GoogleTest now follows the
Abseil Live at Head philosophy.
We recommend
updating to the latest commit in the main
branch as often as possible.
We do publish occasional semantic versions, tagged with
v${major}.${minor}.${patch}
(e.g. v1.15.2
).
Our documentation is now live on GitHub Pages at https://google.github.io/googletest/. We recommend browsing the documentation on GitHub Pages rather than directly in the repository.
Release 1.15.2 is now available.
The 1.15.x branch requires at least C++14.
We use Google's internal systems for continuous integration.
- We are planning to take a dependency on Abseil.
This repository is a merger of the formerly separate GoogleTest and GoogleMock projects. These were so closely related that it makes sense to maintain and release them together.
See the GoogleTest User's Guide for documentation. We recommend starting with the GoogleTest Primer.
More information about building GoogleTest can be found at googletest/README.md.
- xUnit test framework:
Googletest is based on the xUnit testing framework, a popular architecture for unit testing - Test discovery:
Googletest automatically discovers and runs your tests, eliminating the need to manually register your tests - Rich set of assertions:
Googletest provides a variety of assertions, such as equality, inequality, exceptions, and more, making it easy to test your code - User-defined assertions:
You can define your own assertions with Googletest, making it simple to write tests that are specific to your code - Death tests:
Googletest supports death tests, which verify that your code exits in a certain way, making it useful for testing error-handling code - Fatal and non-fatal failures:
You can specify whether a test failure should be treated as fatal or non-fatal with Googletest, allowing tests to continue running even if a failure occurs - Value-parameterized tests:
Googletest supports value-parameterized tests, which run multiple times with different input values, making it useful for testing functions that take different inputs - Type-parameterized tests:
Googletest also supports type-parameterized tests, which run with different data types, making it useful for testing functions that work with different data types - Various options for running tests:
Googletest provides many options for running tests including running individual tests, running tests in a specific order and running tests in parallel
GoogleTest follows Google's Foundational C++ Support Policy. See this table for a list of currently supported versions of compilers, platforms, and build tools.
In addition to many internal projects at Google, GoogleTest is also used by the following notable projects:
- The Chromium projects (behind the Chrome browser and Chrome OS).
- The LLVM compiler.
- Protocol Buffers, Google's data interchange format.
- The OpenCV computer vision library.
GTest Runner is a Qt5 based automated test-runner and Graphical User Interface with powerful features for Windows and Linux platforms.
GoogleTest UI is a test runner that runs your test binary, allows you to track its progress via a progress bar, and displays a list of test failures. Clicking on one shows failure text. GoogleTest UI is written in C#.
GTest TAP Listener is an event listener for GoogleTest that implements the TAP protocol for test result output. If your test runner understands TAP, you may find it useful.
gtest-parallel is a test runner that runs tests from your binary in parallel to provide significant speed-up.
GoogleTest Adapter is a VS Code extension allowing to view GoogleTest in a tree view and run/debug your tests.
C++ TestMate is a VS Code extension allowing to view GoogleTest in a tree view and run/debug your tests.
Cornichon is a small Gherkin DSL parser that generates stub code for GoogleTest.
Please read
CONTRIBUTING.md
for details on how to contribute to this project.
Happy testing!