add_test¶
Add a test to the project to be run by ctest(1)
.
add_test(NAME <name> COMMAND <command> [<arg>...]
[CONFIGURATIONS <config>...]
[WORKING_DIRECTORY <dir>]
[COMMAND_EXPAND_LISTS])
Adds a test called <name>
. The test name may not contain spaces,
quotes, or other characters special in CMake syntax. The options are:
COMMAND
Specify the test command-line. If
<command>
specifies an executable target (created byadd_executable()
) it will automatically be replaced by the location of the executable created at build time.CONFIGURATIONS
Restrict execution of the test only to the named configurations.
WORKING_DIRECTORY
Set the
WORKING_DIRECTORY
test property to specify the working directory in which to execute the test. If not specified the test will be run with the current working directory set to the build directory corresponding to the current source directory.COMMAND_EXPAND_LISTS
Lists in
COMMAND
arguments will be expanded, including those created withgenerator expressions
.
The given test command is expected to exit with code 0
to pass and
non-zero to fail, or vice-versa if the WILL_FAIL
test
property is set. Any output written to stdout or stderr will be
captured by ctest(1)
but does not affect the pass/fail status
unless the PASS_REGULAR_EXPRESSION
,
FAIL_REGULAR_EXPRESSION
or
SKIP_REGULAR_EXPRESSION
test property is used.
The COMMAND
and WORKING_DIRECTORY
options may use “generator
expressions” with the syntax $<...>
. See the
cmake-generator-expressions(7)
manual for available expressions.
Example usage:
add_test(NAME mytest
COMMAND testDriver --config $<CONFIGURATION>
--exe $<TARGET_FILE:myexe>)
This creates a test mytest
whose command runs a testDriver
tool
passing the configuration name and the full path to the executable
file produced by target myexe
.
Note
CMake will generate tests only if the enable_testing()
command has been invoked. The CTest
module invokes the
command automatically unless the BUILD_TESTING
option is turned
OFF
.
add_test(<name> <command> [<arg>...])
Add a test called <name>
with the given command-line. Unlike
the above NAME
signature no transformation is performed on the
command-line to support target names or generator expressions.