Code Coverage Analysis

In computer science, code coverage is a measure used to describe the degree to which the source code of a program is tested by a particular test suite. A program with high code coverage has been more thoroughly tested and has a lower chance of containing software bugs than a program with low code coverage.

--Wikipedia

In this chapter you will learn all about PHPUnit's code coverage functionality that provides an insight into what parts of the production code are executed when the tests are run. It makes use of the PHP_CodeCoverage component, which in turn leverages the code coverage functionality provided by the Xdebug extension for PHP.

Xdebug is not distributed as part of PHPUnit. If you receive a notice while running tests that the Xdebug extension is not loaded, it means that Xdebug is either not installed or not configured properly. Before you can use the code coverage analysis features in PHPUnit, you should read the Xdebug installation guide.

PHPUnit can generate an HTML-based code coverage report as well as XML-based logfiles with code coverage information in various formats (Clover, Crap4J, PHPUnit). Code coverage information can also be reported as text (and printed to STDOUT) and exported as PHP code for further processing.

Please refer to Chapter 3 for a list of commandline switches that control code coverage functionality as well as the section called “Logging” for the relevant configuration settings.

Software Metrics for Code Coverage

Various software metrics exist to measure code coverage:

Line Coverage

The Line Coverage software metric measures whether each executable line was executed.

Function and Method Coverage

The Function and Method Coverage software metric measures whether each function or method has been invoked. PHP_CodeCoverage only considers a function or method as covered when all of its executable lines are covered.

Class and Trait Coverage

The Class and Trait Coverage software metric measures whether each method of a class or trait is covered. PHP_CodeCoverage only considers a class or trait as covered when all of its methods are covered.

Opcode Coverage

The Opcode Coverage software metric measures whether each opcode of a function or method has been executed while running the test suite. A line of code usually compiles into more than one opcode. Line Coverage regards a line of code as covered as soon as one of its opcodes is executed.

Branch Coverage

The Branch Coverage software metric measures whether the boolean expression of each control structure evaluated to both true and false while running the test suite.

Path Coverage

The Path Coverage software metric measures whether each of the possible execution paths in a function or method has been followed while running the test suite. An execution path is a unique sequence of branches from the entry of the function or method to its exit.

Change Risk Anti-Patterns (CRAP) Index

The Change Risk Anti-Patterns (CRAP) Index is calculated based on the cyclomatic complexity and code coverage of a unit of code. Code that is not too complex and has an adequate test coverage will have a low CRAP index. The CRAP index can be lowered by writing tests and by refactoring the code to lower its complexity.

The Opcode Coverage, Branch Coverage, and Path Coverage software metrics are not yet supported by PHP_CodeCoverage.

Including and Excluding Files

By default, all source files that contain at least one line of code that has been executed (and only these files) are included in the code coverage report.

By default, a blacklist is used to exclude files from the code coverage report. This blacklist is pre-filled with the source files of PHPUnit and its dependencies.

It is best practice to use a whitelist instead of the blacklist mentioned above.

Optionally, all whitelisted files can be added to the code coverage report by setting addUncoveredFilesFromWhitelist="true" in your PHPUnit configuration (see the section called “Including and Excluding Files for Code Coverage”). This allows the inclusion of files that are not tested yet at all. If you want to get information about which lines of such an uncovered file are executable, for instance, you also need to set processUncoveredFilesFromWhitelist="true" in your PHPUnit configuration (see the section called “Including and Excluding Files for Code Coverage”).

Please note that the loading of sourcecode files that is performed when processUncoveredFilesFromWhitelist="true" is set can cause problems when a sourcecode file contains code outside the scope of a class or function, for instance.

Ignoring Code Blocks

Sometimes you have blocks of code that you cannot test and that you may want to ignore during code coverage analysis. PHPUnit lets you do this using the @codeCoverageIgnore, @codeCoverageIgnoreStart and @codeCoverageIgnoreEnd annotations as shown in Example 11.1.

Example 11.1: Using the @codeCoverageIgnore, @codeCoverageIgnoreStart and @codeCoverageIgnoreEnd annotations

<?php
/**
 * @codeCoverageIgnore
 */
class Foo
{
    public function bar()
    {
    }
}

class Bar
{
    /**
     * @codeCoverageIgnore
     */
    public function foo()
    {
    }
}

if (FALSE) {
    // @codeCoverageIgnoreStart
    print '*';
    // @codeCoverageIgnoreEnd
}

exit; // @codeCoverageIgnore
?>

The ignored lines of code (marked as ignored using the annotations) are counted as executed (if they are executable) and will not be highlighted.

Specifying Covered Methods

The @covers annotation (see Table B.1) can be used in the test code to specify which method(s) a test method wants to test. If provided, only the code coverage information for the specified method(s) will be considered. Example 11.2 shows an example.

Example 11.2: Tests that specify which method they want to cover

<?php
class BankAccountTest extends PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase
{
    protected $ba;

    protected function setUp()
    {
        $this->ba = new BankAccount;
    }

    /**
     * @covers BankAccount::getBalance
     */
    public function testBalanceIsInitiallyZero()
    {
        $this->assertEquals(0, $this->ba->getBalance());
    }

    /**
     * @covers BankAccount::withdrawMoney
     */
    public function testBalanceCannotBecomeNegative()
    {
        try {
            $this->ba->withdrawMoney(1);
        }

        catch (BankAccountException $e) {
            $this->assertEquals(0, $this->ba->getBalance());

            return;
        }

        $this->fail();
    }

    /**
     * @covers BankAccount::depositMoney
     */
    public function testBalanceCannotBecomeNegative2()
    {
        try {
            $this->ba->depositMoney(-1);
        }

        catch (BankAccountException $e) {
            $this->assertEquals(0, $this->ba->getBalance());

            return;
        }

        $this->fail();
    }

    /**
     * @covers BankAccount::getBalance
     * @covers BankAccount::depositMoney
     * @covers BankAccount::withdrawMoney
     */
    public function testDepositWithdrawMoney()
    {
        $this->assertEquals(0, $this->ba->getBalance());
        $this->ba->depositMoney(1);
        $this->assertEquals(1, $this->ba->getBalance());
        $this->ba->withdrawMoney(1);
        $this->assertEquals(0, $this->ba->getBalance());
    }
}
?>

It is also possible to specify that a test should not cover any method by using the @coversNothing annotation (see the section called “@coversNothing”). This can be helpful when writing integration tests to make sure you only generate code coverage with unit tests.

Example 11.3: A test that specifies that no method should be covered

<?php
class GuestbookIntegrationTest extends PHPUnit_Extensions_Database_TestCase
{
    /**
     * @coversNothing
     */
    public function testAddEntry()
    {
        $guestbook = new Guestbook();
        $guestbook->addEntry("suzy", "Hello world!");

        $queryTable = $this->getConnection()->createQueryTable(
            'guestbook', 'SELECT * FROM guestbook'
        );

        $expectedTable = $this->createFlatXmlDataSet("expectedBook.xml")
                              ->getTable("guestbook");

        $this->assertTablesEqual($expectedTable, $queryTable);
    }
}
?>
      

Edge Cases

This section shows noteworthy edge cases that lead to confusing code coverage information.

Example 11.4:

<?php
// Because it is "line based" and not statement base coverage
// one line will always have one coverage status
if (false) this_function_call_shows_up_as_covered();

// Due to how code coverage works internally these two lines are special.
// This line will show up as non executable
if (false)
    // This line will show up as covered because it is actually the 
    // coverage of the if statement in the line above that gets shown here!
    will_also_show_up_as_covered();

// To avoid this it is necessary that braces are used
if (false) {
    this_call_will_never_show_up_as_covered();
}
?>

© 2005–2016 Sebastian Bergmann
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.
https://phpunit.de/manual/4.8/en/code-coverage-analysis.html