[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/SimonKagstrom/kcov.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/SimonKagstrom/kcov) [![Coveralls coverage status](https://img.shields.io/coveralls/SimonKagstrom/kcov.svg)](https://coveralls.io/r/SimonKagstrom/kcov?branch=master) [![Codecov coverage status](https://codecov.io/gh/SimonKagstrom/kcov/branch/master/graph/badge.svg)](https://codecov.io/gh/SimonKagstrom/kcov) [![Coverity Scan Build Status](https://scan.coverity.com/projects/2844/badge.svg)](https://scan.coverity.com/projects/2844) [![PayPal Donate](https://img.shields.io/badge/paypal-donate-blue.svg)](https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_donations&business=simon.kagstrom%40gmail%2ecom&lc=US&item_name=Simon%20Kagstrom&item_number=kcov¤cy_code=USD&bn=PP%2dDonationsBF%3abtn_donate_LG%2egif%3aNonHosted) [![Github All Releases](https://img.shields.io/github/downloads/atom/atom/total.svg)](https://github.com/SimonKagstrom/kcov/) ## *kcov* Kcov is a Linux/OSX code coverage tester for compiled languages, Python and Bash. Kcov was originally a fork of [Bcov](http://bcov.sf.net), but has since evolved to support a large feature set in addition to that of Bcov. Kcov, like Bcov, uses DWARF debugging information for compiled programs to make it possible to collect coverage information without special compiler switches. Installing ---------- Refer to the [INSTALL](INSTALL.md) file for build instructions, or use one of the pre-built Docker images: * [ragnaroek/kcov](https://hub.docker.com/r/ragnaroek/kcov/) for releases since v31 * [ragnaroek/kcov_head](https://hub.docker.com/r/ragnaroek/kcov_head/) for the latest git HEAD (might be unstable) How to use it ------------- Basic usage is straight-forward: ``` kcov /path/to/outdir executable [args for the executable] ``` */path/to/outdir* will contain lcov-style HTML output generated continuously while the application runs. Kcov will also write cobertura- compatible XML output and can upload coverage data directly to http://coveralls.io for easy integration with travis-ci. A generic coverage.json report is also generated which contains summaries for a given binary and each source file. Filtering output ---------------- It's often useful to filter output, since e.g., /usr/include is seldom of interest. This can be done in two ways: ``` kcov --exclude-pattern=/usr/include --include-pattern=part/of/path,other/path \ /path/to/outdir executable ``` which will do a string-comparison and include everything which contains *part/of/path* or *other/path* but exclude everything that has the */usr/include* string in it. ``` kcov --include-path=/my/src/path /path/to/outdir executable kcov --exclude-path=/usr/include /path/to/outdir executable ``` Does the same thing, but with proper path lookups. Use from continuous integration systems --------------------------------------- kcov is easy to integrate with [travis-ci](http://travis-ci.org) together with [coveralls.io](http://coveralls.io) or [codecov.io](http://codecov.io). It can also be used from Jenkins, [SonarQube](http://sonarqube.org) and [GitLab CI](http://gitlab.com). Refer to * [coveralls](doc/coveralls.md) for details about travis-ci + coveralls, or * [codecov](doc/codecov.md) for details about travis-ci + codecov * [jenkins](doc/jenkins.md) for details about how to integrate in Jenkins * [sonarqube](doc/sonarqube.md) for how to use kcov and sonarqube together * [gitlab](doc/gitlab.md) for use with GitLab Full-system instrumentation --------------------------- Kcov can instrument all binaries with very low overhead for embedded systems. Refer to the [full system instrumentation](doc/full-system-instrumentation.md) documentation for details. More information ---------------- kcov is written by Simon Kagstrom and more information can be found at [the web page](http://simonkagstrom.github.com/kcov/index.html)