write your own main() function, which should
479return the value of `RUN_ALL_TESTS()`
480
481```c++
482#include "this/package/foo.h"
483#include "gtest/gtest.h"
484
485namespace {
486
487// The fixture for testing class Foo.
488class FooTest : public ::testing::Test {
489 protected:
490  // You can remove any or all of the following functions if its body
491  // is empty.
492
493  FooTest() {
494     // You can do set-up work for each test here.
495  }
496
497  ~FooTest() override {
498     // You can do clean-up work that doesn't throw exceptions here.
499  }
500
501  // If the constructor and destructor are not enough for setting up
502  // and cleaning up each test, you can define the following methods:
503
504  void SetUp() override {
505     // Code here will be called immediately after the constructor (right
506     // before each test).
507  }
508
509  void TearDown() override {
510     // Code here will be called immediately after each test (right
511     // before the destructor).
512  }
513
514  // Objects declared here can be used by all tests in the test case for Foo.
515};
516
517// Tests that the Foo::Bar() method does Abc.
518TEST_F(FooTest, MethodBarDoesAbc) {
519  const std::string input_filepath = "this/package/testdata/myinputfile.dat";
520  const std::string output_filepath = "this/package/testdata/myoutputfile.dat";
521  Foo f;
522  EXPECT_EQ(f.Bar(input_filepath, output_filepath), 0);
523}
524
525// Tests that Foo does Xyz.
526TEST_F(FooTest, DoesXyz) {
527  // Exercises the Xyz feature of Foo.
528}
529
530}  // namespace
531
532int main(int argc, char **argv) {
533  ::testing::InitGoogleTest(&argc, argv);
534  return RUN_ALL_TESTS();
535}
536```
537
538
539The `::testing::InitGoogleTest()` function parses the command line for
540googletest flags, and removes all recognized flags. This allows the user to
541control a test program's behavior via various flags, which we'll cover in
542[AdvancedGuide](advanced.md). You **must** call this function before calling
543`RUN_ALL_TESTS()`, or the flags won't be properly initialized.
544
545On Windows, `InitGoogleTest()` also works with wide strings, so it can be used
546in programs compiled in `UNICODE` mode as well.
547
548But maybe you think that writing all those main() functions is too much work? We
549agree with you completely and that's why Google Test provides a basic
550implementation of main(). If it fits your needs, then just link your test with
551gtest\_main library and you are good to go.
552
553NOTE: `ParseGUnitFlags()` is deprecated in favor of `InitGoogleTest()`.
554
555
556## Known Limitations
557
558*   Google Test is designed to be thread-safe. The implementation is thread-safe
559    on systems where the `pthreads` library is available. It is currently
560    _unsafe_ to use Google Test assertions from two threads concurrently on
561    other systems (e.g. Windows). In most tests this is not an issue as usually
562    the assertions are done in the main thread. If you want to help, you can
563    volunteer to implement the necessary synchronization primitives in
564    `gtest-port.h` for your platform.
565