I want to record test coverage per test case using eclEmma tool. The coverage should contain the % covered by that test case of the target class and also want to access the statements executed by that test case. Follwowing is the code which runs a test class and generates the coverage on test class itself.
package expJaCoCo;
public class Calculadora
{
public Calculadora() { }
public int add(int x, final int y) {
return x + y;
}
}
CalculadoraTest.java
package expJaCoCo;
import junit.framework.TestCase;
import org.junit.BeforeClass;
import org.junit.AfterClass;
import org.junit.Test;
public class CalculadoraTest extends TestCase
{
private Calculadora c1;
@BeforeClass
public void setUp() { c1 = new Calculadora(); }
@AfterClass
public void tearDown() { c1 = null; }
@Test
public void testAdd() { assertTrue(c1.add(1, 0) == 1); }
}
CoreTutorial.java
package expJaCoCo;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Map;
import org.jacoco.core.analysis.Analyzer;
import org.jacoco.core.analysis.CoverageBuilder;
import org.jacoco.core.analysis.IClassCoverage;
import org.jacoco.core.analysis.ICounter;
import org.jacoco.core.data.ExecutionDataStore;
import org.jacoco.core.instr.Instrumenter;
import org.jacoco.core.runtime.IRuntime;
import org.jacoco.core.runtime.LoggerRuntime;
import org.junit.runner.JUnitCore;
import org.junit.runner.Result;
public class CoreTutorial
{
/**
* A class loader that loads classes from in-memory data.
*/
public static class MemoryClassLoader extends ClassLoader
{
private final Map<String, byte[]> definitions = new HashMap<String, byte[]>();
/**
* Add a in-memory representation of a class.
*
* @param name name of the class
* @param bytes class definition
*/
public void addDefinition(final String name, final byte[] bytes) {
definitions.put(name, bytes);
}
@Override
protected Class<?> loadClass(final String name, final boolean resolve) throws ClassNotFoundException
{
final byte[] bytes = definitions.get(name);
if (bytes != null)
return defineClass(name, bytes, 0, bytes.length);
return super.loadClass(name, resolve);
}
}
private InputStream getTargetClass(final String name)
{
final String resource = '/' + name.replace('.', '/') + ".class";
return getClass().getResourceAsStream(resource);
}
private void printCounter(final String unit, final ICounter counter)
{
final Integer missed = Integer.valueOf(counter.getMissedCount());
final Integer total = Integer.valueOf(counter.getTotalCount());
System.out.printf("%s of %s %s missed%n", missed, total, unit);
}
private String getColor(final int status)
{
switch (status) {
case ICounter.NOT_COVERED:
return "red";
case ICounter.PARTLY_COVERED:
return "yellow";
case ICounter.FULLY_COVERED:
return "green";
}
return "";
}
private void runTutorial() throws Exception
{
final String targetName = CalculadoraTest.class.getName();
// For instrumentation and runtime we need a IRuntime instance to collect execution data:
final IRuntime runtime = new LoggerRuntime();
// The Instrumenter creates a modified version of our test target class that contains additional probes for execution data recording:
final Instrumenter instr = new Instrumenter(runtime);
final byte[] instrumented = instr.instrument(getTargetClass(targetName));
// Now we're ready to run our instrumented class and need to startup the runtime first:
runtime.startup();
// In this tutorial we use a special class loader to directly load the instrumented class definition from a byte[] instances.
final MemoryClassLoader memoryClassLoader = new MemoryClassLoader();
memoryClassLoader.addDefinition(targetName, instrumented);
final Class<?> targetClass = memoryClassLoader.loadClass(targetName);
// Here we execute our test target class through its Runnable interface:
/*final Runnable targetInstance = (Runnable) targetClass.newInstance();
targetInstance.run();*/
JUnitCore junit = new JUnitCore();
Result result = junit.run(targetClass);
System.out.println(result.getRunTime());
// At the end of test execution we collect execution data and shutdown the runtime:
final ExecutionDataStore executionData = new ExecutionDataStore();
runtime.collect(executionData, null, false);
runtime.shutdown();
// Together with the original class definition we can calculate coverage information:
final CoverageBuilder coverageBuilder = new CoverageBuilder();
final Analyzer analyzer = new Analyzer(executionData, coverageBuilder);
analyzer.analyzeClass(getTargetClass(targetName));
// Let's dump some metrics and line coverage information:
for (final IClassCoverage cc : coverageBuilder.getClasses())
{
System.out.printf("Coverage of class %s%n", cc.getName());
printCounter("instructions", cc.getInstructionCounter());
printCounter("branches", cc.getBranchCounter());
printCounter("lines", cc.getLineCounter());
printCounter("methods", cc.getMethodCounter());
printCounter("complexity", cc.getComplexityCounter());
for (int i = cc.getFirstLine(); i <= cc.getLastLine(); i++) {
System.out.printf("Line %s: %s%n", Integer.valueOf(i), getColor(cc.getLine(i).getStatus()));
}
}
}
public static void main(final String[] args) throws Exception {
new CoreTutorial().runTutorial();
}
}
This example executes and instrument CalculadoraTest and provide the coverage of CalculadoraTest.java, but I want the coverage of Calculadora.java How can I change the code to get the desired result.
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire