This is a boiler plate for C++ projects. What you get:
- Sources, headers and mains separated in distinct folders
- Use of modern CMake for much easier compiling
- Setup for tests using doctest
- Continuous testing with Travis-CI, Appveyor and GitHub Actions, with support for C++17.
- Code coverage reports, including automatic upload to Coveralls.io and/or Codecov.io
- Code documentation with Doxygen
.
├── CMakeLists.txt
├── app
│ └── main.cpp
├── include
│ ├── example.h
│ └── exampleConfig.h.in
├── src
│ └── example.cpp
└── tests
├── dummy.cpp
└── main.cpp
Sources go in src/, header files in include/, main programs in app/, and
tests go in tests/ (compiled to unit_tests
by default).
If you add a new executable, say app/hello.cpp
, you only need to add the following two lines to CMakeLists.txt:
add_executable(main app/main.cpp) # Name of exec. and location of file.
target_link_libraries(main PRIVATE ${LIBRARY_NAME}) # Link the executable to lib built from src/*.cpp (if it uses it).
You can find the example source code that builds the main
executable in app/main.cpp under the Build
section in CMakeLists.txt.
If the executable you made does not use the library in src/, then only the first line is needed.
Build by making a build directory (i.e. build/
), run cmake
in that dir, and then use make
to build the desired target.
Example:
> mkdir build && cd build
> cmake .. -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=[Debug | Coverage | Release]
> make
> ./main
> make test # Makes and runs the tests.
> make coverage # Generate a coverage report.
> make doc # Generate html documentation.
The .gitignore file is a copy of the Github C++.gitignore file,
with the addition of ignoring the build directory (build/
).
If the repository is activated with Travis-CI, then unit tests will be built and executed on each commit. The same is true if the repository is activated with Appveyor.
If the repository is activated with Coveralls/Codecov, then deployment to Travis will also calculate code coverage and upload this to Coveralls.io and/or Codecov.io
Click the Use this template
button to make a new repository from this template.
NB: GitHub templates do not carry over submodules, which means you need to add those back before you can build the project. Run the following after you have generated your new project:
> git clone https://github.com/<your-username>/<your-repo-name>
> git submodule add https://github.com/onqtam/doctest.git external/doctest
> git commit -a --amend --no-edit
> git push --force
When starting a new project, you probably don't want the history of this repository. To start fresh you can use the setup script as follows:
> git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/bsamseth/cpp-project # Or use ssh-link if you like.
> cd cpp-project
> bash setup.sh
The result is a fresh Git repository with one commit adding all files from the boiler plate.