Ant Tasks
JaCoCo comes with Ant tasks to launch Java programs with execution recording
and for creating coverage reports from the recorded data. Execution data can
be collected and managed with the tasks
coverage
,
agent
,
dump
and
merge
. Reports in different formats are
created with the report
task. For
offline instrumentation the task
instrument
can be used to prepare class
files.
If you want to have line number information included in the coverage reports or you want source code highlighting the class files of the test target must be compiled with debug information.
Example
The JaCoCo distribution contains a simple example how code coverage can be
added to a Ant based build. The
build script compiles Java sources,
runs an simple Java program and creates a coverage report. The complete
example is located in the ./doc/examples/build
folder of the
distribution.
Prerequisites
The JaCoCo Ant tasks require
- Ant 1.7.0 or higher and
- Java 1.5 or higher (for both, the Ant runner and the test executor).
All tasks are defined in jacocoant.jar
(which is part of the
distribution) and can be included in your Ant scripts with the usual
taskdef
declaration:
<project name="Example" xmlns:jacoco="antlib:org.jacoco.ant"> <taskdef uri="antlib:org.jacoco.ant" resource="org/jacoco/ant/antlib.xml"> <classpath path="path_to_jacoco/lib/jacocoant.jar"/> </taskdef> ... </project>
Alternatively you might also place the jacocoant.jar
in your
Ant ANT_HOME/lib
folder. If you use the name space URI
antlib:org.jacoco.ant
for JaCoCo tasks Ant will find them
automatically without the taskdef
declaration above.
Declaring a XML namespace for JaCoCo tasks is optional but always recommended
if you mix tasks from different libraries. All subsequent examples use the
jacoco
prefix declared above. If you don't declare a separate
namespace the jacoco
prefix must be removed from the following
examples.
Task coverage
The standard Ant tasks to launch Java programs are java
, junit
and
testng
. To add code coverage recording to these tasks they can
simply be wrapped with the coverage
task as shown in the
following examples:
<jacoco:coverage> <java classname="org.jacoco.examples.HelloJaCoCo" fork="true"> <classpath> <pathelement location="./bin"/> </classpath> </java> </jacoco:coverage> <jacoco:coverage> <junit fork="true" forkmode="once"> <test name="org.jacoco.examples.HelloJaCoCoTest"/> <classpath> <pathelement location="./bin"/> </classpath> </junit> </jacoco:coverage>
Resulting coverage information is collected during execution and written
to a file when the process terminates. Note the fork
attribute
above in the wrapped java
task.
The nested task always has to declare fork="true"
, otherwise the
coverage
task can't record coverage information and will fail.
In addition the junit
task should declare
forkmode="once"
to avoid starting a new JVM for every single test
case and decreasing execution performance dramatically (unless this is
required by the nature of the test cases). Note that
forkmode="perTest"
or forkmode="perBatch"
should not
be combined with append="false"
as the execution data file is
overwritten with the execution of every test.
The coverage task must wrap exactly one task. While it typically works without any configuration, the behavior can be adjusted with some optional attributes:
Attribute | Description | Default |
enabled |
If set to true coverage data will be collected for the contained task. |
true |
destfile |
Path to the output file for execution data. | jacoco.exec |
append |
If set to true and the execution data file already
exists, coverage data is appended to the existing file. If set to
false , an existing execution data file will be replaced.
|
true |
includes |
A list of class names that should be included in execution analysis.
The list entries are separated by a colon (: ) and
may use wildcard characters (* and ? ).
Except for performance optimization or technical corner cases this
option is normally not required.
|
* (all classes) |
excludes |
A list of class names that should be excluded from execution analysis.
The list entries are separated by a colon (: ) and
may use wildcard characters (* and ? ).
Except for performance optimization or technical corner cases this
option is normally not required. If you want to exclude classes from
the report please configure the report task accordingly.
|
empty (no excluded classes) |
exclclassloader |
A list of class loader names, that should be excluded from execution
analysis. The list entries are separated by a colon
(: ) and may use wildcard characters (* and
? ). This option might be required in case of special
frameworks that conflict with JaCoCo code instrumentation, in
particular class loaders that do not have access to the Java runtime
classes.
|
sun.reflect.DelegatingClassLoader |
inclbootstrapclasses |
Specifies whether also classes from the bootstrap classloader should be instrumented. Use this feature with caution, it needs heavy includes/excludes tuning. | false |
inclnolocationclasses |
Specifies whether also classes without a source location should be instrumented. Normally such classes are generated at runtime e.g. by mocking frameworks and are therefore excluded by default. | false |
sessionid |
A session identifier that is written with the execution data. Without this parameter a random identifier is created by the agent. | auto-generated |
dumponexit |
If set to true coverage data will be written on VM
shutdown.
|
true |
output |
Output method to use for writing coverage data. Valid options are:
|
file |
address |
IP address or hostname to bind to when the output method is
tcpserver or connect to when the output method is
tcpclient . In tcpserver mode the value
"* " causes the agent to accept connections on any local
address.
|
loopback interface |
port |
Port to bind to when the output method is tcpserver or
connect to when the output method is tcpclient . In
tcpserver mode the port must be available, which means
that if multiple JaCoCo agents should run on the same machine,
different ports have to be specified.
|
6300 |
classdumpdir |
Location relative to the working directory where all class files seen by the agent are dumped to. This can be useful for debugging purposes or in case of dynamically created classes for example when scripting engines are used. | no dumps |
jmx |
If set to true the agent exposes
functionality via
JMX under the name org.jacoco:type=Runtime .
|
false |
Task agent
If the coverage
task is not suitable for your launch target, you
might alternatively use the agent
task to create the
Java agent parameter. The following example defines a
Ant property with the name agentvmparam
that can be directly used
as a Java VM parameter:
<jacoco:agent property="agentvmparam"/>
This task has the same attributes as the coverage
task plus an
additional property to specify the target property name:
Attribute | Description | Default |
enabled |
When this variable is set to false the value of property will be set to an empty string, effectively
disabling coverage instrumentation for any tasks that used the value. |
true |
property |
Name of the Ant property to set. | none (required) |
All attributes of the coverage task. |
Task dump
This task allows to remotely collect execution data from another JVM without stopping it. For example:
<jacoco:dump address="server.example.com" reset="true" destfile="remote.exec"/>
Remote dumps are usefull for long running Java processes like application servers.
The target JVM needs to have a JaCoCo agent
configured with output
mode tcpserver
. See
coverage
and
agent
tasks above.
The dump
task has the following attributes:
Attribute | Description | Default |
address |
Target IP address or DNS name. | localhost |
port |
Target TCP port. | 6300 |
retryCount |
Number of retries which the goal will attempt to establish a connection. This can be used to wait until the target JVM is successfully launched. | 10 |
dump |
Flag whether execution data should be dumped. | true |
reset |
Flag whether execution data should be reset in the target agent after the dump. | false |
destfile |
File location to write the collected execution data to. | none (required if dump=true) |
append |
If set to true and the execution data file already
exists, coverage data is appended to the existing file. If set to
false , an existing execution data file will be replaced.
|
true |
Task merge
This task can be used to merge the execution data from multiple test runs into a single data store.
<jacoco:merge destfile="merged.exec"> <fileset dir="executionData" includes="*.exec"/> </jacoco:merge>
The task definition can contain any number of resource collection types and has the following mandatory attribute:
Attribute | Description | Default |
destfile |
File location to write the merged execution data to. | none (required) |
Task report
Finally different reports can be created with the report
task.
A report task declaration consists of different sections, two specify the
input data, additional ones specify the output formats:
<jacoco:report> <executiondata> <file file="jacoco.exec"/> </executiondata> <structure name="Example Project"> <classfiles> <fileset dir="classes"/> </classfiles> <sourcefiles encoding="UTF-8"> <fileset dir="src"/> </sourcefiles> </structure> <html destdir="report"/> </jacoco:report>
As you can see from the example above the report
task is based
on several nested elements:
Element executiondata
Within this element Ant resources and resource collections can be specified, that represent JaCoCo execution data files. If more than one execution data file is specified, execution data is combined. A particular piece of code is considered executed when it is marked as such in any of the input files.
Element structure
This element defines the report structure. It might contain the following nested elements:
classfiles
: Container element for Ant resources and resource collections that can specify Java class files, archive files (jar, war, ear etc. or Pack200) or folders containing class files. Archives and folders are searched recursively for class files.sourcefiles
: Optional container element for Ant resources and resource collections that specify corresponding source files. If source files are specified, some report formats include highlighted source code. Source files can be specified as individual files or as source directories.
The sourcefiles
element has these optional attributes:
Attribute | Description | Default |
encoding |
Character encoding of the source files. | Platform default encoding |
tabwidth |
Number of whitespace characters that represent a tab character. | 4 characters |
Important: Source file resources must always be specified relative to the respective source folder. If directory resources are given, they must directly point to source folders. Otherwise source lookup will not succeed.
Note that the classfiles
and sourcefiles
elements
accept any
Ant
resource collection. Therefore also filtering the class file set is
possible and allows to narrow the scope of the report, for example:
<classfiles> <fileset dir="classes"> <include name="org/jacoco/examples/important/**/*.class"/> </fileset> </classfiles>
Performance Warning: Although it is technically possible and sometimes
convenient to use Ant's zipfileset
to specify class or source
files, this resource type has poor performance characteristics and comes with
an huge memory overhead especially for large scale projects.
The structure can be refined with a hierarchy of group
elements.
This way the coverage report can reflect different modules of a software
project. For each group element the corresponding class and source files can
be specified separately. For example:
<structure name="Example Project"> <group name="Server"> <classfiles> <fileset dir="${workspace.dir}/org.jacoco.example.server/classes"/> </classfiles> <sourcefiles> <fileset dir="${workspace.dir}/org.jacoco.example.server/src"/> </sourcefiles> </group> <group name="Client"> <classfiles> <fileset dir="${workspace.dir}/org.jacoco.example.client/classes"/> </classfiles> <sourcefiles> <fileset dir="${workspace.dir}/org.jacoco.example.client/src"/> </sourcefiles> </group> ... </structure>
Both structure
and group
elements have the following
mandatory attribute:
Attribute | Description | Default |
name |
Name of the structure or group. | none (required) |
Element html
Create a multi-page report in HTML format. The report can either be written as multiple files into a directory or compressed into a single ZIP file.
Attribute | Description | Default |
destdir |
Directory to create the report in. Either this property or
destfile has to be supplied. |
none (required) |
destfile |
Zip file to create the report in. Either this property or
destdir has to be supplied. |
none (required) |
footer |
Footer text for each report page. | no footer |
encoding |
Character encoding of generated HTML pages. | UTF-8 |
locale |
Locale specified as ISO code (en, fr, jp, ...) used for number formatting. Locale country and variant can be separated with an underscore (de_CH). | platform locale |
Element xml
Create a single-file report in XML format.
Attribute | Description | Default |
destfile |
Location to write the report file to. | none (required) |
encoding |
Encoding of the generated XML document. | UTF-8 |
Element csv
Create single-file report in CSV format.
Attribute | Description | Default |
destfile |
Location to write the report file to. | none (required) |
encoding |
Encoding of the generated CSV document. | UTF-8 |
Element check
This report type does not actually create a report. It checks coverage counters and reports violations of configured rules. Every rule is applied to elements of a given type (class, package, bundle, etc.) and has a list of limits which are checked for every element. The following example checks that for every package the line coverage is at least 80% and no class is missed:
<check> <rule element="PACKAGE"> <limit counter="LINE" value="COVEREDRATIO" minimum="80%"/> <limit counter="CLASS" value="MISSEDCOUNT" maximum="0"/> </rule> </check>
The check
element has the following attributes:
Attribute | Description | Default |
rules |
List of rules to check. | none |
failonviolation |
Specifies whether build should fail in case of rule violations. | true |
violationsproperty |
The name of an Ant property which is filled with the violation messages. | none |
Within the check
element any number of rule
elements
can be nested:
Attribute | Description | Default |
element |
The elements this rule applies to. Possible values are
BUNDLE , PACKAGE , CLASS ,
SOURCEFILE and METHOD . |
BUNDLE |
includes |
A list of element names that should be checked. The list entries are separated by a colon (:) and may use wildcard characters (* and ?). | * |
excludes |
A list of element names that should not be checked. The list entries are separated by a colon (:) and may use wildcard characters (* and ?). | empty (no excludes) |
limits |
List of limits to check. | none |
Within the rule
element any number of limit
elements
can be nested:
Attribute | Description | Default |
counter |
The counter which should be checked.
Possible options are INSTRUCTION , LINE ,
BRANCH , COMPLEXITY , METHOD and
CLASS . |
INSTRUCTION |
value |
The counter value that should be checked. Possible options are
TOTALCOUNT , MISSEDCOUNT ,
COVEREDCOUNT , MISSEDRATIO and
COVEREDRATIO . |
COVEREDRATIO |
minimum |
Expected minimum value. If the minimum refers to a ratio it must be in the range from 0.0 to 1.0 where the number of decimal places will also determine the precision in error messages. A limit ratio may optionally be declared as a percentage where 0.80 and 80% represent the same value. | none |
maximum |
Expected maximum value, see minimum for details. |
none |
Task instrument
Warning: The preferred way for code coverage analysis with JaCoCo is on-the-fly instrumentation. Offline instrumentation has several drawbacks and should only be used if a specific scenario explicitly requires this mode. Please consult documentation about offline instrumentation before using this mode.
This task is used for offline instrumentation of class files. The task takes a set of files and writes instrumented versions to a specified location. The task takes any file type as input. Java class files are instrumented. Archives (jar, war, ear etc. or Pack200) are searched recursively for class files which then get instrumented. All other files are copied without modification.
<jacoco:instrument destdir="target/classes-instr"> <fileset dir="target/classes" includes="**/*.class"/> </jacoco:instrument>
The task definition can contain any number of resource collection types and has the following mandatory attribute:
Attribute | Description | Default |
destdir |
Directory location to write the instrumented files to. | none (required) |
removesignatures |
If set to true all signature related information is
stripped from JARs. This is typically necessary as instrumentation
breaks the signatures of the original class files. |
true |