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.Dd December 21, 2018
.Dt TESTING-C 7
.Os "Causal Agency"
.
.Sh NAME
.Nm Testing C
.Nd a simple unit testing setup
.
.Sh DESCRIPTION
This is a simple approach
to unit testing in C
that I've used in a couple projects.
At the bottom of a C file
with some code I want to test,
I add:
.
.Bd -literal -offset indent
#ifdef TEST
#include <assert.h>

int main(void) {
	assert(...);
	assert(...);
}

#endif
.Ed
.
.Pp
This file normally produces a
.Pa .o
to be linked into the main binary.
For testing,
I produce separate binaries
and run them with
.Xr make 1 :
.
.Bd -literal -offset indent
TESTS = foo.t bar.t

\&.SUFFIXES: .t

\&.c.t:
	$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -DTEST $(LDFLAGS) $< $(LDLIBS) -o $@

test: $(TESTS)
	set -e; $(TESTS:%=./%;)
.Ed
.
.Pp
Note that the test binaries
aren't linked with the rest of the code,
so there is potential for simple stubbing or mocking.
.
.Pp
To get the best output
from C's simple
.Xr assert 3 ,
it's best to assert the result
of a helper function
which takes the expected output
and the test input,
rather than calling
.Xr assert 3
inside the helper function.
This way,
the message printed by the assert failure
contains a useful line number
and the expected output
rather than just variable names.
.
.Sh AUTHORS
.An Mt june@causal.agency
>2024-09-07Handle no film being loadedJune McEnroe 2024-09-07Fancy up the text a littleJune McEnroe