sbt-scoverage is a plugin for SBT that integrates the scoverage code coverage library. Find out more about scoverage.
Join the scoverage google group for help, bug reports, feature requests, and general discussion on scoverage.
Add the plugin to your build with the following in project/plugins.sbt:
addSbtPlugin("org.scoverage" % "sbt-scoverage" % "1.3.2")
Then run the your tests with coverage enabled by entering:
$ sbt clean coverage test
or if you have integration tests as well
$ sbt clean coverage it:test
You can also enable coverage directly in your build:
coverageEnabled := true
After the tests have finished you should then run
$ sbt coverageReport
to generate the reports. You will find the coverage reports inside target/scoverage-report
. There are HTML and XML reports. The XML is useful if you need to programatically use the results, or if you're writing a tool.
If you're running the coverage reports from within an sbt console session (as
opposed to one command per sbt launch), then the coverage
command is sticky. To
turn it back off when you're done running reports, use the coverageOff
command or reset coverageEnabled
with set coverageEnabled := false
.
If you want to see a project that is already setup to use scoverage in both sbt and maven, then clone the scoverage samples project.
- The object containing the keys has changed from nested to top level so you might need to adjust the import. It's also an auto plugin now, so you might not need the import at all.
- There is an issue syncing the binary with the sbt-plugin-releases repo, so in the meantime add
resolvers += Resolver.url("scoverage-bintray", url("https://dl.bintray.com/sksamuel/sbt-plugins/"))(Resolver.ivyStylePatterns)
to your build.
If you are upgrading from 0.99.x then you must remove the instrumentSettings
from your build.sbt or Build.scala, as that is no longer needed.
Next, the keys have been renamed slightly. The new names begin with coverageXXX, eg coverageExcludedPackages and some have had their full name changed. You can see a full list of keys by opening the object ScoverageKeys.
By default, scoverage will generate reports for each project seperately. You can merge them into an aggregated report by invoking sbt coverageAggregate
. Note, you must do this after all the coverage data is complete as a separate command, so you cannot do sbt coverage test coverageAggregate
(at least until a way around this is found).
You can exclude classes from being considered for coverage measurement by providing semicolon-separated list of regular expressions.
Example:
coverageExcludedPackages := "<empty>;Reverse.*;.*AuthService.*;models\\.data\\..*"
The regular expressions are matched against the fully qualified class name, and must match the entire string to take effect.
Any matched classes will not be instrumented or included in the coverage report.
You can also mark sections of code with comments like:
// $COVERAGE-OFF$Disabling highlighting by default until a workaround for https://issues.scala-lang.org/browse/SI-8596 is found
...
// $COVERAGE-ON$
Any code between two such comments will not be instrumented or included in the coverage report.
You can use the following two keys to set the minimum coverage, and if you want to fail the build if the coverage is less than the minimum.
coverageMinimum := 80
coverageFailOnMinimum := true
If you are using Scala 2.11.1 or less, then highlighting will not work (due to this bug which was fixed in 2.11.2 scala/scala#3799). In that case you must disable highlighting by adding the following to your build:
coverageHighlighting := false
Scoverage does a lot of file writing behind the scenes in order to track which statements have been executed. If you are running into a scenario where your tests normally pass, but fail when scoverage is enabled, then the culprit can be one of the following:
- timing issues on futures and other async operations, try upping the timeouts by an order of magnitude.
- tests are run in a sandbox mode (such as with
java.security.PrivilegedAction<T>
), try running the tests outside of the sandbox.
If you have an open source project then you can add code coverage metrics with the excellent website http://coveralls.io. Scoverage will integrate with coveralls using the sbt-coveralls plugin.
If you want to visually browse statement coverage reports then use this plugin for SonarQube. It allows you to review overall project statement coverage as well as dig deeper into sub-modules, directories and source code files to see uncovered statements. Statement coverage measurement can become an integral part of your team's continuous integration process and a required quality standard.
This software is licensed under the Apache 2 license, quoted below.
Copyright 2013-2014 Stephen Samuel and contributors
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not
use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of
the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under
the License.