View Source mix test.coverage (Mix v1.12.3)
Build report from exported test coverage.
When using --cover
with the default coverage tool,
the coverage tool supports an :export
option to
export the coverage results into a directory. This is
useful when there are multiple test suites (such as in
an umbrella app) or when a single test suite is partitioned
across multiple runs when using the mix test --partitions N
option.
Once multiple test runs are exported, this task can be used to generate an aggregated report.
Example: aggregating partitioned runs
If you partition your tests across multiple runs, you can unify the report as shown below:
MIX_TEST_PARTITION=1 mix test --partitions 2 --cover
MIX_TEST_PARTITION=2 mix test --partitions 2 --cover
mix test.coverage
This works because the --partitions
option
automatically exports the coverage results.
Example: aggregating coverage reports from all umbrella children
If you run mix test.coverage
inside an umbrella,
it will automatically gather exported cover results
from all umbrella children - as long as the coverage
results have been exported, like this:
# from the umbrella root
mix test --cover --export-coverage default
mix test.coverage
Of course, if you want to actually partition the tests, you can also do:
# from the umbrella root
MIX_TEST_PARTITION=1 mix test --partitions 2 --cover
MIX_TEST_PARTITION=2 mix test --partitions 2 --cover
mix test.coverage
On the other hand, if you want partitioned tests but per-app reports, you can do:
# from the umbrella root
MIX_TEST_PARTITION=1 mix test --partitions 2 --cover
MIX_TEST_PARTITION=2 mix test --partitions 2 --cover
mix cmd mix test.coverage
When running test.coverage
from the umbrella root, it
will use the :test_coverage
configuration from the umbrella
root.
Finally, note the coverage itself is not measured across the projects themselves. For example, if project B depends on A, and if there is code in A that is only executed from project B, those lines will not be marked as covered, which is important, as those projects should be developed and tested in isolation.