John J Lee wrote: > On Tue, 9 Dec 2003, [ISO-8859-1] Walter D?rwald wrote: > [...] > >>>One problem, though: doesn't putting functional tests in Lib/test throw >>>off Walter Dorwald's unit test coverage numbers? Perhaps there should be >>>a 'functional' resource for test_support.use_resources (so the tests can >>>be run with -uall, -functional for coverage measurements)? >> >>What exactly do you mean with 'functional' tests? We certainly don't >>need non-functional tests! ;) And why would additional test scripts >>throw off the coverage numbers? > > > http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?FunctionalTest > > I had assumed you were measuring unit test coverage, but maybe there are > lots of functional tests in Lib/test too. What I'm doing is compiling the Python source with profiling options and running Lib/test/regrtest.py via Lib/trace.py. After that the script calls gcov for every .c file to get C coverage info and checks the coverage files generated by trace.py to get Python coverage info. > BTW, I had a look at your coverage page, and it looked as if it would be > useful and interesting, if I understood what all those little graphs &c. > were. :-/ I guess a little explanation would help. There are four types of source code lines: 1) Unknown: The status of the line can not be determined, because gcov or trace.py didn't generate a coverage file (color black) 2) Uncoverable: Can not be executed (Comment or empty line) (color grey) 3) Uncovered (but coverable): Has not been executed (but is executable) (color red) 4) Covered: Has been executed at least once during the test run. (color green) For files: 1) Unknown: A coverage file hasn't been created. 2) Uncoverable: The file consists only of uncoverable lines (e.g. a file with comments only). 3) Uncovered: The file contains coverable lines, but none of these lines have been executed. 4) Covered: The file contains at least one covered line. Note that the web application isn't exactly fast. The machine is rather old and the Postgres database seems to have a few problems with tables that contain 10 million records. :-/ Bye, Walter Dörwald
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