1Google C++ Mocking Framework 2============================ 3 4http://code.google.com/p/googlemock/ 5 6Overview 7-------- 8 9Google's framework for writing and using C++ mock classes on a variety 10of platforms (Linux, Mac OS X, Windows, Windows CE, Symbian, etc). 11Inspired by jMock, EasyMock, and Hamcrest, and designed with C++'s 12specifics in mind, it can help you derive better designs of your 13system and write better tests. 14 15Google Mock: 16 17- provides a declarative syntax for defining mocks, 18- can easily define partial (hybrid) mocks, which are a cross of real 19 and mock objects, 20- handles functions of arbitrary types and overloaded functions, 21- comes with a rich set of matchers for validating function arguments, 22- uses an intuitive syntax for controlling the behavior of a mock, 23- does automatic verification of expectations (no record-and-replay 24 needed), 25- allows arbitrary (partial) ordering constraints on 26 function calls to be expressed, 27- lets a user extend it by defining new matchers and actions. 28- does not use exceptions, and 29- is easy to learn and use. 30 31Please see the project page above for more information as well as the 32mailing list for questions, discussions, and development. There is 33also an IRC channel on OFTC (irc.oftc.net) #gtest available. Please 34join us! 35 36Please note that code under scripts/generator/ is from the cppclean 37project (http://code.google.com/p/cppclean/) and under the Apache 38License, which is different from Google Mock's license. 39 40Requirements for End Users 41-------------------------- 42 43Google Mock is implemented on top of the Google Test C++ testing 44framework (http://code.google.com/p/googletest/), and includes the 45latter as part of the SVN repositary and distribution package. You 46must use the bundled version of Google Test when using Google Mock, or 47you may get compiler/linker errors. 48 49You can also easily configure Google Mock to work with another testing 50framework of your choice; although it will still need Google Test as 51an internal dependency. Please read 52http://code.google.com/p/googlemock/wiki/ForDummies#Using_Google_Mock_with_Any_Testing_Framework 53for how to do it. 54 55Google Mock depends on advanced C++ features and thus requires a more 56modern compiler. The following are needed to use Google Mock: 57 58### Linux Requirements ### 59 60These are the base requirements to build and use Google Mock from a source 61package (as described below): 62 63 * GNU-compatible Make or "gmake" 64 * POSIX-standard shell 65 * POSIX(-2) Regular Expressions (regex.h) 66 * C++98-standard-compliant compiler (e.g. GCC 3.4 or newer) 67 68### Windows Requirements ### 69 70 * Microsoft Visual C++ 8.0 SP1 or newer 71 72### Mac OS X Requirements ### 73 74 * Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger or newer 75 * Developer Tools Installed 76 77Requirements for Contributors 78----------------------------- 79 80We welcome patches. If you plan to contribute a patch, you need to 81build Google Mock and its own tests from an SVN checkout (described 82below), which has further requirements: 83 84 * Automake version 1.9 or newer 85 * Autoconf version 2.59 or newer 86 * Libtool / Libtoolize 87 * Python version 2.3 or newer (for running some of the tests and 88 re-generating certain source files from templates) 89 90Getting the Source 91------------------ 92 93There are two primary ways of getting Google Mock's source code: you 94can download a stable source release in your preferred archive format, 95or directly check out the source from our Subversion (SVN) repositary. 96The SVN checkout requires a few extra steps and some extra software 97packages on your system, but lets you track development and make 98patches much more easily, so we highly encourage it. 99 100### Source Package ### 101 102Google Mock is released in versioned source packages which can be 103downloaded from the download page [1]. Several different archive 104formats are provided, but the only difference is the tools needed to 105extract their contents, and the size of the resulting file. Download 106whichever you are most comfortable with. 107 108 [1] http://code.google.com/p/googlemock/downloads/list 109 110Once downloaded expand the archive using whichever tools you prefer 111for that type. This will always result in a new directory with the 112name "gmock-X.Y.Z" which contains all of the source code. Here are 113some examples on Linux: 114 115 tar -xvzf gmock-X.Y.Z.tar.gz 116 tar -xvjf gmock-X.Y.Z.tar.bz2 117 unzip gmock-X.Y.Z.zip 118 119### SVN Checkout ### 120 121To check out the main branch (also known as the "trunk") of Google 122Mock, run the following Subversion command: 123 124 svn checkout http://googlemock.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/ gmock-svn 125 126If you are using a *nix system and plan to use the GNU Autotools build 127system to build Google Mock (described below), you'll need to 128configure it now. Otherwise you are done with getting the source 129files. 130 131To prepare the Autotools build system, enter the target directory of 132the checkout command you used ('gmock-svn') and proceed with the 133following command: 134 135 autoreconf -fvi 136 137Once you have completed this step, you are ready to build the library. 138Note that you should only need to complete this step once. The 139subsequent 'make' invocations will automatically re-generate the bits 140of the build system that need to be changed. 141 142If your system uses older versions of the autotools, the above command 143will fail. You may need to explicitly specify a version to use. For 144instance, if you have both GNU Automake 1.4 and 1.9 installed and 145'automake' would invoke the 1.4, use instead: 146 147 AUTOMAKE=automake-1.9 ACLOCAL=aclocal-1.9 autoreconf -fvi 148 149Make sure you're using the same version of automake and aclocal. 150 151Setting up the Build 152-------------------- 153 154To build Google Mock and your tests that use it, you need to tell your 155build system where to find its headers and source files. The exact 156way to do it depends on which build system you use, and is usually 157straightforward. 158 159### Generic Build Instructions ### 160 161This section shows how you can integrate Google Mock into your 162existing build system. 163 164Suppose you put Google Mock in directory ${GMOCK_DIR} and Google Test 165in ${GTEST_DIR} (the latter is ${GMOCK_DIR}/gtest by default). To 166build Google Mock, create a library build target (or a project as 167called by Visual Studio and Xcode) to compile 168 169 ${GTEST_DIR}/src/gtest-all.cc and ${GMOCK_DIR}/src/gmock-all.cc 170 171with 172 173 ${GTEST_DIR}/include, ${GTEST_DIR}, ${GMOCK_DIR}/include, and ${GMOCK_DIR} 174 175in the header search path. Assuming a Linux-like system and gcc, 176something like the following will do: 177 178 g++ -I${GTEST_DIR}/include -I${GTEST_DIR} -I${GMOCK_DIR}/include \ 179 -I${GMOCK_DIR} -c ${GTEST_DIR}/src/gtest-all.cc 180 g++ -I${GTEST_DIR}/include -I${GTEST_DIR} -I${GMOCK_DIR}/include \ 181 -I${GMOCK_DIR} -c ${GMOCK_DIR}/src/gmock-all.cc 182 ar -rv libgmock.a gtest-all.o gmock-all.o 183 184Next, you should compile your test source file with 185${GTEST_DIR}/include and ${GMOCK_DIR}/include in the header search 186path, and link it with gmock and any other necessary libraries: 187 188 g++ -I${GTEST_DIR}/include -I${GMOCK_DIR}/include \ 189 path/to/your_test.cc libgmock.a -o your_test 190 191As an example, the make/ directory contains a Makefile that you can 192use to build Google Mock on systems where GNU make is available 193(e.g. Linux, Mac OS X, and Cygwin). It doesn't try to build Google 194Mock's own tests. Instead, it just builds the Google Mock library and 195a sample test. You can use it as a starting point for your own build 196script. 197 198If the default settings are correct for your environment, the 199following commands should succeed: 200 201 cd ${GMOCK_DIR}/make 202 make 203 ./gmock_test 204 205If you see errors, try to tweak the contents of make/Makefile to make 206them go away. There are instructions in make/Makefile on how to do 207it. 208 209### Windows ### 210 211The msvc/2005 directory contains VC++ 2005 projects and the msvc/2010 212directory contains VC++ 2010 projects for building Google Mock and 213selected tests. 214 215Change to the appropriate directory and run "msbuild gmock.sln" to 216build the library and tests (or open the gmock.sln in the MSVC IDE). 217If you want to create your own project to use with Google Mock, you'll 218have to configure it to use the gmock_config propety sheet. For that: 219 220 * Open the Property Manager window (View | Other Windows | Property Manager) 221 * Right-click on your project and select "Add Existing Property Sheet..." 222 * Navigate to gmock_config.vsprops or gmock_config.props and select it. 223 * In Project Properties | Configuration Properties | General | Additional 224 Include Directories, type <path to Google Mock>/include. 225 226Tweaking Google Mock 227-------------------- 228 229Google Mock can be used in diverse environments. The default 230configuration may not work (or may not work well) out of the box in 231some environments. However, you can easily tweak Google Mock by 232defining control macros on the compiler command line. Generally, 233these macros are named like GTEST_XYZ and you define them to either 1 234or 0 to enable or disable a certain feature. 235 236We list the most frequently used macros below. For a complete list, 237see file ${GTEST_DIR}/include/gtest/internal/gtest-port.h. 238 239### Choosing a TR1 Tuple Library ### 240 241Google Mock uses the C++ Technical Report 1 (TR1) tuple library 242heavily. Unfortunately TR1 tuple is not yet widely available with all 243compilers. The good news is that Google Test 1.4.0+ implements a 244subset of TR1 tuple that's enough for Google Mock's need. Google Mock 245will automatically use that implementation when the compiler doesn't 246provide TR1 tuple. 247 248Usually you don't need to care about which tuple library Google Test 249and Google Mock use. However, if your project already uses TR1 tuple, 250you need to tell Google Test and Google Mock to use the same TR1 tuple 251library the rest of your project uses, or the two tuple 252implementations will clash. To do that, add 253 254 -DGTEST_USE_OWN_TR1_TUPLE=0 255 256to the compiler flags while compiling Google Test, Google Mock, and 257your tests. If you want to force Google Test and Google Mock to use 258their own tuple library, just add 259 260 -DGTEST_USE_OWN_TR1_TUPLE=1 261 262to the compiler flags instead. 263 264If you want to use Boost's TR1 tuple library with Google Mock, please 265refer to the Boost website (http://www.boost.org/) for how to obtain 266it and set it up. 267 268### As a Shared Library (DLL) ### 269 270Google Mock is compact, so most users can build and link it as a static 271library for the simplicity. Google Mock can be used as a DLL, but the 272same DLL must contain Google Test as well. See Google Test's README 273file for instructions on how to set up necessary compiler settings. 274 275### Tweaking Google Mock ### 276 277Most of Google Test's control macros apply to Google Mock as well. 278Please see file ${GTEST_DIR}/README for how to tweak them. 279 280Upgrading from an Earlier Version 281--------------------------------- 282 283We strive to keep Google Mock releases backward compatible. 284Sometimes, though, we have to make some breaking changes for the 285users' long-term benefits. This section describes what you'll need to 286do if you are upgrading from an earlier version of Google Mock. 287 288### Upgrading from 1.1.0 or Earlier ### 289 290You may need to explicitly enable or disable Google Test's own TR1 291tuple library. See the instructions in section "Choosing a TR1 Tuple 292Library". 293 294### Upgrading from 1.4.0 or Earlier ### 295 296On platforms where the pthread library is available, Google Test and 297Google Mock use it in order to be thread-safe. For this to work, you 298may need to tweak your compiler and/or linker flags. Please see the 299"Multi-threaded Tests" section in file ${GTEST_DIR}/README for what 300you may need to do. 301 302If you have custom matchers defined using MatcherInterface or 303MakePolymorphicMatcher(), you'll need to update their definitions to 304use the new matcher API [2]. Matchers defined using MATCHER() or 305MATCHER_P*() aren't affected. 306 307 [2] http://code.google.com/p/googlemock/wiki/CookBook#Writing_New_Monomorphic_Matchers, 308 http://code.google.com/p/googlemock/wiki/CookBook#Writing_New_Polymorphic_Matchers 309 310Developing Google Mock 311---------------------- 312 313This section discusses how to make your own changes to Google Mock. 314 315### Testing Google Mock Itself ### 316 317To make sure your changes work as intended and don't break existing 318functionality, you'll want to compile and run Google Test's own tests. 319For that you'll need Autotools. First, make sure you have followed 320the instructions in section "SVN Checkout" to configure Google Mock. 321Then, create a build output directory and enter it. Next, 322 323 ${GMOCK_DIR}/configure # Standard GNU configure script, --help for more info 324 325Once you have successfully configured Google Mock, the build steps are 326standard for GNU-style OSS packages. 327 328 make # Standard makefile following GNU conventions 329 make check # Builds and runs all tests - all should pass. 330 331Note that when building your project against Google Mock, you are building 332against Google Test as well. There is no need to configure Google Test 333separately. 334 335### Regenerating Source Files ### 336 337Some of Google Mock's source files are generated from templates (not 338in the C++ sense) using a script. A template file is named FOO.pump, 339where FOO is the name of the file it will generate. For example, the 340file include/gmock/gmock-generated-actions.h.pump is used to generate 341gmock-generated-actions.h in the same directory. 342 343Normally you don't need to worry about regenerating the source files, 344unless you need to modify them. In that case, you should modify the 345corresponding .pump files instead and run the 'pump' script (for Pump 346is Useful for Meta Programming) to regenerate them. You can find 347pump.py in the ${GTEST_DIR}/scripts/ directory. Read the Pump manual 348[3] for how to use it. 349 350 [3] http://code.google.com/p/googletest/wiki/PumpManual. 351 352### Contributing a Patch ### 353 354We welcome patches. Please read the Google Mock developer's guide [4] 355for how you can contribute. In particular, make sure you have signed 356the Contributor License Agreement, or we won't be able to accept the 357patch. 358 359 [4] http://code.google.com/p/googlemock/wiki/DevGuide 360 361Happy testing! 362