Source-based Code Coverage¶
Introduction¶
This document explains how to use clang’s source-based code coverage feature. It’s called “source-based” because it operates on AST and preprocessor information directly. This allows it to generate very precise coverage data.
Clang ships two other code coverage implementations:
SanitizerCoverage - A low-overhead tool meant for use alongside the various sanitizers. It can provide up to edge-level coverage.
gcov - A GCC-compatible coverage implementation which operates on DebugInfo. This is enabled by
-ftest-coverage
or--coverage
.
From this point onwards “code coverage” will refer to the source-based kind.
The code coverage workflow¶
The code coverage workflow consists of three main steps:
Compiling with coverage enabled.
Running the instrumented program.
Creating coverage reports.
The next few sections work through a complete, copy-‘n-paste friendly example based on this program:
% cat <<EOF > foo.cc
#define BAR(x) ((x) || (x))
template <typename T> void foo(T x) {
for (unsigned I = 0; I < 10; ++I) { BAR(I); }
}
int main() {
foo<int>(0);
foo<float>(0);
return 0;
}
EOF
Compiling with coverage enabled¶
To compile code with coverage enabled, pass -fprofile-instr-generate
-fcoverage-mapping
to the compiler:
# Step 1: Compile with coverage enabled.
% clang++ -fprofile-instr-generate -fcoverage-mapping foo.cc -o foo
Note that linking together code with and without coverage instrumentation is supported. Uninstrumented code simply won’t be accounted for in reports.
Running the instrumented program¶
The next step is to run the instrumented program. When the program exits it
will write a raw profile to the path specified by the LLVM_PROFILE_FILE
environment variable. If that variable does not exist, the profile is written
to default.profraw
in the current directory of the program. If
LLVM_PROFILE_FILE
contains a path to a non-existent directory, the missing
directory structure will be created. Additionally, the following special
pattern strings are rewritten:
“%p” expands out to the process ID.
“%h” expands out to the hostname of the machine running the program.
“%t” expands out to the value of the
TMPDIR
environment variable. On Darwin, this is typically set to a temporary scratch directory.“%Nm” expands out to the instrumented binary’s signature. When this pattern is specified, the runtime creates a pool of N raw profiles which are used for on-line profile merging. The runtime takes care of selecting a raw profile from the pool, locking it, and updating it before the program exits. If N is not specified (i.e the pattern is “%m”), it’s assumed that
N = 1
. N must be between 1 and 9. The merge pool specifier can only occur once per filename pattern.“%c” expands out to nothing, but enables a mode in which profile counter updates are continuously synced to a file. This means that if the instrumented program crashes, or is killed by a signal, perfect coverage information can still be recovered. Continuous mode does not support value profiling for PGO, and is only supported on Darwin at the moment. Support for Linux may be mostly complete but requires testing, and support for Windows may require more extensive changes: please get involved if you are interested in porting this feature.
# Step 2: Run the program.
% LLVM_PROFILE_FILE="foo.profraw" ./foo
Note that continuous mode is also used on Fuchsia where it’s the only supported mode, but the implementation is different. The Darwin and Linux implementation relies on padding and the ability to map a file over the existing memory mapping which is generally only available on POSIX systems and isn’t suitable for other platforms.
On Fuchsia, we rely on the ability to relocate counters at runtime using a
level of indirection. On every counter access, we add a bias to the counter
address. This bias is stored in __llvm_profile_counter_bias
symbol that’s
provided by the profile runtime and is initially set to zero, meaning no
relocation. The runtime can map the profile into memory at arbitrary locations,
and set bias to the offset between the original and the new counter location,
at which point every subsequent counter access will be to the new location,
which allows updating profile directly akin to the continuous mode.
The advantage of this approach is that doesn’t require any special OS support.
The disadvantage is the extra overhead due to additional instructions required
for each counter access (overhead both in terms of binary size and performance)
plus duplication of counters (i.e. one copy in the binary itself and another
copy that’s mapped into memory). This implementation can be also enabled for
other platforms by passing the -runtime-counter-relocation
option to the
backend during compilation.
% clang++ -fprofile-instr-generate -fcoverage-mapping -mllvm -runtime-counter-relocation foo.cc -o foo
Creating coverage reports¶
Raw profiles have to be indexed before they can be used to generate
coverage reports. This is done using the “merge” tool in llvm-profdata
(which can combine multiple raw profiles and index them at the same time):
# Step 3(a): Index the raw profile.
% llvm-profdata merge -sparse foo.profraw -o foo.profdata
There are multiple different ways to render coverage reports. The simplest option is to generate a line-oriented report:
# Step 3(b): Create a line-oriented coverage report.
% llvm-cov show ./foo -instr-profile=foo.profdata
This report includes a summary view as well as dedicated sub-views for
templated functions and their instantiations. For our example program, we get
distinct views for foo<int>(...)
and foo<float>(...)
. If
-show-line-counts-or-regions
is enabled, llvm-cov
displays sub-line
region counts (even in macro expansions):
1| 20|#define BAR(x) ((x) || (x))
^20 ^2
2| 2|template <typename T> void foo(T x) {
3| 22| for (unsigned I = 0; I < 10; ++I) { BAR(I); }
^22 ^20 ^20^20
4| 2|}
------------------
| void foo<int>(int):
| 2| 1|template <typename T> void foo(T x) {
| 3| 11| for (unsigned I = 0; I < 10; ++I) { BAR(I); }
| ^11 ^10 ^10^10
| 4| 1|}
------------------
| void foo<float>(int):
| 2| 1|template <typename T> void foo(T x) {
| 3| 11| for (unsigned I = 0; I < 10; ++I) { BAR(I); }
| ^11 ^10 ^10^10
| 4| 1|}
------------------
If --show-branches=count
and --show-expansions
are also enabled, the
sub-views will show detailed branch coverage information in addition to the
region counts:
------------------
| void foo<float>(int):
| 2| 1|template <typename T> void foo(T x) {
| 3| 11| for (unsigned I = 0; I < 10; ++I) { BAR(I); }
| ^11 ^10 ^10^10
| ------------------
| | | 1| 10|#define BAR(x) ((x) || (x))
| | | ^10 ^1
| | | ------------------
| | | | Branch (1:17): [True: 9, False: 1]
| | | | Branch (1:24): [True: 0, False: 1]
| | | ------------------
| ------------------
| | Branch (3:23): [True: 10, False: 1]
| ------------------
| 4| 1|}
------------------
To generate a file-level summary of coverage statistics instead of a line-oriented report, try:
# Step 3(c): Create a coverage summary.
% llvm-cov report ./foo -instr-profile=foo.profdata
Filename Regions Missed Regions Cover Functions Missed Functions Executed Lines Missed Lines Cover Branches Missed Branches Cover
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/tmp/foo.cc 13 0 100.00% 3 0 100.00% 13 0 100.00% 12 2 83.33%
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL 13 0 100.00% 3 0 100.00% 13 0 100.00% 12 2 83.33%
The llvm-cov
tool supports specifying a custom demangler, writing out
reports in a directory structure, and generating html reports. For the full
list of options, please refer to the command guide.
A few final notes:
The
-sparse
flag is optional but can result in dramatically smaller indexed profiles. This option should not be used if the indexed profile will be reused for PGO.Raw profiles can be discarded after they are indexed. Advanced use of the profile runtime library allows an instrumented program to merge profiling information directly into an existing raw profile on disk. The details are out of scope.
The
llvm-profdata
tool can be used to merge together multiple raw or indexed profiles. To combine profiling data from multiple runs of a program, try e.g:% llvm-profdata merge -sparse foo1.profraw foo2.profdata -o foo3.profdata
Exporting coverage data¶
Coverage data can be exported into JSON using the llvm-cov export
sub-command. There is a comprehensive reference which defines the structure of
the exported data at a high level in the llvm-cov source code.
Interpreting reports¶
There are five statistics tracked in a coverage summary:
Function coverage is the percentage of functions which have been executed at least once. A function is considered to be executed if any of its instantiations are executed.
Instantiation coverage is the percentage of function instantiations which have been executed at least once. Template functions and static inline functions from headers are two kinds of functions which may have multiple instantiations. This statistic is hidden by default in reports, but can be enabled via the
-show-instantiation-summary
option.Line coverage is the percentage of code lines which have been executed at least once. Only executable lines within function bodies are considered to be code lines.
Region coverage is the percentage of code regions which have been executed at least once. A code region may span multiple lines (e.g in a large function body with no control flow). However, it’s also possible for a single line to contain multiple code regions (e.g in “return x || y && z”).
Branch coverage is the percentage of “true” and “false” branches that have been taken at least once. Each branch is tied to individual conditions in the source code that may each evaluate to either “true” or “false”. These conditions may comprise larger boolean expressions linked by boolean logical operators. For example, “x = (y == 2) || (z < 10)” is a boolean expression that is comprised of two individual conditions, each of which evaluates to either true or false, producing four total branch outcomes.
Of these five statistics, function coverage is usually the least granular while branch coverage is the most granular. 100% branch coverage for a function implies 100% region coverage for a function. The project-wide totals for each statistic are listed in the summary.
Format compatibility guarantees¶
There are no backwards or forwards compatibility guarantees for the raw profile format. Raw profiles may be dependent on the specific compiler revision used to generate them. It’s inadvisable to store raw profiles for long periods of time.
Tools must retain backwards compatibility with indexed profile formats. These formats are not forwards-compatible: i.e, a tool which uses format version X will not be able to understand format version (X+k).
Tools must also retain backwards compatibility with the format of the coverage mappings emitted into instrumented binaries. These formats are not forwards-compatible.
The JSON coverage export format has a (major, minor, patch) version triple. Only a major version increment indicates a backwards-incompatible change. A minor version increment is for added functionality, and patch version increments are for bugfixes.
Impact of llvm optimizations on coverage reports¶
llvm optimizations (such as inlining or CFG simplification) should have no impact on coverage report quality. This is due to the fact that the mapping from source regions to profile counters is immutable, and is generated before the llvm optimizer kicks in. The optimizer can’t prove that profile counter instrumentation is safe to delete (because it’s not: it affects the profile the program emits), and so leaves it alone.
Note that this coverage feature does not rely on information that can degrade during the course of optimization, such as debug info line tables.
Using the profiling runtime without static initializers¶
By default the compiler runtime uses a static initializer to determine the profile output path and to register a writer function. To collect profiles without using static initializers, do this manually:
Export a
int __llvm_profile_runtime
symbol from each instrumented shared library and executable. When the linker finds a definition of this symbol, it knows to skip loading the object which contains the profiling runtime’s static initializer.Forward-declare
void __llvm_profile_initialize_file(void)
and call it once from each instrumented executable. This function parsesLLVM_PROFILE_FILE
, sets the output path, and truncates any existing files at that path. To get the same behavior without truncating existing files, pass a filename pattern string tovoid __llvm_profile_set_filename(char *)
. These calls can be placed anywhere so long as they precede all calls to__llvm_profile_write_file
.Forward-declare
int __llvm_profile_write_file(void)
and call it to write out a profile. This function returns 0 when it succeeds, and a non-zero value otherwise. Calling this function multiple times appends profile data to an existing on-disk raw profile.
In C++ files, declare these as extern "C"
.
Using the profiling runtime without a filesystem¶
The profiling runtime also supports freestanding environments that lack a filesystem. The runtime ships as a static archive that’s structured to make dependencies on a hosted environment optional, depending on what features the client application uses.
The first step is to export __llvm_profile_runtime
, as above, to disable
the default static initializers. Instead of calling the *_file()
APIs
described above, use the following to save the profile directly to a buffer
under your control:
Forward-declare
uint64_t __llvm_profile_get_size_for_buffer(void)
and call it to determine the size of the profile. You’ll need to allocate a buffer of this size.Forward-declare
int __llvm_profile_write_buffer(char *Buffer)
and call it to copy the current counters toBuffer
, which is expected to already be allocated and big enough for the profile.Optionally, forward-declare
void __llvm_profile_reset_counters(void)
and call it to reset the counters before entering a specific section to be profiled. This is only useful if there is some setup that should be excluded from the profile.
In C++ files, declare these as extern "C"
.
Collecting coverage reports for the llvm project¶
To prepare a coverage report for llvm (and any of its sub-projects), add
-DLLVM_BUILD_INSTRUMENTED_COVERAGE=On
to the cmake configuration. Raw
profiles will be written to $BUILD_DIR/profiles/
. To prepare an html
report, run llvm/utils/prepare-code-coverage-artifact.py
.
To specify an alternate directory for raw profiles, use
-DLLVM_PROFILE_DATA_DIR
. To change the size of the profile merge pool, use
-DLLVM_PROFILE_MERGE_POOL_SIZE
.
Drawbacks and limitations¶
Prior to version 2.26, the GNU binutils BFD linker is not able link programs compiled with
-fcoverage-mapping
in its--gc-sections
mode. Possible workarounds include disabling--gc-sections
, upgrading to a newer version of BFD, or using the Gold linker.Code coverage does not handle unpredictable changes in control flow or stack unwinding in the presence of exceptions precisely. Consider the following function:
int f() { may_throw(); return 0; }
If the call to
may_throw()
propagates an exception intof
, the code coverage tool may mark thereturn
statement as executed even though it is not. A call tolongjmp()
can have similar effects.
Clang implementation details¶
This section may be of interest to those wishing to understand or improve the clang code coverage implementation.
Gap regions¶
Gap regions are source regions with counts. A reporting tool cannot set a line execution count to the count from a gap region unless that region is the only one on a line.
Gap regions are used to eliminate unnatural artifacts in coverage reports, such as red “unexecuted” highlights present at the end of an otherwise covered line, or blue “executed” highlights present at the start of a line that is otherwise not executed.
Branch regions¶
When viewing branch coverage details in source-based file-level sub-views using
--show-branches
, it is recommended that users show all macro expansions
(using option --show-expansions
) since macros may contain hidden branch
conditions. The coverage summary report will always include these macro-based
boolean expressions in the overall branch coverage count for a function or
source file.
Branch coverage is not tracked for constant folded branch conditions since
branches are not generated for these cases. In the source-based file-level
sub-view, these branches will simply be shown as [Folded - Ignored]
so that
users are informed about what happened.
Branch coverage is tied directly to branch-generating conditions in the source code. Users should not see hidden branches that aren’t actually tied to the source code.
Switch statements¶
The region mapping for a switch body consists of a gap region that covers the entire body (starting from the ‘{‘ in ‘switch (…) {‘, and terminating where the last case ends). This gap region has a zero count: this causes “gap” areas in between case statements, which contain no executable code, to appear uncovered.
When a switch case is visited, the parent region is extended: if the parent
region has no start location, its start location becomes the start of the case.
This is used to support switch statements without a CompoundStmt
body, in
which the switch body and the single case share a count.
For switches with CompoundStmt
bodies, a new region is created at the start
of each switch case.
Branch regions are also generated for each switch case, including the default case. If there is no explicitly defined default case in the source code, a branch region is generated to correspond to the implicit default case that is generated by the compiler. The implicit branch region is tied to the line and column number of the switch statement condition since no source code for the implicit case exists.