72 lines
2.7 KiB
Markdown
72 lines
2.7 KiB
Markdown
# Testing
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## General Testing Information
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In your main CMakeLists.txt you need to add the following function call (not in a subfolder):
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```cmake
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if(CMAKE_PROJECT_NAME STREQUAL PROJECT_NAME)
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include(CTest)
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endif()
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```
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Which will enable testing and set a `BUILD_TESTING` option so users can turn testing on and off (Along with [a few other things](https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/cmake/blob/master/Modules/CTest.cmake)). Or you can do this yourself by directly calling `enable_testing()`.
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When you add your test folder, you should do something like this:
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```cmake
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if(CMAKE_PROJECT_NAME STREQUAL PROJECT_NAME AND BUILD_TESTING)
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add_subdirectory(tests)
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endif()
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```
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The reason for this is that if someone else includes your package, and they use `BUILD_TESTING`, they probably do not want your tests to build. In the rare case that you really do want to enable testing on both packages, you can provide an override:
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```cmake
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if((CMAKE_PROJECT_NAME STREQUAL PROJECT_NAME OR MYPROJECT_BUILD_TESTING) AND BUILD_TESTING)
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add_subdirectory(tests)
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endif()
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```
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The main use case for the override above is actually in this book's own examples, as the master CMake project really does want to run all the subproject tests.
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You can register targets with:
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```cmake
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add_test(NAME TestName COMMAND TargetName)
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```
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If you put something else besides a target name after COMMAND, it will register as a command line to run. It would also be valid to put the generator expression:
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```cmake
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add_test(NAME TestName COMMAND $<TARGET_FILE:${TESTNAME}>)
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```
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which would use the output location (thus, the executable) of the produced target.
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## Building as part of a test
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If you want to run CMake to build a project as part of a test, you can do that too (in fact, this is how CMake tests itself). For example, if your master project was called `MyProject` and you had an `examples/simple` project that could build by itself, this would look like:
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```cmake
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add_test(
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NAME
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ExampleCMakeBuild
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COMMAND
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"${CMAKE_CTEST_COMMAND}"
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--build-and-test "${My_SOURCE_DIR}/examples/simple"
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"${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/simple"
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--build-generator "${CMAKE_GENERATOR}"
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--test-command "${CMAKE_CTEST_COMMAND}"
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)
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```
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## Testing Frameworks
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Look at the subchapters for recipes for popular frameworks.
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* [GoogleTest](testing/googletest.md): A popular option from Google. Development can be a bit slow.
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* [Catch2](testing/catch.md): A modern, PyTest-like framework with clever macros.
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* [DocTest](https://github.com/onqtam/doctest): A replacement for Catch2 that is supposed to compile much faster and be cleaner. See Catch2 chapter and replace with DocTest.
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