A versatile C++ function mocking framework. It replaces a target function with the provided implementation, and integrates well with existing testing and mocking frameworks.
Article about how it works.
A few things that might catch your eye:
- No macros
- Virtually no source code modification
- State-of-the-art code injection (thanks to Frida)
- System functions mocking, for example open
- Type safety
- RAII friendly
Mocking std::filesystem:
Mocxx mocxx;
// Lambda is typed and allows to resolve function overload set
mocxx.ReplaceOnce([&](const std::filesystem::path& p) { return true; },
std::filesystem::exists);
std::string file = "/this/file/now/exists";
// Returns true
std::filesystem::exists(file);
// Returns false, because of ReplaceOnce
std::filesystem::exists(file);
This example could be a good start for implementing an in-process fake file system. We haven't tried yet. Dare to try?
Mocxx can also replace functions by name:
mocxx.Replace([]() { return 0.0; }, "atof");
// Always true
atof("1.0") == 0.0;
Replacing member functions is also straightforward:
struct Name
{
using SizeType = std::string::SizeType;
SizeType Size() const { return name.size(); }
SizeType Size() { return name.size(); }
std::string name;
};
// First argument to such lambdas is the type target (Name in this case) this
// member function belongs. Type constness decides which overload to use.
mocxx.ReplaceMember([](Name* foo) -> Name::SizeType { return 13; }, &Name::Size);
In many cases you might want to simply replace the result:
mocxx.Result(0, getpid);
Mocxx of course works with more complex types than just integers:
std::optional<std:vector<std::string>>
Repeat(const std::string& string, std::int32_t times)
{
if (times == 0) {
return std::nullopt;
}
std::vector<std::string> result;
while (times --> 0) {
result.push_back(string);
}
return result;
}
mocxx.Result(std::nullopt, Repeat);
mocxx.Result(std::vector<std::string>(), Repeat);
Keep in mind that if you pass a named value, a local variable, function arguments etc. you are passing it as a reference. If Mocxx leaves the context of this value you might end up with a runtime exception in the best case, and in the worst you might just see garbage being returned by the replacement.
Mocxx CreateFilesystemExistsMocks(bool result) {
Mocxx mocxx;
mocxx.Result(result,
(bool(*)(const std::filesystem::path&))std::filesystem::exists);
mocxx.Result(result,
(bool(*)(const std::filesystem::path&, std::error_code&))std::filesystem::exists);
return mocxx;
}
auto mocxx = CreateFilesystemExistsMocks(true);
if (std::filesystem::exists("/dev/null")) {
// Whether control enters this block is undefined
}
In case you don't need the parameters passed to the replaced function, but still want to generate a new value every call, you can pass a generator, which is a lambda with no arguments returning a result convertible to the result of the replaced function:
std::random_device rd;
std::uniform_int_distribution<int> dist(0, 9);
int notSoRandom = 0;
mocxx.ReplaceGenerator([&]() mutable { return (notSoRandom %= 9); },
&std::uniform_int_distribution::operator());
As all good things, this one does have some drawbacks. One major issue you might encounter while using Mocxx is that your functions are not being replaced, this is especially true for system functions. This section will go over most common problems.
C++ is a powerful language and it is usually packaged within a powerful compiler that tries to optimise every bit of your code. The function you are trying to replace might be inlined, or simply removed, because it is no longer required for the program. This is especially evident in the very first example this document provides. In order to successfully replace std::filesystem API you want to wrap its header inclusion with the following pragma (clang only).
#pragma clang optimize off
#include <filesystem>
#pragma clang optimize on
The problem with overloading sets in C++ is that they are not first-class citizens, you cannot bind an overloading set to a name, or pass it through a function call. Overloading sets are always resolved at call site. At the moment there is no straightforward solution to this problem, and you have to provide target function type for lambdaless API.
The major issue with template functions is the fact that they are not actual functions. Mocxx is a runtime tool, it can only replace a function that has an address. What this means is that you first need to instantiate the template function, and then pass its address to the tool.
The nature of virtual methods (aka dynamic dispatch, or late method binding) in C++ makes it impossible to home in on the target member function using language means, which is what Mocxx requires. You can of course pass in the virtual member function pointer, but it contains no information about the actual function. The support for virtual member functions can be added to Mocxx, but not in a portable way. A possible solution is explained in the article.
This tool makes use of some STL types, such as std::variant, std::string, etc. To save your sanity, suppress the urge to mock commonly used generic API.
Replacement by name works well for free functions, but not that well for member functions, in a sense that you would have to provide properly mangled name for your specific compiler. This can be improved of course.
After writing this tool and using it for some time, we have identified the following, as the potential extensions and improvements:
- Ability to invoke the original function
- Sanity checks, for instance, recursive invocations
- Automatically mock the entire overload set
- Virtual functions replacement
- Template functions. All or some instantiations
- Full type/namespace API mocking
- Concurrent mocks
You are welcome to contribute.
The base requirements to use Mocxx are quite humble:
- A C++17-standard-compliant compiler
- Frida Gum (included for MacOS and Linux)
- Catch2 for testing (included)
- CMake for building
git clone [email protected]:Guardsquare/mocxx.git; cd mocxx
mkdir build; cd build
cmake ../ -GNinja -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug
ninja
test/test_mocxx
Copy cmake/Mocxx.cmake
into your project cmake
directory and add the
following in your test CMakeLists.txt
:
// Add ./cmake module folder if not already
list(APPEND CMAKE_MODULE_PATH "${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/cmake")
include(Mocxx)
target_link_libraries(<test_target> PUBLIC Mocxx)
To install without cmake you need to add Mocxx
includes and Frida Gum
includes and static library located in vendor/frida/
. Make sure you are
compiling your tests with these flags:
-O0 -g -fno-lto -fno-inline-functions -fno-inline
And link with these:
-lresolv -lpthread -ldl
Pull requests are welcome. For major changes, please open an issue first to discuss what you would like to change.
Please make sure to update tests as appropriate.