This post covers building and testing a minimal, but still useful, C project. We'll use Google's gtest and CMake for testing C code. This will serve as a foundation for some upcoming posts/projects on programming Linux, userland networking and interpreters.

The first version of this post only included one module to test. The test/CMakeLists.txt would also only expose a single pass-fail status for all modules. The second version of this post extends the test/CMakeLists.txt to expose each test/*.cpp file as its own CMake test so that results are displayed by ctest per file. The second version also splits the original src/testy.c and include/testy/testy.h module into a widget and customer module to demonstrate the changes to the CMake configuration.

The "testy" sample project

In this project, we'll put source code in src/ and publicly exported symbols (functions, structs, etc.) in header files in include/testy/ . There will be a main.c in the src/ directory. Tests are written in C++ (since gtest is a C++ testing framework) and are in the test/ directory.

Here's an overview of the source and test code.

src/widget.c

This file has some library code that we should be able to test.

#include "testy/widget.h" int private_ok_value = 2; int widget_ok(int a, int b) { return a + b == private_ok_value; }

include/testy/widget.h

This file handles exported symbols for widget code.

#ifndef _WIDGET_H_ #define _WIDGET_H_ int widget_ok(int, int); #endif

src/customer.c

This file has some more library code that we should be able to test.

#include "testy/customer.h" int customer_check(int a) { return a == 5; }

include/testy/customer.h

This file handles exported symbols for customer code.

#ifndef _CUSTOMER_H_ #define _CUSTOMER_H_ int customer_check(int); #endif

src/main.c

This is the entrypoint to a program built around libtesty.

#include "testy/customer.h" #include "testy/widget.h" int main() { if (widget_ok(1, 1)) { return customer_check(5); } return 0; }

test/widget.cpp

This is one of our test files. It registers test cases and uses gtest to make assertions. We need to wrap the testy/widget.h include in an extern "C" to stop C++ from name-mangling.

#include "gtest/gtest.h" extern "C" { #include "testy/widget.h" } TEST(widget, ok) { ASSERT_EQ(widget_ok(1, 1), 1); } TEST(testy, not_ok) { ASSERT_EQ(widget_ok(1, 2), 0); }

You can see a good high-level overview of gtest testing utilities like ASSERT_EQ and TEST here.

test/customer.cpp

This is another one of our test files.

#include "gtest/gtest.h" extern "C" { #include "testy/customer.h" } TEST(customer, ok) { ASSERT_EQ(customer_check(5), 1); } TEST(testy, not_ok) { ASSERT_EQ(customer_check(0), 0); }

test/main.cpp

This is a standard entrypoint for the test runner.

#include "gtest/gtest.h" int main(int argc, char **argv) { ::testing::InitGoogleTest(&argc, argv); return RUN_ALL_TESTS(); }

Building with CMake

CMake is a build tool that (among other things) produces a Makefile we can run to build our code. We will also use it for dependency management. But fundementally we use it because gtest requires it.

CMake options/rules are defined in a CMakeLists.txt file. We'll have one in the root directory, one in the test directory, and a template for one that will handle the gtest dependency.

A first draft of the top-level CMakeLists.txt might look like this:

cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.1) project(testy) ## ### Source definitions ### ## include_directories("${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/include") file(GLOB sources "${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/src/*.c") add_executable(testy ${sources})

Using include_directory will make sure we compile with the -I flag set up correctly for our include directory.

Using add_executable sets up the binary name to produce from the given sources. And we're using the file helper to get a glob match of C files rather than listing them all out verbatim in the add_executable call.

Building and running

CMake pollutes the current directory, and is fine running in a different directory, so we'll make a build/ directory so we don't pollute root. Then we'll build a Makefile with CMake, run Make, and run our program.

$ mkdir build $ cd build $ cmake .. -- The C compiler identification is AppleClang 10.0.1.10010046 -- The CXX compiler identification is AppleClang 10.0.1.10010046 -- Check for working C compiler: /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/usr/bin/cc -- Check for working C compiler: /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/usr/bin/cc -- works -- Detecting C compiler ABI info -- Detecting C compiler ABI info - done -- Detecting C compile features -- Detecting C compile features - done -- Check for working CXX compiler: /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/usr/bin/c++ -- Check for working CXX compiler: /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/usr/bin/c++ -- works -- Detecting CXX compiler ABI info -- Detecting CXX compiler ABI info - done -- Detecting CXX compile features -- Detecting CXX compile features - done -- Configuring done -- Generating done -- Build files have been written to: /Users/philipeaton/tmp/testy/build $ make [ 25%] Building C object CMakeFiles/testy.dir/src/customer.c.o [ 50%] Building C object CMakeFiles/testy.dir/src/widget.c.o [ 75%] Building C object CMakeFiles/testy.dir/src/main.c.o [100%] Linking C executable testy [100%] Built target testy $ ./testy $ echo $? 1

CMakeLists.txt.in

This template file handles downloading the gtest dependency from github.com pinned to a release. It will be copied into a subdirectory during the cmake .. step.

cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.1) project(googletest-download NONE) include(ExternalProject) ExternalProject_Add(googletest GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/google/googletest.git GIT_TAG release-1.8.1 SOURCE_DIR "${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/googletest-src" BINARY_DIR "${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/googletest-build" CONFIGURE_COMMAND "" BUILD_COMMAND "" INSTALL_COMMAND "" TEST_COMMAND "" )

Now we can tell CMake about it and how to build, within the top-level CMakeLists.txt file.

cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.1) project(testy) ## ### Test definitions ### ## configure_file(CMakeLists.txt.in googletest-download/CMakeLists.txt) execute_process(COMMAND ${CMAKE_COMMAND} -G "${CMAKE_GENERATOR}" . WORKING_DIRECTORY ${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/googletest-download ) execute_process(COMMAND ${CMAKE_COMMAND} --build . WORKING_DIRECTORY ${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/googletest-download ) add_subdirectory(${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/googletest-src ${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/googletest-build) enable_testing() add_subdirectory(test) ## ### Source definitions ### ## include_directories("${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/include") file(GLOB sources "${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/include/testy/*.h" "${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/src/*.c") add_executable(testy ${sources})

The add_subdirectory calls register a directory that contains its own CMakeLists.txt. It would fail now without a CMakeLists.txt file in the test/ directory.

test/CMakeLists.txt

This final file registers a unit_test executable compiling against the source and test code, and includes the project header files.

include_directories("${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/include") file(GLOB sources "${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/src/*.c") list(REMOVE_ITEM sources "${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/src/main.c") file(GLOB tests "${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/test/*.cpp") list(REMOVE_ITEM tests "${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/test/main.cpp") foreach(file ${tests}) set(name) get_filename_component(name ${file} NAME_WE) add_executable("${name}_tests" ${sources} ${file} "${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/test/main.cpp") target_link_libraries("${name}_tests" gtest_main) add_test(NAME ${name} COMMAND "${name}_tests") endforeach()

We have to register a test for each file otherwise each file's tests won't show up by default (i.e. without a --verbose flag).

Building and running tests

Similar to building and running the source, we run CMake in a subdirectory but run make test or ctest after building all sources and tests with make .

$ cd build $ cmake .. -- Configuring done -- Generating done -- Build files have been written to: /Users/philipeaton/tmp/testy/build/googletest-download Scanning dependencies of target googletest [ 11%] Creating directories for 'googletest' [ 22%] Performing download step (git clone) for 'googletest' Cloning into 'googletest-src'... Note: checking out 'release-1.8.1'. You are in 'detached HEAD' state. You can look around, make experimental changes and commit them, and you can discard any commits you make in this state without impacting any branches by performing another checkout. If you want to create a new branch to retain commits you create, you may do so (now or later) by using -b with the checkout command again. Example: git checkout -b <new-branch-name> HEAD is now at 2fe3bd99 Merge pull request #1433 from dsacre/fix-clang-warnings [ 33%] No patch step for 'googletest' [ 44%] Performing update step for 'googletest' [ 55%] No configure step for 'googletest' [ 66%] No build step for 'googletest' [ 77%] No install step for 'googletest' [ 88%] No test step for 'googletest' [100%] Completed 'googletest' [100%] Built target googletest -- Found PythonInterp: /usr/local/bin/python (found version "2.7.16") -- Looking for pthread.h -- Looking for pthread.h - found -- Performing Test CMAKE_HAVE_LIBC_PTHREAD -- Performing Test CMAKE_HAVE_LIBC_PTHREAD - Success -- Found Threads: TRUE -- Configuring done -- Generating done -- Build files have been written to: /Users/philipeaton/tmp/testy/build $ make [ 4%] Building C object CMakeFiles/testy.dir/src/customer.c.o [ 9%] Building C object CMakeFiles/testy.dir/src/widget.c.o [ 13%] Building C object CMakeFiles/testy.dir/src/main.c.o [ 18%] Linking C executable testy [ 18%] Built target testy [ 22%] Building CXX object googletest-build/googlemock/gtest/CMakeFiles/gtest.dir/src/gtest-all.cc.o [ 27%] Linking CXX static library libgtest.a [ 27%] Built target gtest [ 31%] Building CXX object googletest-build/googlemock/CMakeFiles/gmock.dir/src/gmock-all.cc.o [ 36%] Linking CXX static library libgmock.a [ 36%] Built target gmock [ 40%] Building CXX object googletest-build/googlemock/CMakeFiles/gmock_main.dir/src/gmock_main.cc.o [ 45%] Linking CXX static library libgmock_main.a [ 45%] Built target gmock_main [ 50%] Building CXX object googletest-build/googlemock/gtest/CMakeFiles/gtest_main.dir/src/gtest_main.cc.o [ 54%] Linking CXX static library libgtest_main.a [ 54%] Built target gtest_main [ 59%] Building C object test/CMakeFiles/customer_tests.dir/__/src/customer.c.o [ 63%] Building C object test/CMakeFiles/customer_tests.dir/__/src/widget.c.o [ 68%] Building CXX object test/CMakeFiles/customer_tests.dir/customer.cpp.o [ 72%] Building CXX object test/CMakeFiles/customer_tests.dir/main.cpp.o [ 77%] Linking CXX executable customer_tests [ 77%] Built target customer_tests Scanning dependencies of target widget_tests [ 81%] Building C object test/CMakeFiles/widget_tests.dir/__/src/customer.c.o [ 86%] Building C object test/CMakeFiles/widget_tests.dir/__/src/widget.c.o [ 90%] Building CXX object test/CMakeFiles/widget_tests.dir/widget.cpp.o [ 95%] Building CXX object test/CMakeFiles/widget_tests.dir/main.cpp.o [100%] Linking CXX executable widget_tests [100%] Built target widget_tests

After running cmake and make , we're finally ready to run ctest .

$ ctest Test project /Users/philipeaton/tmp/testy/build Start 1: customer 1/2 Test #1: customer .......................... Passed 0.01 sec Start 2: widget 2/2 Test #2: widget ............................ Passed 0.00 sec 100% tests passed, 0 tests failed out of 2 Total Test time (real) = 0.01 sec

Now we're in a good place with most of the challenges of unit testing C code (i.e. ignoring mocks) past us.

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