Codecov CI CMake g++ cpp11 lcov Example
The goal of this project is to build project with following tools:
- C++ version:
C++11
- Build system:
CMake
- C++ compiler:
g++
or Visual Studio - Libraries:
STL
only - Code coverage report:
lcov
andOpenCppCoverage
(note: it should show the code coverage is below 100%) CodeCov
(code coverage is measured by CodeCov).- Source: multiple files
Goes to Richel Bilderbeek for inspiration and all work on Travis CI tutorials.
Here is a link to a project with the same structure (without lcov
),
and here is a list of all his Travis configuration examples.
To build the project you need to install CMake
. (Install instructions)
To display a code coverage report in the console, install lcov
. (Download lcov
, Instructions
)
- Compile with code coverage instrumentation enabled (GCC).
- Execute the tests to generate the coverage data.
- (Optionally) generate and customize reports with
lcov
. - Upload to CodeCov using the bash uploader.
Add to your .travis.yml
file:
addons:
apt:
packages: lcov
after_success:
# Create lcov report
- lcov --capture --directory . --output-file coverage.info
- lcov --remove coverage.info '/usr/*' --output-file coverage.info # filter system-files
- lcov --list coverage.info # debug info
# Uploading report to CodeCov
- bash <(curl -s https://codecov.io/bash) -f coverage.info || echo "Codecov did not collect coverage reports"
By default the bash uploader processes the coverage data using gcov when no file is supplied.
after_success:
- bash <(curl -s https://codecov.io/bash) || echo "Codecov did not collect coverage reports"
Add to your .travis.yml
file:
after_success:
- bash <(curl -s https://codecov.io/bash) -t uuid-repo-token
This repo can serve as the starting point for a new project. The following is worth noticing:
- Use of a build script instead of putting the commands into
.travis.yml
- Allows local testing
- Allows usage of
set -e
to error out with meaningfull messages on any command failure
- Separate testing source tree
- Allows to easily enable/disable testing
- Allows usage in parent projects (you don't want to build the tests if you are consumed)
- You may want to exclude coverage of test files which is easier when they are in a separate folder.
Remember to use full paths for patterns (like
'*/tests/*'
)
- Use of travis cache to cache manually build 3rd-party dependencies (like boost)
- Speeds up build
- More can be added (e.g.
ccache
) - Those need to be excluded from coverage info too
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.
- More documentation at https://docs.codecov.io
- Configure codecov through the
codecov.yml
https://docs.codecov.io/docs/codecov-yaml
We are happy to help if you have any questions. Please email our Support at [email protected]