Exclude by assembly level System.Diagnostics.CodeAnalysis.ExcludeFromCodeCoverage
8.7 KiB
Coverlet Integration with MSBuild
In this mode, Coverlet doesn't require any additional setup other than including the NuGet package in the unit test project. It integrates with the dotnet test infrastructure built into the .NET Core CLI and when enabled, will automatically generate coverage results after tests are run.
If a property takes multiple comma-separated values please note that you will have to add escaped quotes around the string like this: /p:Exclude=\"[coverlet.*]*,[*]Coverlet.Core*\", /p:Include=\"[coverlet.*]*,[*]Coverlet.Core*\", or /p:CoverletOutputFormat=\"json,opencover\".
Code Coverage
Enabling code coverage is as simple as setting the CollectCoverage property to true
dotnet test /p:CollectCoverage=true
After the above command is run, a coverage.json file containing the results will be generated in the root directory of the test project. A summary of the results will also be displayed in the terminal.
Coverage Output
Coverlet can generate coverage results in multiple formats, which is specified using the CoverletOutputFormat property. For example, the following command emits coverage results in the opencover format:
dotnet test /p:CollectCoverage=true /p:CoverletOutputFormat=opencover
Supported Formats:
- json (default)
- lcov
- opencover
- cobertura
- teamcity
You can specify multiple output formats by separating them with a comma (,).
The output of the coverage result can be specified using the CoverletOutput property.
dotnet test /p:CollectCoverage=true /p:CoverletOutput='./result.json'
To specify a directory where all results will be written to (especially if using multiple formats), end the value with a /.
dotnet test /p:CollectCoverage=true /p:CoverletOutput='./results/'
TeamCity Output
Coverlet can output basic code coverage statistics using TeamCity service messages.
dotnet test /p:CollectCoverage=true /p:CoverletOutputFormat=teamcity
The currently supported TeamCity statistics are:
| TeamCity Statistic Key | Description |
|---|---|
| CodeCoverageL | Line-level code coverage |
| CodeCoverageB | Branch-level code coverage |
| CodeCoverageM | Method-level code coverage |
| CodeCoverageAbsLTotal | The total number of lines |
| CodeCoverageAbsLCovered | The number of covered lines |
| CodeCoverageAbsBTotal | The total number of branches |
| CodeCoverageAbsBCovered | The number of covered branches |
| CodeCoverageAbsMTotal | The total number of methods |
| CodeCoverageAbsMCovered | The number of covered methods |
Merging Results
With Coverlet you can combine the output of multiple coverage runs into a single result.
dotnet test /p:CollectCoverage=true /p:MergeWith='/path/to/result.json'
The value given to /p:MergeWith must be a path to Coverlet's own json result format. The results in result.json will be read, and added to the new results written to by Coverlet.
Check the sample.
Threshold
Coverlet allows you to specify a coverage threshold below which it fails the build. This allows you to enforce a minimum coverage percent on all changes to your project.
dotnet test /p:CollectCoverage=true /p:Threshold=80
The above command will automatically fail the build if the line, branch or method coverage of any of the instrumented modules falls below 80%. You can specify what type of coverage to apply the threshold value to using the ThresholdType property. For example to apply the threshold check to only line coverage:
dotnet test /p:CollectCoverage=true /p:Threshold=80 /p:ThresholdType=line
You can specify multiple values for ThresholdType by separating them with commas. Valid values include line, branch and method.
By default, Coverlet will validate the threshold value against the coverage result of each module. The /p:ThresholdStat option allows you to change this behaviour and can have any of the following values:
- Minimum (Default): Ensures the coverage result of each module isn't less than the threshold
- Total: Ensures the total combined coverage result of all modules isn't less than the threshold
- Average: Ensures the average coverage result of all modules isn't less than the threshold
The following command will compare the threshold value with the overall total coverage of all modules:
dotnet test /p:CollectCoverage=true /p:Threshold=80 /p:ThresholdType=line /p:ThresholdStat=total
Excluding From Coverage
Attributes
You can ignore a method an entire class or assembly from code coverage by creating and applying the ExcludeFromCodeCoverage attribute present in the System.Diagnostics.CodeAnalysis namespace.
You can also ignore additional attributes by using the ExcludeByAttribute property (short name or full name supported):
dotnet test /p:CollectCoverage=true /p:ExcludeByAttribute="Obsolete,GeneratedCodeAttribute,CompilerGeneratedAttribute"
Source Files
You can also ignore specific source files from code coverage using the ExcludeByFile property
- Use single or multiple paths (separate by comma)
- Use absolute or relative paths (relative to the project directory)
- Use file path or directory path with globbing (e.g
dir1/*.cs)
dotnet test /p:CollectCoverage=true /p:ExcludeByFile=\"../dir1/class1.cs,../dir2/*.cs,../dir3/**/*.cs\"
Filters
Coverlet gives the ability to have fine grained control over what gets excluded using "filter expressions".
Syntax: /p:Exclude=[Assembly-Filter]Type-Filter
Wildcards
*=> matches zero or more characters?=> the prefixed character is optional
Examples
/p:Exclude="[*]*"=> Excludes all types in all assemblies (nothing is instrumented)/p:Exclude="[coverlet.*]Coverlet.Core.Coverage"=> Excludes the Coverage class in theCoverlet.Corenamespace belonging to any assembly that matchescoverlet.*(e.gcoverlet.core)/p:Exclude="[*]Coverlet.Core.Instrumentation.*"=> Excludes all types belonging toCoverlet.Core.Instrumentationnamespace in any assembly/p:Exclude="[coverlet.*.tests?]*"=> Excludes all types in any assembly starting withcoverlet.and ending with.testor.tests(the?makes thesoptional)/p:Exclude=\"[coverlet.*]*,[*]Coverlet.Core*\"=> Excludes assemblies matchingcoverlet.*and excludes all types belonging to theCoverlet.Corenamespace in any assembly
dotnet test /p:CollectCoverage=true /p:Exclude="[coverlet.*]Coverlet.Core.Coverage"
Coverlet goes a step in the other direction by also letting you explicitly set what can be included using the Include property.
Examples
/p:Include="[*]*"=> Includes all types in all assemblies (everything is instrumented)/p:Include="[coverlet.*]Coverlet.Core.Coverage"=> Includes the Coverage class in theCoverlet.Corenamespace belonging to any assembly that matchescoverlet.*(e.gcoverlet.core)/p:Include="[coverlet.*.tests?]*"=> Includes all types in any assembly starting withcoverlet.and ending with.testor.tests(the?makes thesoptional)
Both Exclude and Include properties can be used together but Exclude takes precedence. You can specify multiple filter expressions by separting them with a comma (,).
You can also include coverage of the test assembly itself by setting /p:IncludeTestAssembly to true.
Note for Powershell / VSTS users
To exclude or include multiple assemblies when using Powershell scripts or creating a .yaml file for a VSTS build %2c should be used as a separator. Msbuild will translate this symbol to ,.
/p:Exclude="[*]*Examples?%2c[*]*Startup"
VSTS builds do not require double quotes to be unescaped:
dotnet test --configuration $(buildConfiguration) --no-build /p:CollectCoverage=true /p:CoverletOutputFormat=cobertura /p:CoverletOutput=$(Build.SourcesDirectory)/TestResults/Coverage/ /p:Exclude="[MyAppName.DebugHost]*%2c[MyAppNamet.WebHost]*%2c[MyAppName.App]*"
SourceLink
Coverlet supports SourceLink custom debug information contained in PDBs. When you specify the --use-source-link flag in the global tool or /p:UseSourceLink=true property in the MSBuild command, Coverlet will generate results that contain the URL to the source files in your source control instead of absolute file paths.