Book Image

CMake Cookbook

By : Radovan Bast, Roberto Di Remigio
Book Image

CMake Cookbook

By: Radovan Bast, Roberto Di Remigio

Overview of this book

CMake is cross-platform, open-source software for managing the build process in a portable fashion. This book features a collection of recipes and building blocks with tips and techniques for working with CMake, CTest, CPack, and CDash. CMake Cookbook includes real-world examples in the form of recipes that cover different ways to structure, configure, build, and test small- to large-scale code projects. You will learn to use CMake's command-line tools and master modern CMake practices for configuring, building, and testing binaries and libraries. With this book, you will be able to work with external libraries and structure your own projects in a modular and reusable way. You will be well-equipped to generate native build scripts for Linux, MacOS, and Windows, simplify and refactor projects using CMake, and port projects to CMake.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)

Defining a unit test using the Catch2 library

The code for this recipe is available at https://github.com/dev-cafe/cmake-cookbook/tree/v1.0/chapter-04/recipe-02, and has a C++ example. The recipe is valid with CMake version 3.5 (and higher), and has been tested on GNU/Linux, macOS, and Windows.

In the previous recipe, we used an integer return code to signal success or failure in test.cpp. This is fine for simple tests, but typically, we would like to use a testing framework that offers an infrastructure to run more sophisticated tests with fixtures, comparisons with numerical tolerance, and better error reporting if a test fails. A modern and popular test library is Catch2 (https://github.com/catchorg/Catch2). One nice feature of this test framework is the fact that it can be included in your project as a single-header library, which makes compilation and updating the framework...