Skip to main content

A minimal mocking utility for C projects.

Project description

🎣 narmock

Build Status PyPI PyPI - Python Version Code style: black

A minimal mocking utility for C projects.

Narmock finds the functions mocked in your tests and generates mocks with a slick API.

#include <time.h>

#include "__mocks__.h"
#include "narwhal.h"

TEST(example)
{
    MOCK(time)->mock_return(42);

    ASSERT_EQ(time(NULL), 42);
}

This example is a test written with Narwhal but Narmock can be used with other test frameworks and anywhere in regular source code.

Installation

The package can be installed with pip.

$ pip install narmock

Getting started

The command-line utility provides two essential commands that should make it possible to integrate Narmock in any kind of build system.

usage: narmock [-h] (-g [<code>] | -f) [-d <directory>] [-k [<regex>]]

A minimal mocking utility for C projects.

optional arguments:
  -h, --help      show this help message and exit
  -g [<code>]     generate mocks
  -f              output linker flags
  -d <directory>  mocks directory
  -k [<regex>]    keep argument names

Check out the basic example for a simple Makefile that integrates both Narwhal and Narmock.

Generating mocks

The narmock -g command finds the functions mocked in your code and generates a __mocks__.c file and a __mocks__.h file that respectively define and declare all the required mocks.

$ gcc -E *.c | narmock -g

Narmock requires source code to be expanded by the preprocessor. You can directly pipe the output of gcc -E to the command-line utility.

By default, __mocks__.c and __mocks__.h will be created in the current directory. You can specify a different output directory with the -d option.

$ gcc -E tests/*.c | narmock -g -d tests

Retrieving linker flags

The narmock -f command reads the generated __mocks__.h file and outputs the necessary linker flags for linking all your source files together.

$ gcc $(narmock -f) *.c

By default, the command looks for __mocks__.h in the current directory. You can specify a different directory with the -d option.

$ gcc $(narmock -f -d tests) tests/*.c

Mock API

The MOCK macro returns a pointer to the mock API of a given function.

MOCK(time);

Mocking the returned value

You can make a function return a specific value without calling its original implementation.

MOCK(time)->mock_return(42);

printf("%ld\n", time(NULL));  // Outputs 42

Mocking the implementation

You can switch the implementation of a function.

time_t time_stub(time_t *timer)
{
    return 42;
}

MOCK(time)->mock_implementation(time_stub);

printf("%ld\n", time(NULL));  // Outputs 42

Disabling the mock

You can disable the mock and make the function call its original implementation.

MOCK(time)->disable_mock();

printf("%ld\n", time(NULL));  // Outputs the current time

Counting and inspecting calls

Narmock keeps track of the number of times mocked functions are called.

printf("%ld\n", time(NULL));  // Outputs the current time

printf("%ld\n", MOCK(time)->call_count);  // Outputs 1

You can also inspect the last call of a function.

printf("%ld\n", time(NULL));  // Outputs the current time

printf("%p\n", MOCK(time)->last_call->arg1);           // Outputs (nil)
printf("%ld\n", MOCK(time)->last_call->return_value);  // Outputs the current time

Note that the last_call pointer is NULL until the function gets called for the first time. By default, the arguments are accessible through the sequential arg1, arg2, ..., argN attributes. If you want to keep the original name of the arguments for a set of specific functions you can use the -k option when generating the mocks.

$ gcc -E *.c | narmock -g -k "myprefix_.*"

The option takes a regular expression and generates mocks that use the original argument names for all the functions that match the regex.

$ gcc -E *.c | narmock -g -k

Note that the default regex is .* so here every function would be affected.

Resetting everything

You can reset the mock to its initial state. This will make the function use its original implementation and reset call_count to 0 and last_call to NULL.

MOCK(time)->mock_return(42);

printf("%ld\n", time(NULL));  // Outputs 42

MOCK(time)->reset();

printf("%ld\n", MOCK(time)->call_count);  // Outputs 0
printf("%p\n", MOCK(time)->last_call);    // Outputs (nil)
printf("%ld\n", time(NULL));              // Outputs the current time

You can also call the narmock_reset_all_mocks function to reset all the mock.

narmock_reset_all_mocks();

Contributing

Contributions are welcome. Feel free to open issues and suggest improvements. This project uses poetry so you'll need to install it first if you want to be able to work with the project locally.

$ curl -sSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sdispater/poetry/master/get-poetry.py | python

You should now be able to install the required dependencies.

$ poetry install

The code follows the black code style.

$ poetry run black narmock

You can run the tests with poetry run make -C tests. The test suite is built with Narwhal.

$ poetry run make -C tests

License - MIT

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

narmock-0.2.10.tar.gz (12.5 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

narmock-0.2.10-py3-none-any.whl (12.5 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file narmock-0.2.10.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: narmock-0.2.10.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 12.5 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/0.12.17 CPython/3.7.1 Linux/4.15.0-1028-gcp

File hashes

Hashes for narmock-0.2.10.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 cf6aa6f176c144192564bf65d3d24e85f0755b2065a27ba3d5b58152b30c8188
MD5 98267e6ecd064cdb783beab36633f48e
BLAKE2b-256 938f6b14317897b68fa0e720c06357193dff1742734a1db90d081ec0b32c3b39

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file narmock-0.2.10-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: narmock-0.2.10-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 12.5 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/0.12.17 CPython/3.7.1 Linux/4.15.0-1028-gcp

File hashes

Hashes for narmock-0.2.10-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 ea25049f0e577d29aad2326e26908e68e0956a752f3b43c94a827fd9f0e0f4a2
MD5 961b5b907bace3f98ebb65b2cdc185bb
BLAKE2b-256 006dfb890afbf991713fc5e685f592b2716b8a290653c6c39b87dbd452903f1d

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page