Google C++ Testing Framework 1.2.0 (Default branch)


 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements Software Releases - RSS News Google C++ Testing Framework 1.2.0 (Default branch)
# 1  
Old 12-02-2008
Google C++ Testing Framework 1.2.0 (Default branch)

Google C++ Testing Framework is Google's frameworkfor writing C++ tests on a variety of platforms.It is based on the xUnit architecture, and itsupports automatic test discovery, a rich set ofassertions, user-defined assertions, death tests,fatal and non-fatal failures, various options forrunning the tests, and XML test report generation.License: BSD License (revised)Changes:
Value-parameterized tests and failure catching assertions have been implemented. The XML report format has been changed to match that of JUnit/Ant's. Test atrgets have been added to the XCode project. A SConscript build file has been added to build Google Test with SCons. An src/gtest-all.cc file has been added for building Google Test from a single file. Compatibility issues on Solaris and z/OS have been fixed. Tests on systems with Python 2.3 (such as Mac OS X 10.3) have been enabled. Multiple bugs have been fixed.Image

Image

More...
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread
Login or Register to Ask a Question
ATF(7)						       BSD Miscellaneous Information Manual						    ATF(7)

NAME
ATF -- introduction to the Automated Testing Framework DESCRIPTION
The Automated Testing Framework (ATF) is a collection of libraries to implement test programs in a variety of languages. These libraries all offer similar functionality and any test program written with them exposes a consistent user interface. Test programs using the ATF libraries rely on a separate runtime engine to execute them in a deterministic fashion. The runtime engine iso- lates the test programs from the rest of the system and ensures some common side-effects are cleaned up. The runtime engine is also respon- sible for gathering the results of all tests and composing reports. The current runtime of choice is Kyua, described in kyua(1). If your operating systems distributes ATF, it should also provide an introductory tests(7) manual page. You are encouraged to read it now. The rest of this manual page serves as a cross-reference to all the other documentation shipped with ATF. Language bindings atf-c(3) C programming interface. atf-c++(3) C++ programming interface. atf-sh(3) sh(1) programming interface. Miscellaneous pages atf-test-case(4) Generic description of test cases, independent of the language they are implemented in. atf-test-program(1) Common interface provided by the test programs written using the ATF libraries. SEE ALSO
kyua(1), tests(7) HISTORY
ATF started as a Google Summer of Code 2007 project mentored by The NetBSD Foundation. Its original goal was to provide a testing framework for the NetBSD operating system, but it grew as an independent project because the framework itself did not need to be tied to a specific operating system. Originally, ATF shipped the collection of libraries described in this manual page as well as a runtime engine. The runtime engine has since been replaced by Kyua and the old tools were removed in 0.20, which shipped in early 2014. As of late 2014, both FreeBSD and NetBSD ship ATF in their base systems and provide extensive test suites based on it. For more details on historical changes, refer to: /usr/share/doc/atf/NEWS AUTHORS
For more details on the people that made ATF possible, refer to: /usr/share/doc/atf/AUTHORS BSD
September 14, 2014 BSD