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cxxspec

cxxspec is an BDD/TDD framework that's like ruby's rspec, and heavily inspired by it.

compatible with:

  • c++14
  • c++17

License

This project is licensed under the terms of the AGPL v3.0 . For license details please see the file LICENSE.

Todo / Roadmap

  • implement more builtin matchers
    • support contains_all, contains_any and contains_none
    • has_key & has_value
    • ...
  • enhance the system that allows us to access protected members of other classes (ALLOW_SPEC)
  • implement around hooks
  • formatters
    • xml
    • junit
    • yaml
    • ...
  • default parsing of cli options
    • allow specifing more formatter options
  • execution
    • honor more the order of definition (we currently first run all sub-groups and then the examples of a group)
    • allow 'random' execution of examples (with seed)

Building

cxxspec can only work relaible either directly compiled into the specs of the project or via dynamic library. This is because in order to "autoregister" all specs, we use __attribute__((constructor)) which executes the function it is annoted to before main().

xmake

To build using xmake just do xmake. To build and run the cxxspec specs, run xmake -b specs && xmake run specs. To install cxxspec in your system, run xmake i (after you builded it ofcourse). To uninstall cxxspec from your system, run xmake uninstall.

Writing specs

The boilerplate

To begin writing specs we need a tiny bit of boilerplate code, but this needs only be written once (in your main spec file):

#include "cxxsepc/cxxspec.hpp"              // includes the core classes and DSL (macros) of cxxspec

int main(int argc, char** argv) {
    cxxspec::runSpecs(--argc, ++argv);      // this runs your specs with the builtin commandline parser & options
}

A simple full example

First the code:

#include <cxxspec/cxxspec.hpp>
#include <iostream>

// ----- this is our project's code -----
namespace mytest {
    int my_static_var = 42;
}
// --------------------------------------

namespace mytest {
    namespace specs {

        describe(mytest, $ {                // <1>
            explain("my_static_var", $ {    // <2>
                it("should equal 42", _ {   // <3>
                    expect(mytest::my_static_var).to_eq(42);    // <4>
                });

                it("should not equal 12", _ {
                    expect(mytest::my_static_var).to_not_eq(12);
                });

                it("should equal 12", _ {
                    expect(mytest::my_static_var).to_eq(12);
                });
            });
        });

    }
}

int main(int argc, char** argv) {
    cxxspec::runSpecs(--argc, ++argv);
}

To build & run this example, install cxxspec and then go into the examples folder and run: xmake -P . -r && xmake run -P . simple.

With describe you start an new specification (see <1>); note that the first argument (mytest) is the name of the spec and must not be a string or contain spaces, because it's used internaly to create a new function calles __initSpec_mytest. For an answer why, see Private and protected class members.

To group examples inside an spec, you can use explain or context (see <2>); this can be viewed as an example group. Note that you can use them also inside each other to go arbitarily deep.

To define an example, you simply use it. The first param here is the name of the example. Inside it you can declare 'expectations'.

An expectation always starts with a call to expect(...). As it's argument to give it the value that you 'got'; the value that should be checked against.

To now define what is allowed and not you call to_* or to_not_* methods on the result of expect. There are a bunch of them; see Builtin matchers

You use them like so: expect(value_got).to_eq(expected_value);. For example: expect(mytest::my_static_var).to_eq(42); (see <3>) declares an expectation, that mytest::my_static_var equals 42. If this is the case the expectation succeeds and your example continues; however if it is not the case, the whole example will fail immediately.

If you wish a negative expectation, you can use the to_not_* methods. For our example above this would be to_not_eq. They are like their to_* counterpart but they fail if the check succeeds and succeed when the check fails. For Example: expect(mytest::my_static_var).to_not_eq(100); declares an expectation, that mytest::my_static_var does not equals 100. If this is the case (the equal check fails) then the expectation succeeds; if not (the equal check succeeds) then the expectation fails, and with it the whole example.

Private and protected class members

As we descussied above, describe(mytest) generates a new method __initSpec_mytest. This is important for the ALLOW_SPEC macro, wich is needed in order to allow the spec(s) to access protected and private members of classes. To use it, simply write ALLOW_SPEC(mytest); in your class to allow mytest full access. And you write into he global namespace DEFINE_SPEC(mytest); so the friend-clause generated by ALLOW_SPEC is referring to an defined symbol. Otherwise your compiler maybe generates an error. Also note, that the spec MUST be defined in the global namespace as well. So calling describe in an namespace will break this system.

Example:

DEFINE_SPEC(mytest);    // maybe it would be practical to create an 'spec_defines.h'
                        // to define all specs there and include it anywhere where needed

namespace mytest {
    class MyObject {
    protected:
        int doSome();
        ALLOW_SPEC(mytest);
    };
}

Exceptions

In order to deal with code that can throw exceptions, you need to use expect_throw or expect_no_throw.

expect_throw(type, block) is used to express that the lambda block is expected to throw an exception of type type. Example:

expect_throw(std::runtime_error, [] {
    throw std::runtime_error("some reason to be thrown");
});

If an exception of the given type is catched, then the example continues. However, if nonthing is catched or something other than the given type is catched then the example will fail.

expect_no_throw(block) is used to express that the lamda block is expected to throw nothing. If it does, this means an failure of the example.

Builtin matchers

Note: bound arrays are all arrays that have a fixed size at compile time; for example : int my_array[] = {1,2,3,4}, which is of type int[4] and 'bound' to four elements. unbound arrays are the opposite: their length is not determineable at compile time, such as int* my_array = new int[len];.

to_eq(...) compares bot values on equality, this means:

  • for T[] that the number of elements and the content must equal. Only bounded arrays work correctly. For unbounded arrays, this compares addresses.
  • for char* that the string is equal, including the zero-terminator. Uses strcmp under the hood.
  • for everything else it uses the == operator to determine equality. Note that this operator can be overwritten.

to_neq(...) does the opposite of to_eq(...); Can be used to test the != operator on objects. This is handy when your custom object implements == and != differently.

to_lt(...), to_gt(...), to_le(...), to_ge(...) are used to compare 'got' and 'expected' with their respective comparator (<, >, <=, >=).

to_be(...) compares by comparing the address of both values (trys to detect if 'exactly the same')

to_be_a<T>() (WIP) checks if the type of the value 'got' is the same type as the given type.

  • when T is a pointer type (such as int*), then dynamic_cast is used
  • when T is not a pointer type, then std::is_same is used

to_contain(...) is used to check if the 'got' value contains an expected value. Supported (standard) types:

  • T[] (bounded arrays)
  • char* (zero-terminated)
  • All C++17 sequence containers (std::vector, std::deque, std::array, std::forward_list, std::list)
  • std::string, std::string_view
  • std::map, std::unordered_map Should generaly work on all types that implement begin() and end() iterators for use with std::find.

to_match(...) is used to compare strings against an regex Versions:

  • to_match(<string> [,<regex flags> [,<match flags>]])
  • to_match(<string> [,<match flags> [,<regex flags>]]) Where regex flags are all flags that are used when creating an std::regex (see here), while match flags are flags that are used to a call to std::regex_match or std::regex_searc (see here).

To express a negative expectation, just replace to with to_not.

Hooks

Like rspec, cxxspec allows for some hooks to be added:

  • before_all & after_all will run when the spec they are defined on is entered & exited respecitvely. Example:

    describe(Top, $ {
        before_all({ std::cout << "before all hook called\n"; });
        after_all({ std::cout << "after all hook called\n"; });
    
        it("test 1", _ { std::cout << "running test 1\n"; });
        it("test 2", _ { std::cout << "running test 2\n"; });
    });
    
    /*
    Output:
    before all hook called
    running test 1
    running test 2
    after all hook called
    */
  • before_each & after_each will run with the example as the argument example when a example is about to be run & has been run. Additionally, each spec calls first it's parents hooks after it runs their own. Example:

    describe(Top, $ {
        before_each({ std::cout << "before each hook called\n"; });
        after_each({ std::cout << "after each hook called\n"; });
    
        it("test 1", _ { std::cout << "running test 1\n"; });
        it("test 2", _ { std::cout << "running test 2\n"; });
    });
    
    /*
    Output:
    before each hook called
    running test 1
    after each hook called
    before each hook called
    running test 2
    after each hook called
    */

Example cleanup

In your examples you can use cleanup(...) to add code to run as cleanup after the example has completed, regardless the result.

  • cleanup(std::function<void()>) runs the given function at cleanup
  • T* cleanup(T*) adds a cleanup function to free the given pointer. Can be used instead of free / delete in your example's code. It detects automatically if the pointer given is an pointer to an class/struct and then uses delete, while other pointers are released via free. Returns the given pointer to allow cleaner code

Builtin formatters

  • cxxspec::TextFormatter (cxxspec/formatters/text_formatter.hpp): Base formatter for text output. Has indent support
  • cxxspec::CliFormatter (cxxspec/formatters/cli_formatter.hpp): Suitable for terminal output
  • cxxspec::JsonFormatter (cxxspec/formatters/json_formatter.hpp): Prints json data to the given stream

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