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GOBCO - Golang Branch Coverage

Gobco measures condition coverage of Go code.

Gobco is intended to be used in addition to go test -cover. For example, gobco does not detect functions or methods that are completely unused, it only notices them if they contain any conditions or branches. Gobco also doesn't cover select statements.

Installation

With go1.17 or later:

$ go install github.com/rillig/gobco@latest

With go1.16:

$ go get github.com/rillig/gobco

Older go releases are not supported.

Usage

To run gobco on a single package, run it in the package directory:

$ gobco

The output typically looks like the following example, taken from package github.com/rillig/pkglint:

ok  	github.com/rillig/pkglint/v23	29.648s

Condition coverage: 8720/8840
...
changes.go:171:61: condition "n == 6" was 12 times true but never false
distinfo.go:268:8: condition "alg == \"SHA1\"" was 16 times false but never true
distinfo.go:322:13: condition "remainingHashes[0].algorithm == alg" was 8 times true but never false
...
mkcondsimplifier.go:141:31: condition "p[2] == p[1]-'A'+'a'" was 26 times true but never false
...
vartypecheck.go:1027:11: condition "len(invalid) > 1" was once false but never true
vartypecheck.go:1628:42: condition "cv.MkLines.pkg != nil" was 8 times true but never false
vartypecheck.go:1630:6: condition "distname.IsConstant()" was 8 times true but never false

Adding custom test conditions

If you want to ensure that the tests cover a certain condition in your code, you can insert the desired condition into the code and assign it to the underscore:

func square(x int) int {
    _ = x > 50
    _ = x == 0
    _ = x < 0

    return x * x
}

The compiler will see that these conditions are side-effect-free and will thus optimize them away, so there is no runtime overhead.

Since the above conditions are syntactically recognizable as boolean expressions, gobco inserts its coverage code around them.

Note that for boolean expressions that don't clearly look like boolean expressions, you have to write cond == true instead of a simple cond since as of March 2021, gobco only analyzes the code at the syntactical level, without resolving any types.

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Measure branch coverage of golang tests

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