20

Are there any good (and preferably free) code coverage tools out there for Perl?

4 Answers 4

28

As usual, CPAN is your friend: Have a look at Devel::Cover

3
  • 1
    Please don't link to a specific version of a module. Try search.cpan.org/perldoc?Devel::Cover instead.
    – cjm
    Oct 23, 2008 at 15:21
  • I still think the perldoc link is better in this case, since it shows you the documentation. But the place to debate the merits of these link methods is stackoverflow.com/questions/43758/…
    – cjm
    Oct 23, 2008 at 19:44
  • In this particular case, I think linking to the distribution is more appropriate, because there are a huge number of modules within it, as well as a tutorial. Oct 23, 2008 at 20:45
26

Yes, Devel::Cover is the way to go.

If you develop a module, and use Module::Build to manage the installation, you even have a testcover target:

 perl Build.PL
 ./Build testcover

That runs the whole test suite, and makes a combined coverage report in nice HTML, where you can browse through your modules and watch their coverage.

1
  • thanks, I am just a bit puzzled , 3 replies to the same question in one day, two of them almost identical
    – FantomX1
    Mar 16, 2021 at 9:55
12

As noted, Devel::Cover is your friend, but you'll want to google for it, too. It's documentation is a bit sparse and if you change your environment radically, you'll need to reinstall it because it builds Devel::Cover::Inc with a bunch of information pulled from your environment at the time you install it. This has caused plenty of problems for us at work as we have a shared CPAN environment and if one developer installs Devel::Cover and a different developer tries to run it, strange (and incorrect) results are common.

If you use this module, also check out Devel::CoverX::Covered. This module will capture much of the information which Devel::Cover throws away. It's very handy.

5

Moritz discusses how modules built with Module::Build can use Devel::Cover easily.

For modules using ExtUtils::MakeMaker, an extension module exists to invoke the same functionality. Adding the following code before the call to WriteMakefile():

eval "use ExtUtils::MakeMaker::Coverage";
if( !$@ ) {
    print "Adding testcover target\n";
}

... will allow one to run the command 'make testcover' and have Devel::Cover perform its magic.

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