You can find recipes for using Google Mock here. If you haven't yet, please read the ForDummies document first to make sure you understand the basics.
Note: Google Mock lives in the testing
name space. For
readability, it is recommended to write using ::testing::Foo;
once in
your file before using the name Foo
defined by Google Mock. We omit
such using
statements in this page for brevity, but you should do it
in your own code.
You must always put a mock method definition (MOCK_METHOD*
) in a
public:
section of the mock class, regardless of the method being
mocked being public
, protected
, or private
in the base class.
This allows ON_CALL
and EXPECT_CALL
to reference the mock function
from outside of the mock class. (Yes, C++ allows a subclass to specify
a different access level than the base class on a virtual function.)
Example:
class Foo {
public:
...
virtual bool Transform(Gadget* g) = 0;
protected:
virtual void Resume();
private:
virtual int GetTimeOut();
};
class MockFoo : public Foo {
public:
...
MOCK_METHOD1(Transform, bool(Gadget* g));
// The following must be in the public section, even though the
// methods are protected or private in the base class.
MOCK_METHOD0(Resume, void());
MOCK_METHOD0(GetTimeOut, int());
};
You can mock overloaded functions as usual. No special attention is required:
class Foo {
...
// Must be virtual as we'll inherit from Foo.
virtual ~Foo();
// Overloaded on the types and/or numbers of arguments.
virtual int Add(Element x);
virtual int Add(int times, Element x);
// Overloaded on the const-ness of this object.
virtual Bar& GetBar();
virtual const Bar& GetBar() const;
};
class MockFoo : public Foo {
...
MOCK_METHOD1(Add, int(Element x));
MOCK_METHOD2(Add, int(int times, Element x);
MOCK_METHOD0(GetBar, Bar&());
MOCK_CONST_METHOD0(GetBar, const Bar&());
};
Note: if you don't mock all versions of the overloaded method, the
compiler will give you a warning about some methods in the base class
being hidden. To fix that, use using
to bring them in scope:
class MockFoo : public Foo {
...
using Foo::Add;
MOCK_METHOD1(Add, int(Element x));
// We don't want to mock int Add(int times, Element x);
...
};
To mock a class template, append _T
to the MOCK_*
macros:
template <typename Elem>
class StackInterface {
...
// Must be virtual as we'll inherit from StackInterface.
virtual ~StackInterface();
virtual int GetSize() const = 0;
virtual void Push(const Elem& x) = 0;
};
template <typename Elem>
class MockStack : public StackInterface<Elem> {
...
MOCK_CONST_METHOD0_T(GetSize, int());
MOCK_METHOD1_T(Push, void(const Elem& x));
};
Google Mock can mock non-virtual functions to be used in what we call hi-perf dependency injection.
In this case, instead of sharing a common base class with the real class, your mock class will be unrelated to the real class, but contain methods with the same signatures. The syntax for mocking non-virtual methods is the same as mocking virtual methods:
// A simple packet stream class. None of its members is virtual.
class ConcretePacketStream {
public:
void AppendPacket(Packet* new_packet);
const Packet* GetPacket(size_t packet_number) const;
size_t NumberOfPackets() const;
...
};
// A mock packet stream class. It inherits from no other, but defines
// GetPacket() and NumberOfPackets().
class MockPacketStream {
public:
MOCK_CONST_METHOD1(GetPacket, const Packet*(size_t packet_number));
MOCK_CONST_METHOD0(NumberOfPackets, size_t());
...
};
Note that the mock class doesn't define AppendPacket()
, unlike the
real class. That's fine as long as the test doesn't need to call it.
Next, you need a way to say that you want to use
ConcretePacketStream
in production code and to use MockPacketStream
in tests. Since the functions are not virtual and the two classes are
unrelated, you must specify your choice at compile time (as opposed
to run time).
One way to do it is to templatize your code that needs to use a packet
stream. More specifically, you will give your code a template type
argument for the type of the packet stream. In production, you will
instantiate your template with ConcretePacketStream
as the type
argument. In tests, you will instantiate the same template with
MockPacketStream
. For example, you may write:
template <class PacketStream>
void CreateConnection(PacketStream* stream) { ... }
template <class PacketStream>
class PacketReader {
public:
void ReadPackets(PacketStream* stream, size_t packet_num);
};
Then you can use CreateConnection<ConcretePacketStream>()
and
PacketReader<ConcretePacketStream>
in production code, and use
CreateConnection<MockPacketStream>()
and
PacketReader<MockPacketStream>
in tests.
MockPacketStream mock_stream;
EXPECT_CALL(mock_stream, ...)...;
.. set more expectations on mock_stream ...
PacketReader<MockPacketStream> reader(&mock_stream);
... exercise reader ...
It's possible to use Google Mock to mock a free function (i.e. a C-style function or a static method). You just need to rewrite your code to use an interface (abstract class).
Instead of calling a free function (say, OpenFile
) directly,
introduce an interface for it and have a concrete subclass that calls
the free function:
class FileInterface {
public:
...
virtual bool Open(const char* path, const char* mode) = 0;
};
class File : public FileInterface {
public:
...
virtual bool Open(const char* path, const char* mode) {
return OpenFile(path, mode);
}
};
Your code should talk to FileInterface
to open a file. Now it's
easy to mock out the function.
This may seem much hassle, but in practice you often have multiple related functions that you can put in the same interface, so the per-function syntactic overhead will be much lower.
If you are concerned about the performance overhead incurred by virtual functions, and profiling confirms your concern, you can combine this with the recipe for mocking non-virtual methods.
If a mock method has no EXPECT_CALL
spec but is called, Google Mock
will print a warning about the "uninteresting call". The rationale is:
- New methods may be added to an interface after a test is written. We shouldn't fail a test just because a method it doesn't know about is called.
- However, this may also mean there's a bug in the test, so Google Mock shouldn't be silent either. If the user believes these calls are harmless, they can add an
EXPECT_CALL()
to suppress the warning.
However, sometimes you may want to suppress all "uninteresting call" warnings, while sometimes you may want the opposite, i.e. to treat all of them as errors. Google Mock lets you make the decision on a per-mock-object basis.
Suppose your test uses a mock class MockFoo
:
TEST(...) {
MockFoo mock_foo;
EXPECT_CALL(mock_foo, DoThis());
... code that uses mock_foo ...
}
If a method of mock_foo
other than DoThis()
is called, it will be
reported by Google Mock as a warning. However, if you rewrite your
test to use NiceMock<MockFoo>
instead, the warning will be gone,
resulting in a cleaner test output:
using ::testing::NiceMock;
TEST(...) {
NiceMock<MockFoo> mock_foo;
EXPECT_CALL(mock_foo, DoThis());
... code that uses mock_foo ...
}
NiceMock<MockFoo>
is a subclass of MockFoo
, so it can be used
wherever MockFoo
is accepted.
It also works if MockFoo
's constructor takes some arguments, as
NiceMock<MockFoo>
"inherits" MockFoo
's constructors:
using ::testing::NiceMock;
TEST(...) {
NiceMock<MockFoo> mock_foo(5, "hi"); // Calls MockFoo(5, "hi").
EXPECT_CALL(mock_foo, DoThis());
... code that uses mock_foo ...
}
The usage of StrictMock
is similar, except that it makes all
uninteresting calls failures:
using ::testing::StrictMock;
TEST(...) {
StrictMock<MockFoo> mock_foo;
EXPECT_CALL(mock_foo, DoThis());
... code that uses mock_foo ...
// The test will fail if a method of mock_foo other than DoThis()
// is called.
}
There are some caveats though (I don't like them just as much as the next guy, but sadly they are side effects of C++'s limitations):
NiceMock<MockFoo>
andStrictMock<MockFoo>
only work for mock methods defined using theMOCK_METHOD*
family of macros directly in theMockFoo
class. If a mock method is defined in a base class ofMockFoo
, the "nice" or "strict" modifier may not affect it, depending on the compiler. In particular, nestingNiceMock
andStrictMock
(e.g.NiceMock<StrictMock<MockFoo> >
) is not supported.- The constructors of the base mock (
MockFoo
) cannot have arguments passed by non-const reference, which happens to be banned by the Google C++ style guide. - During the constructor or destructor of
MockFoo
, the mock object is not nice or strict. This may cause surprises if the constructor or destructor calls a mock method onthis
object. (This behavior, however, is consistent with C++'s general rule: if a constructor or destructor calls a virtual method ofthis
object, that method is treated as non-virtual. In other words, to the base class's constructor or destructor,this
object behaves like an instance of the base class, not the derived class. This rule is required for safety. Otherwise a base constructor may use members of a derived class before they are initialized, or a base destructor may use members of a derived class after they have been destroyed.)
Finally, you should be very cautious about when to use naggy or strict mocks, as they tend to make tests more brittle and harder to maintain. When you refactor your code without changing its externally visible behavior, ideally you should't need to update any tests. If your code interacts with a naggy mock, however, you may start to get spammed with warnings as the result of your change. Worse, if your code interacts with a strict mock, your tests may start to fail and you'll be forced to fix them. Our general recommendation is to use nice mocks (not yet the default) most of the time, use naggy mocks (the current default) when developing or debugging tests, and use strict mocks only as the last resort.
Sometimes a method has a long list of arguments that is mostly uninteresting. For example,
class LogSink {
public:
...
virtual void send(LogSeverity severity, const char* full_filename,
const char* base_filename, int line,
const struct tm* tm_time,
const char* message, size_t message_len) = 0;
};
This method's argument list is lengthy and hard to work with (let's
say that the message
argument is not even 0-terminated). If we mock
it as is, using the mock will be awkward. If, however, we try to
simplify this interface, we'll need to fix all clients depending on
it, which is often infeasible.
The trick is to re-dispatch the method in the mock class:
class ScopedMockLog : public LogSink {
public:
...
virtual void send(LogSeverity severity, const char* full_filename,
const char* base_filename, int line, const tm* tm_time,
const char* message, size_t message_len) {
// We are only interested in the log severity, full file name, and
// log message.
Log(severity, full_filename, std::string(message, message_len));
}
// Implements the mock method:
//
// void Log(LogSeverity severity,
// const string& file_path,
// const string& message);
MOCK_METHOD3(Log, void(LogSeverity severity, const string& file_path,
const string& message));
};
By defining a new mock method with a trimmed argument list, we make the mock class much more user-friendly.
Often you may find yourself using classes that don't implement
interfaces. In order to test your code that uses such a class (let's
call it Concrete
), you may be tempted to make the methods of
Concrete
virtual and then mock it.
Try not to do that.
Making a non-virtual function virtual is a big decision. It creates an extension point where subclasses can tweak your class' behavior. This weakens your control on the class because now it's harder to maintain the class' invariants. You should make a function virtual only when there is a valid reason for a subclass to override it.
Mocking concrete classes directly is problematic as it creates a tight coupling between the class and the tests - any small change in the class may invalidate your tests and make test maintenance a pain.
To avoid such problems, many programmers have been practicing "coding
to interfaces": instead of talking to the Concrete
class, your code
would define an interface and talk to it. Then you implement that
interface as an adaptor on top of Concrete
. In tests, you can easily
mock that interface to observe how your code is doing.
This technique incurs some overhead:
- You pay the cost of virtual function calls (usually not a problem).
- There is more abstraction for the programmers to learn.
However, it can also bring significant benefits in addition to better testability:
Concrete
's API may not fit your problem domain very well, as you may not be the only client it tries to serve. By designing your own interface, you have a chance to tailor it to your need - you may add higher-level functionalities, rename stuff, etc instead of just trimming the class. This allows you to write your code (user of the interface) in a more natural way, which means it will be more readable, more maintainable, and you'll be more productive.- If
Concrete
's implementation ever has to change, you don't have to rewrite everywhere it is used. Instead, you can absorb the change in your implementation of the interface, and your other code and tests will be insulated from this change.
Some people worry that if everyone is practicing this technique, they will end up writing lots of redundant code. This concern is totally understandable. However, there are two reasons why it may not be the case:
- Different projects may need to use
Concrete
in different ways, so the best interfaces for them will be different. Therefore, each of them will have its own domain-specific interface on top ofConcrete
, and they will not be the same code. - If enough projects want to use the same interface, they can always share it, just like they have been sharing
Concrete
. You can check in the interface and the adaptor somewhere nearConcrete
(perhaps in acontrib
sub-directory) and let many projects use it.
You need to weigh the pros and cons carefully for your particular problem, but I'd like to assure you that the Java community has been practicing this for a long time and it's a proven effective technique applicable in a wide variety of situations. :-)
Some times you have a non-trivial fake implementation of an interface. For example:
class Foo {
public:
virtual ~Foo() {}
virtual char DoThis(int n) = 0;
virtual void DoThat(const char* s, int* p) = 0;
};
class FakeFoo : public Foo {
public:
virtual char DoThis(int n) {
return (n > 0) ? '+' :
(n < 0) ? '-' : '0';
}
virtual void DoThat(const char* s, int* p) {
*p = strlen(s);
}
};
Now you want to mock this interface such that you can set expectations
on it. However, you also want to use FakeFoo
for the default
behavior, as duplicating it in the mock object is, well, a lot of
work.
When you define the mock class using Google Mock, you can have it delegate its default action to a fake class you already have, using this pattern:
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::Invoke;
class MockFoo : public Foo {
public:
// Normal mock method definitions using Google Mock.
MOCK_METHOD1(DoThis, char(int n));
MOCK_METHOD2(DoThat, void(const char* s, int* p));
// Delegates the default actions of the methods to a FakeFoo object.
// This must be called *before* the custom ON_CALL() statements.
void DelegateToFake() {
ON_CALL(*this, DoThis(_))
.WillByDefault(Invoke(&fake_, &FakeFoo::DoThis));
ON_CALL(*this, DoThat(_, _))
.WillByDefault(Invoke(&fake_, &FakeFoo::DoThat));
}
private:
FakeFoo fake_; // Keeps an instance of the fake in the mock.
};
With that, you can use MockFoo
in your tests as usual. Just remember
that if you don't explicitly set an action in an ON_CALL()
or
EXPECT_CALL()
, the fake will be called upon to do it:
using ::testing::_;
TEST(AbcTest, Xyz) {
MockFoo foo;
foo.DelegateToFake(); // Enables the fake for delegation.
// Put your ON_CALL(foo, ...)s here, if any.
// No action specified, meaning to use the default action.
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThis(5));
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThat(_, _));
int n = 0;
EXPECT_EQ('+', foo.DoThis(5)); // FakeFoo::DoThis() is invoked.
foo.DoThat("Hi", &n); // FakeFoo::DoThat() is invoked.
EXPECT_EQ(2, n);
}
Some tips:
- If you want, you can still override the default action by providing your own
ON_CALL()
or using.WillOnce()
/.WillRepeatedly()
inEXPECT_CALL()
. - In
DelegateToFake()
, you only need to delegate the methods whose fake implementation you intend to use. - The general technique discussed here works for overloaded methods, but you'll need to tell the compiler which version you mean. To disambiguate a mock function (the one you specify inside the parentheses of
ON_CALL()
), see the "Selecting Between Overloaded Functions" section on this page; to disambiguate a fake function (the one you place insideInvoke()
), use astatic_cast
to specify the function's type. For instance, if classFoo
has methodschar DoThis(int n)
andbool DoThis(double x) const
, and you want to invoke the latter, you need to writeInvoke(&fake_, static_cast<bool (FakeFoo::*)(double) const>(&FakeFoo::DoThis))
instead ofInvoke(&fake_, &FakeFoo::DoThis)
(The strange-looking thing inside the angled brackets ofstatic_cast
is the type of a function pointer to the secondDoThis()
method.). - Having to mix a mock and a fake is often a sign of something gone wrong. Perhaps you haven't got used to the interaction-based way of testing yet. Or perhaps your interface is taking on too many roles and should be split up. Therefore, don't abuse this. We would only recommend to do it as an intermediate step when you are refactoring your code.
Regarding the tip on mixing a mock and a fake, here's an example on
why it may be a bad sign: Suppose you have a class System
for
low-level system operations. In particular, it does file and I/O
operations. And suppose you want to test how your code uses System
to do I/O, and you just want the file operations to work normally. If
you mock out the entire System
class, you'll have to provide a fake
implementation for the file operation part, which suggests that
System
is taking on too many roles.
Instead, you can define a FileOps
interface and an IOOps
interface
and split System
's functionalities into the two. Then you can mock
IOOps
without mocking FileOps
.
When using testing doubles (mocks, fakes, stubs, and etc), sometimes their behaviors will differ from those of the real objects. This difference could be either intentional (as in simulating an error such that you can test the error handling code) or unintentional. If your mocks have different behaviors than the real objects by mistake, you could end up with code that passes the tests but fails in production.
You can use the delegating-to-real technique to ensure that your mock has the same behavior as the real object while retaining the ability to validate calls. This technique is very similar to the delegating-to-fake technique, the difference being that we use a real object instead of a fake. Here's an example:
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::AtLeast;
using ::testing::Invoke;
class MockFoo : public Foo {
public:
MockFoo() {
// By default, all calls are delegated to the real object.
ON_CALL(*this, DoThis())
.WillByDefault(Invoke(&real_, &Foo::DoThis));
ON_CALL(*this, DoThat(_))
.WillByDefault(Invoke(&real_, &Foo::DoThat));
...
}
MOCK_METHOD0(DoThis, ...);
MOCK_METHOD1(DoThat, ...);
...
private:
Foo real_;
};
...
MockFoo mock;
EXPECT_CALL(mock, DoThis())
.Times(3);
EXPECT_CALL(mock, DoThat("Hi"))
.Times(AtLeast(1));
... use mock in test ...
With this, Google Mock will verify that your code made the right calls (with the right arguments, in the right order, called the right number of times, etc), and a real object will answer the calls (so the behavior will be the same as in production). This gives you the best of both worlds.
Ideally, you should code to interfaces, whose methods are all pure virtual. In reality, sometimes you do need to mock a virtual method that is not pure (i.e, it already has an implementation). For example:
class Foo {
public:
virtual ~Foo();
virtual void Pure(int n) = 0;
virtual int Concrete(const char* str) { ... }
};
class MockFoo : public Foo {
public:
// Mocking a pure method.
MOCK_METHOD1(Pure, void(int n));
// Mocking a concrete method. Foo::Concrete() is shadowed.
MOCK_METHOD1(Concrete, int(const char* str));
};
Sometimes you may want to call Foo::Concrete()
instead of
MockFoo::Concrete()
. Perhaps you want to do it as part of a stub
action, or perhaps your test doesn't need to mock Concrete()
at all
(but it would be oh-so painful to have to define a new mock class
whenever you don't need to mock one of its methods).
The trick is to leave a back door in your mock class for accessing the real methods in the base class:
class MockFoo : public Foo {
public:
// Mocking a pure method.
MOCK_METHOD1(Pure, void(int n));
// Mocking a concrete method. Foo::Concrete() is shadowed.
MOCK_METHOD1(Concrete, int(const char* str));
// Use this to call Concrete() defined in Foo.
int FooConcrete(const char* str) { return Foo::Concrete(str); }
};
Now, you can call Foo::Concrete()
inside an action by:
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::Invoke;
...
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Concrete(_))
.WillOnce(Invoke(&foo, &MockFoo::FooConcrete));
or tell the mock object that you don't want to mock Concrete()
:
using ::testing::Invoke;
...
ON_CALL(foo, Concrete(_))
.WillByDefault(Invoke(&foo, &MockFoo::FooConcrete));
(Why don't we just write Invoke(&foo, &Foo::Concrete)
? If you do
that, MockFoo::Concrete()
will be called (and cause an infinite
recursion) since Foo::Concrete()
is virtual. That's just how C++
works.)
You can specify exactly which arguments a mock method is expecting:
using ::testing::Return;
...
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThis(5))
.WillOnce(Return('a'));
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThat("Hello", bar));
You can use matchers to match arguments that have a certain property:
using ::testing::Ge;
using ::testing::NotNull;
using ::testing::Return;
...
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThis(Ge(5))) // The argument must be >= 5.
.WillOnce(Return('a'));
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThat("Hello", NotNull()));
// The second argument must not be NULL.
A frequently used matcher is _
, which matches anything:
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::NotNull;
...
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThat(_, NotNull()));
You can build complex matchers from existing ones using AllOf()
,
AnyOf()
, and Not()
:
using ::testing::AllOf;
using ::testing::Gt;
using ::testing::HasSubstr;
using ::testing::Ne;
using ::testing::Not;
...
// The argument must be > 5 and != 10.
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThis(AllOf(Gt(5),
Ne(10))));
// The first argument must not contain sub-string "blah".
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThat(Not(HasSubstr("blah")),
NULL));
Google Mock matchers are statically typed, meaning that the compiler
can catch your mistake if you use a matcher of the wrong type (for
example, if you use Eq(5)
to match a string
argument). Good for
you!
Sometimes, however, you know what you're doing and want the compiler
to give you some slack. One example is that you have a matcher for
long
and the argument you want to match is int
. While the two
types aren't exactly the same, there is nothing really wrong with
using a Matcher<long>
to match an int
- after all, we can first
convert the int
argument to a long
before giving it to the
matcher.
To support this need, Google Mock gives you the
SafeMatcherCast<T>(m)
function. It casts a matcher m
to type
Matcher<T>
. To ensure safety, Google Mock checks that (let U
be the
type m
accepts):
- Type
T
can be implicitly cast to typeU
; - When both
T
andU
are built-in arithmetic types (bool
, integers, and floating-point numbers), the conversion fromT
toU
is not lossy (in other words, any value representable byT
can also be represented byU
); and - When
U
is a reference,T
must also be a reference (as the underlying matcher may be interested in the address of theU
value).
The code won't compile if any of these conditions aren't met.
Here's one example:
using ::testing::SafeMatcherCast;
// A base class and a child class.
class Base { ... };
class Derived : public Base { ... };
class MockFoo : public Foo {
public:
MOCK_METHOD1(DoThis, void(Derived* derived));
};
...
MockFoo foo;
// m is a Matcher<Base*> we got from somewhere.
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThis(SafeMatcherCast<Derived*>(m)));
If you find SafeMatcherCast<T>(m)
too limiting, you can use a similar
function MatcherCast<T>(m)
. The difference is that MatcherCast
works
as long as you can static_cast
type T
to type U
.
MatcherCast
essentially lets you bypass C++'s type system
(static_cast
isn't always safe as it could throw away information,
for example), so be careful not to misuse/abuse it.
If you expect an overloaded function to be called, the compiler may need some help on which overloaded version it is.
To disambiguate functions overloaded on the const-ness of this object,
use the Const()
argument wrapper.
using ::testing::ReturnRef;
class MockFoo : public Foo {
...
MOCK_METHOD0(GetBar, Bar&());
MOCK_CONST_METHOD0(GetBar, const Bar&());
};
...
MockFoo foo;
Bar bar1, bar2;
EXPECT_CALL(foo, GetBar()) // The non-const GetBar().
.WillOnce(ReturnRef(bar1));
EXPECT_CALL(Const(foo), GetBar()) // The const GetBar().
.WillOnce(ReturnRef(bar2));
(Const()
is defined by Google Mock and returns a const
reference
to its argument.)
To disambiguate overloaded functions with the same number of arguments
but different argument types, you may need to specify the exact type
of a matcher, either by wrapping your matcher in Matcher<type>()
, or
using a matcher whose type is fixed (TypedEq<type>
, An<type>()
,
etc):
using ::testing::An;
using ::testing::Lt;
using ::testing::Matcher;
using ::testing::TypedEq;
class MockPrinter : public Printer {
public:
MOCK_METHOD1(Print, void(int n));
MOCK_METHOD1(Print, void(char c));
};
TEST(PrinterTest, Print) {
MockPrinter printer;
EXPECT_CALL(printer, Print(An<int>())); // void Print(int);
EXPECT_CALL(printer, Print(Matcher<int>(Lt(5)))); // void Print(int);
EXPECT_CALL(printer, Print(TypedEq<char>('a'))); // void Print(char);
printer.Print(3);
printer.Print(6);
printer.Print('a');
}
When a mock method is called, the last matching expectation that's still active will be selected (think "newer overrides older"). So, you can make a method do different things depending on its argument values like this:
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::Lt;
using ::testing::Return;
...
// The default case.
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThis(_))
.WillRepeatedly(Return('b'));
// The more specific case.
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThis(Lt(5)))
.WillRepeatedly(Return('a'));
Now, if foo.DoThis()
is called with a value less than 5, 'a'
will
be returned; otherwise 'b'
will be returned.
Sometimes it's not enough to match the arguments individually. For
example, we may want to say that the first argument must be less than
the second argument. The With()
clause allows us to match
all arguments of a mock function as a whole. For example,
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::Lt;
using ::testing::Ne;
...
EXPECT_CALL(foo, InRange(Ne(0), _))
.With(Lt());
says that the first argument of InRange()
must not be 0, and must be
less than the second argument.
The expression inside With()
must be a matcher of type
Matcher< ::testing::tuple<A1, ..., An> >
, where A1
, ..., An
are the
types of the function arguments.
You can also write AllArgs(m)
instead of m
inside .With()
. The
two forms are equivalent, but .With(AllArgs(Lt()))
is more readable
than .With(Lt())
.
You can use Args<k1, ..., kn>(m)
to match the n
selected arguments
(as a tuple) against m
. For example,
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::AllOf;
using ::testing::Args;
using ::testing::Lt;
...
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Blah(_, _, _))
.With(AllOf(Args<0, 1>(Lt()), Args<1, 2>(Lt())));
says that Blah()
will be called with arguments x
, y
, and z
where
x < y < z
.
As a convenience and example, Google Mock provides some matchers for
2-tuples, including the Lt()
matcher above. See the CheatSheet for
the complete list.
Note that if you want to pass the arguments to a predicate of your own
(e.g. .With(Args<0, 1>(Truly(&MyPredicate)))
), that predicate MUST be
written to take a ::testing::tuple
as its argument; Google Mock will pass the n
selected arguments as one single tuple to the predicate.
Have you noticed that a matcher is just a fancy predicate that also
knows how to describe itself? Many existing algorithms take predicates
as arguments (e.g. those defined in STL's <algorithm>
header), and
it would be a shame if Google Mock matchers are not allowed to
participate.
Luckily, you can use a matcher where a unary predicate functor is
expected by wrapping it inside the Matches()
function. For example,
#include <algorithm>
#include <vector>
std::vector<int> v;
...
// How many elements in v are >= 10?
const int count = count_if(v.begin(), v.end(), Matches(Ge(10)));
Since you can build complex matchers from simpler ones easily using
Google Mock, this gives you a way to conveniently construct composite
predicates (doing the same using STL's <functional>
header is just
painful). For example, here's a predicate that's satisfied by any
number that is >= 0, <= 100, and != 50:
Matches(AllOf(Ge(0), Le(100), Ne(50)))
Since matchers are basically predicates that also know how to describe
themselves, there is a way to take advantage of them in
Google Test assertions. It's
called ASSERT_THAT
and EXPECT_THAT
:
ASSERT_THAT(value, matcher); // Asserts that value matches matcher.
EXPECT_THAT(value, matcher); // The non-fatal version.
For example, in a Google Test test you can write:
#include "gmock/gmock.h"
using ::testing::AllOf;
using ::testing::Ge;
using ::testing::Le;
using ::testing::MatchesRegex;
using ::testing::StartsWith;
...
EXPECT_THAT(Foo(), StartsWith("Hello"));
EXPECT_THAT(Bar(), MatchesRegex("Line \\d+"));
ASSERT_THAT(Baz(), AllOf(Ge(5), Le(10)));
which (as you can probably guess) executes Foo()
, Bar()
, and
Baz()
, and verifies that:
Foo()
returns a string that starts with"Hello"
.Bar()
returns a string that matches regular expression"Line \\d+"
.Baz()
returns a number in the range [5, 10].
The nice thing about these macros is that they read like
English. They generate informative messages too. For example, if the
first EXPECT_THAT()
above fails, the message will be something like:
Value of: Foo()
Actual: "Hi, world!"
Expected: starts with "Hello"
Credit: The idea of (ASSERT|EXPECT)_THAT
was stolen from the
Hamcrest project, which adds
assertThat()
to JUnit.
Google Mock provides a built-in set of matchers. In case you find them
lacking, you can use an arbitray unary predicate function or functor
as a matcher - as long as the predicate accepts a value of the type
you want. You do this by wrapping the predicate inside the Truly()
function, for example:
using ::testing::Truly;
int IsEven(int n) { return (n % 2) == 0 ? 1 : 0; }
...
// Bar() must be called with an even number.
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Bar(Truly(IsEven)));
Note that the predicate function / functor doesn't have to return
bool
. It works as long as the return value can be used as the
condition in statement if (condition) ...
.
When you do an EXPECT_CALL(mock_obj, Foo(bar))
, Google Mock saves
away a copy of bar
. When Foo()
is called later, Google Mock
compares the argument to Foo()
with the saved copy of bar
. This
way, you don't need to worry about bar
being modified or destroyed
after the EXPECT_CALL()
is executed. The same is true when you use
matchers like Eq(bar)
, Le(bar)
, and so on.
But what if bar
cannot be copied (i.e. has no copy constructor)? You
could define your own matcher function and use it with Truly()
, as
the previous couple of recipes have shown. Or, you may be able to get
away from it if you can guarantee that bar
won't be changed after
the EXPECT_CALL()
is executed. Just tell Google Mock that it should
save a reference to bar
, instead of a copy of it. Here's how:
using ::testing::Eq;
using ::testing::ByRef;
using ::testing::Lt;
...
// Expects that Foo()'s argument == bar.
EXPECT_CALL(mock_obj, Foo(Eq(ByRef(bar))));
// Expects that Foo()'s argument < bar.
EXPECT_CALL(mock_obj, Foo(Lt(ByRef(bar))));
Remember: if you do this, don't change bar
after the
EXPECT_CALL()
, or the result is undefined.
Often a mock function takes a reference to object as an argument. When
matching the argument, you may not want to compare the entire object
against a fixed object, as that may be over-specification. Instead,
you may need to validate a certain member variable or the result of a
certain getter method of the object. You can do this with Field()
and Property()
. More specifically,
Field(&Foo::bar, m)
is a matcher that matches a Foo
object whose bar
member variable
satisfies matcher m
.
Property(&Foo::baz, m)
is a matcher that matches a Foo
object whose baz()
method returns
a value that satisfies matcher m
.
For example:
Expression | Description |
---|---|
Field(&Foo::number, Ge(3)) |
Matches x where x.number >= 3 . |
Property(&Foo::name, StartsWith("John ")) |
Matches x where x.name() starts with "John " . |
Note that in Property(&Foo::baz, ...)
, method baz()
must take no
argument and be declared as const
.
BTW, Field()
and Property()
can also match plain pointers to
objects. For instance,
Field(&Foo::number, Ge(3))
matches a plain pointer p
where p->number >= 3
. If p
is NULL
,
the match will always fail regardless of the inner matcher.
What if you want to validate more than one members at the same time?
Remember that there is AllOf()
.
C++ functions often take pointers as arguments. You can use matchers
like IsNull()
, NotNull()
, and other comparison matchers to match a
pointer, but what if you want to make sure the value pointed to by
the pointer, instead of the pointer itself, has a certain property?
Well, you can use the Pointee(m)
matcher.
Pointee(m)
matches a pointer iff m
matches the value the pointer
points to. For example:
using ::testing::Ge;
using ::testing::Pointee;
...
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Bar(Pointee(Ge(3))));
expects foo.Bar()
to be called with a pointer that points to a value
greater than or equal to 3.
One nice thing about Pointee()
is that it treats a NULL
pointer as
a match failure, so you can write Pointee(m)
instead of
AllOf(NotNull(), Pointee(m))
without worrying that a NULL
pointer will crash your test.
Also, did we tell you that Pointee()
works with both raw pointers
and smart pointers (linked_ptr
, shared_ptr
, scoped_ptr
, and
etc)?
What if you have a pointer to pointer? You guessed it - you can use
nested Pointee()
to probe deeper inside the value. For example,
Pointee(Pointee(Lt(3)))
matches a pointer that points to a pointer
that points to a number less than 3 (what a mouthful...).
Sometimes you want to specify that an object argument has a certain property, but there is no existing matcher that does this. If you want good error messages, you should define a matcher. If you want to do it quick and dirty, you could get away with writing an ordinary function.
Let's say you have a mock function that takes an object of type Foo
,
which has an int bar()
method and an int baz()
method, and you
want to constrain that the argument's bar()
value plus its baz()
value is a given number. Here's how you can define a matcher to do it:
using ::testing::MatcherInterface;
using ::testing::MatchResultListener;
class BarPlusBazEqMatcher : public MatcherInterface<const Foo&> {
public:
explicit BarPlusBazEqMatcher(int expected_sum)
: expected_sum_(expected_sum) {}
virtual bool MatchAndExplain(const Foo& foo,
MatchResultListener* listener) const {
return (foo.bar() + foo.baz()) == expected_sum_;
}
virtual void DescribeTo(::std::ostream* os) const {
*os << "bar() + baz() equals " << expected_sum_;
}
virtual void DescribeNegationTo(::std::ostream* os) const {
*os << "bar() + baz() does not equal " << expected_sum_;
}
private:
const int expected_sum_;
};
inline Matcher<const Foo&> BarPlusBazEq(int expected_sum) {
return MakeMatcher(new BarPlusBazEqMatcher(expected_sum));
}
...
EXPECT_CALL(..., DoThis(BarPlusBazEq(5)))...;
Sometimes an STL container (e.g. list, vector, map, ...) is passed to
a mock function and you may want to validate it. Since most STL
containers support the ==
operator, you can write
Eq(expected_container)
or simply expected_container
to match a
container exactly.
Sometimes, though, you may want to be more flexible (for example, the first element must be an exact match, but the second element can be any positive number, and so on). Also, containers used in tests often have a small number of elements, and having to define the expected container out-of-line is a bit of a hassle.
You can use the ElementsAre()
or UnorderedElementsAre()
matcher in
such cases:
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::ElementsAre;
using ::testing::Gt;
...
MOCK_METHOD1(Foo, void(const vector<int>& numbers));
...
EXPECT_CALL(mock, Foo(ElementsAre(1, Gt(0), _, 5)));
The above matcher says that the container must have 4 elements, which must be 1, greater than 0, anything, and 5 respectively.
If you instead write:
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::Gt;
using ::testing::UnorderedElementsAre;
...
MOCK_METHOD1(Foo, void(const vector<int>& numbers));
...
EXPECT_CALL(mock, Foo(UnorderedElementsAre(1, Gt(0), _, 5)));
It means that the container must have 4 elements, which under some permutation must be 1, greater than 0, anything, and 5 respectively.
ElementsAre()
and UnorderedElementsAre()
are overloaded to take 0
to 10 arguments. If more are needed, you can place them in a C-style
array and use ElementsAreArray()
or UnorderedElementsAreArray()
instead:
using ::testing::ElementsAreArray;
...
// ElementsAreArray accepts an array of element values.
const int expected_vector1[] = { 1, 5, 2, 4, ... };
EXPECT_CALL(mock, Foo(ElementsAreArray(expected_vector1)));
// Or, an array of element matchers.
Matcher<int> expected_vector2 = { 1, Gt(2), _, 3, ... };
EXPECT_CALL(mock, Foo(ElementsAreArray(expected_vector2)));
In case the array needs to be dynamically created (and therefore the
array size cannot be inferred by the compiler), you can give
ElementsAreArray()
an additional argument to specify the array size:
using ::testing::ElementsAreArray;
...
int* const expected_vector3 = new int[count];
... fill expected_vector3 with values ...
EXPECT_CALL(mock, Foo(ElementsAreArray(expected_vector3, count)));
Tips:
ElementsAre*()
can be used to match any container that implements the STL iterator pattern (i.e. it has aconst_iterator
type and supportsbegin()/end()
), not just the ones defined in STL. It will even work with container types yet to be written - as long as they follows the above pattern.- You can use nested
ElementsAre*()
to match nested (multi-dimensional) containers. - If the container is passed by pointer instead of by reference, just write
Pointee(ElementsAre*(...))
. - The order of elements matters for
ElementsAre*()
. Therefore don't use it with containers whose element order is undefined (e.g.hash_map
).
Under the hood, a Google Mock matcher object consists of a pointer to a ref-counted implementation object. Copying matchers is allowed and very efficient, as only the pointer is copied. When the last matcher that references the implementation object dies, the implementation object will be deleted.
Therefore, if you have some complex matcher that you want to use again and again, there is no need to build it every time. Just assign it to a matcher variable and use that variable repeatedly! For example,
Matcher<int> in_range = AllOf(Gt(5), Le(10));
... use in_range as a matcher in multiple EXPECT_CALLs ...
ON_CALL
is likely the single most under-utilized construct in Google Mock.
There are basically two constructs for defining the behavior of a mock object: ON_CALL
and EXPECT_CALL
. The difference? ON_CALL
defines what happens when a mock method is called, but doesn't imply any expectation on the method being called. EXPECT_CALL
not only defines the behavior, but also sets an expectation that the method will be called with the given arguments, for the given number of times (and in the given order when you specify the order too).
Since EXPECT_CALL
does more, isn't it better than ON_CALL
? Not really. Every EXPECT_CALL
adds a constraint on the behavior of the code under test. Having more constraints than necessary is baaad - even worse than not having enough constraints.
This may be counter-intuitive. How could tests that verify more be worse than tests that verify less? Isn't verification the whole point of tests?
The answer, lies in what a test should verify. A good test verifies the contract of the code. If a test over-specifies, it doesn't leave enough freedom to the implementation. As a result, changing the implementation without breaking the contract (e.g. refactoring and optimization), which should be perfectly fine to do, can break such tests. Then you have to spend time fixing them, only to see them broken again the next time the implementation is changed.
Keep in mind that one doesn't have to verify more than one property in one test. In fact, it's a good style to verify only one thing in one test. If you do that, a bug will likely break only one or two tests instead of dozens (which case would you rather debug?). If you are also in the habit of giving tests descriptive names that tell what they verify, you can often easily guess what's wrong just from the test log itself.
So use ON_CALL
by default, and only use EXPECT_CALL
when you actually intend to verify that the call is made. For example, you may have a bunch of ON_CALL
s in your test fixture to set the common mock behavior shared by all tests in the same group, and write (scarcely) different EXPECT_CALL
s in different TEST_F
s to verify different aspects of the code's behavior. Compared with the style where each TEST
has many EXPECT_CALL
s, this leads to tests that are more resilient to implementational changes (and thus less likely to require maintenance) and makes the intent of the tests more obvious (so they are easier to maintain when you do need to maintain them).
If you are bothered by the "Uninteresting mock function call" message printed when a mock method without an EXPECT_CALL
is called, you may use a NiceMock
instead to suppress all such messages for the mock object, or suppress the message for specific methods by adding EXPECT_CALL(...).Times(AnyNumber())
. DO NOT suppress it by blindly adding an EXPECT_CALL(...)
, or you'll have a test that's a pain to maintain.
If you are not interested in how a mock method is called, just don't
say anything about it. In this case, if the method is ever called,
Google Mock will perform its default action to allow the test program
to continue. If you are not happy with the default action taken by
Google Mock, you can override it using DefaultValue<T>::Set()
(described later in this document) or ON_CALL()
.
Please note that once you expressed interest in a particular mock
method (via EXPECT_CALL()
), all invocations to it must match some
expectation. If this function is called but the arguments don't match
any EXPECT_CALL()
statement, it will be an error.
If a mock method shouldn't be called at all, explicitly say so:
using ::testing::_;
...
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Bar(_))
.Times(0);
If some calls to the method are allowed, but the rest are not, just list all the expected calls:
using ::testing::AnyNumber;
using ::testing::Gt;
...
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Bar(5));
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Bar(Gt(10)))
.Times(AnyNumber());
A call to foo.Bar()
that doesn't match any of the EXPECT_CALL()
statements will be an error.
Uninteresting calls and unexpected calls are different concepts in Google Mock. Very different.
A call x.Y(...)
is uninteresting if there's not even a single EXPECT_CALL(x, Y(...))
set. In other words, the test isn't interested in the x.Y()
method at all, as evident in that the test doesn't care to say anything about it.
A call x.Y(...)
is unexpected if there are some EXPECT_CALL(x, Y(...))s
set, but none of them matches the call. Put another way, the test is interested in the x.Y()
method (therefore it explicitly sets some EXPECT_CALL
to verify how it's called); however, the verification fails as the test doesn't expect this particular call to happen.
An unexpected call is always an error, as the code under test doesn't behave the way the test expects it to behave.
By default, an uninteresting call is not an error, as it violates no constraint specified by the test. (Google Mock's philosophy is that saying nothing means there is no constraint.) However, it leads to a warning, as it might indicate a problem (e.g. the test author might have forgotten to specify a constraint).
In Google Mock, NiceMock
and StrictMock
can be used to make a mock class "nice" or "strict". How does this affect uninteresting calls and unexpected calls?
A nice mock suppresses uninteresting call warnings. It is less chatty than the default mock, but otherwise is the same. If a test fails with a default mock, it will also fail using a nice mock instead. And vice versa. Don't expect making a mock nice to change the test's result.
A strict mock turns uninteresting call warnings into errors. So making a mock strict may change the test's result.
Let's look at an example:
TEST(...) {
NiceMock<MockDomainRegistry> mock_registry;
EXPECT_CALL(mock_registry, GetDomainOwner("google.com"))
.WillRepeatedly(Return("Larry Page"));
// Use mock_registry in code under test.
... &mock_registry ...
}
The sole EXPECT_CALL
here says that all calls to GetDomainOwner()
must have "google.com"
as the argument. If GetDomainOwner("yahoo.com")
is called, it will be an unexpected call, and thus an error. Having a nice mock doesn't change the severity of an unexpected call.
So how do we tell Google Mock that GetDomainOwner()
can be called with some other arguments as well? The standard technique is to add a "catch all" EXPECT_CALL
:
EXPECT_CALL(mock_registry, GetDomainOwner(_))
.Times(AnyNumber()); // catches all other calls to this method.
EXPECT_CALL(mock_registry, GetDomainOwner("google.com"))
.WillRepeatedly(Return("Larry Page"));
Remember that _
is the wildcard matcher that matches anything. With this, if GetDomainOwner("google.com")
is called, it will do what the second EXPECT_CALL
says; if it is called with a different argument, it will do what the first EXPECT_CALL
says.
Note that the order of the two EXPECT_CALLs
is important, as a newer EXPECT_CALL
takes precedence over an older one.
For more on uninteresting calls, nice mocks, and strict mocks, read "The Nice, the Strict, and the Naggy".
Although an EXPECT_CALL()
statement defined earlier takes precedence
when Google Mock tries to match a function call with an expectation,
by default calls don't have to happen in the order EXPECT_CALL()
statements are written. For example, if the arguments match the
matchers in the third EXPECT_CALL()
, but not those in the first two,
then the third expectation will be used.
If you would rather have all calls occur in the order of the
expectations, put the EXPECT_CALL()
statements in a block where you
define a variable of type InSequence
:
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::InSequence;
{
InSequence s;
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThis(5));
EXPECT_CALL(bar, DoThat(_))
.Times(2);
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThis(6));
}
In this example, we expect a call to foo.DoThis(5)
, followed by two
calls to bar.DoThat()
where the argument can be anything, which are
in turn followed by a call to foo.DoThis(6)
. If a call occurred
out-of-order, Google Mock will report an error.
Sometimes requiring everything to occur in a predetermined order can
lead to brittle tests. For example, we may care about A
occurring
before both B
and C
, but aren't interested in the relative order
of B
and C
. In this case, the test should reflect our real intent,
instead of being overly constraining.
Google Mock allows you to impose an arbitrary DAG (directed acyclic
graph) on the calls. One way to express the DAG is to use the
After clause of EXPECT_CALL
.
Another way is via the InSequence()
clause (not the same as the
InSequence
class), which we borrowed from jMock 2. It's less
flexible than After()
, but more convenient when you have long chains
of sequential calls, as it doesn't require you to come up with
different names for the expectations in the chains. Here's how it
works:
If we view EXPECT_CALL()
statements as nodes in a graph, and add an
edge from node A to node B wherever A must occur before B, we can get
a DAG. We use the term "sequence" to mean a directed path in this
DAG. Now, if we decompose the DAG into sequences, we just need to know
which sequences each EXPECT_CALL()
belongs to in order to be able to
reconstruct the original DAG.
So, to specify the partial order on the expectations we need to do two
things: first to define some Sequence
objects, and then for each
EXPECT_CALL()
say which Sequence
objects it is part
of. Expectations in the same sequence must occur in the order they are
written. For example,
using ::testing::Sequence;
Sequence s1, s2;
EXPECT_CALL(foo, A())
.InSequence(s1, s2);
EXPECT_CALL(bar, B())
.InSequence(s1);
EXPECT_CALL(bar, C())
.InSequence(s2);
EXPECT_CALL(foo, D())
.InSequence(s2);
specifies the following DAG (where s1
is A -> B
, and s2
is A -> C -> D
):
+---> B
|
A ---|
|
+---> C ---> D
This means that A must occur before B and C, and C must occur before D. There's no restriction about the order other than these.
When a mock method is called, Google Mock only consider expectations that are still active. An expectation is active when created, and becomes inactive (aka retires) when a call that has to occur later has occurred. For example, in
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::Sequence;
Sequence s1, s2;
EXPECT_CALL(log, Log(WARNING, _, "File too large.")) // #1
.Times(AnyNumber())
.InSequence(s1, s2);
EXPECT_CALL(log, Log(WARNING, _, "Data set is empty.")) // #2
.InSequence(s1);
EXPECT_CALL(log, Log(WARNING, _, "User not found.")) // #3
.InSequence(s2);
as soon as either #2 or #3 is matched, #1 will retire. If a warning
"File too large."
is logged after this, it will be an error.
Note that an expectation doesn't retire automatically when it's saturated. For example,
using ::testing::_;
...
EXPECT_CALL(log, Log(WARNING, _, _)); // #1
EXPECT_CALL(log, Log(WARNING, _, "File too large.")); // #2
says that there will be exactly one warning with the message "File too large."
. If the second warning contains this message too, #2 will
match again and result in an upper-bound-violated error.
If this is not what you want, you can ask an expectation to retire as soon as it becomes saturated:
using ::testing::_;
...
EXPECT_CALL(log, Log(WARNING, _, _)); // #1
EXPECT_CALL(log, Log(WARNING, _, "File too large.")) // #2
.RetiresOnSaturation();
Here #2 can be used only once, so if you have two warnings with the
message "File too large."
, the first will match #2 and the second
will match #1 - there will be no error.
If a mock function's return type is a reference, you need to use
ReturnRef()
instead of Return()
to return a result:
using ::testing::ReturnRef;
class MockFoo : public Foo {
public:
MOCK_METHOD0(GetBar, Bar&());
};
...
MockFoo foo;
Bar bar;
EXPECT_CALL(foo, GetBar())
.WillOnce(ReturnRef(bar));
The Return(x)
action saves a copy of x
when the action is
created, and always returns the same value whenever it's
executed. Sometimes you may want to instead return the live value of
x
(i.e. its value at the time when the action is executed.).
If the mock function's return type is a reference, you can do it using
ReturnRef(x)
, as shown in the previous recipe ("Returning References
from Mock Methods"). However, Google Mock doesn't let you use
ReturnRef()
in a mock function whose return type is not a reference,
as doing that usually indicates a user error. So, what shall you do?
You may be tempted to try ByRef()
:
using testing::ByRef;
using testing::Return;
class MockFoo : public Foo {
public:
MOCK_METHOD0(GetValue, int());
};
...
int x = 0;
MockFoo foo;
EXPECT_CALL(foo, GetValue())
.WillRepeatedly(Return(ByRef(x)));
x = 42;
EXPECT_EQ(42, foo.GetValue());
Unfortunately, it doesn't work here. The above code will fail with error:
Value of: foo.GetValue()
Actual: 0
Expected: 42
The reason is that Return(value)
converts value
to the actual
return type of the mock function at the time when the action is
created, not when it is executed. (This behavior was chosen for
the action to be safe when value
is a proxy object that references
some temporary objects.) As a result, ByRef(x)
is converted to an
int
value (instead of a const int&
) when the expectation is set,
and Return(ByRef(x))
will always return 0.
ReturnPointee(pointer)
was provided to solve this problem
specifically. It returns the value pointed to by pointer
at the time
the action is executed:
using testing::ReturnPointee;
...
int x = 0;
MockFoo foo;
EXPECT_CALL(foo, GetValue())
.WillRepeatedly(ReturnPointee(&x)); // Note the & here.
x = 42;
EXPECT_EQ(42, foo.GetValue()); // This will succeed now.
Want to do more than one thing when a function is called? That's
fine. DoAll()
allow you to do sequence of actions every time. Only
the return value of the last action in the sequence will be used.
using ::testing::DoAll;
class MockFoo : public Foo {
public:
MOCK_METHOD1(Bar, bool(int n));
};
...
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Bar(_))
.WillOnce(DoAll(action_1,
action_2,
...
action_n));
Sometimes a method exhibits its effect not via returning a value but
via side effects. For example, it may change some global state or
modify an output argument. To mock side effects, in general you can
define your own action by implementing ::testing::ActionInterface
.
If all you need to do is to change an output argument, the built-in
SetArgPointee()
action is convenient:
using ::testing::SetArgPointee;
class MockMutator : public Mutator {
public:
MOCK_METHOD2(Mutate, void(bool mutate, int* value));
...
};
...
MockMutator mutator;
EXPECT_CALL(mutator, Mutate(true, _))
.WillOnce(SetArgPointee<1>(5));
In this example, when mutator.Mutate()
is called, we will assign 5
to the int
variable pointed to by argument #1
(0-based).
SetArgPointee()
conveniently makes an internal copy of the
value you pass to it, removing the need to keep the value in scope and
alive. The implication however is that the value must have a copy
constructor and assignment operator.
If the mock method also needs to return a value as well, you can chain
SetArgPointee()
with Return()
using DoAll()
:
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::Return;
using ::testing::SetArgPointee;
class MockMutator : public Mutator {
public:
...
MOCK_METHOD1(MutateInt, bool(int* value));
};
...
MockMutator mutator;
EXPECT_CALL(mutator, MutateInt(_))
.WillOnce(DoAll(SetArgPointee<0>(5),
Return(true)));
If the output argument is an array, use the
SetArrayArgument<N>(first, last)
action instead. It copies the
elements in source range [first, last)
to the array pointed to by
the N
-th (0-based) argument:
using ::testing::NotNull;
using ::testing::SetArrayArgument;
class MockArrayMutator : public ArrayMutator {
public:
MOCK_METHOD2(Mutate, void(int* values, int num_values));
...
};
...
MockArrayMutator mutator;
int values[5] = { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 };
EXPECT_CALL(mutator, Mutate(NotNull(), 5))
.WillOnce(SetArrayArgument<0>(values, values + 5));
This also works when the argument is an output iterator:
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::SetArrayArgument;
class MockRolodex : public Rolodex {
public:
MOCK_METHOD1(GetNames, void(std::back_insert_iterator<vector<string> >));
...
};
...
MockRolodex rolodex;
vector<string> names;
names.push_back("George");
names.push_back("John");
names.push_back("Thomas");
EXPECT_CALL(rolodex, GetNames(_))
.WillOnce(SetArrayArgument<0>(names.begin(), names.end()));
If you expect a call to change the behavior of a mock object, you can use ::testing::InSequence
to specify different behaviors before and after the call:
using ::testing::InSequence;
using ::testing::Return;
...
{
InSequence seq;
EXPECT_CALL(my_mock, IsDirty())
.WillRepeatedly(Return(true));
EXPECT_CALL(my_mock, Flush());
EXPECT_CALL(my_mock, IsDirty())
.WillRepeatedly(Return(false));
}
my_mock.FlushIfDirty();
This makes my_mock.IsDirty()
return true
before my_mock.Flush()
is called and return false
afterwards.
If the behavior change is more complex, you can store the effects in a variable and make a mock method get its return value from that variable:
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::SaveArg;
using ::testing::Return;
ACTION_P(ReturnPointee, p) { return *p; }
...
int previous_value = 0;
EXPECT_CALL(my_mock, GetPrevValue())
.WillRepeatedly(ReturnPointee(&previous_value));
EXPECT_CALL(my_mock, UpdateValue(_))
.WillRepeatedly(SaveArg<0>(&previous_value));
my_mock.DoSomethingToUpdateValue();
Here my_mock.GetPrevValue()
will always return the argument of the last UpdateValue()
call.
If a mock method's return type is a built-in C++ type or pointer, by default it will return 0 when invoked. Also, in C++ 11 and above, a mock method whose return type has a default constructor will return a default-constructed value by default. You only need to specify an action if this default value doesn't work for you.
Sometimes, you may want to change this default value, or you may want
to specify a default value for types Google Mock doesn't know
about. You can do this using the ::testing::DefaultValue
class
template:
class MockFoo : public Foo {
public:
MOCK_METHOD0(CalculateBar, Bar());
};
...
Bar default_bar;
// Sets the default return value for type Bar.
DefaultValue<Bar>::Set(default_bar);
MockFoo foo;
// We don't need to specify an action here, as the default
// return value works for us.
EXPECT_CALL(foo, CalculateBar());
foo.CalculateBar(); // This should return default_bar.
// Unsets the default return value.
DefaultValue<Bar>::Clear();
Please note that changing the default value for a type can make you
tests hard to understand. We recommend you to use this feature
judiciously. For example, you may want to make sure the Set()
and
Clear()
calls are right next to the code that uses your mock.
You've learned how to change the default value of a given
type. However, this may be too coarse for your purpose: perhaps you
have two mock methods with the same return type and you want them to
have different behaviors. The ON_CALL()
macro allows you to
customize your mock's behavior at the method level:
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::AnyNumber;
using ::testing::Gt;
using ::testing::Return;
...
ON_CALL(foo, Sign(_))
.WillByDefault(Return(-1));
ON_CALL(foo, Sign(0))
.WillByDefault(Return(0));
ON_CALL(foo, Sign(Gt(0)))
.WillByDefault(Return(1));
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Sign(_))
.Times(AnyNumber());
foo.Sign(5); // This should return 1.
foo.Sign(-9); // This should return -1.
foo.Sign(0); // This should return 0.
As you may have guessed, when there are more than one ON_CALL()
statements, the news order take precedence over the older ones. In
other words, the last one that matches the function arguments will
be used. This matching order allows you to set up the common behavior
in a mock object's constructor or the test fixture's set-up phase and
specialize the mock's behavior later.
If the built-in actions don't suit you, you can easily use an existing function, method, or functor as an action:
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::Invoke;
class MockFoo : public Foo {
public:
MOCK_METHOD2(Sum, int(int x, int y));
MOCK_METHOD1(ComplexJob, bool(int x));
};
int CalculateSum(int x, int y) { return x + y; }
class Helper {
public:
bool ComplexJob(int x);
};
...
MockFoo foo;
Helper helper;
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Sum(_, _))
.WillOnce(Invoke(CalculateSum));
EXPECT_CALL(foo, ComplexJob(_))
.WillOnce(Invoke(&helper, &Helper::ComplexJob));
foo.Sum(5, 6); // Invokes CalculateSum(5, 6).
foo.ComplexJob(10); // Invokes helper.ComplexJob(10);
The only requirement is that the type of the function, etc must be compatible with the signature of the mock function, meaning that the latter's arguments can be implicitly converted to the corresponding arguments of the former, and the former's return type can be implicitly converted to that of the latter. So, you can invoke something whose type is not exactly the same as the mock function, as long as it's safe to do so - nice, huh?
Invoke()
is very useful for doing actions that are more complex. It
passes the mock function's arguments to the function or functor being
invoked such that the callee has the full context of the call to work
with. If the invoked function is not interested in some or all of the
arguments, it can simply ignore them.
Yet, a common pattern is that a test author wants to invoke a function
without the arguments of the mock function. Invoke()
allows her to
do that using a wrapper function that throws away the arguments before
invoking an underlining nullary function. Needless to say, this can be
tedious and obscures the intent of the test.
InvokeWithoutArgs()
solves this problem. It's like Invoke()
except
that it doesn't pass the mock function's arguments to the
callee. Here's an example:
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::InvokeWithoutArgs;
class MockFoo : public Foo {
public:
MOCK_METHOD1(ComplexJob, bool(int n));
};
bool Job1() { ... }
...
MockFoo foo;
EXPECT_CALL(foo, ComplexJob(_))
.WillOnce(InvokeWithoutArgs(Job1));
foo.ComplexJob(10); // Invokes Job1().
Sometimes a mock function will receive a function pointer or a functor (in other words, a "callable") as an argument, e.g.
class MockFoo : public Foo {
public:
MOCK_METHOD2(DoThis, bool(int n, bool (*fp)(int)));
};
and you may want to invoke this callable argument:
using ::testing::_;
...
MockFoo foo;
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThis(_, _))
.WillOnce(...);
// Will execute (*fp)(5), where fp is the
// second argument DoThis() receives.
Arghh, you need to refer to a mock function argument but your version of C++ has no lambdas, so you have to define your own action. :-( Or do you really?
Well, Google Mock has an action to solve exactly this problem:
InvokeArgument<N>(arg_1, arg_2, ..., arg_m)
will invoke the N
-th (0-based) argument the mock function receives,
with arg_1
, arg_2
, ..., and arg_m
. No matter if the argument is
a function pointer or a functor, Google Mock handles them both.
With that, you could write:
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::InvokeArgument;
...
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThis(_, _))
.WillOnce(InvokeArgument<1>(5));
// Will execute (*fp)(5), where fp is the
// second argument DoThis() receives.
What if the callable takes an argument by reference? No problem - just
wrap it inside ByRef()
:
...
MOCK_METHOD1(Bar, bool(bool (*fp)(int, const Helper&)));
...
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::ByRef;
using ::testing::InvokeArgument;
...
MockFoo foo;
Helper helper;
...
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Bar(_))
.WillOnce(InvokeArgument<0>(5, ByRef(helper)));
// ByRef(helper) guarantees that a reference to helper, not a copy of it,
// will be passed to the callable.
What if the callable takes an argument by reference and we do not
wrap the argument in ByRef()
? Then InvokeArgument()
will make a
copy of the argument, and pass a reference to the copy, instead of
a reference to the original value, to the callable. This is especially
handy when the argument is a temporary value:
...
MOCK_METHOD1(DoThat, bool(bool (*f)(const double& x, const string& s)));
...
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::InvokeArgument;
...
MockFoo foo;
...
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThat(_))
.WillOnce(InvokeArgument<0>(5.0, string("Hi")));
// Will execute (*f)(5.0, string("Hi")), where f is the function pointer
// DoThat() receives. Note that the values 5.0 and string("Hi") are
// temporary and dead once the EXPECT_CALL() statement finishes. Yet
// it's fine to perform this action later, since a copy of the values
// are kept inside the InvokeArgument action.
Sometimes you have an action that returns something, but you need an
action that returns void
(perhaps you want to use it in a mock
function that returns void
, or perhaps it needs to be used in
DoAll()
and it's not the last in the list). IgnoreResult()
lets
you do that. For example:
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::Invoke;
using ::testing::Return;
int Process(const MyData& data);
string DoSomething();
class MockFoo : public Foo {
public:
MOCK_METHOD1(Abc, void(const MyData& data));
MOCK_METHOD0(Xyz, bool());
};
...
MockFoo foo;
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Abc(_))
// .WillOnce(Invoke(Process));
// The above line won't compile as Process() returns int but Abc() needs
// to return void.
.WillOnce(IgnoreResult(Invoke(Process)));
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Xyz())
.WillOnce(DoAll(IgnoreResult(Invoke(DoSomething)),
// Ignores the string DoSomething() returns.
Return(true)));
Note that you cannot use IgnoreResult()
on an action that already
returns void
. Doing so will lead to ugly compiler errors.
Say you have a mock function Foo()
that takes seven arguments, and
you have a custom action that you want to invoke when Foo()
is
called. Trouble is, the custom action only wants three arguments:
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::Invoke;
...
MOCK_METHOD7(Foo, bool(bool visible, const string& name, int x, int y,
const map<pair<int, int>, double>& weight,
double min_weight, double max_wight));
...
bool IsVisibleInQuadrant1(bool visible, int x, int y) {
return visible && x >= 0 && y >= 0;
}
...
EXPECT_CALL(mock, Foo(_, _, _, _, _, _, _))
.WillOnce(Invoke(IsVisibleInQuadrant1)); // Uh, won't compile. :-(
To please the compiler God, you can to define an "adaptor" that has
the same signature as Foo()
and calls the custom action with the
right arguments:
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::Invoke;
bool MyIsVisibleInQuadrant1(bool visible, const string& name, int x, int y,
const map<pair<int, int>, double>& weight,
double min_weight, double max_wight) {
return IsVisibleInQuadrant1(visible, x, y);
}
...
EXPECT_CALL(mock, Foo(_, _, _, _, _, _, _))
.WillOnce(Invoke(MyIsVisibleInQuadrant1)); // Now it works.
But isn't this awkward?
Google Mock provides a generic action adaptor, so you can spend your time minding more important business than writing your own adaptors. Here's the syntax:
WithArgs<N1, N2, ..., Nk>(action)
creates an action that passes the arguments of the mock function at
the given indices (0-based) to the inner action
and performs
it. Using WithArgs
, our original example can be written as:
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::Invoke;
using ::testing::WithArgs;
...
EXPECT_CALL(mock, Foo(_, _, _, _, _, _, _))
.WillOnce(WithArgs<0, 2, 3>(Invoke(IsVisibleInQuadrant1)));
// No need to define your own adaptor.
For better readability, Google Mock also gives you:
WithoutArgs(action)
when the inneraction
takes no argument, andWithArg<N>(action)
(nos
afterArg
) when the inneraction
takes one argument.
As you may have realized, InvokeWithoutArgs(...)
is just syntactic
sugar for WithoutArgs(Invoke(...))
.
Here are more tips:
- The inner action used in
WithArgs
and friends does not have to beInvoke()
-- it can be anything. - You can repeat an argument in the argument list if necessary, e.g.
WithArgs<2, 3, 3, 5>(...)
. - You can change the order of the arguments, e.g.
WithArgs<3, 2, 1>(...)
. - The types of the selected arguments do not have to match the signature of the inner action exactly. It works as long as they can be implicitly converted to the corresponding arguments of the inner action. For example, if the 4-th argument of the mock function is an
int
andmy_action
takes adouble
,WithArg<4>(my_action)
will work.
The selecting-an-action's-arguments recipe showed us one way to make a
mock function and an action with incompatible argument lists fit
together. The downside is that wrapping the action in
WithArgs<...>()
can get tedious for people writing the tests.
If you are defining a function, method, or functor to be used with
Invoke*()
, and you are not interested in some of its arguments, an
alternative to WithArgs
is to declare the uninteresting arguments as
Unused
. This makes the definition less cluttered and less fragile in
case the types of the uninteresting arguments change. It could also
increase the chance the action function can be reused. For example,
given
MOCK_METHOD3(Foo, double(const string& label, double x, double y));
MOCK_METHOD3(Bar, double(int index, double x, double y));
instead of
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::Invoke;
double DistanceToOriginWithLabel(const string& label, double x, double y) {
return sqrt(x*x + y*y);
}
double DistanceToOriginWithIndex(int index, double x, double y) {
return sqrt(x*x + y*y);
}
...
EXEPCT_CALL(mock, Foo("abc", _, _))
.WillOnce(Invoke(DistanceToOriginWithLabel));
EXEPCT_CALL(mock, Bar(5, _, _))
.WillOnce(Invoke(DistanceToOriginWithIndex));
you could write
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::Invoke;
using ::testing::Unused;
double DistanceToOrigin(Unused, double x, double y) {
return sqrt(x*x + y*y);
}
...
EXEPCT_CALL(mock, Foo("abc", _, _))
.WillOnce(Invoke(DistanceToOrigin));
EXEPCT_CALL(mock, Bar(5, _, _))
.WillOnce(Invoke(DistanceToOrigin));
Just like matchers, a Google Mock action object consists of a pointer to a ref-counted implementation object. Therefore copying actions is also allowed and very efficient. When the last action that references the implementation object dies, the implementation object will be deleted.
If you have some complex action that you want to use again and again, you may not have to build it from scratch every time. If the action doesn't have an internal state (i.e. if it always does the same thing no matter how many times it has been called), you can assign it to an action variable and use that variable repeatedly. For example:
Action<bool(int*)> set_flag = DoAll(SetArgPointee<0>(5),
Return(true));
... use set_flag in .WillOnce() and .WillRepeatedly() ...
However, if the action has its own state, you may be surprised if you
share the action object. Suppose you have an action factory
IncrementCounter(init)
which creates an action that increments and
returns a counter whose initial value is init
, using two actions
created from the same expression and using a shared action will
exihibit different behaviors. Example:
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThis())
.WillRepeatedly(IncrementCounter(0));
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThat())
.WillRepeatedly(IncrementCounter(0));
foo.DoThis(); // Returns 1.
foo.DoThis(); // Returns 2.
foo.DoThat(); // Returns 1 - Blah() uses a different
// counter than Bar()'s.
versus
Action<int()> increment = IncrementCounter(0);
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThis())
.WillRepeatedly(increment);
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThat())
.WillRepeatedly(increment);
foo.DoThis(); // Returns 1.
foo.DoThis(); // Returns 2.
foo.DoThat(); // Returns 3 - the counter is shared.
C++11 introduced move-only types. A move-only-typed value can be moved from one object to another, but cannot be copied. std::unique_ptr<T>
is probably the most commonly used move-only type.
Mocking a method that takes and/or returns move-only types presents some challenges, but nothing insurmountable. This recipe shows you how you can do it.
Let’s say we are working on a fictional project that lets one post and share snippets called “buzzes”. Your code uses these types:
enum class AccessLevel { kInternal, kPublic };
class Buzz {
public:
explicit Buzz(AccessLevel access) { … }
...
};
class Buzzer {
public:
virtual ~Buzzer() {}
virtual std::unique_ptr<Buzz> MakeBuzz(const std::string& text) = 0;
virtual bool ShareBuzz(std::unique_ptr<Buzz> buzz, Time timestamp) = 0;
...
};
A Buzz
object represents a snippet being posted. A class that implements the Buzzer
interface is capable of creating and sharing Buzz
. Methods in Buzzer
may return a unique_ptr<Buzz>
or take a unique_ptr<Buzz>
. Now we need to mock Buzzer
in our tests.
To mock a method that returns a move-only type, you just use the familiar MOCK_METHOD
syntax as usual:
class MockBuzzer : public Buzzer {
public:
MOCK_METHOD1(MakeBuzz, std::unique_ptr<Buzz>(const std::string& text));
…
};
However, if you attempt to use the same MOCK_METHOD
pattern to mock a method that takes a move-only parameter, you’ll get a compiler error currently:
// Does NOT compile!
MOCK_METHOD2(ShareBuzz, bool(std::unique_ptr<Buzz> buzz, Time timestamp));
While it’s highly desirable to make this syntax just work, it’s not trivial and the work hasn’t been done yet. Fortunately, there is a trick you can apply today to get something that works nearly as well as this.
The trick, is to delegate the ShareBuzz()
method to a mock method (let’s call it DoShareBuzz()
) that does not take move-only parameters:
class MockBuzzer : public Buzzer {
public:
MOCK_METHOD1(MakeBuzz, std::unique_ptr<Buzz>(const std::string& text));
MOCK_METHOD2(DoShareBuzz, bool(Buzz* buzz, Time timestamp));
bool ShareBuzz(std::unique_ptr<Buzz> buzz, Time timestamp) {
return DoShareBuzz(buzz.get(), timestamp);
}
};
Note that there's no need to define or declare DoShareBuzz()
in a base class. You only need to define it as a MOCK_METHOD
in the mock class.
Now that we have the mock class defined, we can use it in tests. In the following code examples, we assume that we have defined a MockBuzzer
object named mock_buzzer_
:
MockBuzzer mock_buzzer_;
First let’s see how we can set expectations on the MakeBuzz()
method, which returns a unique_ptr<Buzz>
.
As usual, if you set an expectation without an action (i.e. the .WillOnce()
or .WillRepeated()
clause), when that expectation fires, the default action for that method will be taken. Since unique_ptr<>
has a default constructor that returns a null unique_ptr
, that’s what you’ll get if you don’t specify an action:
// Use the default action.
EXPECT_CALL(mock_buzzer_, MakeBuzz("hello"));
// Triggers the previous EXPECT_CALL.
EXPECT_EQ(nullptr, mock_buzzer_.MakeBuzz("hello"));
If you are not happy with the default action, you can tweak it. Depending on what you need, you may either tweak the default action for a specific (mock object, mock method) combination using ON_CALL()
, or you may tweak the default action for all mock methods that return a specific type. The usage of ON_CALL()
is similar to EXPECT_CALL()
, so we’ll skip it and just explain how to do the latter (tweaking the default action for a specific return type). You do this via the DefaultValue<>::SetFactory()
and DefaultValue<>::Clear()
API:
// Sets the default action for return type std::unique_ptr<Buzz> to
// creating a new Buzz every time.
DefaultValue<std::unique_ptr<Buzz>>::SetFactory(
[] { return MakeUnique<Buzz>(AccessLevel::kInternal); });
// When this fires, the default action of MakeBuzz() will run, which
// will return a new Buzz object.
EXPECT_CALL(mock_buzzer_, MakeBuzz("hello")).Times(AnyNumber());
auto buzz1 = mock_buzzer_.MakeBuzz("hello");
auto buzz2 = mock_buzzer_.MakeBuzz("hello");
EXPECT_NE(nullptr, buzz1);
EXPECT_NE(nullptr, buzz2);
EXPECT_NE(buzz1, buzz2);
// Resets the default action for return type std::unique_ptr<Buzz>,
// to avoid interfere with other tests.
DefaultValue<std::unique_ptr<Buzz>>::Clear();
What if you want the method to do something other than the default action? If you just need to return a pre-defined move-only value, you can use the Return(ByMove(...))
action:
// When this fires, the unique_ptr<> specified by ByMove(...) will
// be returned.
EXPECT_CALL(mock_buzzer_, MakeBuzz("world"))
.WillOnce(Return(ByMove(MakeUnique<Buzz>(AccessLevel::kInternal))));
EXPECT_NE(nullptr, mock_buzzer_.MakeBuzz("world"));
Note that ByMove()
is essential here - if you drop it, the code won’t compile.
Quiz time! What do you think will happen if a Return(ByMove(...))
action is performed more than once (e.g. you write ….WillRepeatedly(Return(ByMove(...)));
)? Come think of it, after the first time the action runs, the source value will be consumed (since it’s a move-only value), so the next time around, there’s no value to move from -- you’ll get a run-time error that Return(ByMove(...))
can only be run once.
If you need your mock method to do more than just moving a pre-defined value, remember that you can always use Invoke()
to call a lambda or a callable object, which can do pretty much anything you want:
EXPECT_CALL(mock_buzzer_, MakeBuzz("x"))
.WillRepeatedly(Invoke([](const std::string& text) {
return std::make_unique<Buzz>(AccessLevel::kInternal);
}));
EXPECT_NE(nullptr, mock_buzzer_.MakeBuzz("x"));
EXPECT_NE(nullptr, mock_buzzer_.MakeBuzz("x"));
Every time this EXPECT_CALL
fires, a new unique_ptr<Buzz>
will be created and returned. You cannot do this with Return(ByMove(...))
.
Now there’s one topic we haven’t covered: how do you set expectations on ShareBuzz()
, which takes a move-only-typed parameter? The answer is you don’t. Instead, you set expectations on the DoShareBuzz()
mock method (remember that we defined a MOCK_METHOD
for DoShareBuzz()
, not ShareBuzz()
):
EXPECT_CALL(mock_buzzer_, DoShareBuzz(NotNull(), _));
// When one calls ShareBuzz() on the MockBuzzer like this, the call is
// forwarded to DoShareBuzz(), which is mocked. Therefore this statement
// will trigger the above EXPECT_CALL.
mock_buzzer_.ShareBuzz(MakeUnique<Buzz>(AccessLevel::kInternal),
::base::Now());
Some of you may have spotted one problem with this approach: the DoShareBuzz()
mock method differs from the real ShareBuzz()
method in that it cannot take ownership of the buzz parameter - ShareBuzz()
will always delete buzz after DoShareBuzz()
returns. What if you need to save the buzz object somewhere for later use when ShareBuzz()
is called? Indeed, you'd be stuck.
Another problem with the DoShareBuzz()
we had is that it can surprise people reading or maintaining the test, as one would expect that DoShareBuzz()
has (logically) the same contract as ShareBuzz()
.
Fortunately, these problems can be fixed with a bit more code. Let's try to get it right this time:
class MockBuzzer : public Buzzer {
public:
MockBuzzer() {
// Since DoShareBuzz(buzz, time) is supposed to take ownership of
// buzz, define a default behavior for DoShareBuzz(buzz, time) to
// delete buzz.
ON_CALL(*this, DoShareBuzz(_, _))
.WillByDefault(Invoke([](Buzz* buzz, Time timestamp) {
delete buzz;
return true;
}));
}
MOCK_METHOD1(MakeBuzz, std::unique_ptr<Buzz>(const std::string& text));
// Takes ownership of buzz.
MOCK_METHOD2(DoShareBuzz, bool(Buzz* buzz, Time timestamp));
bool ShareBuzz(std::unique_ptr<Buzz> buzz, Time timestamp) {
return DoShareBuzz(buzz.release(), timestamp);
}
};
Now, the mock DoShareBuzz()
method is free to save the buzz argument for later use if this is what you want:
std::unique_ptr<Buzz> intercepted_buzz;
EXPECT_CALL(mock_buzzer_, DoShareBuzz(NotNull(), _))
.WillOnce(Invoke([&intercepted_buzz](Buzz* buzz, Time timestamp) {
// Save buzz in intercepted_buzz for analysis later.
intercepted_buzz.reset(buzz);
return false;
}));
mock_buzzer_.ShareBuzz(std::make_unique<Buzz>(AccessLevel::kInternal),
Now());
EXPECT_NE(nullptr, intercepted_buzz);
Using the tricks covered in this recipe, you are now able to mock methods that take and/or return move-only types. Put your newly-acquired power to good use - when you design a new API, you can now feel comfortable using unique_ptrs
as appropriate, without fearing that doing so will compromise your tests.
Believe it or not, the vast majority of the time spent on compiling a mock class is in generating its constructor and destructor, as they perform non-trivial tasks (e.g. verification of the expectations). What's more, mock methods with different signatures have different types and thus their constructors/destructors need to be generated by the compiler separately. As a result, if you mock many different types of methods, compiling your mock class can get really slow.
If you are experiencing slow compilation, you can move the definition
of your mock class' constructor and destructor out of the class body
and into a .cpp
file. This way, even if you #include
your mock
class in N files, the compiler only needs to generate its constructor
and destructor once, resulting in a much faster compilation.
Let's illustrate the idea using an example. Here's the definition of a mock class before applying this recipe:
// File mock_foo.h.
...
class MockFoo : public Foo {
public:
// Since we don't declare the constructor or the destructor,
// the compiler will generate them in every translation unit
// where this mock class is used.
MOCK_METHOD0(DoThis, int());
MOCK_METHOD1(DoThat, bool(const char* str));
... more mock methods ...
};
After the change, it would look like:
// File mock_foo.h.
...
class MockFoo : public Foo {
public:
// The constructor and destructor are declared, but not defined, here.
MockFoo();
virtual ~MockFoo();
MOCK_METHOD0(DoThis, int());
MOCK_METHOD1(DoThat, bool(const char* str));
... more mock methods ...
};
and
// File mock_foo.cpp.
#include "path/to/mock_foo.h"
// The definitions may appear trivial, but the functions actually do a
// lot of things through the constructors/destructors of the member
// variables used to implement the mock methods.
MockFoo::MockFoo() {}
MockFoo::~MockFoo() {}
When it's being destroyed, your friendly mock object will automatically verify that all expectations on it have been satisfied, and will generate Google Test failures if not. This is convenient as it leaves you with one less thing to worry about. That is, unless you are not sure if your mock object will be destroyed.
How could it be that your mock object won't eventually be destroyed? Well, it might be created on the heap and owned by the code you are testing. Suppose there's a bug in that code and it doesn't delete the mock object properly - you could end up with a passing test when there's actually a bug.
Using a heap checker is a good idea and can alleviate the concern, but
its implementation may not be 100% reliable. So, sometimes you do want
to force Google Mock to verify a mock object before it is
(hopefully) destructed. You can do this with
Mock::VerifyAndClearExpectations(&mock_object)
:
TEST(MyServerTest, ProcessesRequest) {
using ::testing::Mock;
MockFoo* const foo = new MockFoo;
EXPECT_CALL(*foo, ...)...;
// ... other expectations ...
// server now owns foo.
MyServer server(foo);
server.ProcessRequest(...);
// In case that server's destructor will forget to delete foo,
// this will verify the expectations anyway.
Mock::VerifyAndClearExpectations(foo);
} // server is destroyed when it goes out of scope here.
Tip: The Mock::VerifyAndClearExpectations()
function returns a
bool
to indicate whether the verification was successful (true
for
yes), so you can wrap that function call inside a ASSERT_TRUE()
if
there is no point going further when the verification has failed.
Sometimes you may want to "reset" a mock object at various check points in your test: at each check point, you verify that all existing expectations on the mock object have been satisfied, and then you set some new expectations on it as if it's newly created. This allows you to work with a mock object in "phases" whose sizes are each manageable.
One such scenario is that in your test's SetUp()
function, you may
want to put the object you are testing into a certain state, with the
help from a mock object. Once in the desired state, you want to clear
all expectations on the mock, such that in the TEST_F
body you can
set fresh expectations on it.
As you may have figured out, the Mock::VerifyAndClearExpectations()
function we saw in the previous recipe can help you here. Or, if you
are using ON_CALL()
to set default actions on the mock object and
want to clear the default actions as well, use
Mock::VerifyAndClear(&mock_object)
instead. This function does what
Mock::VerifyAndClearExpectations(&mock_object)
does and returns the
same bool
, plus it clears the ON_CALL()
statements on
mock_object
too.
Another trick you can use to achieve the same effect is to put the expectations in sequences and insert calls to a dummy "check-point" function at specific places. Then you can verify that the mock function calls do happen at the right time. For example, if you are exercising code:
Foo(1);
Foo(2);
Foo(3);
and want to verify that Foo(1)
and Foo(3)
both invoke
mock.Bar("a")
, but Foo(2)
doesn't invoke anything. You can write:
using ::testing::MockFunction;
TEST(FooTest, InvokesBarCorrectly) {
MyMock mock;
// Class MockFunction<F> has exactly one mock method. It is named
// Call() and has type F.
MockFunction<void(string check_point_name)> check;
{
InSequence s;
EXPECT_CALL(mock, Bar("a"));
EXPECT_CALL(check, Call("1"));
EXPECT_CALL(check, Call("2"));
EXPECT_CALL(mock, Bar("a"));
}
Foo(1);
check.Call("1");
Foo(2);
check.Call("2");
Foo(3);
}
The expectation spec says that the first Bar("a")
must happen before
check point "1", the second Bar("a")
must happen after check point "2",
and nothing should happen between the two check points. The explicit
check points make it easy to tell which Bar("a")
is called by which
call to Foo()
.
Sometimes you want to make sure a mock object is destructed at the
right time, e.g. after bar->A()
is called but before bar->B()
is
called. We already know that you can specify constraints on the order
of mock function calls, so all we need to do is to mock the destructor
of the mock function.
This sounds simple, except for one problem: a destructor is a special
function with special syntax and special semantics, and the
MOCK_METHOD0
macro doesn't work for it:
MOCK_METHOD0(~MockFoo, void()); // Won't compile!
The good news is that you can use a simple pattern to achieve the same
effect. First, add a mock function Die()
to your mock class and call
it in the destructor, like this:
class MockFoo : public Foo {
...
// Add the following two lines to the mock class.
MOCK_METHOD0(Die, void());
virtual ~MockFoo() { Die(); }
};
(If the name Die()
clashes with an existing symbol, choose another
name.) Now, we have translated the problem of testing when a MockFoo
object dies to testing when its Die()
method is called:
MockFoo* foo = new MockFoo;
MockBar* bar = new MockBar;
...
{
InSequence s;
// Expects *foo to die after bar->A() and before bar->B().
EXPECT_CALL(*bar, A());
EXPECT_CALL(*foo, Die());
EXPECT_CALL(*bar, B());
}
And that's that.
IMPORTANT NOTE: What we describe in this recipe is ONLY true on
platforms where Google Mock is thread-safe. Currently these are only
platforms that support the pthreads library (this includes Linux and Mac).
To make it thread-safe on other platforms we only need to implement
some synchronization operations in "gtest/internal/gtest-port.h"
.
In a unit test, it's best if you could isolate and test a piece of code in a single-threaded context. That avoids race conditions and dead locks, and makes debugging your test much easier.
Yet many programs are multi-threaded, and sometimes to test something we need to pound on it from more than one thread. Google Mock works for this purpose too.
Remember the steps for using a mock:
- Create a mock object
foo
. - Set its default actions and expectations using
ON_CALL()
andEXPECT_CALL()
. - The code under test calls methods of
foo
. - Optionally, verify and reset the mock.
- Destroy the mock yourself, or let the code under test destroy it. The destructor will automatically verify it.
If you follow the following simple rules, your mocks and threads can live happily together:
- Execute your test code (as opposed to the code being tested) in one thread. This makes your test easy to follow.
- Obviously, you can do step #1 without locking.
- When doing step #2 and #5, make sure no other thread is accessing
foo
. Obvious too, huh? - #3 and #4 can be done either in one thread or in multiple threads - anyway you want. Google Mock takes care of the locking, so you don't have to do any - unless required by your test logic.
If you violate the rules (for example, if you set expectations on a mock while another thread is calling its methods), you get undefined behavior. That's not fun, so don't do it.
Google Mock guarantees that the action for a mock function is done in the same thread that called the mock function. For example, in
EXPECT_CALL(mock, Foo(1))
.WillOnce(action1);
EXPECT_CALL(mock, Foo(2))
.WillOnce(action2);
if Foo(1)
is called in thread 1 and Foo(2)
is called in thread 2,
Google Mock will execute action1
in thread 1 and action2
in thread
2.
Google Mock does not impose a sequence on actions performed in
different threads (doing so may create deadlocks as the actions may
need to cooperate). This means that the execution of action1
and
action2
in the above example may interleave. If this is a problem,
you should add proper synchronization logic to action1
and action2
to make the test thread-safe.
Also, remember that DefaultValue<T>
is a global resource that
potentially affects all living mock objects in your
program. Naturally, you won't want to mess with it from multiple
threads or when there still are mocks in action.
When Google Mock sees something that has the potential of being an error (e.g. a mock function with no expectation is called, a.k.a. an uninteresting call, which is allowed but perhaps you forgot to explicitly ban the call), it prints some warning messages, including the arguments of the function and the return value. Hopefully this will remind you to take a look and see if there is indeed a problem.
Sometimes you are confident that your tests are correct and may not appreciate such friendly messages. Some other times, you are debugging your tests or learning about the behavior of the code you are testing, and wish you could observe every mock call that happens (including argument values and the return value). Clearly, one size doesn't fit all.
You can control how much Google Mock tells you using the
--gmock_verbose=LEVEL
command-line flag, where LEVEL
is a string
with three possible values:
info
: Google Mock will print all informational messages, warnings, and errors (most verbose). At this setting, Google Mock will also log any calls to theON_CALL/EXPECT_CALL
macros.warning
: Google Mock will print both warnings and errors (less verbose). This is the default.error
: Google Mock will print errors only (least verbose).
Alternatively, you can adjust the value of that flag from within your tests like so:
::testing::FLAGS_gmock_verbose = "error";
Now, judiciously use the right flag to enable Google Mock serve you better!
You have a test using Google Mock. It fails: Google Mock tells you
that some expectations aren't satisfied. However, you aren't sure why:
Is there a typo somewhere in the matchers? Did you mess up the order
of the EXPECT_CALL
s? Or is the code under test doing something
wrong? How can you find out the cause?
Won't it be nice if you have X-ray vision and can actually see the
trace of all EXPECT_CALL
s and mock method calls as they are made?
For each call, would you like to see its actual argument values and
which EXPECT_CALL
Google Mock thinks it matches?
You can unlock this power by running your test with the
--gmock_verbose=info
flag. For example, given the test program:
using testing::_;
using testing::HasSubstr;
using testing::Return;
class MockFoo {
public:
MOCK_METHOD2(F, void(const string& x, const string& y));
};
TEST(Foo, Bar) {
MockFoo mock;
EXPECT_CALL(mock, F(_, _)).WillRepeatedly(Return());
EXPECT_CALL(mock, F("a", "b"));
EXPECT_CALL(mock, F("c", HasSubstr("d")));
mock.F("a", "good");
mock.F("a", "b");
}
if you run it with --gmock_verbose=info
, you will see this output:
[ RUN ] Foo.Bar
foo_test.cc:14: EXPECT_CALL(mock, F(_, _)) invoked
foo_test.cc:15: EXPECT_CALL(mock, F("a", "b")) invoked
foo_test.cc:16: EXPECT_CALL(mock, F("c", HasSubstr("d"))) invoked
foo_test.cc:14: Mock function call matches EXPECT_CALL(mock, F(_, _))...
Function call: F(@0x7fff7c8dad40"a", @0x7fff7c8dad10"good")
foo_test.cc:15: Mock function call matches EXPECT_CALL(mock, F("a", "b"))...
Function call: F(@0x7fff7c8dada0"a", @0x7fff7c8dad70"b")
foo_test.cc:16: Failure
Actual function call count doesn't match EXPECT_CALL(mock, F("c", HasSubstr("d")))...
Expected: to be called once
Actual: never called - unsatisfied and active
[ FAILED ] Foo.Bar
Suppose the bug is that the "c"
in the third EXPECT_CALL
is a typo
and should actually be "a"
. With the above message, you should see
that the actual F("a", "good")
call is matched by the first
EXPECT_CALL
, not the third as you thought. From that it should be
obvious that the third EXPECT_CALL
is written wrong. Case solved.
If you build and run your tests in Emacs, the source file locations of
Google Mock and Google Test
errors will be highlighted. Just press <Enter>
on one of them and
you'll be taken to the offending line. Or, you can just type `C-x ``
to jump to the next error.
To make it even easier, you can add the following lines to your
~/.emacs
file:
(global-set-key "\M-m" 'compile) ; m is for make
(global-set-key [M-down] 'next-error)
(global-set-key [M-up] '(lambda () (interactive) (next-error -1)))
Then you can type M-m
to start a build, or M-up
/M-down
to move
back and forth between errors.
Google Mock's implementation consists of dozens of files (excluding
its own tests). Sometimes you may want them to be packaged up in
fewer files instead, such that you can easily copy them to a new
machine and start hacking there. For this we provide an experimental
Python script fuse_gmock_files.py
in the scripts/
directory
(starting with release 1.2.0). Assuming you have Python 2.4 or above
installed on your machine, just go to that directory and run
python fuse_gmock_files.py OUTPUT_DIR
and you should see an OUTPUT_DIR
directory being created with files
gtest/gtest.h
, gmock/gmock.h
, and gmock-gtest-all.cc
in it.
These three files contain everything you need to use Google Mock (and
Google Test). Just copy them to anywhere you want and you are ready
to write tests and use mocks. You can use the
scrpts/test/Makefile file as an example on how to compile your tests
against them.
The MATCHER*
family of macros can be used to define custom matchers
easily. The syntax:
MATCHER(name, description_string_expression) { statements; }
will define a matcher with the given name that executes the
statements, which must return a bool
to indicate if the match
succeeds. Inside the statements, you can refer to the value being
matched by arg
, and refer to its type by arg_type
.
The description string is a string
-typed expression that documents
what the matcher does, and is used to generate the failure message
when the match fails. It can (and should) reference the special
bool
variable negation
, and should evaluate to the description of
the matcher when negation
is false
, or that of the matcher's
negation when negation
is true
.
For convenience, we allow the description string to be empty (""
),
in which case Google Mock will use the sequence of words in the
matcher name as the description.
For example:
MATCHER(IsDivisibleBy7, "") { return (arg % 7) == 0; }
allows you to write
// Expects mock_foo.Bar(n) to be called where n is divisible by 7.
EXPECT_CALL(mock_foo, Bar(IsDivisibleBy7()));
or,
using ::testing::Not;
...
EXPECT_THAT(some_expression, IsDivisibleBy7());
EXPECT_THAT(some_other_expression, Not(IsDivisibleBy7()));
If the above assertions fail, they will print something like:
Value of: some_expression
Expected: is divisible by 7
Actual: 27
...
Value of: some_other_expression
Expected: not (is divisible by 7)
Actual: 21
where the descriptions "is divisible by 7"
and "not (is divisible by 7)"
are automatically calculated from the matcher name
IsDivisibleBy7
.
As you may have noticed, the auto-generated descriptions (especially those for the negation) may not be so great. You can always override them with a string expression of your own:
MATCHER(IsDivisibleBy7, std::string(negation ? "isn't" : "is") +
" divisible by 7") {
return (arg % 7) == 0;
}
Optionally, you can stream additional information to a hidden argument
named result_listener
to explain the match result. For example, a
better definition of IsDivisibleBy7
is:
MATCHER(IsDivisibleBy7, "") {
if ((arg % 7) == 0)
return true;
*result_listener << "the remainder is " << (arg % 7);
return false;
}
With this definition, the above assertion will give a better message:
Value of: some_expression
Expected: is divisible by 7
Actual: 27 (the remainder is 6)
You should let MatchAndExplain()
print any additional information
that can help a user understand the match result. Note that it should
explain why the match succeeds in case of a success (unless it's
obvious) - this is useful when the matcher is used inside
Not()
. There is no need to print the argument value itself, as
Google Mock already prints it for you.
Notes:
- The type of the value being matched (
arg_type
) is determined by the context in which you use the matcher and is supplied to you by the compiler, so you don't need to worry about declaring it (nor can you). This allows the matcher to be polymorphic. For example,IsDivisibleBy7()
can be used to match any type where the value of(arg % 7) == 0
can be implicitly converted to abool
. In theBar(IsDivisibleBy7())
example above, if methodBar()
takes anint
,arg_type
will beint
; if it takes anunsigned long
,arg_type
will beunsigned long
; and so on. - Google Mock doesn't guarantee when or how many times a matcher will be invoked. Therefore the matcher logic must be purely functional (i.e. it cannot have any side effect, and the result must not depend on anything other than the value being matched and the matcher parameters). This requirement must be satisfied no matter how you define the matcher (e.g. using one of the methods described in the following recipes). In particular, a matcher can never call a mock function, as that will affect the state of the mock object and Google Mock.
Sometimes you'll want to define a matcher that has parameters. For that you can use the macro:
MATCHER_P(name, param_name, description_string) { statements; }
where the description string can be either ""
or a string expression
that references negation
and param_name
.
For example:
MATCHER_P(HasAbsoluteValue, value, "") { return abs(arg) == value; }
will allow you to write:
EXPECT_THAT(Blah("a"), HasAbsoluteValue(n));
which may lead to this message (assuming n
is 10):
Value of: Blah("a")
Expected: has absolute value 10
Actual: -9
Note that both the matcher description and its parameter are printed, making the message human-friendly.
In the matcher definition body, you can write foo_type
to
reference the type of a parameter named foo
. For example, in the
body of MATCHER_P(HasAbsoluteValue, value)
above, you can write
value_type
to refer to the type of value
.
Google Mock also provides MATCHER_P2
, MATCHER_P3
, ..., up to
MATCHER_P10
to support multi-parameter matchers:
MATCHER_Pk(name, param_1, ..., param_k, description_string) { statements; }
Please note that the custom description string is for a particular instance of the matcher, where the parameters have been bound to actual values. Therefore usually you'll want the parameter values to be part of the description. Google Mock lets you do that by referencing the matcher parameters in the description string expression.
For example,
using ::testing::PrintToString;
MATCHER_P2(InClosedRange, low, hi,
std::string(negation ? "isn't" : "is") + " in range [" +
PrintToString(low) + ", " + PrintToString(hi) + "]") {
return low <= arg && arg <= hi;
}
...
EXPECT_THAT(3, InClosedRange(4, 6));
would generate a failure that contains the message:
Expected: is in range [4, 6]
If you specify ""
as the description, the failure message will
contain the sequence of words in the matcher name followed by the
parameter values printed as a tuple. For example,
MATCHER_P2(InClosedRange, low, hi, "") { ... }
...
EXPECT_THAT(3, InClosedRange(4, 6));
would generate a failure that contains the text:
Expected: in closed range (4, 6)
For the purpose of typing, you can view
MATCHER_Pk(Foo, p1, ..., pk, description_string) { ... }
as shorthand for
template <typename p1_type, ..., typename pk_type>
FooMatcherPk<p1_type, ..., pk_type>
Foo(p1_type p1, ..., pk_type pk) { ... }
When you write Foo(v1, ..., vk)
, the compiler infers the types of
the parameters v1
, ..., and vk
for you. If you are not happy with
the result of the type inference, you can specify the types by
explicitly instantiating the template, as in Foo<long, bool>(5, false)
.
As said earlier, you don't get to (or need to) specify
arg_type
as that's determined by the context in which the matcher
is used.
You can assign the result of expression Foo(p1, ..., pk)
to a
variable of type FooMatcherPk<p1_type, ..., pk_type>
. This can be
useful when composing matchers. Matchers that don't have a parameter
or have only one parameter have special types: you can assign Foo()
to a FooMatcher
-typed variable, and assign Foo(p)
to a
FooMatcherP<p_type>
-typed variable.
While you can instantiate a matcher template with reference types, passing the parameters by pointer usually makes your code more readable. If, however, you still want to pass a parameter by reference, be aware that in the failure message generated by the matcher you will see the value of the referenced object but not its address.
You can overload matchers with different numbers of parameters:
MATCHER_P(Blah, a, description_string_1) { ... }
MATCHER_P2(Blah, a, b, description_string_2) { ... }
While it's tempting to always use the MATCHER*
macros when defining
a new matcher, you should also consider implementing
MatcherInterface
or using MakePolymorphicMatcher()
instead (see
the recipes that follow), especially if you need to use the matcher a
lot. While these approaches require more work, they give you more
control on the types of the value being matched and the matcher
parameters, which in general leads to better compiler error messages
that pay off in the long run. They also allow overloading matchers
based on parameter types (as opposed to just based on the number of
parameters).
A matcher of argument type T
implements
::testing::MatcherInterface<T>
and does two things: it tests whether a
value of type T
matches the matcher, and can describe what kind of
values it matches. The latter ability is used for generating readable
error messages when expectations are violated.
The interface looks like this:
class MatchResultListener {
public:
...
// Streams x to the underlying ostream; does nothing if the ostream
// is NULL.
template <typename T>
MatchResultListener& operator<<(const T& x);
// Returns the underlying ostream.
::std::ostream* stream();
};
template <typename T>
class MatcherInterface {
public:
virtual ~MatcherInterface();
// Returns true iff the matcher matches x; also explains the match
// result to 'listener'.
virtual bool MatchAndExplain(T x, MatchResultListener* listener) const = 0;
// Describes this matcher to an ostream.
virtual void DescribeTo(::std::ostream* os) const = 0;
// Describes the negation of this matcher to an ostream.
virtual void DescribeNegationTo(::std::ostream* os) const;
};
If you need a custom matcher but Truly()
is not a good option (for
example, you may not be happy with the way Truly(predicate)
describes itself, or you may want your matcher to be polymorphic as
Eq(value)
is), you can define a matcher to do whatever you want in
two steps: first implement the matcher interface, and then define a
factory function to create a matcher instance. The second step is not
strictly needed but it makes the syntax of using the matcher nicer.
For example, you can define a matcher to test whether an int
is
divisible by 7 and then use it like this:
using ::testing::MakeMatcher;
using ::testing::Matcher;
using ::testing::MatcherInterface;
using ::testing::MatchResultListener;
class DivisibleBy7Matcher : public MatcherInterface<int> {
public:
virtual bool MatchAndExplain(int n, MatchResultListener* listener) const {
return (n % 7) == 0;
}
virtual void DescribeTo(::std::ostream* os) const {
*os << "is divisible by 7";
}
virtual void DescribeNegationTo(::std::ostream* os) const {
*os << "is not divisible by 7";
}
};
inline Matcher<int> DivisibleBy7() {
return MakeMatcher(new DivisibleBy7Matcher);
}
...
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Bar(DivisibleBy7()));
You may improve the matcher message by streaming additional
information to the listener
argument in MatchAndExplain()
:
class DivisibleBy7Matcher : public MatcherInterface<int> {
public:
virtual bool MatchAndExplain(int n,
MatchResultListener* listener) const {
const int remainder = n % 7;
if (remainder != 0) {
*listener << "the remainder is " << remainder;
}
return remainder == 0;
}
...
};
Then, EXPECT_THAT(x, DivisibleBy7());
may general a message like this:
Value of: x
Expected: is divisible by 7
Actual: 23 (the remainder is 2)
You've learned how to write your own matchers in the previous
recipe. Just one problem: a matcher created using MakeMatcher()
only
works for one particular type of arguments. If you want a
polymorphic matcher that works with arguments of several types (for
instance, Eq(x)
can be used to match a value
as long as value
==
x
compiles -- value
and x
don't have to share the same type),
you can learn the trick from "gmock/gmock-matchers.h"
but it's a bit
involved.
Fortunately, most of the time you can define a polymorphic matcher
easily with the help of MakePolymorphicMatcher()
. Here's how you can
define NotNull()
as an example:
using ::testing::MakePolymorphicMatcher;
using ::testing::MatchResultListener;
using ::testing::NotNull;
using ::testing::PolymorphicMatcher;
class NotNullMatcher {
public:
// To implement a polymorphic matcher, first define a COPYABLE class
// that has three members MatchAndExplain(), DescribeTo(), and
// DescribeNegationTo(), like the following.
// In this example, we want to use NotNull() with any pointer, so
// MatchAndExplain() accepts a pointer of any type as its first argument.
// In general, you can define MatchAndExplain() as an ordinary method or
// a method template, or even overload it.
template <typename T>
bool MatchAndExplain(T* p,
MatchResultListener* /* listener */) const {
return p != NULL;
}
// Describes the property of a value matching this matcher.
void DescribeTo(::std::ostream* os) const { *os << "is not NULL"; }
// Describes the property of a value NOT matching this matcher.
void DescribeNegationTo(::std::ostream* os) const { *os << "is NULL"; }
};
// To construct a polymorphic matcher, pass an instance of the class
// to MakePolymorphicMatcher(). Note the return type.
inline PolymorphicMatcher<NotNullMatcher> NotNull() {
return MakePolymorphicMatcher(NotNullMatcher());
}
...
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Bar(NotNull())); // The argument must be a non-NULL pointer.
Note: Your polymorphic matcher class does not need to inherit from
MatcherInterface
or any other class, and its methods do not need
to be virtual.
Like in a monomorphic matcher, you may explain the match result by
streaming additional information to the listener
argument in
MatchAndExplain()
.
A cardinality is used in Times()
to tell Google Mock how many times
you expect a call to occur. It doesn't have to be exact. For example,
you can say AtLeast(5)
or Between(2, 4)
.
If the built-in set of cardinalities doesn't suit you, you are free to
define your own by implementing the following interface (in namespace
testing
):
class CardinalityInterface {
public:
virtual ~CardinalityInterface();
// Returns true iff call_count calls will satisfy this cardinality.
virtual bool IsSatisfiedByCallCount(int call_count) const = 0;
// Returns true iff call_count calls will saturate this cardinality.
virtual bool IsSaturatedByCallCount(int call_count) const = 0;
// Describes self to an ostream.
virtual void DescribeTo(::std::ostream* os) const = 0;
};
For example, to specify that a call must occur even number of times, you can write
using ::testing::Cardinality;
using ::testing::CardinalityInterface;
using ::testing::MakeCardinality;
class EvenNumberCardinality : public CardinalityInterface {
public:
virtual bool IsSatisfiedByCallCount(int call_count) const {
return (call_count % 2) == 0;
}
virtual bool IsSaturatedByCallCount(int call_count) const {
return false;
}
virtual void DescribeTo(::std::ostream* os) const {
*os << "called even number of times";
}
};
Cardinality EvenNumber() {
return MakeCardinality(new EvenNumberCardinality);
}
...
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Bar(3))
.Times(EvenNumber());
If the built-in actions don't work for you, and you find it
inconvenient to use Invoke()
, you can use a macro from the ACTION*
family to quickly define a new action that can be used in your code as
if it's a built-in action.
By writing
ACTION(name) { statements; }
in a namespace scope (i.e. not inside a class or function), you will
define an action with the given name that executes the statements.
The value returned by statements
will be used as the return value of
the action. Inside the statements, you can refer to the K-th
(0-based) argument of the mock function as argK
. For example:
ACTION(IncrementArg1) { return ++(*arg1); }
allows you to write
... WillOnce(IncrementArg1());
Note that you don't need to specify the types of the mock function
arguments. Rest assured that your code is type-safe though:
you'll get a compiler error if *arg1
doesn't support the ++
operator, or if the type of ++(*arg1)
isn't compatible with the mock
function's return type.
Another example:
ACTION(Foo) {
(*arg2)(5);
Blah();
*arg1 = 0;
return arg0;
}
defines an action Foo()
that invokes argument #2 (a function pointer)
with 5, calls function Blah()
, sets the value pointed to by argument
#1 to 0, and returns argument #0.
For more convenience and flexibility, you can also use the following
pre-defined symbols in the body of ACTION
:
argK_type |
The type of the K-th (0-based) argument of the mock function |
---|---|
args |
All arguments of the mock function as a tuple |
args_type |
The type of all arguments of the mock function as a tuple |
return_type |
The return type of the mock function |
function_type |
The type of the mock function |
For example, when using an ACTION
as a stub action for mock function:
int DoSomething(bool flag, int* ptr);
we have:
Pre-defined Symbol | Is Bound To |
---|---|
arg0 |
the value of flag |
arg0_type |
the type bool |
arg1 |
the value of ptr |
arg1_type |
the type int* |
args |
the tuple (flag, ptr) |
args_type |
the type ::testing::tuple<bool, int*> |
return_type |
the type int |
function_type |
the type int(bool, int*) |
Sometimes you'll want to parameterize an action you define. For that we have another macro
ACTION_P(name, param) { statements; }
For example,
ACTION_P(Add, n) { return arg0 + n; }
will allow you to write
// Returns argument #0 + 5.
... WillOnce(Add(5));
For convenience, we use the term arguments for the values used to invoke the mock function, and the term parameters for the values used to instantiate an action.
Note that you don't need to provide the type of the parameter either.
Suppose the parameter is named param
, you can also use the
Google-Mock-defined symbol param_type
to refer to the type of the
parameter as inferred by the compiler. For example, in the body of
ACTION_P(Add, n)
above, you can write n_type
for the type of n
.
Google Mock also provides ACTION_P2
, ACTION_P3
, and etc to support
multi-parameter actions. For example,
ACTION_P2(ReturnDistanceTo, x, y) {
double dx = arg0 - x;
double dy = arg1 - y;
return sqrt(dx*dx + dy*dy);
}
lets you write
... WillOnce(ReturnDistanceTo(5.0, 26.5));
You can view ACTION
as a degenerated parameterized action where the
number of parameters is 0.
You can also easily define actions overloaded on the number of parameters:
ACTION_P(Plus, a) { ... }
ACTION_P2(Plus, a, b) { ... }
For maximum brevity and reusability, the ACTION*
macros don't ask
you to provide the types of the mock function arguments and the action
parameters. Instead, we let the compiler infer the types for us.
Sometimes, however, we may want to be more explicit about the types. There are several tricks to do that. For example:
ACTION(Foo) {
// Makes sure arg0 can be converted to int.
int n = arg0;
... use n instead of arg0 here ...
}
ACTION_P(Bar, param) {
// Makes sure the type of arg1 is const char*.
::testing::StaticAssertTypeEq<const char*, arg1_type>();
// Makes sure param can be converted to bool.
bool flag = param;
}
where StaticAssertTypeEq
is a compile-time assertion in Google Test
that verifies two types are the same.
Sometimes you want to give an action explicit template parameters that
cannot be inferred from its value parameters. ACTION_TEMPLATE()
supports that and can be viewed as an extension to ACTION()
and
ACTION_P*()
.
The syntax:
ACTION_TEMPLATE(ActionName,
HAS_m_TEMPLATE_PARAMS(kind1, name1, ..., kind_m, name_m),
AND_n_VALUE_PARAMS(p1, ..., p_n)) { statements; }
defines an action template that takes m explicit template parameters
and n value parameters, where m is between 1 and 10, and n is
between 0 and 10. name_i
is the name of the i-th template
parameter, and kind_i
specifies whether it's a typename
, an
integral constant, or a template. p_i
is the name of the i-th value
parameter.
Example:
// DuplicateArg<k, T>(output) converts the k-th argument of the mock
// function to type T and copies it to *output.
ACTION_TEMPLATE(DuplicateArg,
// Note the comma between int and k:
HAS_2_TEMPLATE_PARAMS(int, k, typename, T),
AND_1_VALUE_PARAMS(output)) {
*output = T(::testing::get<k>(args));
}
To create an instance of an action template, write:
ActionName<t1, ..., t_m>(v1, ..., v_n)
where the t
s are the template arguments and the
v
s are the value arguments. The value argument
types are inferred by the compiler. For example:
using ::testing::_;
...
int n;
EXPECT_CALL(mock, Foo(_, _))
.WillOnce(DuplicateArg<1, unsigned char>(&n));
If you want to explicitly specify the value argument types, you can provide additional template arguments:
ActionName<t1, ..., t_m, u1, ..., u_k>(v1, ..., v_n)
where u_i
is the desired type of v_i
.
ACTION_TEMPLATE
and ACTION
/ACTION_P*
can be overloaded on the
number of value parameters, but not on the number of template
parameters. Without the restriction, the meaning of the following is
unclear:
OverloadedAction<int, bool>(x);
Are we using a single-template-parameter action where bool
refers to
the type of x
, or a two-template-parameter action where the compiler
is asked to infer the type of x
?
If you are writing a function that returns an ACTION
object, you'll
need to know its type. The type depends on the macro used to define
the action and the parameter types. The rule is relatively simple:
Given Definition | Expression | Has Type |
---|---|---|
ACTION(Foo) |
Foo() |
FooAction |
ACTION_TEMPLATE(Foo, HAS_m_TEMPLATE_PARAMS(...), AND_0_VALUE_PARAMS()) |
Foo<t1, ..., t_m>() |
FooAction<t1, ..., t_m> |
ACTION_P(Bar, param) |
Bar(int_value) |
BarActionP<int> |
ACTION_TEMPLATE(Bar, HAS_m_TEMPLATE_PARAMS(...), AND_1_VALUE_PARAMS(p1)) |
Bar<t1, ..., t_m>(int_value) |
FooActionP<t1, ..., t_m, int> |
ACTION_P2(Baz, p1, p2) |
Baz(bool_value, int_value) |
BazActionP2<bool, int> |
ACTION_TEMPLATE(Baz, HAS_m_TEMPLATE_PARAMS(...), AND_2_VALUE_PARAMS(p1, p2)) |
Baz<t1, ..., t_m>(bool_value, int_value) |
FooActionP2<t1, ..., t_m, bool, int> |
... | ... | ... |
Note that we have to pick different suffixes (Action
, ActionP
,
ActionP2
, and etc) for actions with different numbers of value
parameters, or the action definitions cannot be overloaded on the
number of them.
While the ACTION*
macros are very convenient, sometimes they are
inappropriate. For example, despite the tricks shown in the previous
recipes, they don't let you directly specify the types of the mock
function arguments and the action parameters, which in general leads
to unoptimized compiler error messages that can baffle unfamiliar
users. They also don't allow overloading actions based on parameter
types without jumping through some hoops.
An alternative to the ACTION*
macros is to implement
::testing::ActionInterface<F>
, where F
is the type of the mock
function in which the action will be used. For example:
template <typename F>class ActionInterface {
public:
virtual ~ActionInterface();
// Performs the action. Result is the return type of function type
// F, and ArgumentTuple is the tuple of arguments of F.
//
// For example, if F is int(bool, const string&), then Result would
// be int, and ArgumentTuple would be ::testing::tuple<bool, const string&>.
virtual Result Perform(const ArgumentTuple& args) = 0;
};
using ::testing::_;
using ::testing::Action;
using ::testing::ActionInterface;
using ::testing::MakeAction;
typedef int IncrementMethod(int*);
class IncrementArgumentAction : public ActionInterface<IncrementMethod> {
public:
virtual int Perform(const ::testing::tuple<int*>& args) {
int* p = ::testing::get<0>(args); // Grabs the first argument.
return *p++;
}
};
Action<IncrementMethod> IncrementArgument() {
return MakeAction(new IncrementArgumentAction);
}
...
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Baz(_))
.WillOnce(IncrementArgument());
int n = 5;
foo.Baz(&n); // Should return 5 and change n to 6.
The previous recipe showed you how to define your own action. This is
all good, except that you need to know the type of the function in
which the action will be used. Sometimes that can be a problem. For
example, if you want to use the action in functions with different
types (e.g. like Return()
and SetArgPointee()
).
If an action can be used in several types of mock functions, we say
it's polymorphic. The MakePolymorphicAction()
function template
makes it easy to define such an action:
namespace testing {
template <typename Impl>
PolymorphicAction<Impl> MakePolymorphicAction(const Impl& impl);
} // namespace testing
As an example, let's define an action that returns the second argument in the mock function's argument list. The first step is to define an implementation class:
class ReturnSecondArgumentAction {
public:
template <typename Result, typename ArgumentTuple>
Result Perform(const ArgumentTuple& args) const {
// To get the i-th (0-based) argument, use ::testing::get<i>(args).
return ::testing::get<1>(args);
}
};
This implementation class does not need to inherit from any
particular class. What matters is that it must have a Perform()
method template. This method template takes the mock function's
arguments as a tuple in a single argument, and returns the result of
the action. It can be either const
or not, but must be invokable
with exactly one template argument, which is the result type. In other
words, you must be able to call Perform<R>(args)
where R
is the
mock function's return type and args
is its arguments in a tuple.
Next, we use MakePolymorphicAction()
to turn an instance of the
implementation class into the polymorphic action we need. It will be
convenient to have a wrapper for this:
using ::testing::MakePolymorphicAction;
using ::testing::PolymorphicAction;
PolymorphicAction<ReturnSecondArgumentAction> ReturnSecondArgument() {
return MakePolymorphicAction(ReturnSecondArgumentAction());
}
Now, you can use this polymorphic action the same way you use the built-in ones:
using ::testing::_;
class MockFoo : public Foo {
public:
MOCK_METHOD2(DoThis, int(bool flag, int n));
MOCK_METHOD3(DoThat, string(int x, const char* str1, const char* str2));
};
...
MockFoo foo;
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThis(_, _))
.WillOnce(ReturnSecondArgument());
EXPECT_CALL(foo, DoThat(_, _, _))
.WillOnce(ReturnSecondArgument());
...
foo.DoThis(true, 5); // Will return 5.
foo.DoThat(1, "Hi", "Bye"); // Will return "Hi".
When an uninteresting or unexpected call occurs, Google Mock prints the
argument values and the stack trace to help you debug. Assertion
macros like EXPECT_THAT
and EXPECT_EQ
also print the values in
question when the assertion fails. Google Mock and Google Test do this using
Google Test's user-extensible value printer.
This printer knows how to print built-in C++ types, native arrays, STL
containers, and any type that supports the <<
operator. For other
types, it prints the raw bytes in the value and hopes that you the
user can figure it out.
Google Test's advanced guide
explains how to extend the printer to do a better job at
printing your particular type than to dump the bytes.