Minunit is a minimal unit testing framework for C/C++ self-contained in a single header file.
It provides a way to define and configure test suites and a few handy assertion types. It reports the summary of the number of tests run, number of assertions and time elapsed.
Note that this project is based on: http://www.jera.com/techinfo/jtns/jtn002.html
This is a minimal test suite written with minunit:
#include "minunit.h"
MU_TEST(test_check) {
mu_check(5 == 7);
}
MU_TEST_SUITE(test_suite) {
MU_RUN_TEST(test_check);
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
MU_RUN_SUITE(test_suite);
MU_REPORT();
return MU_EXIT_CODE;
}
Which will produce the following output:
F
test_check failed:
readme_sample.c:4: 5 == 7
1 tests, 1 assertions, 1 failures
Finished in 0.00032524 seconds (real) 0.00017998 seconds (proc)
Check out minunit_example.c to see a complete example. Compile with something like:
gcc minunit_example.c -lrt -lm -o minunit_example
Don't forget to add -lrt for the timer and -lm for linking the function fabs used in mu_assert_double_eq.
One can define setup and teardown functions and configure the test suite to run them by using the macro MU_SUITE_CONFIGURE with within a MU_TEST_SUITE declaration.
mu_check(condition): will pass if the condition is evaluated to true, otherwise it will show the condition as the error message
mu_fail(message): will fail and show the message
mu_assert(condition, message): will pass if the condition is true, otherwise it will show the failed condition and the message
mu_assert_int_eq(expected, result): it will pass if the two numbers are equal or show their values as the error message
mu_assert_double_eq(expected, result): it will pass if the two values are almost equal or show their values as the error message. The value of MINUNIT_EPSILON sets the threshold to determine if the values are close enough.
David Siñuela Pastor [email protected]