Gcovr User Guide

Gcovr provides a utility for managing the use of the GNU gcov utility and generating summarized code coverage results. This command is inspired by the Python coverage.py package, which provides a similar utility for Python.

The gcovr command can produce different kinds of coverage reports:

  • default: compact human-readable summaries
  • --xml: machine readable XML reports in Cobertura format
  • --html: HTML summaries
  • --html-details: HTML report with annotated source files

Thus, gcovr can be viewed as a command-line alternative to the lcov utility, which runs gcov and generates an HTML-formatted report. The development of gcovr was motivated by the need for text summaries and XML reports.

The Gcovr Home Page is http://gcovr.com. Automated test results are available through Travis CI and Appveyor. Gcovr is available under the BSD license.

This documentation describes Gcovr 4.1.

This User Guide provides the following sections:

Related documents:

Getting Started

The gcovr command provides a summary of the lines that have been executed in a program. Code coverage statistics help you discover untested parts of a program, which is particularly important when assessing code quality. Well-tested code is a characteristic of high quality code, and software developers often assess code coverage statistics when deciding if software is ready for a release.

The gcovr command can be used to analyze programs compiled with GCC. The following sections illustrate the application of gcovr to test coverage of the following program:

 1 // example.cpp
 2 
 3 int foo(int param)
 4 {
 5     if (param)
 6     {
 7         return 1;
 8     }
 9     else
10     {
11         return 0;
12     }
13 }
14 
15 int main(int argc, char* argv[])
16 {
17     foo(0);
18 
19     return 0;
20 }

This code executes several subroutines in this program, but some lines in the program are not executed.

Tabular Output of Code Coverage

We compile example1.cpp with the GCC compiler as follows:

g++ -fprofile-arcs -ftest-coverage -fPIC -O0 example.cpp -o program

Note that we compile this program without optimization, because optimization may combine lines of code and otherwise change the flow of execution in the program. Additionally, we compile with the -fprofile-arcs -ftest-coverage -fPIC compiler options, which add logic to generate output files that can be processed by the gcov command.

The compiler generates the program executable. When we execute this command:

./program

the files example1.gcno and example1.gcda are generated. These files are processed with by gcov to generate code coverage statistics. The gcovr command calls gcov and summarizes these code coverage statistics in various formats. For example:

gcovr -r .

generates a text summary of the lines executed:

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                           GCC Code Coverage Report
Directory: .
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
File                                       Lines    Exec  Cover   Missing
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
example.cpp                                    7       6    85%   7
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL                                          7       6    85%
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Each line of this output includes a summary for a given source file, including the number of lines instrumented, the number of lines executed, the percentage of lines executed, and a summary of the line numbers that were not executed. To improve clarity, gcovr uses an aggressive approach to grouping uncovered lines and will combine uncovered lines separated by “non-code” lines (blank, freestanding braces, and single-line comments) into a single region. As a result, the number of lines listed in the “Missing” list may be greater than the difference of the “Lines” and “Exec” columns.

The -r option specifies the root directory for the files that are being analyzed. This allows gcovr to generate a simpler report (without absolute path names), and it allows system header files to be excluded from the analysis.

Note that gcov accumulates statistics by line. Consequently, it works best with a programming style that places only one statement on each line.

Tabular Output of Branch Coverage

The gcovr command can also summarize branch coverage using the --branches option:

gcovr -r . --branches

This generates a tabular output that summarizes the number of branches, the number of branches taken and the branches that were not completely covered:

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                           GCC Code Coverage Report
Directory: .
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
File                                    Branches   Taken  Cover   Missing
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
example.cpp                                    2       1    50%   5
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL                                          2       1    50%
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

XML Output

The default output format for gcovr is to generate a tabular summary in plain text. The gcovr command can also generate an XML output using the --xml and --xml-pretty options:

gcovr -r . --xml-pretty

This generates an XML summary of the lines executed:

<?xml version="1.0" ?>
<!DOCTYPE coverage
  SYSTEM 'http://cobertura.sourceforge.net/xml/coverage-04.dtd'>
<coverage branch-rate="0.5" branches-covered="1" branches-valid="2"
 complexity="0.0" line-rate="0.8571428571428571" lines-covered="6"
 lines-valid="7" timestamp="1530565116" version="gcovr 4.1">
 <sources>
  <source>.</source>
 </sources>
 <packages>
  <package branch-rate="0.5" complexity="0.0" line-rate="0.8571428571428571"
   name="">
   <classes>
    <class branch-rate="0.5" complexity="0.0" filename="example.cpp"
     line-rate="0.8571428571428571" name="example_cpp">
     <methods/>
     <lines>
      <line branch="false" hits="1" number="3"/>
      <line branch="true" condition-coverage="50% (1/2)" hits="1" number="5">
       <conditions>
        <condition coverage="50%" number="0" type="jump"/>
       </conditions>
      </line>
      <line branch="false" hits="0" number="7"/>
      <line branch="false" hits="1" number="11"/>
      <line branch="false" hits="1" number="15"/>
      <line branch="false" hits="1" number="17"/>
      <line branch="false" hits="1" number="19"/>
     </lines>
    </class>
   </classes>
  </package>
 </packages>
</coverage>

This XML format is in the Cobertura XML format suitable for import and display within the Jenkins and Hudson continuous integration servers using the Cobertura Plugin.

The --xml option generates a denser XML output, and the --xml-pretty option generates an indented XML output that is easier to read. Note that the XML output contains more information than the tabular summary. The tabular summary shows the percentage of covered lines, while the XML output includes branch statistics and the number of times that each line was covered. Consequently, XML output can be used to support performance optimization in the same manner that gcov does.

HTML Output

The gcovr command can also generate a simple HTML output using the --html option:

gcovr -r . --html -o example-html.html

This generates a HTML summary of the lines executed. In this example, the file example1.html is generated, which has the following output:

_images/screenshot-html.png

The default behavior of the --html option is to generate HTML for a single webpage that summarizes the coverage for all files. The HTML is printed to standard output, but the -o (--output) option is used to specify a file that stores the HTML output.

The --html-details option is used to create a separate web page for each file. Each of these web pages includes the contents of file with annotations that summarize code coverage. Consider the following command:

gcovr -r . --html --html-details -o example-html-details.html

This generates the following HTML page for the file example1.cpp:

_images/screenshot-html-details.example.cpp.png

Note that the --html-details option can only be used with the -o (--output) option. For example, if the --output option specifies the output file coverage.html, then the web pages generated for each file will have names of the form coverage.<filename>.html.

The gcovr Command

The gcovr command recursively searches a directory tree to find gcov coverage files, and generates a text summary of the code coverage. The --help option generates the following summary of the gcovr command line options:

gcovr

A utility to run gcov and summarize the coverage in simple reports.

usage: gcovr [options] [search_paths...]

See <http://gcovr.com/> for the full manual.

Options

search_paths

Search these directories for coverage files. Defaults to –root and –object-directory.

-h, --help

Show this help message, then exit.

--version

Print the version number, then exit.

-v, --verbose

Print progress messages. Please include this output in bug reports.

-r <root>, --root <root>

The root directory of your source files. Defaults to ‘.’, the current directory. File names are reported relative to this root. The –root is the default –filter.

--fail-under-line <min>

Exit with a status of 2 if the total line coverage is less than MIN. Can be ORed with exit status of ‘–fail-under-branch’ option.

--fail-under-branch <min>

Exit with a status of 4 if the total branch coverage is less than MIN. Can be ORed with exit status of ‘–fail-under-line’ option.

--source-encoding <source_encoding>

Select the source file encoding. Defaults to the system default encoding (UTF-8).

--html-medium-threshold <medium>

If the coverage is below MEDIUM, the value is marked as low coverage in the HTML report. MEDIUM has to be lower than or equal to value of –html-high-threshold. If MEDIUM is equal to value of –html-high-threshold the report has only high and low coverage. Default is 75.0.

--html-high-threshold <high>

If the coverage is below HIGH, the value is marked as medium coverage in the HTML report. HIGH has to be greater than or equal to value of –html-medium-threshold. If HIGH is equal to value of –html-medium-threshold the report has only high and low coverage. Default is 90.0.

Output Options

Gcovr prints a text report by default, but can switch to XML or HTML.

-o <output>, --output <output>

Print output to this filename. Defaults to stdout. Required for –html-details.

-b, --branches

Report the branch coverage instead of the line coverage. For text report only.

-u, --sort-uncovered

Sort entries by increasing number of uncovered lines. For text and HTML report.

-p, --sort-percentage

Sort entries by increasing percentage of uncovered lines. For text and HTML report.

-x, --xml

Generate a Cobertura XML report.

--xml-pretty

Pretty-print the XML report. Implies –xml. Default: False.

--html

Generate a HTML report.

--html-details

Add annotated source code reports to the HTML report. Requires –output as a basename for the reports. Implies –html.

--html-title <title>

Use TITLE as title for the HTML report. Default is Head.

--html-absolute-paths

Use absolute paths to link the –html-details reports. Defaults to relative links.

--html-encoding <html_encoding>

Override the declared HTML report encoding. Defaults to UTF-8. See also –source-encoding.

-s, --print-summary

Print a small report to stdout with line & branch percentage coverage. This is in addition to other reports. Default: False.

Filter Options

Filters decide which files are included in the report. Any filter must match, and no exclude filter must match. A filter is a regular expression that matches a path. Filter paths use forward slashes, even on Windows.

-f <filter>, --filter <filter>

Keep only source files that match this filter. Can be specified multiple times. If no filters are provided, defaults to –root.

-e <exclude>, --exclude <exclude>

Exclude source files that match this filter. Can be specified multiple times.

--gcov-filter <gcov_filter>

Keep only gcov data files that match this filter. Can be specified multiple times.

--gcov-exclude <gcov_exclude>

Exclude gcov data files that match this filter. Can be specified multiple times.

--exclude-directories <exclude_dirs>

Exclude directories that match this regex while searching raw coverage files. Can be specified multiple times.

GCOV Options

The ‘gcov’ tool turns raw coverage files (.gcda and .gcno) into .gcov files that are then processed by gcovr. The gcno files are generated by the compiler. The gcda files are generated when the instrumented program is executed.

--gcov-executable <gcov_cmd>

Use a particular gcov executable. Must match the compiler you are using, e.g. ‘llvm-cov gcov’ for Clang. Can include additional arguments. Defaults to the GCOV environment variable, or ‘gcov’: ‘gcov’.

--exclude-unreachable-branches

Exclude branch coverage with LCOV/GCOV exclude markers. Additionally, exclude branch coverage from lines without useful source code (often, compiler-generated “dead” code). Default: False.

-g, --use-gcov-files

Use existing gcov files for analysis. Default: False.

--gcov-ignore-parse-errors

Skip lines with parse errors in GCOV files instead of exiting with an error. A report will be shown on stderr. Default: False.

--object-directory <objdir>

Override normal working directory detection. Gcovr needs to identify the path between gcda files and the directory where the compiler was originally run. Normally, gcovr can guess correctly. This option specifies either the path from gcc to the gcda file (i.e. gcc’s ‘-o’ option), or the path from the gcda file to gcc’s working directory.

-k, --keep

Keep gcov files after processing. This applies both to files that were generated by gcovr, or were supplied via the –use-gcov-files option. Default: False.

-d, --delete

Delete gcda files after processing. Default: False.

-j <gcov_parallel>

Set the number of threads to use in parallel.

The above Getting Started guide illustrates the use of some command line options. Using Filters is discussed below.

Using Filters

Gcovr tries to only report coverage for files within your project, not for your libraries. This is influenced by the following options:

These options take filters. A filter is a regular expression that matches a file path. Because filters are regexes, you will have to escape “special” characters with a backslash \.

Always use forward slashes / as path separators, even on Windows:

  • wrong: --filter C:\project\src\
  • correct: --filter C:/project/src/

If the filter looks like an absolute path, it is matched against an absolute path. Otherwise, the filter is matched against a relative path, where that path is relative to the current directory. Examples of relative filters:

  • --filter subdir/ matches only that subdirectory
  • --filter '\.\./src/' matches a sibling directory ../src. But because a dot . matches any character in a regex, we have to escape it. You have to use additional shell escaping. This example uses single quotes for Bash or POSIX shell.
  • --filter '(.+/)?foo\.c$' matches only files called foo.c. The regex must match from the start of the relative path, so we ignore any leading directory parts with (.+/)?. The $ at the end ensures that the path ends here.

If no --filter is provided, the --root is turned into a default filter. Therefore, files outside of the --root directory are excluded.

To be included in a report, the source file must match any --filter, and must not match any --exclude filter.

The --gcov-filter and --gcov-exclude filters apply to the .gcov files created by gcov. This is useful mostly when running gcov yourself, and then invoking gcovr with -g/--use-gcov-files. But these filters also apply when gcov is launched by gcovr.

Acknowledgements

Gcovr is maintained by:

William Hart, John Siirola, and Lukas Atkinson.

The following developers contributed to gcovr (ordered alphabetically):

Andrew Stone, Arvin Schnell, Attie Grande, Bernhard Breinbauer, Carlos Jenkins, Christian Taedcke, Dave George, Dom Postorivo, goriy, ja11sop, James Reynolds, Jessica Levine, Joel Klinghed, John Siirola, Jörg Kreuzberger, Kai Blaschke, Kevin Cai, libPhipp, Lukas Atkinson, Luke Woydziak, Marek Kurdej, Martin Mraz, Matsumoto Taichi, Matthew Stadelman, Matthias Schmieder, Matthieu Darbois, Michał Pszona, Michael Förderer, Mikael Salson, Mikk Leini, Nikolaj Schumacher, Piotr Dziwinski, Reto Schneider, Robert Rosengren, Songmin Li, Steven Myint, Sylvestre Ledru, trapzero, William Hart, and possibly others.

The development of Gcovr has been partially supported by Sandia National Laboratories. Sandia National Laboratories is a multi-program laboratory managed and operated by Sandia Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of Lockheed Martin Corporation, for the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration under contract DE-AC04-94AL85000.