man ggcov-webdb (Commandes) - generate intermediate database for ggcov web interface
NAME
ggcov-webdb - generate intermediate database for ggcov web interface
SYNOPSIS
ggcov-webdb [[-r] directory|file] ...
DESCRIPTION
Ggcov-webdb generates an intermediate database and tree of source files from a development directory, in the form of a tarball. The files in this tarball are later used by the ggcov PHP pages to present test coverage data to WWW browsers.
Test coverage data is produced by C and C++ programs compiled with gcc -fprofile-arcs -ftest-coverage. So the combination of ggcov-webdb and the ggcov PHP pages is basically a WWW replacement for the gcov program that comes with gcc.
The intermediate database approach is used to handle the common case where the development machine and the web server machine are separate. The database contains coverage data in an indexed, platform-independent, PHP-friendly form. Because the database format is platform-independant the PHP pages can be deployed on web servers of a different architecture to the development machines. In fact the ggcov web pages support any web server that meets the following criteria:
- •
- supports PHP version 4.3 or later, and
- •
- provides the dba extension with the db4 provider (which ggcov uses to read the intermediate database), and
- •
- provides the gd extension (which ggcov uses to generate the bargraphs on the Summary page).
The sourceforge.net project web server is an example of such a server.
Ggcov-webdb produces a gzipped tarball containing the intermediate database itself and copies of all the source files which are mentioned in the database. This is all the information that the ggcov web pages need, in one bundle which is convenient to copy from the development machine to the web server. Usually this tarball would be extracted into a subdirectory of /var/cache/ggcov/tests/ on the web server.
Arguments are used to specify how to find coverage data files. The arguments can combinations of:
- directory
- The directory is scanned for source files, which are handled as if they had been specified on the commandline (except that missing coverage data files are silently ignored). If the -r flag is in effect, sub-directories are scanned recursively. Multiple directories can be specified and are scanned in the order given.
- executable
- The executable file is scanned for debugging records which contain source file names, and each source file which exists is handled as if it had been specified on the command line (except that missing coverage data files are silently ignored). Any shared libraries on which the executable depends are also scanned. Multiple executables can be specified and are scanned in the order given. This feature is only available on some platforms (for example, i386-linux).
- source-file
- Is any regular file ending in one of the file extensions .c, .cc, .cxx, .cpp, or .C. Source files are matched to their corresponding coverage data files (.gcno and .gcda files, or .bb, .bbg, and .da files with older compilers) and object files by searching for a file of the same basename and the appropriate extension first in the same directory as the source file and then in all the directories specified on the command line (in the order they were specified).
OPTIONS
- -f test.tgz, --output-file=test.tgz
- Generate output to filename test.tgz instead of the default ggcov.webdb.tgz. The special filename - can be used to generate output to stdout.
- -o dir, --object-directory=dir
- Add the directory dir to the search path for object files and coverage data files.
- -r, --recursive
- When a directory is specified on the command line, search for coverage data files recursively in all child directories.
- -X symbols, --suppress-ifdef=symbols
- Do not include in statistics or summaries, code inside C pre-processor directives which depend on any of the given symbols. One or more symbols may be given, separated by commas or whitespace. Ggcov-webdb understands the following subset of the C pre-processor command set:
-
• #if SYMBOL
• #if defined(SYMBOL)
• #ifdef SYMBOL
• #ifndef SYMBOL
• #else
• #endif
- This option is useful for suppressing test infrastructure code, debugging code, or other code which is compiled into the coverage test executable but whose coverage is not significant.
EXAMPLES
Generate intermediate database for all the available source in the executable a.out (on some platforms only), and install as test foo in the default tests location.
-
mkdir /var/cache/ggcov/tests/foo
ggcov-webdb -f - a.out |
(cd /var/ggcov/tests/foo ; tar -xzf - )
Generate intermediate database for all the C source in the current directory.
- ggcov-webdb *.c
Generate intermediate database for all the C source in one directory where the object files and test coverage data files are in different directories:
- ggcov-webdb /foo/obj/ /foo/cov-data/ /foo/src/
AUTHOR
Written by Greg Banks <gnb@alphalink.com.au>.
COPYRIGHT
ggcov is Copyright © 2001-2005 Greg Banks <gnb@alphalink.com.au>.
This is free software; see the COPYING file for copying conditions. There
is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
PURPOSE.