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# Defining a Mock Class #
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## Mocking a Normal Class ##
6
 
7
Given
8
```
9
class Foo {
10
  ...
11
  virtual ~Foo();
12
  virtual int GetSize() const = 0;
13
  virtual string Describe(const char* name) = 0;
14
  virtual string Describe(int type) = 0;
15
  virtual bool Process(Bar elem, int count) = 0;
16
};
17
```
18
(note that `~Foo()` **must** be virtual) we can define its mock as
19
```
20
#include 
21
 
22
class MockFoo : public Foo {
23
  MOCK_CONST_METHOD0(GetSize, int());
24
  MOCK_METHOD1(Describe, string(const char* name));
25
  MOCK_METHOD1(Describe, string(int type));
26
  MOCK_METHOD2(Process, bool(Bar elem, int count));
27
};
28
```
29
 
30
To create a "nice" mock object which ignores all uninteresting calls,
31
or a "strict" mock object, which treats them as failures:
32
```
33
NiceMock nice_foo;     // The type is a subclass of MockFoo.
34
StrictMock strict_foo; // The type is a subclass of MockFoo.
35
```
36
 
37
## Mocking a Class Template ##
38
 
39
To mock
40
```
41
template 
42
class StackInterface {
43
 public:
44
  ...
45
  virtual ~StackInterface();
46
  virtual int GetSize() const = 0;
47
  virtual void Push(const Elem& x) = 0;
48
};
49
```
50
(note that `~StackInterface()` **must** be virtual) just append `_T` to the `MOCK_*` macros:
51
```
52
template 
53
class MockStack : public StackInterface {
54
 public:
55
  ...
56
  MOCK_CONST_METHOD0_T(GetSize, int());
57
  MOCK_METHOD1_T(Push, void(const Elem& x));
58
};
59
```
60
 
61
## Specifying Calling Conventions for Mock Functions ##
62
 
63
If your mock function doesn't use the default calling convention, you
64
can specify it by appending `_WITH_CALLTYPE` to any of the macros
65
described in the previous two sections and supplying the calling
66
convention as the first argument to the macro. For example,
67
```
68
  MOCK_METHOD_1_WITH_CALLTYPE(STDMETHODCALLTYPE, Foo, bool(int n));
69
  MOCK_CONST_METHOD2_WITH_CALLTYPE(STDMETHODCALLTYPE, Bar, int(double x, double y));
70
```
71
where `STDMETHODCALLTYPE` is defined by `` on Windows.
72
 
73
# Using Mocks in Tests #
74
 
75
The typical flow is:
76
  1. Import the Google Mock names you need to use. All Google Mock names are in the `testing` namespace unless they are macros or otherwise noted.
77
  1. Create the mock objects.
78
  1. Optionally, set the default actions of the mock objects.
79
  1. Set your expectations on the mock objects (How will they be called? What wil they do?).
80
  1. Exercise code that uses the mock objects; if necessary, check the result using [Google Test](http://code.google.com/p/googletest/) assertions.
81
  1. When a mock objects is destructed, Google Mock automatically verifies that all expectations on it have been satisfied.
82
 
83
Here is an example:
84
```
85
using ::testing::Return;                            // #1
86
 
87
TEST(BarTest, DoesThis) {
88
  MockFoo foo;                                    // #2
89
 
90
  ON_CALL(foo, GetSize())                         // #3
91
      .WillByDefault(Return(1));
92
  // ... other default actions ...
93
 
94
  EXPECT_CALL(foo, Describe(5))                   // #4
95
      .Times(3)
96
      .WillRepeatedly(Return("Category 5"));
97
  // ... other expectations ...
98
 
99
  EXPECT_EQ("good", MyProductionFunction(&foo));  // #5
100
}                                                 // #6
101
```
102
 
103
# Setting Default Actions #
104
 
105
Google Mock has a **built-in default action** for any function that
106
returns `void`, `bool`, a numeric value, or a pointer.
107
 
108
To customize the default action for functions with return type `T` globally:
109
```
110
using ::testing::DefaultValue;
111
 
112
DefaultValue::Set(value);  // Sets the default value to be returned.
113
// ... use the mocks ...
114
DefaultValue::Clear();     // Resets the default value.
115
```
116
 
117
To customize the default action for a particular method, use `ON_CALL()`:
118
```
119
ON_CALL(mock_object, method(matchers))
120
    .With(multi_argument_matcher)  ?
121
    .WillByDefault(action);
122
```
123
 
124
# Setting Expectations #
125
 
126
`EXPECT_CALL()` sets **expectations** on a mock method (How will it be
127
called? What will it do?):
128
```
129
EXPECT_CALL(mock_object, method(matchers))
130
    .With(multi_argument_matcher)  ?
131
    .Times(cardinality)            ?
132
    .InSequence(sequences)         *
133
    .After(expectations)           *
134
    .WillOnce(action)              *
135
    .WillRepeatedly(action)        ?
136
    .RetiresOnSaturation();        ?
137
```
138
 
139
If `Times()` is omitted, the cardinality is assumed to be:
140
 
141
  * `Times(1)` when there is neither `WillOnce()` nor `WillRepeatedly()`;
142
  * `Times(n)` when there are `n WillOnce()`s but no `WillRepeatedly()`, where `n` >= 1; or
143
  * `Times(AtLeast(n))` when there are `n WillOnce()`s and a `WillRepeatedly()`, where `n` >= 0.
144
 
145
A method with no `EXPECT_CALL()` is free to be invoked _any number of times_, and the default action will be taken each time.
146
 
147
# Matchers #
148
 
149
A **matcher** matches a _single_ argument.  You can use it inside
150
`ON_CALL()` or `EXPECT_CALL()`, or use it to validate a value
151
directly:
152
 
153
| `EXPECT_THAT(value, matcher)` | Asserts that `value` matches `matcher`. |
154
|:------------------------------|:----------------------------------------|
155
| `ASSERT_THAT(value, matcher)` | The same as `EXPECT_THAT(value, matcher)`, except that it generates a **fatal** failure. |
156
 
157
Built-in matchers (where `argument` is the function argument) are
158
divided into several categories:
159
 
160
## Wildcard ##
161
|`_`|`argument` can be any value of the correct type.|
162
|:--|:-----------------------------------------------|
163
|`A()` or `An()`|`argument` can be any value of type `type`.     |
164
 
165
## Generic Comparison ##
166
 
167
|`Eq(value)` or `value`|`argument == value`|
168
|:---------------------|:------------------|
169
|`Ge(value)`           |`argument >= value`|
170
|`Gt(value)`           |`argument > value` |
171
|`Le(value)`           |`argument <= value`|
172
|`Lt(value)`           |`argument < value` |
173
|`Ne(value)`           |`argument != value`|
174
|`IsNull()`            |`argument` is a `NULL` pointer (raw or smart).|
175
|`NotNull()`           |`argument` is a non-null pointer (raw or smart).|
176
|`Ref(variable)`       |`argument` is a reference to `variable`.|
177
|`TypedEq(value)`|`argument` has type `type` and is equal to `value`. You may need to use this instead of `Eq(value)` when the mock function is overloaded.|
178
 
179
Except `Ref()`, these matchers make a _copy_ of `value` in case it's
180
modified or destructed later. If the compiler complains that `value`
181
doesn't have a public copy constructor, try wrap it in `ByRef()`,
182
e.g. `Eq(ByRef(non_copyable_value))`. If you do that, make sure
183
`non_copyable_value` is not changed afterwards, or the meaning of your
184
matcher will be changed.
185
 
186
## Floating-Point Matchers ##
187
 
188
|`DoubleEq(a_double)`|`argument` is a `double` value approximately equal to `a_double`, treating two NaNs as unequal.|
189
|:-------------------|:----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
190
|`FloatEq(a_float)`  |`argument` is a `float` value approximately equal to `a_float`, treating two NaNs as unequal.  |
191
|`NanSensitiveDoubleEq(a_double)`|`argument` is a `double` value approximately equal to `a_double`, treating two NaNs as equal.  |
192
|`NanSensitiveFloatEq(a_float)`|`argument` is a `float` value approximately equal to `a_float`, treating two NaNs as equal.    |
193
 
194
The above matchers use ULP-based comparison (the same as used in
195
[Google Test](http://code.google.com/p/googletest/)). They
196
automatically pick a reasonable error bound based on the absolute
197
value of the expected value.  `DoubleEq()` and `FloatEq()` conform to
198
the IEEE standard, which requires comparing two NaNs for equality to
199
return false. The `NanSensitive*` version instead treats two NaNs as
200
equal, which is often what a user wants.
201
 
202
## String Matchers ##
203
 
204
The `argument` can be either a C string or a C++ string object:
205
 
206
|`ContainsRegex(string)`|`argument` matches the given regular expression.|
207
|:----------------------|:-----------------------------------------------|
208
|`EndsWith(suffix)`     |`argument` ends with string `suffix`.           |
209
|`HasSubstr(string)`    |`argument` contains `string` as a sub-string.   |
210
|`MatchesRegex(string)` |`argument` matches the given regular expression with the match starting at the first character and ending at the last character.|
211
|`StartsWith(prefix)`   |`argument` starts with string `prefix`.         |
212
|`StrCaseEq(string)`    |`argument` is equal to `string`, ignoring case. |
213
|`StrCaseNe(string)`    |`argument` is not equal to `string`, ignoring case.|
214
|`StrEq(string)`        |`argument` is equal to `string`.                |
215
|`StrNe(string)`        |`argument` is not equal to `string`.            |
216
 
217
`StrCaseEq()`, `StrCaseNe()`, `StrEq()`, and `StrNe()` work for wide
218
strings as well.
219
 
220
## Container Matchers ##
221
 
222
Most STL-style containers support `==`, so you can use
223
`Eq(expected_container)` or simply `expected_container` to match a
224
container exactly.   If you want to write the elements in-line,
225
match them more flexibly, or get more informative messages, you can use:
226
 
227
| `Contains(e)` | `argument` contains an element that matches `e`, which can be either a value or a matcher. |
228
|:--------------|:-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
229
|`ElementsAre(e0, e1, ..., en)`|`argument` has `n + 1` elements, where the i-th element matches `ei`, which can be a value or a matcher. 0 to 10 arguments are allowed.|
230
|`ElementsAreArray(array)` or `ElementsAreArray(array, count)`|The same as `ElementsAre()` except that the expected element values/matchers come from a C-style array.|
231
| `ContainerEq(container)` | The same as `Eq(container)` except that the failure message also includes which elements are in one container but not the other. |
232
 
233
These matchers can also match:
234
 
235
  1. a native array passed by reference (e.g. in `Foo(const int (&a)[5])`), and
236
  1. an array passed as a pointer and a count (e.g. in `Bar(const T* buffer, int len)` -- see [Multi-argument Matchers](#Multiargument_Matchers.md)).
237
 
238
where the array may be multi-dimensional (i.e. its elements can be arrays).
239
 
240
## Member Matchers ##
241
 
242
|`Field(&class::field, m)`|`argument.field` (or `argument->field` when `argument` is a plain pointer) matches matcher `m`, where `argument` is an object of type _class_.|
243
|:------------------------|:---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
244
|`Key(e)`                 |`argument.first` matches `e`, which can be either a value or a matcher. E.g. `Contains(Key(Le(5)))` can verify that a `map` contains a key `<= 5`.|
245
|`Pair(m1, m2)`           |`argument` is an `std::pair` whose `first` field matches `m1` and `second` field matches `m2`.                                                |
246
|`Property(&class::property, m)`|`argument.property()` (or `argument->property()` when `argument` is a plain pointer) matches matcher `m`, where `argument` is an object of type _class_.|
247
 
248
## Matching the Result of a Function or Functor ##
249
 
250
|`ResultOf(f, m)`|`f(argument)` matches matcher `m`, where `f` is a function or functor.|
251
|:---------------|:---------------------------------------------------------------------|
252
 
253
## Pointer Matchers ##
254
 
255
|`Pointee(m)`|`argument` (either a smart pointer or a raw pointer) points to a value that matches matcher `m`.|
256
|:-----------|:-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
257
 
258
## Multiargument Matchers ##
259
 
260
These are matchers on tuple types. They can be used in
261
`.With()`. The following can be used on functions with two
262
arguments `x` and `y`:
263
 
264
|`Eq()`|`x == y`|
265
|:-----|:-------|
266
|`Ge()`|`x >= y`|
267
|`Gt()`|`x > y` |
268
|`Le()`|`x <= y`|
269
|`Lt()`|`x < y` |
270
|`Ne()`|`x != y`|
271
 
272
You can use the following selectors to pick a subset of the arguments
273
(or reorder them) to participate in the matching:
274
 
275
|`AllArgs(m)`|Equivalent to `m`. Useful as syntactic sugar in `.With(AllArgs(m))`.|
276
|:-----------|:-------------------------------------------------------------------|
277
|`Args(m)`|The `k` selected (using 0-based indices) arguments match `m`, e.g. `Args<1, 2>(Contains(5))`.|
278
 
279
## Composite Matchers ##
280
 
281
You can make a matcher from one or more other matchers:
282
 
283
|`AllOf(m1, m2, ..., mn)`|`argument` matches all of the matchers `m1` to `mn`.|
284
|:-----------------------|:---------------------------------------------------|
285
|`AnyOf(m1, m2, ..., mn)`|`argument` matches at least one of the matchers `m1` to `mn`.|
286
|`Not(m)`                |`argument` doesn't match matcher `m`.               |
287
 
288
## Adapters for Matchers ##
289
 
290
|`MatcherCast(m)`|casts matcher `m` to type `Matcher`.|
291
|:------------------|:--------------------------------------|
292
|`SafeMatcherCast(m)`| [safely casts](V1_5_CookBook#Casting_Matchers.md) matcher `m` to type `Matcher`. |
293
|`Truly(predicate)` |`predicate(argument)` returns something considered by C++ to be true, where `predicate` is a function or functor.|
294
 
295
## Matchers as Predicates ##
296
 
297
|`Matches(m)`|a unary functor that returns `true` if the argument matches `m`.|
298
|:-----------|:---------------------------------------------------------------|
299
|`ExplainMatchResult(m, value, result_listener)`|returns `true` if `value` matches `m`, explaining the result to `result_listener`.|
300
|`Value(x, m)`|returns `true` if the value of `x` matches `m`.                 |
301
 
302
## Defining Matchers ##
303
 
304
| `MATCHER(IsEven, "") { return (arg % 2) == 0; }` | Defines a matcher `IsEven()` to match an even number. |
305
|:-------------------------------------------------|:------------------------------------------------------|
306
| `MATCHER_P(IsDivisibleBy, n, "") { *result_listener << "where the remainder is " << (arg % n); return (arg % n) == 0; }` | Defines a macher `IsDivisibleBy(n)` to match a number divisible by `n`. |
307
| `MATCHER_P2(IsBetween, a, b, "is between %(a)s and %(b)s") { return a <= arg && arg <= b; }` | Defines a matcher `IsBetween(a, b)` to match a value in the range [`a`, `b`]. |
308
 
309
**Notes:**
310
 
311
  1. The `MATCHER*` macros cannot be used inside a function or class.
312
  1. The matcher body must be _purely functional_ (i.e. it cannot have any side effect, and the result must not depend on anything other than the value being matched and the matcher parameters).
313
  1. You can use `PrintToString(x)` to convert a value `x` of any type to a string.
314
 
315
## Matchers as Test Assertions ##
316
 
317
|`ASSERT_THAT(expression, m)`|Generates a [fatal failure](http://code.google.com/p/googletest/wiki/GoogleTestPrimer#Assertions) if the value of `expression` doesn't match matcher `m`.|
318
|:---------------------------|:--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
319
|`EXPECT_THAT(expression, m)`|Generates a non-fatal failure if the value of `expression` doesn't match matcher `m`.                                                                    |
320
 
321
# Actions #
322
 
323
**Actions** specify what a mock function should do when invoked.
324
 
325
## Returning a Value ##
326
 
327
|`Return()`|Return from a `void` mock function.|
328
|:---------|:----------------------------------|
329
|`Return(value)`|Return `value`.                    |
330
|`ReturnArg()`|Return the `N`-th (0-based) argument.|
331
|`ReturnNew(a1, ..., ak)`|Return `new T(a1, ..., ak)`; a different object is created each time.|
332
|`ReturnNull()`|Return a null pointer.             |
333
|`ReturnRef(variable)`|Return a reference to `variable`.  |
334
 
335
## Side Effects ##
336
 
337
|`Assign(&variable, value)`|Assign `value` to variable.|
338
|:-------------------------|:--------------------------|
339
| `DeleteArg()`         | Delete the `N`-th (0-based) argument, which must be a pointer. |
340
| `SaveArg(pointer)`    | Save the `N`-th (0-based) argument to `*pointer`. |
341
| `SetArgReferee(value)` |      Assign value to the variable referenced by the `N`-th (0-based) argument. |
342
|`SetArgumentPointee(value)`|Assign `value` to the variable pointed by the `N`-th (0-based) argument.|
343
|`SetArrayArgument(first, last)`|Copies the elements in source range [`first`, `last`) to the array pointed to by the `N`-th (0-based) argument, which can be either a pointer or an iterator. The action does not take ownership of the elements in the source range.|
344
|`SetErrnoAndReturn(error, value)`|Set `errno` to `error` and return `value`.|
345
|`Throw(exception)`        |Throws the given exception, which can be any copyable value. Available since v1.1.0.|
346
 
347
## Using a Function or a Functor as an Action ##
348
 
349
|`Invoke(f)`|Invoke `f` with the arguments passed to the mock function, where `f` can be a global/static function or a functor.|
350
|:----------|:-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
351
|`Invoke(object_pointer, &class::method)`|Invoke the {method on the object with the arguments passed to the mock function.                                  |
352
|`InvokeWithoutArgs(f)`|Invoke `f`, which can be a global/static function or a functor. `f` must take no arguments.                       |
353
|`InvokeWithoutArgs(object_pointer, &class::method)`|Invoke the method on the object, which takes no arguments.                                                        |
354
|`InvokeArgument(arg1, arg2, ..., argk)`|Invoke the mock function's `N`-th (0-based) argument, which must be a function or a functor, with the `k` arguments.|
355
 
356
The return value of the invoked function is used as the return value
357
of the action.
358
 
359
When defining a function or functor to be used with `Invoke*()`, you can declare any unused parameters as `Unused`:
360
```
361
  double Distance(Unused, double x, double y) { return sqrt(x*x + y*y); }
362
  ...
363
  EXPECT_CALL(mock, Foo("Hi", _, _)).WillOnce(Invoke(Distance));
364
```
365
 
366
In `InvokeArgument(...)`, if an argument needs to be passed by reference, wrap it inside `ByRef()`. For example,
367
```
368
  InvokeArgument<2>(5, string("Hi"), ByRef(foo))
369
```
370
calls the mock function's #2 argument, passing to it `5` and `string("Hi")` by value, and `foo` by reference.
371
 
372
## Default Action ##
373
 
374
|`DoDefault()`|Do the default action (specified by `ON_CALL()` or the built-in one).|
375
|:------------|:--------------------------------------------------------------------|
376
 
377
**Note:** due to technical reasons, `DoDefault()` cannot be used inside  a composite action - trying to do so will result in a run-time error.
378
 
379
## Composite Actions ##
380
 
381
|`DoAll(a1, a2, ..., an)`|Do all actions `a1` to `an` and return the result of `an` in each invocation. The first `n - 1` sub-actions must return void. |
382
|:-----------------------|:-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
383
|`IgnoreResult(a)`       |Perform action `a` and ignore its result. `a` must not return void.                                                           |
384
|`WithArg(a)`         |Pass the `N`-th (0-based) argument of the mock function to action `a` and perform it.                                         |
385
|`WithArgs(a)`|Pass the selected (0-based) arguments of the mock function to action `a` and perform it.                                      |
386
|`WithoutArgs(a)`        |Perform action `a` without any arguments.                                                                                     |
387
 
388
## Defining Actions ##
389
 
390
| `ACTION(Sum) { return arg0 + arg1; }` | Defines an action `Sum()` to return the sum of the mock function's argument #0 and #1. |
391
|:--------------------------------------|:---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
392
| `ACTION_P(Plus, n) { return arg0 + n; }` | Defines an action `Plus(n)` to return the sum of the mock function's argument #0 and `n`. |
393
| `ACTION_Pk(Foo, p1, ..., pk) { statements; }` | Defines a parameterized action `Foo(p1, ..., pk)` to execute the given `statements`.   |
394
 
395
The `ACTION*` macros cannot be used inside a function or class.
396
 
397
# Cardinalities #
398
 
399
These are used in `Times()` to specify how many times a mock function will be called:
400
 
401
|`AnyNumber()`|The function can be called any number of times.|
402
|:------------|:----------------------------------------------|
403
|`AtLeast(n)` |The call is expected at least `n` times.       |
404
|`AtMost(n)`  |The call is expected at most `n` times.        |
405
|`Between(m, n)`|The call is expected between `m` and `n` (inclusive) times.|
406
|`Exactly(n) or n`|The call is expected exactly `n` times. In particular, the call should never happen when `n` is 0.|
407
 
408
# Expectation Order #
409
 
410
By default, the expectations can be matched in _any_ order.  If some
411
or all expectations must be matched in a given order, there are two
412
ways to specify it.  They can be used either independently or
413
together.
414
 
415
## The After Clause ##
416
 
417
```
418
using ::testing::Expectation;
419
...
420
Expectation init_x = EXPECT_CALL(foo, InitX());
421
Expectation init_y = EXPECT_CALL(foo, InitY());
422
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Bar())
423
    .After(init_x, init_y);
424
```
425
says that `Bar()` can be called only after both `InitX()` and
426
`InitY()` have been called.
427
 
428
If you don't know how many pre-requisites an expectation has when you
429
write it, you can use an `ExpectationSet` to collect them:
430
 
431
```
432
using ::testing::ExpectationSet;
433
...
434
ExpectationSet all_inits;
435
for (int i = 0; i < element_count; i++) {
436
  all_inits += EXPECT_CALL(foo, InitElement(i));
437
}
438
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Bar())
439
    .After(all_inits);
440
```
441
says that `Bar()` can be called only after all elements have been
442
initialized (but we don't care about which elements get initialized
443
before the others).
444
 
445
Modifying an `ExpectationSet` after using it in an `.After()` doesn't
446
affect the meaning of the `.After()`.
447
 
448
## Sequences ##
449
 
450
When you have a long chain of sequential expectations, it's easier to
451
specify the order using **sequences**, which don't require you to given
452
each expectation in the chain a different name.  All expected
453
calls in the same sequence must occur in the order they are
454
specified.
455
 
456
```
457
using ::testing::Sequence;
458
Sequence s1, s2;
459
...
460
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Reset())
461
    .InSequence(s1, s2)
462
    .WillOnce(Return(true));
463
EXPECT_CALL(foo, GetSize())
464
    .InSequence(s1)
465
    .WillOnce(Return(1));
466
EXPECT_CALL(foo, Describe(A()))
467
    .InSequence(s2)
468
    .WillOnce(Return("dummy"));
469
```
470
says that `Reset()` must be called before _both_ `GetSize()` _and_
471
`Describe()`, and the latter two can occur in any order.
472
 
473
To put many expectations in a sequence conveniently:
474
```
475
using ::testing::InSequence;
476
{
477
  InSequence dummy;
478
 
479
  EXPECT_CALL(...)...;
480
  EXPECT_CALL(...)...;
481
  ...
482
  EXPECT_CALL(...)...;
483
}
484
```
485
says that all expected calls in the scope of `dummy` must occur in
486
strict order. The name `dummy` is irrelevant.)
487
 
488
# Verifying and Resetting a Mock #
489
 
490
Google Mock will verify the expectations on a mock object when it is destructed, or you can do it earlier:
491
```
492
using ::testing::Mock;
493
...
494
// Verifies and removes the expectations on mock_obj;
495
// returns true iff successful.
496
Mock::VerifyAndClearExpectations(&mock_obj);
497
...
498
// Verifies and removes the expectations on mock_obj;
499
// also removes the default actions set by ON_CALL();
500
// returns true iff successful.
501
Mock::VerifyAndClear(&mock_obj);
502
```
503
 
504
You can also tell Google Mock that a mock object can be leaked and doesn't
505
need to be verified:
506
```
507
Mock::AllowLeak(&mock_obj);
508
```
509
 
510
# Mock Classes #
511
 
512
Google Mock defines a convenient mock class template
513
```
514
class MockFunction {
515
 public:
516
  MOCK_METHODn(Call, R(A1, ..., An));
517
};
518
```
519
See this [recipe](V1_5_CookBook#Using_Check_Points.md) for one application of it.
520
 
521
# Flags #
522
 
523
| `--gmock_catch_leaked_mocks=0` | Don't report leaked mock objects as failures. |
524
|:-------------------------------|:----------------------------------------------|
525
| `--gmock_verbose=LEVEL`        | Sets the default verbosity level (`info`, `warning`, or `error`) of Google Mock messages. |

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