My SUT looks like:
foo.py
bar.py
tests/__init__.py [empty]
tests/foo_tests.py
tests/bar_tests.py
tests/integration/__init__.py [empty]
tests/integration/foo_tests.py
tests/integration/bar_tests.py
When I run nosetests --with-coverage
, I get details for all sorts of
modules that I'd rather ignore. But I can't use the
--cover-package=PACKAGE
option because foo.py
& bar.py
are not in a
package. (See the thread after
http://lists.idyll.org/pipermail/testing-in-python/2008-November/001091.html
for my reasons for not putting them in a package.)
Can I restrict coverage output to just foo.py & bar.py?
Update - Assuming that there isn't a better answer than Nadia's below, I've asked a follow up question: "How do I write some (bash) shell script to convert all matching filenames in directory to command-line options?"
I would do this:
I prefer this solution to the others suggested; it's simple yet you are explicit about which packages you wish to have coverage for. Nadia's answer involves a lot more redundant typing, Stuart's answer uses sed and still creates a package by invoking
touch __init__.py
, and--cover-package=.
doesn't work for me.You can use it like this:
I had a quick look at nose source code to confirm: This is the line
I have a lot of top-level Python files/packages and find it annoying to list them all manually using --cover-package, so I made two aliases for myself. Alias
nosetests_cover
will run coverage with all your top-level Python files/packages listed in --cover-package. Aliasnosetests_cover_sort
will do the same and additionally sort your results by coverage percentage.Notes:
-nr
with-n
in the sort command.Details:
I don't claim that these are the most efficient commands to achieve the results I want. They're just the commands I happened to come up with. =P
The main thing to explain would be the argument to --cover-package. It builds the comma-separated list of top-level Python file/package names (with ".py" stripped from file names) as follows:
\$
-- Escapes the$
character in a double-quoted string.$( )
-- Inserts the result of the command contained within.ls
-- Lists all names in current directory (must be top-level Python directory).| sed -r 's/[.]py$//'
-- In the list, replaces "foo_bar.py" with "foo_bar".| fgrep -v '.'
-- In the list, removes all names without a dot (e.g. removes foo_bar.pyc and notes.txt).| paste -s -d ','
-- Changes the list from newline-separated to comma-separated.I should also explain the sorting.
2>&1
-- Joins stderr and stdout.| fgrep '%'
-- Removes all output lines without a%
character.| sort -nr -k 4
-- Sorts the remaining lines in reverse numerical order by the 4th column (which is the column for coverage percentage). If you want normal order instead of reverse order, replace-nr
with-n
.Hope this helps someone! =)
You can use:
or even set environment variable
Tested with nose 1.1.2
You can improve the accepted answer like so
--cover-package=foo,bar