When running code coverage for my solution which contains multiple projects, I noticed that Code Coverage includes also my test assemblies.
I found an article which suggests the following template for .runsettings:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<RunSettings>
<DataCollectionRunSettings>
<DataCollectors>
<DataCollector friendlyName="Code Coverage" uri="datacollector://Microsoft/CodeCoverage/2.0" assemblyQualifiedName="Microsoft.VisualStudio.Coverage.DynamicCoverageDataCollector, Microsoft.VisualStudio.TraceCollector, Version=11.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a">
<Configuration>
<CodeCoverage>
<ModulePaths>
<Include>
<!-- Do not specify any includes. This will attempt to include all binaries -->
</Include>
<Exclude>
<!-- Exclude modules that aren't to be processed, by their name / path -->
<ModulePath>.*Tests\.dll$</ModulePath> <!-- I put it here -->
</Exclude>
</ModulePaths>
<UseVerifiableInstrumentation>True</UseVerifiableInstrumentation>
<AllowLowIntegrityProcesses>True</AllowLowIntegrityProcesses>
<CollectFromChildProcesses>True</CollectFromChildProcesses>
<CollectAspDotNet>False</CollectAspDotNet>
<!--
Additional paths to search for symbol files. Symbols must be found for modules to be instrumented.
If symbols are alongside the binaries, they are automatically picked up. Otherwise specify the here.
Note that searching for symbols increases code coverage runtime. So keep this small and local.
<SymbolSearchPaths>
<Path>C:\Users\User\Documents\Visual Studio 11\Projects\ProjectX\bin\Debug</Path>
<Path>\\mybuildshare\builds\ProjectX</Path>
</SymbolSearchPaths>
-->
<Functions>
<Exclude>
<Function>^std::.*</Function>
<Function>^ATL::.*</Function>
<Function>.*::__GetTestMethodInfo.*</Function>
<Function>^Microsoft::VisualStudio::CppCodeCoverageFramework::.*</Function>
<Function>^Microsoft::VisualStudio::CppUnitTestFramework::.*</Function>
<Function>.*::YOU_CAN_ONLY_DESIGNATE_ONE_.*</Function>
</Exclude>
</Functions>
<Attributes>
<Exclude>
<Attribute>^System.Diagnostics.DebuggerHiddenAttribute$</Attribute>
<Attribute>^System.Diagnostics.DebuggerNonUserCodeAttribute$</Attribute>
<Attribute>^System.Runtime.CompilerServices.CompilerGeneratedAttribute$</Attribute>
<Attribute>^System.CodeDom.Compiler.GeneratedCodeAttribute$</Attribute>
<Attribute>^System.Diagnostics.CodeAnalysis.ExcludeFromCodeCoverageAttribute$</Attribute>
</Exclude>
</Attributes>
<Sources>
<Exclude>
<Source>.*\\atlmfc\\.*</Source>
<Source>.*\\vctools\\.*</Source>
<Source>.*\\public\\sdk\\.*</Source>
<Source>.*\\microsoft sdks\\.*</Source>
<Source>.*\\vc\\include\\.*</Source>
</Exclude>
</Sources>
<CompanyNames>
<Exclude>
<CompanyName>.*microsoft.*</CompanyName>
</Exclude>
</CompanyNames>
<PublicKeyTokens>
<Exclude>
<PublicKeyToken>^B77A5C561934E089$</PublicKeyToken>
<PublicKeyToken>^B03F5F7F11D50A3A$</PublicKeyToken>
<PublicKeyToken>^31BF3856AD364E35$</PublicKeyToken>
<PublicKeyToken>^89845DCD8080CC91$</PublicKeyToken>
<PublicKeyToken>^71E9BCE111E9429C$</PublicKeyToken>
<PublicKeyToken>^8F50407C4E9E73B6$</PublicKeyToken>
<PublicKeyToken>^E361AF139669C375$</PublicKeyToken>
</Exclude>
</PublicKeyTokens>
</CodeCoverage>
</Configuration>
</DataCollector>
</DataCollectors>
</DataCollectionRunSettings>
</RunSettings>
Now the problem is that as soon as I check my .runsettings file in the TEST\Test settings menu, I see Code Coverage analyzes only one of many assemblies in my solution.
Even if I remove the line
<ModulePath>.*Tests\.dll$</ModulePath> <!-- I put it here -->
only one assembly is analyzed. I would like to avoid adding all my assemblies to the Include list, I just need to exclude all the test assemblies.
Why does .runsettings make code coverage see only one of the assemblies in my VS solution?
Unfortunately I couldn't get the other answers working for me, but I got this working, as per https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/jj159530.aspx:
The issue is the period. For some reason the RegEx is choking on that. You can get around it by escaping the period as follows:
Also, the empty includes are valid and imply that all Modules are included. The comments of the Microsoft provided sample state that:
I had all sorts of issues getting
<ModulePaths>
to work reliably (using ASP.NET Core 2.1).In the end I found that using the
<Sources>
was simple and more reliable and worked exactly as I needed. You still leverage the advice on the use of regex.I include my solution path, and exclude my \tests subfolders where all my test projects live. Example for CodeCoverage element in RunSettings xml file:
See more at: Customising Code Coverage on MS Docs
On a related note, I ran into this post because I was bit thinking clearly about the regular expression nature of the include and exclude paths. For my WPF application, I wanted to exclude coverage analysis on Caliburn.Micro. So I had written
Clearly, the period is messing me up. This question does not suffer from that problem, but I bet I’m not the only one to overlook this simple fact. For any other readers, please also take note that * is not a wildcard – it is the regular expression “any number of” operator. You do not want
*.Caliburn
, but rather.*Caliburn
Thus this simple statement solved my problem:Because it is looking for a path, not just a module name, you need the .* in front of the module to ignore it – that is, you want to ignore it at any given file path.
As I couldn't find this answer anywhere else, and this just took me a while to figure out,
ModulePath
is the full path, and you may be matching your pattern somewhere else in the path.For example, if you have a project
Foo
and a projectFoo.Tests
, and they are built to their own directories, you will end up withFoo.Tests\bin\Release\Foo.dll
andFoo.Tests\bin\Release\Foo.Tests.dll
. This is the dll that the test assembly will reference, so this is the path that is used.Foo\bin\Release\Foo.dll
is not directly referenced by the test assembly.If you try to exclude
.*tests.*
it will match both paths and produce no coverage.To only exclude assemblies with "test" in their file name, ignoring their path, I used