JaCoCo Coverage Reports
DETAILS: Tier: Free, Premium, Ultimate Offering: GitLab.com, Self-managed, GitLab Dedicated Status: Beta
- Introduced in GitLab 17.3 with a flag named
jacoco_coverage_reports
. Disabled by default.
FLAG: The availability of this feature is controlled by a feature flag. For more information, see the history. This feature is available for testing, but not ready for production use.
For JaCoCo coverage reports to work, you must generate a properly formatted JaCoCo XML file that provides line coverage.
The JaCoCo coverage reports visualization supports:
-
Instructions (C0 Coverage),
ci
(covered instructions) in reports.
This feature is in beta. If you have any comments, use the feedback issue to provide more details.
Add JaCoCo coverage job
To configure your pipeline to generate the coverage reports, add a job to your
.gitlab-ci.yml
file. For example:
Below is an example configuration:
test-jdk11:
stage: test
image: maven:3.6.3-jdk-11
script:
- mvn $MAVEN_CLI_OPTS clean org.jacoco:jacoco-maven-plugin:prepare-agent test jacoco:report
artifacts:
reports:
coverage_report:
coverage_format: jacoco
path: target/site/jacoco/jacoco.xml
In this example, the mvn
command generates the JaCoCo coverage report. The path
points to the generated report.
If the job generates multiple reports, use a wildcard in the artifact path
Relative File Paths Correction
File path conversion
JaCoCo reports provide relative file paths but coverage report visualizations require absolute paths. GitLab attempts to convert the relative paths to absolute paths, using data from the related merge requests.
The path matching process is:
- Find all the merge requests for the same pipeline ref.
- For all the files that changed, find all the absolute paths.
- For each relative path in the report, use the first matching absolute path.
This process might not always be able to find a suitable matching absolute path.
Multiple modules or source directories
With identical file names for multiple modules or source directories, it might not be possible to find the absolute path by default.
For example, GitLab cannot find the absolute paths if these files are changed in a merge request:
src/main/java/org/acme/DemoExample.java
src/main/other-module/org/acme/DemoExample.java
For path conversion to succeed, you must have some unique difference in the relative paths. For example, you can change one of the file or directory names:
-
Change the filename:
src/main/java/org/acme/DemoExample.java - src/main/other-module/org/acme/DemoExample.java + src/main/other-module/org/acme/OtherDemoExample.java
-
Change the path:
src/main/java/org/acme/DemoExample.java - src/main/other-module/org/acme/DemoExample.java + src/main/other-module/org/other-acme/DemoExample.java
You can also add a new directory, as long as the complete relative path is unique.
Troubleshooting
Metrics do not display for all changed files
Metrics might not display correctly if you create a new merge request from the same source branch, but with a different target branch.
The job doesn't consider the diffs from the new merge request and doesn't display any metrics for files not contained in the diff of the other merge request. This happens even when the generated coverage report contain metrics for the specified file.
To fix this issue, wait until the new merge request is created, then rerun your pipeline or start a new one. Then the new merge request is taken into account.