| # The cover story |
| 2 Dec 2013 |
| Tags: tools, coverage, testing |
| Summary: Introducing Go 1.12's code coverage tool. |
| |
| Rob Pike |
| |
| ## Introduction |
| |
| From the beginning of the project, Go was designed with tools in mind. |
| Those tools include some of the most iconic pieces of Go technology such as |
| the documentation presentation tool |
| [godoc](https://golang.org/cmd/godoc), |
| the code formatting tool |
| [gofmt](https://golang.org/cmd/gofmt), |
| and the API rewriter |
| [gofix](https://golang.org/cmd/fix). |
| Perhaps most important of all is the |
| [`go` command](https://golang.org/cmd/go), |
| the program that automatically installs, builds, and tests Go programs |
| using nothing more than the source code as the build specification. |
| |
| The release of Go 1.2 introduces a new tool for test coverage that takes an |
| unusual approach to the way it generates coverage statistics, an approach |
| that builds on the technology laid down by godoc and friends. |
| |
| ## Support for tools |
| |
| First, some background: What does it mean for a |
| [language to support good tooling](https://talks.golang.org/2012/splash.article#TOC_17.)? |
| It means that the language makes it easy to write good tools and that its ecosystem |
| supports the construction of tools of all flavors. |
| |
| There are a number of properties of Go that make it suitable for tooling. |
| For starters, Go has a regular syntax that is easy to parse. |
| The grammar aims to be free of special cases that require complex machinery to analyze. |
| |
| Where possible, Go uses lexical and syntactic constructs to make semantic properties |
| easy to understand. |
| Examples include the use of upper-case letters to define exported names |
| and the radically simplified scoping rules compared to other languages in the C tradition. |
| |
| Finally, the standard library comes with production-quality packages to lex and parse Go source code. |
| They also include, more unusually, a production-quality package to pretty-print Go syntax trees. |
| |
| These packages in combination form the core of the gofmt tool, but the pretty-printer is worth singling out. |
| Because it can take an arbitrary Go syntax tree and output standard-format, human-readable, correct |
| code, it creates the possibility to build tools that transform the parse tree and output modified but |
| correct and easy-to-read code. |
| |
| One example is the gofix tool, which automates the |
| rewriting of code to use new language features or updated libraries. |
| Gofix let us make fundamental changes to the language and libraries in the |
| [run-up to Go 1.0](https://blog.golang.org/the-path-to-go-1), |
| with the confidence that users could just run the tool to update their source to the newest version. |
| |
| Inside Google, we have used gofix to make sweeping changes in a huge code repository that would be almost |
| unthinkable in the other languages we use. |
| There's no need any more to support multiple versions of some API; we can use gofix to update |
| the entire company in one operation. |
| |
| It's not just these big tools that these packages enable, of course. |
| They also make it easy to write more modest programs such as IDE plugins, for instance. |
| All these items build on each other, making the Go environment |
| more productive by automating many tasks. |
| |
| ## Test coverage |
| |
| Test coverage is a term that describes how much of a package's code is exercised by running the package's tests. |
| If executing the test suite causes 80% of the package's source statements to be run, we say that the test coverage is 80%. |
| |
| The program that provides test coverage in Go 1.2 is the latest to exploit the tooling support in the Go ecosystem. |
| |
| The usual way to compute test coverage is to instrument the binary. |
| For instance, the GNU [gcov](http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Gcov.html) program sets breakpoints at branches |
| executed by the binary. |
| As each branch executes, the breakpoint is cleared and the target statements of the branch are marked as 'covered'. |
| |
| This approach is successful and widely used. An early test coverage tool for Go even worked the same way. |
| But it has problems. |
| It is difficult to implement, as analysis of the execution of binaries is challenging. |
| It also requires a reliable way of tying the execution trace back to the source code, which can also be difficult, |
| as any user of a source-level debugger can attest. |
| Problems there include inaccurate debugging information and issues such as in-lined functions complicating |
| the analysis. |
| Most important, this approach is very non-portable. |
| It needs to be done afresh for every architecture, and to some extent for every |
| operating system since debugging support varies greatly from system to system. |
| |
| It does work, though, and for instance if you are a user of gccgo, the gcov tool can give you test coverage |
| information. |
| However If you're a user of gc, the more commonly used Go compiler suite, until Go 1.2 you were out of luck. |
| |
| ## Test coverage for Go |
| |
| For the new test coverage tool for Go, we took a different approach that avoids dynamic debugging. |
| The idea is simple: Rewrite the package's source code before compilation to add instrumentation, |
| compile and run the modified source, and dump the statistics. |
| The rewriting is easy to arrange because the `go` command controls the flow |
| from source to test to execution. |
| |
| Here's an example. Say we have a simple, one-file package like this: |
| |
| .code cover/pkg.go |
| |
| and this test: |
| |
| .code cover/pkg_test.go |
| |
| To get the test coverage for the package, |
| we run the test with coverage enabled by providing the `-cover` flag to `go` `test`: |
| |
| % go test -cover |
| PASS |
| coverage: 42.9% of statements |
| ok size 0.026s |
| % |
| |
| Notice that the coverage is 42.9%, which isn't very good. |
| Before we ask how to raise that number, let's see how that was computed. |
| |
| When test coverage is enabled, `go` `test` runs the "cover" tool, a separate program included |
| with the distribution, to rewrite the source code before compilation. Here's what the rewritten |
| `Size` function looks like: |
| |
| .code cover/pkg.cover /func/,/^}/ |
| |
| Each executable section of the program is annotated with an assignment statement that, |
| when executed, records that that section ran. |
| The counter is tied to the original source position of the statements it counts |
| through a second read-only data structure that is also generated by the cover tool. |
| When the test run completes, the counters are collected and the percentage is computed |
| by seeing how many were set. |
| |
| Although that annotating assignment might look expensive, it compiles to a single "move" instruction. |
| Its run-time overhead is therefore modest, adding only about 3% when running a typical (more realistic) test. |
| That makes it reasonable to include test coverage as part of the standard development pipeline. |
| |
| ## Viewing the results |
| |
| The test coverage for our example was poor. |
| To discover why, we ask `go` `test` to write a "coverage profile" for us, a file that holds |
| the collected statistics so we can study them in more detail. |
| That's easy to do: use the `-coverprofile` flag to specify a file for the output: |
| |
| % go test -coverprofile=coverage.out |
| PASS |
| coverage: 42.9% of statements |
| ok size 0.030s |
| % |
| |
| (The `-coverprofile` flag automatically sets `-cover` to enable coverage analysis.) |
| The test runs just as before, but the results are saved in a file. |
| To study them, we run the test coverage tool ourselves, without `go` `test`. |
| As a start, we can ask for the coverage to be broken down by function, |
| although that's not going to illuminate much in this case since there's |
| only one function: |
| |
| % go tool cover -func=coverage.out |
| size.go: Size 42.9% |
| total: (statements) 42.9% |
| % |
| |
| A much more interesting way to see the data is to get an HTML presentation |
| of the source code decorated with coverage information. |
| This display is invoked by the `-html` flag: |
| |
| $ go tool cover -html=coverage.out |
| |
| When this command is run, a browser window pops up, showing the covered (green), |
| uncovered (red), and uninstrumented (grey) source. |
| Here's a screen dump: |
| |
| .image cover/set.png |
| |
| With this presentation, it's obvious what's wrong: we neglected to test several |
| of the cases! |
| And we can see exactly which ones they are, which makes it easy to |
| improve our test coverage. |
| |
| ## Heat maps |
| |
| A big advantage of this source-level approach to test coverage is that it's |
| easy to instrument the code in different ways. |
| For instance, we can ask not only whether a statement has been executed, |
| but how many times. |
| |
| The `go` `test` command accepts a `-covermode` flag to set the coverage mode |
| to one of three settings: |
| |
| - set: did each statement run? |
| - count: how many times did each statement run? |
| - atomic: like count, but counts precisely in parallel programs |
| |
| The default is 'set', which we've already seen. |
| The `atomic` setting is needed only when accurate counts are required |
| when running parallel algorithms. It uses atomic operations from the |
| [sync/atomic](https://golang.org/pkg/sync/atomic/) package, |
| which can be quite expensive. |
| For most purposes, though, the `count` mode works fine and, like |
| the default `set` mode, is very cheap. |
| |
| Let's try counting statement execution for a standard package, the `fmt` formatting package. |
| We run the test and write out a coverage profile so we can present the information |
| nicely afterwards. |
| |
| % go test -covermode=count -coverprofile=count.out fmt |
| ok fmt 0.056s coverage: 91.7% of statements |
| % |
| |
| That's a much better test coverage ratio than for our previous example. |
| (The coverage ratio is not affected by the coverage mode.) |
| We can display the function breakdown: |
| |
| % go tool cover -func=count.out |
| fmt/format.go: init 100.0% |
| fmt/format.go: clearflags 100.0% |
| fmt/format.go: init 100.0% |
| fmt/format.go: computePadding 84.6% |
| fmt/format.go: writePadding 100.0% |
| fmt/format.go: pad 100.0% |
| ... |
| fmt/scan.go: advance 96.2% |
| fmt/scan.go: doScanf 96.8% |
| total: (statements) 91.7% |
| |
| The big payoff happens in the HTML output: |
| |
| % go tool cover -html=count.out |
| |
| Here's what the `pad` function looks like in that presentation: |
| |
| .image cover/count.png |
| |
| Notice how the intensity of the green changes. Brighter-green |
| statements have higher execution counts; less saturated greens |
| represent lower execution counts. |
| You can even hover the mouse over the statements to see the |
| actual counts pop up in a tool tip. |
| At the time of writing, the counts come out like this |
| (we've moved the counts from the tool tips to beginning-of-line |
| markers to make them easier to show): |
| |
| 2933 if !f.widPresent || f.wid == 0 { |
| 2985 f.buf.Write(b) |
| 2985 return |
| 2985 } |
| 56 padding, left, right := f.computePadding(len(b)) |
| 56 if left > 0 { |
| 37 f.writePadding(left, padding) |
| 37 } |
| 56 f.buf.Write(b) |
| 56 if right > 0 { |
| 13 f.writePadding(right, padding) |
| 13 } |
| |
| That's a lot of information about the execution of the function, |
| information that might be useful in profiling. |
| |
| ## Basic blocks |
| |
| You might have noticed that the counts in the previous example |
| were not what you expected on the lines with closing braces. |
| That's because, as always, test coverage is an inexact science. |
| |
| What's going on here is worth explaining, though. We'd like the |
| coverage annotations to be demarcated by branches in the program, |
| the way they are when the binary is instrumented in the traditional |
| method. |
| It's hard to do that by rewriting the source, though, since |
| the branches don't appear explicitly in the source. |
| |
| What the coverage annotation does is instrument blocks, which |
| are typically bounded by brace brackets. |
| Getting this right in general is very hard. |
| A consequence of the algorithm used is that the closing |
| brace looks like it belongs to the block it closes, while the |
| opening brace looks like it belongs outside the block. |
| A more interesting consequence is that in an expression like |
| |
| f() && g() |
| |
| there is no attempt to separately instrument the calls to `f` and `g`, Regardless of |
| the facts it will always look like they both ran the same |
| number of times, the number of times `f` ran. |
| |
| To be fair, even `gcov` has trouble here. That tool gets the |
| instrumentation right but the presentation is line-based and |
| can therefore miss some nuances. |
| |
| ## The big picture |
| |
| That's the story about test coverage in Go 1.2. |
| A new tool with an interesting implementation enables not only |
| test coverage statistics, but easy-to-interpret presentations |
| of them and even the possibility to extract profiling information. |
| |
| Testing is an important part of software development and test |
| coverage a simple way to add discipline to your testing strategy. |
| Go forth, test, and cover. |