Question

I'm trying CTest in CMake in order to automatically run some of my tests using make test target. The problem is CMake does not "understand" that the test I'm willing to run has to be built since it is part of the project.

So I'm looking for a way to explicitly specify this dependency.

Was it helpful?

Solution

It is arguably a bug in CMake (previously tracked here) that this doesn't work out of the box. A workaround is to do the following:

add_test(TestName ExeName)
add_custom_target(check COMMAND ${CMAKE_CTEST_COMMAND}
                  DEPENDS ExeName)

Then you can run make check and it will compile and run the test. If you have several tests, then you would have to use DEPENDS exe1 exe2 exe3 ... in the above line.

OTHER TIPS

There is actually a way to use make test. You need to define the build of the test executable as one of the tests and then add dependencies between the tests. That is:

ADD_TEST(ctest_build_test_code
         "${CMAKE_COMMAND}" --build ${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR} --target test_code)
ADD_TEST(ctest_run_test_code test_code)
SET_TESTS_PROPERTIES(ctest_run_test_code
                     PROPERTIES DEPENDS ctest_build_test_code)

I use a variant of richq's answer. In the top-level CMakeLists.txt, I add a custom target, build_and_test, for building and running all tests:

find_package(GTest)
if (GTEST_FOUND)
    enable_testing()
    add_custom_target(build_and_test ${CMAKE_CTEST_COMMAND} -V)
    add_subdirectory(test)
endif()

In the various sub-project CMakeLists.txt files under test/, I add each test executable as a dependency of build_and_test:

include_directories(${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/src/proj1)
include_directories(${GTEST_INCLUDE_DIRS})
add_executable(proj1_test proj1_test.cpp)
target_link_libraries(proj1_test ${GTEST_BOTH_LIBRARIES} pthread)
add_test(proj1_test proj1_test)
add_dependencies(build_and_test proj1_test)

With this approach, I just need to make build_and_test instead of make test (or make all test), and it has the benefit of only building test code (and its dependencies). It's a shame I can't use the target name test. In my case, it's not so bad because I have a top-level script that does out-of-tree debug and release (and cross-compiled) builds by calling cmake and then make, and it translates test into build_and_test.

Obviously, the GTest stuff isn't required. I just happen to use/like Google Test, and wanted to share a complete example of using it with CMake/CTest. IMHO, this approach also has the benefit of allowing me to use ctest -V, which shows the Google Test output while the tests run:

1: Running main() from gtest_main.cc
1: [==========] Running 1 test from 1 test case.
1: [----------] Global test environment set-up.
1: [----------] 1 test from proj1
1: [ RUN      ] proj1.dummy
1: [       OK ] proj1.dummy (0 ms)
1: [----------] 1 test from proj1 (1 ms total)
1:
1: [----------] Global test environment tear-down
1: [==========] 1 test from 1 test case ran. (1 ms total)
1: [  PASSED  ] 1 test.
1/2 Test #1: proj1_test .......................   Passed    0.03 sec

If you are trying to emulate make check, you may find this wiki entry usefull :

http://www.cmake.org/Wiki/CMakeEmulateMakeCheck

I have just checked that is does what it says with success (CMake 2.8.10).

Save yourself the headache:

make all test

Works out of the box for me and will build dependencies before running the test. Given how simple this is, it almost makes the native make test functionality convenient because it gives you the option of running the last compiling tests even if your code is broken.

This is what I hammered out and have been using:

set(${PROJECT_NAME}_TESTS a b c)

enable_testing()
add_custom_target(all_tests)
foreach(test ${${PROJECT_NAME}_TESTS})
        add_executable(${test} EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL ${test}.cc)
        add_test(NAME ${test} COMMAND $<TARGET_FILE:${test}>)
        add_dependencies(all_tests ${test})
endforeach(test)

build_command(CTEST_CUSTOM_PRE_TEST TARGET all_tests)
string(CONFIGURE \"@CTEST_CUSTOM_PRE_TEST@\" CTEST_CUSTOM_PRE_TEST_QUOTED ESCAPE_QUOTES)
file(WRITE "${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/CTestCustom.cmake" "set(CTEST_CUSTOM_PRE_TEST ${CTEST_CUSTOM_PRE_TEST_QUOTED})" "\n")

YMMV

If you are using CMake >= 3.7, then the recommended approach is to use fixtures:

add_executable(test test.cpp)
add_test(test_build
  "${CMAKE_COMMAND}"
  --build "${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}"
  --config $<CONFIG>
  --target test
)
add_test(test test)
set_tests_properties(test       PROPERTIES FIXTURES_REQUIRED test_fixture)
set_tests_properties(test_build PROPERTIES FIXTURES_SETUP    test_fixture)

All above answers are perfect. But actually CMake use CTest as its testing tools, so the standard method (I think it is) to do the mission is:

enable_testing ()
add_test (TestName TestCommand)
add_test (TestName2 AnotherTestCommand)

Then run cmake and make to build the targets. After that, you can either run make test, or just run

ctest

you will get the result. This is tested under CMake 2.8 .

Check details at: http://cmake.org/Wiki/CMake/Testing_With_CTest#Simple_Testing

All the answers are good, but they imply a breach of tradition to run a test by command make test. I've done this trick:

add_test(NAME <mytest>
WORKING_DIRECTORY ${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}
COMMAND sh -c "make <mytarget>; $<TARGET_FILE:<mytarget>>")

This means that the test consists of building (optionally) and running of executable target.

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