Not sure to which degree this applies to the CUTE project itself, but here it goes.
The cgreen unit testing framework, which provides a CUTE compatible reporter, allows nesting of suites.
The example shown here
- creates a
main suite (the create_test_suite() macro uses the name of the caller as suite name), and
- appends an
first_suite and second_suite to it.
#include <cgreen/cgreen.h>
Ensure(first_suite_test) {
assert_true(1);
}
TestSuite *first_suite() {
TestSuite *suite = create_test_suite();
add_test(suite, first_suite_test);
/* could add more */
return suite;
}
Ensure(second_suite_test) {
assert_true(1);
}
TestSuite *second_suite() {
TestSuite *suite = create_test_suite();
add_test(suite, second_suite_test);
/* could add more */
return suite;
}
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
TestSuite *suite = create_test_suite();
add_suite(suite, first_suite());
add_suite(suite, second_suite());
TestReporter *reporter = create_cute_reporter();
return run_test_suite(suite, reporter);
}
This generates the following output
#beginning main 2
#beginning first_suite 1
#starting first_suite_test
#success first_suite_test, 535408 ms OK
#ending first_suite
#beginning second_suite 1
#starting second_suite_test
#success second_suite_test, 535408 ms OK
#ending second_suite
#ending main: 2 passes, 0 failures, 0 exceptions, 1742 ms.
The plugin seems to parse the nesting, but it doesn't display the statistics correctly

Not sure to which degree this applies to the CUTE project itself, but here it goes.
The cgreen unit testing framework, which provides a CUTE compatible reporter, allows nesting of suites.
The example shown here
mainsuite (thecreate_test_suite()macro uses the name of the caller as suite name), andfirst_suiteandsecond_suiteto it.This generates the following output
The plugin seems to parse the nesting, but it doesn't display the statistics correctly