Feature #13901
closedAdd branch coverage
Description
I plan to add "branch coverage" (and "method coverage") as new target types of coverage.so, the coverage measurement library. I'd like to introduce this feature for Ruby 2.5.0. Let me to hear your opinions.
Basic Usage of the Coverage API¶
The sequence is the same as the current: (1) require "coverage.so", (2) start coverage measurement by Coverage.start
, (3) load a program being measured (typically, a test runner program), and (4) get the result by Coverage.result
.
When you pass to Coverage.start
with keyword argument "branches: true
", branch coverage measurement is enabled.
test.rb
require "coverage"
Coverage.start(lines: true, branches: true)
load "target.rb"
p Coverage.result
target.rb
1: if 1 == 0
2: p :match
3: else
4: p :not_match
5: end
By measuring coverage of target.rb, the result will be output (manually formatted):
$ ruby test.rb
:not_match
{".../target.rb" => {
:lines => [1, 0, nil, 1, nil],
:branches => {
[:if, 0, 1] => { [:then, 1, 2] => 0, [:else, 2, 4] => 1 }
}
}
[:if, 0, 1]
reads "if branch at Line 1", and [:then, 1, 2]
reads "then clause at Line 2". So, [:if,0,1] => { [:then,1,2]=>0, [:else,2,4]=>0 }
reads "the branch from Line 1 to Line 2 has never executed, and the branch from Line 1 to Line 4 has executed once."
The second number (0
of [:if, 0, 1]
) is a unique ID to avoid conflict, just in case where multiple branches are written in one line. This format of a key is discussed in "Key format" section.
Why needed¶
Traditional coverage (line coverage) misses a branch in one line. Branch coverage is useful to find such untested code. See the following example.
target.rb
p(:foo) unless 1 == 0
p(1 == 0 ? :foo : :bar)
The result is:
{".../target.rb" => {
:lines => [1, 1],
:branches => {
[:unless, 0, 1] => { [:else, 1, 1] => 0, [:then, 2, 1] => 1 },
[:if, 3, 2] => { [:then, 4, 2] => 0, [:else, 5, 2] => 1 }
}
}}
Line coverage tells coverage 100%, but branch coverage shows that the unless
statement of the first line has never taken true and that the ternary operator has never taken true.
Current status¶
I've already committed the feature in trunk as an experimental feature. To enable the feature, you need to set the environment variable COVERAGE_EXPERIMENTAL_MODE
= true
. I plan to activate this feature by default by Ruby 2.5 release, if there is no big problem.
Key format¶
The current implementation uses [<label>, <unique ID>, <lineno>]
, like [:if, 0, 1]
, to represent the site of branch. <unique ID>
is required for the case where multiple branches are in one line.
I think this format is arguable. I thought of some other candidates:
-
[<label>, <lineno>, <column-no>]
: A big problem, how should we handle TAB character? -
[<label>, <offset from file head>]
: Looks good for machine readability. - Are
<label>
and<lineno>
needed? They are useful for human, but normally, this result will be processed by a visualization script (such as SimpleCov).
What do you think? I'm now thinking that [<label>, <lineno>, <offset from file head>]
is reasonable, but it is hard for me to implement. I'll try later but parse.y is so difficult... (A patch is welcome!)
Compatibility¶
This API is 100% compatible. If no keyword argument is given, the result will be old format, i.e., a hash from filename to an array that represents line coverage.
# compatiblie mode
Coverage.start
load "target.rb"
p Coverage.result
#=> {".../target.rb" => [1, 1, 1, ...] }
# If "lines: true" is given, the result format differs slightly
Coverage.start(lines: true)
load "target.rb"
p Coverage.result
#=> {".../target.rb" => { :lines => [1, 1, 1, ...] } }
Method coverage¶
Method coverage is also supported. You can measure it by using Coverage.start(methods: true)
.
target.rb
1: def foo
2: end
3: def bar
4: end
5: def baz
6: end
7:
8: foo
9: foo
10: bar
result (manually formatted)
{".../target.rb"=> {
:methods => {
[:foo, 0, 1] => 2,
[:bar, 1, 3] => 1,
[:baz, 2, 5] => 0,
}
}}
Notes¶
-
if
statements whose condtion is literal, such asif true
andif false
, are not considered as a branch. -
while
,until
, andcase
are also supported. See Examples 2 and 3. -
This proposal is based on #9508. The proposal has some spec-level issues, but the work was really inspiring me.
Future work¶
-
Someone may want to know how many times an one-line block is executed, such as
n.times { }
. -
Someone may want to know how many times each method call is executed, such as
obj.foo.bar.baz
(For example, if methodfoo
always raises an exception, calls tobar
andbaz
are not executed.)
Some examples¶
Example 1¶
target.rb
1: if 1 == 0
2: p :match1
3: elsif 1 == 0
4: p :match2
5: else
6: p :not_match
7: end
result (manually formatted)
{"target.rb" => {
:lines => [1, 0, 1, 0, nil, 1, nil],
:branches => {
[:if, 1] => { [:then, 2] => 0, [:else, 3] => 1 },
[:if, 3] => { [:then, 4] => 0, [:else, 5] => 1 },
}
}
Example 2¶
target.rb
1:case :BOO
2:when :foo then p :foo
3:when :bar then p :bar
4:when :baz then p :baz
5:else p :other
6:end
7:
8:x = 3
9:case
10:when x == 0 then p :foo
11:when x == 1 then p :bar
12:when x == 2 then p :baz
13:else p :other
14:end
result (manually formatted)
{"target.rb" => {
:lines => [1, 0, 0, 0, 1, nil, nil, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, nil],
:branches => {
[:case, 1] => {
[:when, 2] => 0,
[:when, 3] => 0,
[:when, 4] => 0,
[:else, 5] => 1
},
[:case, 8] => {
[:when, 9] => 0,
[:when, 10] => 0,
[:when, 11] => 0,
[:else, 12] => 1
}
}
}
Example 3¶
target.rb
1:n = 0
2:while n < 100
3: n += 1
4:end
result (manually formatted)
{"target.rb" => {
:lines => [1, 101, 100, nil],
:branches => {
[:while, 2] => {
[:body, 3] => 100,
[:end, 5] => 1
}
}
}