XSTest is a cross-platform C++ unit testing library.
- Cross-platform (macOS, Windows, Linux, Unix)
- C++11 and greater
- Header-only library
- Integration with IDEs such as Xcode and VisualStudio
- Compatible with GoogleTest
XSTest is a header only library, meaning you simply need to include XSTest/XSTest.hpp
in order to use-it.
Test cases are defined using the XTest
macro.
Parameters are the test suite name and the test case name:
#include <XSTest/XSTest.hpp>
XSTest( MyTestSuite, MyTestCase )
{
/* Test case body */
}
Note that tests cases and test suites are run in random order for each invocation.
Test case body is user-defined code, but the test case result is controlled using assertions macros:
#include <XSTest/XSTest.hpp>
XSTest( MyTestSuite, MyTestCase )
{
XSTestAssertTrue( true ); /* Will succeed */
XSTestAssertEqual( true, false ); /* Will fail */
}
Usually, the unit tests are packaged into an executable.
You can define a main
function that will run all registered tests using:
#include <XSTest/XSTest.hpp>
int main( int argc, char * argv[] )
{
return XS::Test::RunAll( { argc, argv } );
}
As an alternative, you can define the XSTEST_MAIN
macro.
This will automatically generate a main
function for you.
#define XSTEST_MAIN
#include <XSTest/XSTest.hpp>
XSTest supports fixtures, that is test cases that will run from a user defined class representing the test suite.
This allows custom setup to be performed prior to running a test case.
Fixtures requires a user-defined class, inheriting from XS::Test::Case
, and are defined with the XSTestFixture
macro:
#include <XSTest/XSTest.hpp>
class MyFixture: XS::Test::Case
{
protected:
void SetUp() override
{
this->_x = 42;
}
void TearDown() override
{}
int _x = 0;
};
XSTestFixture( MyFixture, MyTestCase )
{
XSTestAssertEqual( this->_x, 42 ); /* Will succeed */
}
For each test case, a new instance of the fixture class will be created.
SetUp
and TearDown
will be automatically called, allowing you to add custom behaviours to your test suite.
When XSTest is run as an executable, you can specify which test you want to run by providing the names as command-line arguments:
./MyTestExecutable Foo Bar.Test1 Bar.Test2
In the example above, all tests from the Foo
suite will run, as well as Test1
and Test2
from the Bar
suite.
XSTest provides a bridge for Xcode's XCTest framework, allowing you to run your tests and see the results directly from Xcode.
In order to use XSTest within Xcode, simply create a unit-test bundle and link with XSTest.framework
, which is provided by the XSTest.xcodeproj
project.
Then, write your tests as usual, including XSTest's main header file:
#include <XSTest/XSTest.hpp>
Note that in such a scenario, there's no need for a main
function.
You can then run your tests. Test results will be reported to Xcode and displayed as usual:
...
XSTest aims to be compatible with GoogleTest, making it easy to migrate.
Most assertions from GoogleTest can be used seamlessly with XSTest, by defining the XSTEST_GTEST_COMPAT
macro:
#define XSTEST_GTEST_COMPAT
#include <XSTest/XSTest.hpp>
TEST( MyTestSuite, MyTestCase )
{
ASSERT_TRUE( true );
}
Supported macros are:
GoogleTest: | Expands to: |
---|---|
TEST |
XSTest |
TEST_F |
XSTestFixture |
ASSERT_TRUE |
XSTestAssertTrue |
ASSERT_FALSE |
XSTestAssertFalse |
ASSERT_EQ |
XSTestAssertEqual |
ASSERT_NE |
XSTestAssertNotEqual |
ASSERT_LT |
XSTestAssertLess |
ASSERT_LE |
XSTestAssertLessOrEqual |
ASSERT_GT |
XSTestAssertGreater |
ASSERT_GE |
XSTestAssertGreaterOrEqual |
ASSERT_STREQ |
XSTestAssertStringEqual |
ASSERT_STRNE |
XSTestAssertStringNotEqual |
ASSERT_STRCASEEQ |
XSTestAssertStringEqualCaseInsensitive |
ASSERT_STRCASENE |
XSTestAssertStringNotEqualCaseInsensitive |
ASSERT_THROW |
XSTestAssertThrow |
ASSERT_NO_THROW |
XSTestAssertNoThrow |
ASSERT_ANY_THROW |
XSTestAssertAnyThrow |
ASSERT_FLOAT_EQ |
XSTestAssertFloatEqual |
ASSERT_DOUBLE_EQ |
XSTestAssertDoubleEqual |
ASSERT_HRESULT_SUCCEEDED |
XSTestAssertHResultSucceeded |
ASSERT_HRESULT_FAILED |
XSTestAssertHResultFailed |
Assertion | Verifies |
---|---|
XSTestAssertTrue( expr ) |
expr == true |
XSTestAssertFalse( expr ) |
expr == false |
XSTestAssertEqual( expr1, expr2 ) |
expr1 == expr2 |
XSTestAssertNotEqual( expr1, expr2 ) |
expr1 != expr2 |
XSTestAssertLess( expr1, expr2 ) |
expr1 < expr2 |
XSTestAssertLessOrEqual( expr1, expr2 ) |
expr1 <= expr2 |
XSTestAssertGreater( expr1, expr2 ) |
expr1 > expr2 |
XSTestAssertGreaterOrEqual( expr1, expr2 ) |
expr1 >= expr2 |
Assertion | Verifies |
---|---|
XSTestAssertStringEqual( expr1, expr2 ) |
If both C strings are equal (case sensitive) |
XSTestAssertStringNotEqual( expr1, expr2 ) |
If both C strings are not equal (case sensitive) |
XSTestAssertStringEqualCaseInsensitive( expr1, expr2 ) |
If both C strings are equal (case insensitive) |
XSTestAssertStringNotEqualCaseInsensitive( expr1, expr2 ) |
If both C strings are not equal (case insensitive) |
Assertion | Verifies |
---|---|
XSTestAssertThrow( expr, except ) |
If expr throws a C++ exception of type except |
XSTestAssertNoThrow( expr ) |
If expr doesn't any C++ exception |
XSTestAssertAnyThrow( expr ) |
If expr throws a C++ exception |
Assertion | Verifies |
---|---|
XSTestAssertFloatEqual( expr1, expr2 ) |
If both float values can be considered equal |
XSTestAssertDoubleEqual( expr1, expr2 ) |
If both double values can be considered equal |
Note: Floating point values are considered equal if they are within 4 ULPs from each other.
Value of 4 ULPs is used to keep compatibility with GoogleTest, which uses the same value.
Assertion | Verifies |
---|---|
XSTestAssertHResultSucceeded( expr ) |
If expr is a valid HRESULT |
XSTestAssertHResultFailed( expr ) |
If expr is not a valid HRESULT |
XSTest is released under the terms of the MIT license.
Owner: Jean-David Gadina - XS-Labs
Web: www.xs-labs.com
Blog: www.noxeos.com
Twitter: @macmade
GitHub: github.com/macmade
LinkedIn: ch.linkedin.com/in/macmade/
StackOverflow: stackoverflow.com/users/182676/macmade