# # subunit C bindings. # Copyright (C) 2006 Robert Collins # # Licensed under either the Apache License, Version 2.0 or the BSD 3-clause # license at the users choice. A copy of both licenses are available in the # project source as Apache-2.0 and BSD. You may not use this file except in # compliance with one of these two licences. # # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software # distributed under these licenses is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT # WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the # license you chose for the specific language governing permissions and # limitations under that license. This subtree contains an implementation of the subunit child protocol. Currently I have no plans to write a test runner in C, so I have not written an implementation of the parent protocol. [but will happily accept patches]. This implementation is built using SCons and tested via 'check'. See the tests/ directory for the test programs. You can use `make check` or `scons check` to run the tests. The C protocol consists of four functions which you can use to output test metadata trivially. See lib/subunit_child.[ch] for details. However, this is not a test runner - subunit provides no support for [for instance] managing assertions, cleaning up on errors etc. You can look at 'check' (http://check.sourceforge.net/) or 'gunit' (https://garage.maemo.org/projects/gunit) for C unit test frameworks. There is a patch for 'check' (check-subunit-*.patch) in this source tree. Its also available as request ID #1470750 in the sourceforge request tracker http://sourceforge.net/tracker/index.php. The 'check' developers have indicated they will merge this during the current release cycle. If you are a test environment maintainer - either homegrown, or 'check' or 'gunit' or some other, you will to know how the subunit calls should be used. Here is what a manually written test using the bindings might look like: void a_test(void) { int result; subunit_test_start("test name"); # determine if test passes or fails result = SOME_VALUE; if (!result) { subunit_test_pass("test name"); } else { subunit_test_fail("test name", "Something went wrong running something:\n" "exited with result: '%s'", result); } } Which when run with a subunit test runner will generate something like: test name ... ok on success, and: test name ... FAIL ====================================================================== FAIL: test name ---------------------------------------------------------------------- RemoteError: Something went wrong running something: exited with result: '1'