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README.md
solidity-coverage
Code coverage for Solidity testing
- For more details about what this is, how it works and potential limitations, see the accompanying article.
solidity-coverage
is in development and its accuracy is unknown. If you find discrepancies between the coverage report and your suite's behavior, please open an issue.solidity-coverage
is Solcover
Install
$ npm install --save-dev solidity-coverage
Run
$ ./node_modules/.bin/solidity-coverage
Tests run signficantly slower while coverage is being generated. A 1 to 2 minute delay between the end of Truffle compilation and the beginning of test execution is possible if your test suite is large. Large Solidity files can also take a while to instrument.
Network Configuration
By default, solidity-coverage generates a stub truffle.js
that accomodates its special gas needs and
connects to a modified version of testrpc on port 8555. If your tests will run on the development network
using a standard truffle.js
and testrpc instance, you shouldn't have to do any configuration. If your tests depend on logic or special options added to truffle.js
you should declare a coverage network there following the example below.
Example
module.exports = {
networks: {
development: {
host: "localhost",
port: 8545,
network_id: "*"
},
coverage: {
host: "localhost",
network_id: "*",
port: 8555, // <-- If you change this, also set the port option in .solcover.js.
gas: 0xfffffffffff, // <-- Use this high gas value
gasPrice: 0x01 // <-- Use this low gas price
},
...etc...
}
};
Options
You can also create a .solcover.js
config file in the root directory of your project and specify
additional options if necessary:
Example:
module.exports = {
port: 6545,
testrpcOptions: '-p 6545 -u 0x54fd80d6ae7584d8e9a19fe1df43f04e5282cc43',
testCommand: 'mocha --timeout 5000',
norpc: true,
dir: './secretDirectory',
skipFiles: ['Routers/EtherRouter.sol']
};
Option | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
accounts | Number | 35 | Number of accounts to launch testrpc with. |
port | Number | 8555 | Port to run testrpc on / have truffle connect to |
norpc | Boolean | false | Prevent solidity-coverage from launching its own testrpc. Useful if you are managing a complex test suite with a shell script |
testCommand | String | truffle test |
Run an arbitrary test command. ex: mocha --timeout 5000 . NB: Also set the port option to whatever your tests require (probably 8545). |
testrpcOptions | String | --port 8555 |
options to append to a command line invocation of testrpc. NB: Using this overwrites the defaults so always specify a port in this string and in the port option |
copyNodeModules | Boolean | false | Copies node_modules into the coverage environment. May significantly increase the time for coverage to complete if enabled. Useful if your contracts import solidity files from an npm installed package. |
skipFiles | Array | ['Migrations.sol'] |
Array of contracts (with paths expressed relative to the contracts directory) that should be skipped when doing instrumentation. Migrations.sol is skipped by default, and does not need to be added to this configuration option if it is used. |
dir | String | . |
Solidity-coverage copies all the assets in your root directory (except node_modules ) to a special folder where it instruments the contracts and executes the tests. dir allows you to define a relative path from the root directory to those assets. Useful if your contracts & tests are within their own folder as part of a larger project. |
FAQ
Solutions to common issues people run into using this tool:
- Running out of gas
- Running out of memory (locally and in CI)
- Running out of time (in mocha)
- Using alongside HDWalletProvider
- Integrating into CI
- Why are asserts and requires highlighted as branch points?
- Running testrpc-sc on its own
Example reports
- metacoin (Istanbul HTML)
- zeppelin-solidity (Coveralls)
- gnosis-contracts (Codecov)
Contribution Guidelines
Contributions are welcome! If you're opening a PR that adds features please consider writing some
unit tests for them. You could
also lint your submission with npm run lint
. Bugs can be reported in the
issues.