Driver | Current version | Downloads |
---|---|---|
coverlet.collector | ||
coverlet.msbuild | ||
coverlet.console |
Coverlet is a cross platform code coverage framework for .NET, with support for line, branch and method coverage. It works with .NET Framework on Windows and .NET Core on all supported platforms.
- QuickStart
- How It Works
- Deterministic build support
- Known Issues
- Consume nightly build
- Feature samples
- Cake Add-In
- Changelog
- Roadmap
Coverlet can be used through three different drivers
- VSTest engine integration
- MSBuild task integration
- As a .NET Global tool
Coverlet supports only SDK-style projects https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/visualstudio/msbuild/how-to-use-project-sdk?view=vs-2019
VSTest Integration (preferred due to known issue supports only .NET Core application)
At the moment collectors integration does not support .NET Framework application.
dotnet add package coverlet.collector
N.B. You MUST add package only to test projects and if you create xunit test projects (dotnet new xunit
) you'll find the reference already present in csproj
file because Coverlet is the default coverage tool for every .NET Core and >= .NET 5 applications, you've only to update to last version if needed.
Coverlet is integrated into the Visual Studio Test Platform as a data collector. To get coverage simply run the following command:
dotnet test --collect:"XPlat Code Coverage"
After the above command is run, a coverage.cobertura.xml
file containing the results will be published to the TestResults
directory as an attachment.
See documentation for advanced usage.
- You need to be running .NET Core SDK v2.2.401 or newer
- You need to reference version 16.5.0 and above of Microsoft.NET.Test.Sdk
<PackageReference Include="Microsoft.NET.Test.Sdk" Version="16.5.0" />
MSBuild Integration (suffers of possible known issue)
dotnet add package coverlet.msbuild
N.B. You MUST add package only to test projects
Coverlet also integrates with the build system to run code coverage after tests. Enabling code coverage is as simple as setting the CollectCoverage
property to true
dotnet test /p:CollectCoverage=true
After the above command is run, a coverage.json
file containing the results will be generated in the root directory of the test project. A summary of the results will also be displayed in the terminal.
See documentation for advanced usage.
Requires a runtime that support .NET Standard 2.0 and above
.NET Global Tool (guide, suffers of possible known issue)
dotnet tool install --global coverlet.console
The coverlet
tool is invoked by specifying the path to the assembly that contains the unit tests. You also need to specify the test runner and the arguments to pass to the test runner using the --target
and --targetargs
options respectively. The invocation of the test runner with the supplied arguments must not involve a recompilation of the unit test assembly or no coverage result will be generated.
The following example shows how to use the familiar dotnet test
toolchain:
coverlet /path/to/test-assembly.dll --target "dotnet" --targetargs "test /path/to/test-project --no-build"
Note: The --no-build
flag is specified so that the /path/to/test-assembly.dll
assembly isn't rebuilt
See documentation for advanced usage.
.NET global tools rely on a .NET Core runtime installed on your machine https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/core/tools/global-tools#what-could-go-wrong
.NET Coverlet global tool requires .NET Core 2.2 and above
Coverlet generates code coverage information by going through the following process:
- Locates the unit test assembly and selects all the referenced assemblies that have PDBs.
- Instruments the selected assemblies by inserting code to record sequence point hits to a temporary file.
- Restore the original non-instrumented assembly files.
- Read the recorded hits information from the temporary file.
- Generate the coverage result from the hits information and write it to a file.
Coverlet supports coverage for deterministic builds. The solution at the moment is not optimal and need a workaround.
Take a look at documentation.
Are you in trouble with some feature? Check on examples!
Unfortunately we have some known issues, check it here
If you're using Cake Build for your build script you can use the Cake.Coverlet add-in to provide you extensions to dotnet test for passing Coverlet arguments in a strongly typed manner.
We offer nightly build of master for all packages. See the documentation
If you find a bug or have a feature request, please report them at this repository's issues section. See the CONTRIBUTING GUIDE for details on building and contributing to this project.
Author and owner
Co-maintainers
This project has adopted the code of conduct defined by the Contributor Covenant to clarify expected behavior in our community.
For more information, see the .NET Foundation Code of Conduct.
This project is licensed under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.