I am trying to use GoogleTest to test a simple function, but as I run make
in my build folder, the compiler throws Undefined Reference
error messages at me. I've referenced the gtest header file, so I'm not sure what is wrong. Any ideas? I'm new to the entire subject of both unix and unit testing , so I could very well be missing something simple. Thanks in advance!
Error Messages:
CMakeFiles/Proj2.dir/main.cpp.o: In function `main': main.cpp:(.text+0x1e): undefined reference to `testing::InitGoogleTest(int*, char**)' main.cpp:(.text+0x23): undefined reference to `testing::UnitTest::GetInstance()' main.cpp:(.text+0x2b): undefined reference to `testing::UnitTest::Run()' collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
main.cpp
#include "gtest/gtest.h" int main(int argc, char **argv) { ::testing::InitGoogleTest(&argc, argv); return RUN_ALL_TESTS(); }
Test.cpp
#include "gtest/gtest.h" #include "Testable.h" TEST(GetTwoTest, Two) { EXPECT_EQ(2, GetTwo()); }
Testable.cpp
#include "Testable.h" int GetTwo() { return 3; }
Here is my CMakeLists.txt file:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.6) SET(CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS "-std=gnu++11") #Turn on C++11 Support set(FILES_TO_TEST Testable.cpp) set(UNIT_TESTS Test.cpp) set(MAIN_FILE main.cpp) add_subdirectory(gtest) #Build all the gtest stuff include_directories(gtest/include) include_directories(.) add_library(codeToTest ${FILES_TO_TEST}) add_executable(Proj2 ${MAIN_FILE}) target_link_libraries(Proj2 codeToTest) add_executable(unit-test ${UNIT_TESTS}) target_link_libraries(unit-test gtest gtest_main rt pthread codeToTest)
You can fix undefined reference in C++ by investigating the linker error messages and then providing the missing definition for the given symbols. Note that not all linker errors are undefined references, and the same programmer error does not cause all undefined reference errors.
An “Undefined Reference” error occurs when we have a reference to object name (class, function, variable, etc.) in our program and the linker cannot find its definition when it tries to search for it in all the linked object files and libraries.
GTest is objected oriented tool and C language isn't! from GTest website gmock_for_dummies.md so you will use only macros like expect_equal, expect_bigger_than and so on...
Your setup looks to be almost correct. However, you're needing to have 2 separate main
functions; one for the real executable Proj2
and another with the gtest includes and functions for the test executable unit-test
.
You could do this by having 2 different main.cpp files, say main.cpp and test_main.cpp. The one you've shown would be test_main.cpp, and would be included in the add_executable(unit-test ...
command.
Your new main.cpp would have no references to gtest, either includes or functions.
From linker errors it is obvious that you did not link gtest library to your test program.
See Primer:
To write a test program using Google Test, you need to compile Google Test into a library and link your test with it. ...
Just see this doc for details about your compiler and system.
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