*
* \author Daniele Basile <asterix@develer.com>
* \author Francesco Sacchi <batt@develer.com>
- *
+ *
* When you want to test a module that is emulable on hosted
* platforms, these macros come in handy.
* Your module_test should supply three basic functions:
- *
+ *
* int module_testSetup(void)
* int module_testRun(void)
* int module_testTearDown(void)
- *
+ *
* All of these should return 0 if ok or a value != 0 on errors.
- *
+ *
* Then, at the end of your module_test you can write:
* #include TEST_ONLY(whatuneed.h)
* #include TEST_ONLY(whatuneed.c)
* #include TEST_ONLY(...)
- *
+ *
* TEST_MAIN(module);
- *
+ *
* The macro TEST_ONLY expand to nothing in non-TEST mode or to
* the specified filename if _TEST is defined.
* Including directly into your module the file.c you need to
* run the test allows you to build and run the test compiling
* only one file.
- *
+ *
* To achieve this you also need a main() that is supplied by
* the TEST_MAIN macro.
* This will expand to a full main that calls, in sequence:
/** This macro will include the specified file only in test-mode */
#define TEST_ONLY(file) PP_STRINGIZE(file)
-
+
#else /* !_TEST */
#define TEST_MAIN(module) /* nothing */
/**
* Silent an assert in a test.
+ *
* This is useful when we run a test and we want to test
* an error condition. We know that an assert will fail but
* this is not really an error. To ignore that we mark it
*/
#define SILENT_ASSERT(str) kputs("SILENT_ASSERT:$"str"$\n")
-
#endif /* CFG_TEST_H */