googletest 1.10.0-2 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

googletest (1.10.0-2) unstable; urgency=medium

  * Source upload.

 -- Steve M. Robbins <email address hidden>  Tue, 28 Jan 2020 12:53:48 -0600

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Steve M. Robbins
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Steve M. Robbins
Architectures:
any all
Section:
misc
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Focal release universe misc

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
googletest_1.10.0-2.dsc 2.1 KiB c7b1a205d6f704d54e8fb34b680a6c4e7f71f91af0ee8b29fa05adcec5c569d1
googletest_1.10.0.orig.tar.bz2 686.3 KiB 369d5e65753f0e86ed96dac25088488ff852332cbf1be1db58d062eecc4c32bf
googletest_1.10.0-2.debian.tar.xz 10.2 KiB af49f7e0195db575ca6bd907c09e2e85b78685dd3374e00bda53624f436bddb1

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

google-mock: Google's framework for writing and using C++ mock classes

 NOTE: This is a transitional package, retained for backwards compatibility.
 New code should instead use either package libgmock-dev (for compiled lib)
 or package googletest (for lib sources).

googletest: Google's C++ test framework sources

 This package provides sources for Google Test and Google Mock.
 .
 Google Test is a framework for writing C++ tests on a variety of
 platforms. Based on the xUnit architecture. Supports automatic test
 discovery, a rich set of assertions, user-defined assertions, death
 tests, fatal and non-fatal failures, value- and type-parameterized
 tests, various options for running the tests, and XML test report
 generation.
 .
 Google Mock is an extension of Google Test for C++ mocking. Inspired
 by jMock, EasyMock, and Hamcrest, and designed with C++'s specifics
 in mind, it can help you derive better designs of your system and
 write better tests.
 .
 Google Mock:
 .
  - provides a declarative syntax for defining mocks,
  - can easily define partial (hybrid) mocks, which are a cross of real
    and mock objects,
  - handles functions of arbitrary types and overloaded functions,
  - comes with a rich set of matchers for validating function arguments,
  - uses an intuitive syntax for controlling the behavior of a mock,
  - does automatic verification of expectations (no record-and-replay
    needed),
  - allows arbitrary (partial) ordering constraints on
    function calls to be expressed,
  - lets a user extend it by defining new matchers and actions.
  - does not use exceptions, and
  - is easy to learn and use.
 .
 NOTE: This package does not contain a library to link against, but rather
 the source code to build the google test and mock libraries. This enables
 building the google test and mock libraries with the same flags as the
 C++ code under test.

googletest-tools: No summary available for googletest-tools in ubuntu groovy.

No description available for googletest-tools in ubuntu groovy.

libgmock-dev: Google's framework for writing C++ tests

 Inspired by jMock, EasyMock, and Hamcrest, and designed with C++'s
 specifics in mind, it can help you derive better designs of your
 system and write better tests.
 .
 Google Mock:
 .
  - provides a declarative syntax for defining mocks,
  - can easily define partial (hybrid) mocks, which are a cross of real
    and mock objects,
  - handles functions of arbitrary types and overloaded functions,
  - comes with a rich set of matchers for validating function arguments,
  - uses an intuitive syntax for controlling the behavior of a mock,
  - does automatic verification of expectations (no record-and-replay
    needed),
  - allows arbitrary (partial) ordering constraints on
    function calls to be expressed,
  - lets a user extend it by defining new matchers and actions.
  - does not use exceptions, and
  - is easy to learn and use.

libgtest-dev: Google's framework for writing C++ tests

 Google's framework for writing C++ tests on a variety of platforms. Based on
 the xUnit architecture. Supports automatic test discovery, a rich set of
 assertions, user-defined assertions, death tests, fatal and non-fatal failures,
 value- and type-parameterized tests, various options for running the tests, and
 XML test report generation.