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I'm developing a C++ web application and I'm using PostgreSQL with libpqxx, on Ubuntu 16.04. The issue I'm having is that I need a portable (over Linux systems) way to run my unit tests.

What I have now is a class that controls database calls. I'd like to test how this class acts under my unit tests. For that, for every time I run a unit test, I'd like to:

  1. Create a temp user
  2. Create a dummy db
  3. run my tests on it
  4. delete the db
  5. delete the user

Now doing the steps is fine with Google tests. I can create a fixture that will do them all reproducibly. BUT...

How can I create a user with a password in one call (without being prompted for the password), so that I can create that user on the go and run my tests?

The manual doesn't seem to provide a way to provide the password in an argument. I was hoping to do something like this:

system("createuser " + username + " -password abcdefg");

where system() runs a terminal command. Then I can connect to the DB server with that username and password to do my unit tests.

Another failed attempt for me was to pass an sql query that would create the user through the terminal:

system("psql -c \"CREATE ROLE joe PASSWORD 'aabbccdd';\"")

When I do this, I get the error:

psql: FATAL:  database "user" does not exist

where user is my unix username.

Remember that I cannot connect to the server with libpqxx because I don't have credentials yet (as the temporary user). Right? Please correct me if I'm wrong.

Is there any way to do what I'm planning here and make unit-tests runnable without user intervention?

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  • Have you tried docker? With containers you don't need to create temporary users or databases.
    – Dan
    May 17, 2018 at 21:24
  • @Dan How could Docker help with this scenario? Could you elaborate? (I use Docker normally for build tests, not unit tests) May 17, 2018 at 21:25
  • Well, don't know your architecture, but if you use Docker for tests, maybe you need something else. Anyway here are some ways to run psql without password
    – Dan
    May 17, 2018 at 22:09
  • @Dan Thanks. I'll be trying the methods in that link. May 17, 2018 at 22:15

1 Answer 1

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The problem with the system("psql -c \"CREATE ROLE joe PASSWORD 'aabbccdd';\"") call is that it doesn't specify a database to connect to which will then default to trying a database of the same name as the user logging in. Try adding -d postgres and see if it works.

Please note that this only creates the user, it doesn't create any database or give privileges to anything.

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