cover - report coverage statistics
version 1.44
cover -test
cover -report html_basic
Report coverage statistics in a variety of formats.
The summary option produces a short textual summary. Other reports are available by using the report option.
The following reports are currently available:
html - detailed HTML reports (default)
html_basic - detailed HTML reports with syntax highlighting
text - detailed textual summary
compilation - output in a format similar to Perl errors
json - output in a JSON format
vim - show coverage information in vim gutter
The following command line options are supported:
-h -help - show help
-i -info - show documentation
-v -version - show version
-silent - don't print informational messages (default off)
-summary - give summary report (default on)
-report report_format - report format (default html)
-outputdir dir - directory for output (default given db)
-launch - launch report in viewer (if avail) (default off)
-select filename - only report on the file (default all)
-ignore filename - don't report on the file (default none)
-select_re RE - append to REs of files to select (default none)
-ignore_re RE - append to REs of files to ignore (default none)
-relative_only - for XS, ignore absolute paths (default off)
-gcov_chdir - for XS, run gcov in subdirs (default off)
-write [db] - write the merged database (default off)
-delete - drop database(s) (default off)
-dump_db - dump database(s) (for debugging) (default off)
-coverage criterion - report on criterion (default all available)
-test - drop database(s) and run make test (default off)
-gcov - run gcov to cover XS code (default on if using gcc)
-make make_prog - use the given 'make' program for 'make test'
-prefer_lib - prefer files in lib (default off)
-ignore_covered_err - allow coverung uncoverable code (default off)
-add_uncoverable_point string
-delete_uncoverable_point string
-clean_uncoverable_points
-uncoverable_file file
other options specific to the report format
coverage_database [coverage_database ...]
The -report
, -select
, -ignore
, -select_re
, -ignore_re
, and -coverage
options may be specified multiple times.
The following -report
options are available in the core module. Other reports may be available if they've been installed from external packages.
HTML reporting. Percentage thresholds are colour-coded and configurable via -report_c0 <integer>, -report_c1 <integer> and -report_c2 <integer>.:
0% 75% 90% 100%
| .. | .. | .. |
<c0 <c1 <c2 c3
red yellow orange green
HTML reporting with syntax highlighting if PPI::HTML or Perl::Tidy module is detected. Like html|html_minimal reporting, percentage thresholds are colour-coded and configurable.
Plain text reporting.
A textual report in a format similar to that output by Perl itself such that the report may be used by your editor or other reporting tools to show where coverage is missing.
A report in JSON format.
A report suitable for use with the vim editor to show coverage data in the sign column.
Any number of coverage databases may be specified on the command line. These databases will be merged and the reports will be based on the merged information. If no databases are specified the default database (cover_db) will be used.
The -write
option will write out the merged database. If no name is given for the new database, the first database read in will be overwritten. When this option is used no reports are generated by default.
Specify the -select
, -select_re
, -ignore
, and -ignore_re
options to report on specific files. -select
and -ignore
are interpreted as shell globs; -select_re
and -ignore_re
are interpreted as regular expressions.
Specify -coverage
options to report on specific criteria. By default all available information on all criteria in all files will be reported. Available coverage options are statement, branch, condition, subroutine, pod, and default (which equates to all available options). However, if you know you only want coverage information for certain criteria it is better to only collect data for those criteria in the first place by specifying them at that point. This will make the data collection and reporting processes faster and less memory intensive. See the documentation for Devel::Cover for more information.
If you want all *except* some criteria, then you can say something like -coverage default,-pod
.
If you specify multiple -report
options, make sure that they do not conflict. For example, the different HTML reports will overwrite each other's results.
The -test
option will delete the databases and run your tests to generate new coverage data before reporting on it. Devel::Cover knows how to work with standard Perl Makefiles as well as Module::Build based distributions. For detailed instructions see the documentation for ExtUtils::MakeMaker at https://metacpan.org/module/ExtUtils::MakeMaker or for Module::Build at https://metacpan.org/module/Module::Build both of which come as standard in recent Perl distributions.
The -gcov
option will try to run gcov on any XS code. This requires that you are using gcc of course. If you are using the -test
option will be turned on by default. If you have XS code in subdirectories, you will probably need to add the -gcov_chdir
option since gcov seems to work better with that.
The -prefer_lib
option tells Devel::Cover to report on files in the lib directory even if they were used from the blib directory.
The -ignore_covered_err
option will not flag an error if uncoverable code is covered.
The following exit values are returned:
0 All operations were completed successfully.
>0 An error occurred.
With the -test option the exit status of the underlying test run is returned.
Did I mention that this is alpha code?
See the BUGS file.
Copyright 2001-2024, Paul Johnson (paul@pjcj.net)
This software is free. It is licensed under the same terms as Perl itself.
The latest version of this software should be available from my homepage: http://www.pjcj.net