What are your tips for interpreting gcov output in order to improve coverage?
I'm successfully using gcov in my project:
- I can build my project with gcov flags:
-fprofile-arcs -ftest-coverage
- I link with the
-lgcov
option - I run my unit test program and lots of
gcda
andgcno
files are produced. - I run gcov lots of times and lots of
gcov
files are produced. - I summarise the results and produce a list of lines like this:
#####: 42: virtual double run_time() const { return 0; }
I then go 'doh!' and write a test which calls that missing method.
The above example line is quite easy to diagnose - gcov told me the exact method I was not calling.
I've also had an example of a copy constructor being flagged by gcov, but I'm able to step through it using my Visual Studio debugger. The solution there was to realise that gcov was suffering from RVO which elided the copy, but writing a test which forced a copy fixed that.
I h开发者_JS百科ave a couple of other examples which I cannot figure out:
1.
File.cpp
#####: 78:}
gcov seems to be flagging the close brace of a namespace which is the last line of a file.
2.
File.h
#####: 33: class FooBase: public IResult {
What is gcov trying to tell me here? I can't think of a call to make here.
Update 1: I've detected thatFooBase
has a default constructor, which if only 'called' by a subclass is not the same as calling it by instantiating it, as far as gcov
is concerned.
Update 2: I've been using djgpp/gcc 4.4.4
which produced the above results. However, by using MinGW/gcc 4.5.2
the 'aberrations' disappear and with a little more work I've been able to get to 100% line coverage.
Please write your answers with either a single tip for the unwary gcov user, or an answer to one of my examples.
As it is said in gcov.c
/* For lines which don't exist in the .bb file, print '-' before
the source line. For lines which exist but were never
executed, print '#####' before the source line. Otherwise,
print the execution count before the source line. There are
16 spaces of indentation added before the source line so that
tabs won't be messed up. */
I suggest you use a debug builds for gcov and for VS when trying to get a coverage.
The line you talk about is going to be inlined in release mode. That means the line itself will never be counted (although frankly the increment of the counter could have been moved to the place where the function gets inlined... but g++ does not do that yet.)
In order to fix the problem add -g
to your g++ command line to keep all debug. You probably also want to make sure you defined -D_DEBUG
. Actually, the documentation generally tells you to use -g
.
Finally, you want to avoid optimizations with -O0
.
On my end, I like to also use -fprofile-arcs
and -ftest-coverage
.
As mentioned in a comment in another answer, using -fno-elide-constructors
and -fno-default-inline
may also help with coverage of "missing" constructors and inline functions.
In regard to the opening brace being flagged, g++ is likely to create a constructor (possibly the copy constructor) and show it on that first class declaration line. There may be other compiler specific functions created like that and at times it is just impossible to hit them without extremely complicated test cases... I encounter that problem all the time.
As suggested by climbatizer, you could use lcov. That gives you HTML as output with easy to read tables that you can browse quickly. I have such an example here:
http://lcov.csspp.org/csspp-1.0.5/lib/index.html
As we can see, the library is 100% covered by all the tests. But somehow the assembler.cpp file says that one function is not covered. I have no idea which function that is though since 100% of the code I wrote is covered... So I just ignore such.
Recently I've been using cmake+"make Experimental"+lcov. I highly recommend that combination. Even if not using cmake, take a look at lcov.
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