21

I faced with a problem when I was trying to use Google Test.

There are lot of manuals on how to use ExternalProject_Add for the adding gtest into the project, however most of these describe a method based on downloading zip archive with gtest and build it.

As we know gtest is github-hosted and cmake-based project. So I'd like to find native cmake way.

If this would be a header-only project, I'd write something like:

cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.8.8)
include(ExternalProject)
find_package(Git REQUIRED)

ExternalProject_Add(
    gtest
    PREFIX ${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/ext
    GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/google/googletest.git
    TIMEOUT 10
    UPDATE_COMMAND ${GIT_EXECUTABLE} pull
    CONFIGURE_COMMAND ""
    BUILD_COMMAND ""
    INSTALL_COMMAND ""
    LOG_DOWNLOAD ON
)

ExternalProject_Get_Property(gtest source_dir)
set(GTEST_INCLUDE_DIR ${source_dir}/googletest/include CACHE INTERNAL "Path to include folder for GTest")
set(GTEST_ROOT_DIR ${source_dir}/googletest CACHE INTERNAL "Path to source folder for GTest")
include_directories(${INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES} ${GTEST_INCLUDE_DIR} ${GTEST_ROOT_DIR})
message(${GTEST_INCLUDE_DIR})

and add this script from my cmake project like:

 set(CMAKE_MODULE_PATH ${CMAKE_MODULE_PATH} "${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/cmake.modules/")
 include(AddGTest)
....
 add_dependencies(${PROJECT_NAME} gtest)

However this requires a build step.

How should this be implemented?

  1. By adding BUILD_COMMAND into ExternaProject_Add and linking with produced libs?
  2. Or by including gtest's cmakelists into my project, something like this:

add_subdirectory (${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}\ext\src\gtest\googletest\CMakeLists.txt)

this is not correct way because on the moment of the project load the folder does not exist.

  1. Any other ways?

What is a correct/prefer way?

1 Answer 1

42

I would go with the first approach. You don't need to specify a build command because cmake is used by default. This could look like:

cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.0)
project(GTestProject)

include(ExternalProject)

set(EXTERNAL_INSTALL_LOCATION ${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/external)

ExternalProject_Add(googletest
    GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/google/googletest
    CMAKE_ARGS -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=${EXTERNAL_INSTALL_LOCATION}
)

include_directories(${EXTERNAL_INSTALL_LOCATION}/include)
link_directories(${EXTERNAL_INSTALL_LOCATION}/lib)

add_executable(FirstTest main.cpp)
add_dependencies(FirstTest googletest)
target_link_libraries(FirstTest gtest gtest_main pthread)

I don't know if this is the correct/preferred way if there even is one. If you wanted to implement your second approach you would have to download the code with execute_process first.

3
  • Thank you, this is what i want to hear - "cmake does this by default" , didn't find this in manual, and looked for build command
    – amigo421
    Jun 25, 2016 at 8:08
  • 7
    This article documents a way that the gtest manual now also recommends. CMake 3.11 added the FetchContent module which extends the approach further and uses gtest as one of its examples. May 19, 2018 at 12:27
  • 1
    @CraigScott Your answers are always the most enlightening ones. This is worth a own answer instead of just a comment. I really love your book by the way!
    – ataraxis
    Nov 13, 2020 at 12:53

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