TestGen 0.05 is now available and contains significant enhancements. What's New ---------- Significant Enhancements/Changes 1) added manipc.py, a generic C/C++ source manipulator that can be used for function/method isolation and stubbing for the purposes of unit testing with any test framework, including CppUnit. 2) although not new (but neglected in first anouncement) this package also includes doxit.py which is used to automatically insert Doxygen comment templates into source code. Minor Enhancements/Changes 1) C/C++ stubber has index checks to prevent storage array overflows 2) added a lot of comments to the example test scripts. 3) moved all example source files into examples/source subdirectory and moved defaultConfig.py to the examples subdirectory. Bug Fixes 1) corrected undefined name problem in C/C++ source manipulator removefunction(). 2) unit test stubber didn't recognize #include of .hpp files (or any include where extension is greater than one character. 3) python unit test target - fixed so syntax error doesn't occur when no test cases. What's TestGen -------------- TestGen is a Python package for software testing. The package currently contains targets for unit testing C/C++. Future releases will support integration testing of C/C++ systems as well as functional testing using Python targets. - requires Python2.2 or later (it was developed on Python2.3 with some testing/verification performed with 2.2) - Python API for specification of test case setup, inputs and outputs (Python's power and flexibility can be used to generate test cases) - generates "C/C++" test code per test specifications, compiles, links, runs, and evaluates the results - provides access to C++ protected and private variables and methods - function/method stubbing (for satisfying external linkages or testing interfaces to them) - function/method remove/copy (for isolating code under test to reduce external linkage requirements) - "on the fly" code under test manipulation capability (useful for making temporary code modifications to make it testable) - convenient "C" random number function library (useful when iterating the test to get better coverage) - easy file output comparison and base lining - test expectations independently verified for successful completion. - batch facility available for running multiple test scripts (batch tests may be nested in that they may execute other batch tests) - GNU and Microsoft compilers supported (customizable for others) TestGen also includes "by products" that fall outside the main purpose of TestGen but are related or depend on TestGen (IOW, great tools that I don't want to create independent projects for yet): - manipc.py -- source code manipulator for isolating/stubbing functions and methods for test purposes. This can be used with any test framework including CppUnit. - doxit.py -- inserts Doxygen comment templates into source code for the file header as well as structures, enums, classes, functions, methods, and defines. Does not insert templates where templates already exist. Prepopulates certain fields such as function name, parameters, and return type in the template automatically. - config.py -- flexible configuration file reader (a less up to date version is also available at http://sourceforge.net/projects/config-py/. - HtmlDiff -- class that creates an HTML table showing a side by side comparison of two versions of a text (is being included in Python2.4). License ------- The vast majority of TestGen is released under the GNU General Public License with the small remainder released under the MIT License. All modules should be clearly marked, if not please let me know. Download -------- Downloads are available at the following address under the "Files" link: https://sourceforge.net/projects/testgen/ Feedback -------- Feedback and comments (both positive and negative) are very welcome. Besides allowing me to improve this package, it also lets me know how worth while my time is spent making updates to this package publically available. Email addresses will be respected of course. Documentation is always a challenge to keep accurate and complete. If you struggle with any part of it, let me know. Better yet if you can contribute, even something as small as a clarification, that would be greatly appreciated. You may contact the author at dan.gass at gmail.com.