grcov collects and aggregates code coverage information for multiple source files. grcov processes .profraw and .gcda files which can be generated from llvm/clang or gcc. grcov also processes lcov files (for JS coverage) and JaCoCo files (for Java coverage). Linux, macOS and Windows are supported.
This is a project initiated by Mozilla to gather code coverage results on Firefox.
USAGE:
grcov [FLAGS] [OPTIONS] <paths>...
FLAGS:
--branch
Enables parsing branch coverage information
--guess-directory-when-missing
-h, --help
Prints help information
--ignore-not-existing
Ignore source files that can't be found on the disk
--llvm
Speeds-up parsing, when the code coverage information is exclusively coming from a llvm build
--parallel
Sets the build type to be parallel for 'coveralls' and 'coveralls+' formats
-V, --version
Prints version information
OPTIONS:
-b, --binary-path <PATH>
Sets the path to the compiled binary to be used
--commit-sha <COMMIT HASH>
Sets the hash of the commit used to generate the code coverage data
--excl-br-line <regex>
Lines in covered files containing this marker will be excluded from branch coverage.
--excl-br-start <regex>
Marks the beginning of a section excluded from branch coverage. The current line is part of this section.
--excl-br-stop <regex>
Marks the end of a section excluded from branch coverage. The current line is part of this section.
--excl-line <regex>
Lines in covered files containing this marker will be excluded.
--excl-start <regex>
Marks the beginning of an excluded section. The current line is part of this section.
--excl-stop <regex>
Marks the end of an excluded section. The current line is part of this section.
--filter <filter>
Filters out covered/uncovered files. Use 'covered' to only return covered files, 'uncovered' to only return
uncovered files [possible values: covered, uncovered]
--ignore <PATH>...
Ignore files/directories specified as globs
--keep-only <PATH>...
Keep only files/directories specified as globs
--log <LOG>
Set the file where to log (or stderr or stdout). Defaults to 'stderr' [default: stderr]
-o, --output-path <PATH>
Specifies the output path
-t, --output-type <OUTPUT TYPE>
Sets a custom output type:
- *html* for a HTML coverage report;
- *coveralls* for the Coveralls specific format;
- *lcov* for the lcov INFO format;
- *covdir* for the covdir recursive JSON format;
- *coveralls+* for the Coveralls specific format with function information;
- *ade* for the ActiveData-ETL specific format;
- *files* to only return a list of files.
[default: lcov] [possible values: ade, lcov, coveralls, coveralls+, files, covdir, html]
--path-mapping <PATH>...
-p, --prefix-dir <PATH>
Specifies a prefix to remove from the paths (e.g. if grcov is run on a different machine than the one that
generated the code coverage information)
--service-job-id <SERVICE JOB ID>
Sets the service job id [aliases: service-job-number]
--service-name <SERVICE NAME>
Sets the service name
--service-number <SERVICE NUMBER>
Sets the service number
--service-pull-request <SERVICE PULL REQUEST>
Sets the service pull request number
-s, --source-dir <DIRECTORY>
Specifies the root directory of the source files
--threads <NUMBER>
[default: 11]
--token <TOKEN>
Sets the repository token from Coveralls, required for the 'coveralls' and 'coveralls+' formats
--vcs-branch <VCS BRANCH>
Set the branch for coveralls report. Defaults to 'master' [default: master]
ARGS:
<paths>...
Sets the input paths to use
Grcov can be downloaded from releases or, if you have Rust installed,
you can run cargo install grcov
.
Nightly Rust is required to use grcov for Rust coverage. Alternatively, you can export RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=1
, which basically turns your stable rustc into a Nightly one.
- Install the llvm-tools or llvm-tools-preview component:
rustup component add llvm-tools-preview
- Ensure that the following environment variable is set up:
export RUSTFLAGS="-Zinstrument-coverage"
- Build your code:
cargo build
- Run your tests:
cargo test
In the CWD, you will see a .profraw
file has been generated. This contains the profiling information that grcov will parse, alongside with your binary.
Pass --coverage
to clang
or gcc
(or for older gcc versions pass -ftest-coverage
and -fprofile-arcs
options (see gcc docs).
- Ensure that the following environment variables are set up:
export CARGO_INCREMENTAL=0
export RUSTFLAGS="-Zprofile -Ccodegen-units=1 -Copt-level=0 -Clink-dead-code -Coverflow-checks=off -Zpanic_abort_tests -Cpanic=abort"
export RUSTDOCFLAGS="-Cpanic=abort"
These will ensure that things like dead code elimination do not skew the coverage.
- Build your code:
cargo build
If you look in target/debug/deps
dir you will see .gcno
files have appeared. These are the locations that could be covered.
- Run your tests:
cargo test
In the target/debug/deps/
dir you will now also see .gcda
files. These contain the hit counts on which of those locations have been reached. Both sets of files are used as inputs to grcov
.
Generate a html coverage report like this:
grcov . -s . --binary-path ./target/debug/YOUR_BINARY -t html --branch --ignore-not-existing -o ./target/debug/coverage/
N.B.: The --binary-path
argument is only necessary for source-based coverage.
You can see the report in target/debug/coverage/index.html
.
(or alterntatively with -t lcov
grcov will output a lcov compatible coverage report that you could then feed into lcov's genhtml
command).
By passing -t lcov
you could generate an lcov.info file and pass it to genhtml:
genhtml -o ./target/debug/coverage/ --show-details --highlight --ignore-errors source --legend ./target/debug/lcov.info
Coverage can also be generated in coveralls format:
grcov . --binary-path ./target/debug/YOUR_BINARY -t coveralls -s . --token YOUR_COVERALLS_TOKEN > coveralls.json
Here is an example of .travis.yml file for source-based coverage:
language: rust
before_install:
- curl -L https://github.com/mozilla/grcov/releases/latest/download/grcov-linux-x86_64.tar.bz2 | tar jxf -
matrix:
include:
- os: linux
rust: nightly
script:
- rustup component add llvm-tools-preview
- export RUSTFLAGS="-Zinstrument-coverage"
- cargo build --verbose
- LLVM_PROFILE_FILE="your_name-%p-%m.profraw" cargo test --verbose
- ./grcov . --binary-path ./target/debug/YOUR_BINARY -s . -t lcov --branch --ignore-not-existing --ignore "/*" -o lcov.info
- bash <(curl -s https://codecov.io/bash) -f lcov.info
Here is an example of .travis.yml file:
language: rust
before_install:
- curl -L https://github.com/mozilla/grcov/releases/latest/download/grcov-linux-x86_64.tar.bz2 | tar jxf -
matrix:
include:
- os: linux
rust: nightly
script:
- export CARGO_INCREMENTAL=0
- export RUSTFLAGS="-Zprofile -Ccodegen-units=1 -Copt-level=0 -Clink-dead-code -Coverflow-checks=off -Zpanic_abort_tests -Cpanic=abort"
- export RUSTDOCFLAGS="-Cpanic=abort"
- cargo build --verbose $CARGO_OPTIONS
- cargo test --verbose $CARGO_OPTIONS
- |
zip -0 ccov.zip `find . \( -name "YOUR_PROJECT_NAME*.gc*" \) -print`;
./grcov ccov.zip -s . -t lcov --llvm --branch --ignore-not-existing --ignore "/*" -o lcov.info;
bash <(curl -s https://codecov.io/bash) -f lcov.info;
grcov provides the following output types:
Output Type -t |
Description |
---|---|
lcov (default) | lcov's INFO format that is compatible with the linux coverage project. |
ade | ActiveData-ETL format. Only useful for Mozilla projects. |
coveralls | Generates coverage in Coveralls format. |
coveralls+ | Like coveralls but with function level information. |
files | Output a file list of covered or uncovered source files. |
covdir | Provides coverage in a recursive JSON format. |
html | Output a HTML coverage report. |
This project is using pre-commit. Please run pre-commit install
to install the git pre-commit hooks on your clone. Instructions on how to install pre-commit can be found here.
Every time you will try to commit, pre-commit will run checks on your files to make sure they follow our style standards and they aren't affected by some simple issues. If the checks fail, pre-commit won't let you commit.
Build with:
cargo build
To run unit tests:
cargo test --lib
To run integration tests, it is suggested to use the Docker image defined in tests/Dockerfile. Simply build the image to run them:
docker build -t marcocas/grcov -f tests/Dockerfile .
Otherwise, if you don't want to use Docker, the only prerequisite is to install GCC 7, setting the GCC_CXX
environment variable to g++-7
and the GCOV
environment variable to gcov-7
. Then run the tests with:
cargo test
- GCC 4.9 or higher is required (if parsing coverage artifacts generated by GCC).
Published under the MPL 2.0 license.