coverage sub-command to produce code coverage
reports on repositories that can be tested with bazel coverage. Due
to the idiosyncrasies of the various language ecosystems, it is not
always trivial to make this work for a given project.
This page documents the general process for creating and viewing
coverage reports, and also features some language-specific notes for
languages whose configuration is well-known. It is best read by first
reading the general section, and then
reading about the requirements for a specific language. Note also the
remote execution section, which requires some
additional considerations.
While a lot of customization is possible, this document focuses on
producing and consuming lcov reports, which is currently the
most well-supported route.
Creating a coverage report
Preparation
The basic workflow for creating coverage reports requires the following:- A basic repository with test targets
- A toolchain with the language-specific code coverage tools installed
- A correct “instrumentation” configuration
--instrumentation_filter
flag, which specifies a filter for targets that are tested with the
instrumentation enabled. To enable instrumentation for tests, the
--instrument_test_targets
flag is required.
By default, bazel tries to match the target package(s), and prints the
relevant filter as an INFO message.
Running coverage
To produce a coverage report, usebazel coverage --combined_report=lcov [target]. This runs the
tests for the target, generating coverage reports in the lcov format
for each file.
Once finished, bazel runs an action that collects all the produced
coverage files, and merges them into one, which is then finally
created under $(bazel info output_path)/_coverage/_coverage_report.dat.
Coverage reports are also produced if tests fail, though note that
this does not extend to the failed tests - only passing tests are
reported.
Viewing coverage
The coverage report is only output in the non-human-readablelcov
format. From this, we can use the genhtml utility (part of the lcov
project) to produce a report that can be viewed in a web
browser:
genhtml reads the source code as well, to annotate missing
coverage in these files. For this to work, it is expected that
genhtml is executed in the root of the bazel project.
To view the result, simply open the index.html file produced in the
genhtml directory in any web browser.
For further help and information around the genhtml tool, or the
lcov coverage format, see the lcov project.
Remote execution
Running with remote test execution currently has a few caveats:- The report combination action cannot yet run remotely. This is
because Bazel does not consider the coverage output files as part of
its graph (see this issue), and can therefore
not correctly treat them as inputs to the combination action. To
work around this, use
--strategy=CoverageReport=local.- Note: It may be necessary to specify something like
--strategy=CoverageReport=local,remoteinstead, if Bazel is set up to trylocal,remote, due to how Bazel resolves strategies.
- Note: It may be necessary to specify something like
--remote_download_minimaland similar flags can also not be used as a consequence of the former.- Bazel will currently fail to create coverage information if tests
have been cached previously. To work around this,
--nocache_test_resultscan be set specifically for coverage runs, although this of course incurs a heavy cost in terms of test times. --experimental_split_coverage_postprocessingand--experimental_fetch_all_coverage_outputs- Usually coverage is run as part of the test action, and so by default, we don’t get all coverage back as outputs of the remote execution by default. These flags override the default and obtain the coverage data. See this issue for more details.
Language-specific configuration
Java
Java should work out-of-the-box with the default configuration. The bazel toolchains contain everything necessary for remote execution, as well, including JUnit.Python
See therules_python coverage docs
for additional steps needed to enable coverage support in Python.