vote up 13 vote down star
8

I'm having trouble figuring out how to get the testing framework set up and usable in Visual Studio 2008 for C++ presumably with the built-in unit testing suite.

Any links or tutorials would be appreciated.

flag

What framework did you end up using? – Joakim Karlsson Nov 4 at 8:30
actually I still haven't used any of them. I decided for what I was working on unit tests weren't the most effective use of time. – Hazar Nov 5 at 19:01

13 Answers

vote up 10 vote down check

This page may help - it reviews a bunch of cpp unit test frameworks:

  • CppUnit
  • Boost.Test
  • CppUnitLite
  • NanoCppUnit
  • Unit++
  • CxxTest

Check out CPPUnitLite or CPPUnitLite2. CPPUnitLite was created by Michael Feathers, who originally ported JUnit to C++ as CPPUnit. He eventually created a 'Lite' version to avoid these complexities. He claimed his CPPUnit to be too much like JUnit - but lacks the reflection to make it easy to use. (I'm paraphrasing from Feather's Working Effectively with Legacy Code book). The CPPUnitLite2 seems to be a re-write of it - with more features and bug fixes.

I also just stumbled across UnitTest++ - which includes stuff from CPPUnitLite2 and some other framework.

Microsoft has released (via MSDN magazine) WinUnit. The download for the code seems broken, but here is a link found in the comments here. * Update: WinUnit Homepage *

link|flag
1  
winunit.codeplex.com – inazaruk Oct 2 at 6:53
vote up 1 vote down

The tools that have been mentioned here are all command line tools. If you look for a more integrated solution, have a look at cfix studio, which is a Visual Studio AddIn for C/C++ unit testing . It is quite similar to TestDriven.Net, but for (unmanaged) C/C++ rather than .Net.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

There is a way to test unmanaged C++ using the built in testing framework within Visual Studio 2008. If you create a C++ Test Project, using C++/CLI, you can then make calls to an unmanaged DLL. You will have to switch the Common Language Runtime support to /clr from /clr:safe if you want to test code that was written in unmanaged C++.

I have step by step details on my blog here: http://msujaws.wordpress.com/2009/05/06/unit-testing-mfc-with-mstest/

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Have a look at CUnitWin32. It includes an example.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Personally, I prefer WinUnit since it doesn't require me to write anything except for my tests (I build a .dll as the test, not an exe). I just build a project, and point WinUnit.exe to my test output directory and it runs everything it finds. You can download the WinUnit project here. (MSDN now requires you to download the entire issue, not the article. WinUnit is included within.)

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I like the CxxTest as well for the same reasons. It's a header file only so no linking required. You aren't stuck with Perl as there is a Python runner as well. I will be reviewing the google library soon. The Boost stuff pulls in too much other baggage.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Google releases C++ Test Framework which is very similar with xUnit frameworks.

http://code.google.com/p/googletest/

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I use UnitTest++ as well. I'm a big fan of its simplicity.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

The unit tester for VS2008 is only for .NET code as far as I know.

I used CppUnit on Vs2005 and found it to be pretty good.

As far as I remember, the setup was relatively painless, just make sure that in your testing projects the linker (Linker->Input->Additional Dependencies) includes cppunitd.lib.

Then, #include <cppunit/extensions/HelperMacros.h> in your header

You can then follow the steps in http://cppunit.sourceforge.net/doc/1.11.6/cppunit_cookbook.html to get your test class working.

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

The framework included with VS9 is .NET, but you can write tests in C++/CLI, so as long as you're comfortable learning some .NET isms, you should be able to test most any C++ code.

boost.test and googletest look to be fairly similar, but adapted for slightly different uses. Both of these have a binary component, so you'll need an extra project in your solution to compile and run the tests.

The framework we use is CxxTest, which is much lighter; it's headers only, and uses a Perl (!) script to scrape test suite information from your headers (suites inherit from CxxTest::Base, all your test methods' names start with "test"). Obviously, this requires that you get Perl from one source or another, which adds overhead to your build environment setup.

link|flag
CxxTest can use python instead of perl – mgb Jun 8 at 13:38
vote up 0 vote down

I'm not 100% sure about VS2008, but I know that the Unit Testing framework that microsoft shipped in VS2005 as part of their Team Suite was only for .NET, not C++

I've used CppUnit also and it was alright. Much the same as NUnit/JUnit/so on.

If you've used boost, they also have a unit testing library

The guys behind boost have some serious coding chops, so I'd say their framework should be pretty good, but it might not be the most user friendly :-)

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I've used CppUnit with VS2005 and Eclipse. The wiki is very thorough (especially if you are familiar with JUnit).

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I use UnitTest++.

While the example tutorial is for Visual Studio 2005, the concepts are similar (try setting one up for VC6...).

Update: The VC6 hacks are now included in the source!

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.