• Home
  • Line#
  • Scopes#
  • Navigate#
  • Raw
  • Download
1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
2<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
3<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
4<head>
5  <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
6  <link rel="stylesheet" href="resources/doc.css" charset="UTF-8" type="text/css" />
7  <link rel="shortcut icon" href="resources/report.gif" type="image/gif" />
8  <title>JaCoCo - FAQ</title>
9</head>
10<body>
11
12<div class="breadcrumb">
13  <a href="../index.html" class="el_report">JaCoCo</a> &gt;
14  <a href="index.html" class="el_group">Documentation</a> &gt;
15  <span class="el_source">FAQ</span>
16</div>
17<div id="content">
18
19<h1>FAQ</h1>
20
21<p>
22  This is a compilation of questions that have been asked by JaCoCo users
23  before.
24</p>
25
26<h3>Does JaCoCo have a plug-in for [Eclipse|Netbeans|Whatever...]?</h3>
27<p>
28  See <a href="integrations.html">this list</a> for current integrations with
29  various tools.
30</p>
31
32<h3>What Java versions are supported by JaCoCo?</h3>
33<p>
34  JaCoCo supports Java class files from version 1.0 to 1.8. However the minimum
35  JRE version required by the JaCoCo runtime (e.g. the agent) and the JaCoCo
36  tools is 1.5. Also note that class files under test from version 1.6 and above
37  have to contain valid stackmap frames.
38</p>
39
40<h3>Why do I get the error "Can't add different class with same name"?</h3>
41<p>
42  For coverage report generation all classes within a group must have unique
43  names. You get this error during report generation if JaCoCo is supplied with
44  multiple different class files with the same name. To fix this remove those
45  duplicate classes or create separate reports or report groups for each version.
46</p>
47
48<h3>Source code lines with exceptions show no coverage. Why?</h3>
49<p>
50  JaCoCo determines code execution with so called probes. Probes are inserted
51  into the control flow at certain positions. Code is considered as executed
52  when a subsequent probe has been executed. In case of exceptions such a
53  sequence of instructions is aborted somewhere in the middle and the
54  corresponding line of source code is not marked as covered.
55</p>
56
57<h3>Why does the coverage report not show line coverage figures?</h3>
58<p>
59  JaCoCo is based on class files analysis. To calculate line coverage class
60  files must contain line number attributes. For this your code must be compiled
61  with debug information.
62</p>
63
64<h3>Why does the coverage report not show highlighted source code?</h3>
65<p>
66  Make sure the following prerequisites are fulfilled to get source code
67  highlighting in JaCoCo coverage reports:
68</p>
69<ul>
70  <li>Class files must be compiled with debug information to contain line numbers.</li>
71  <li>Source files must be properly supplied at report generation time. I.e.
72      specified source folders must be the direct parent of the folders that
73      define the Java packages.</li>
74</ul>
75
76<h3>Why does a class show as not covered although it has been executed?</h3>
77<p>
78  First make sure execution data has been collected. For this select the
79  <i>Sessions</i> link on the top right corner of the HTML report and check
80  whether the class in question is listed. If it is listed but not linked the
81  class at execution time is a different class file. Make sure you're using the
82  exact same class file at runtime as for report generation. Note that some
83  tools (e.g. EJB containers, mocking frameworks) might modify your class files
84  at runtime. Please see the chapter about <a href="classids.html"> class
85  ids</a> for a detailed discussion.
86</p>
87
88<h3>Why are Java interface types not shown in the coverage reports?</h3>
89<p>
90  Java interface methods do not contain code, therefore code coverage cannot
91  be evaluated. Indeed code coverage is recorded for the implementation classes.
92  The same applies to abstract methods in abstract classes.
93</p>
94
95<h3>Can I collect coverage information without stopping the JVM?</h3>
96<p>
97  Yes, there are two possible ways: The JaCoCo <a href="agent.html">agent</a>
98  can be configured for remote control via TCP/IP sockets. This allows to
99  collect execution data at any point in time from a running JVM. The
100  <a href="ant.html#dump"><code>dump</code> Ant task</a> or the
101  <a href="dump-mojo.html"><code>dump</code> Maven goal</a> can be used to
102  request dumps. The remote control feature also allows you to reset execution
103  data.
104</p>
105<p>
106  Alternatively the JaCoCo <a href="agent.html">agent</a> can be configured to
107  expose some functionality via JMX (<code>jmx=true</code>). The bean
108  <code><a href="./api/org/jacoco/agent/rt/IAgent.html">org.jacoco:type=Runtime</a></code>
109  provides operations to dump and reset execution data at any point in time.
110</p>
111
112<h3>My code uses reflection. Why does it fail when I execute it with JaCoCo?</h3>
113<p>
114  To collect execution data JaCoCo instruments the classes under test which adds
115  two members to the classes: A private static field <code>$jacocoData</code>
116  and a private static method <code>$jacocoInit()</code>. Both members are
117  marked as synthetic.
118</p>
119<p>
120  Please change your code to ignore synthetic members. This is a good practice
121  anyways as also the Java compiler creates synthetic members in certain
122  situation.
123</p>
124
125<h3>Why do I get an error while instrumenting certain Java classes?</h3>
126<p>
127  JaCoCo can instrument valid class files only. Class files with syntactical or
128  semantical error will typically lead to exceptions. In certain areas JaCoCo is
129  more restrictive then the JVM: JaCoCo expects valid so-called "stackmap
130  frame" information in class files of version 1.6 or higher. In turn JaCoCo
131  instrumented classes are expected to conform the specification.
132</p>
133<p>
134  Invalid class files are typically created by some frameworks which do not
135  properly adjust stackmap frames when manipulating bytecode.
136</p>
137
138<h3>Does JaCoCo run on the IBM JRE J9 and WebSphere?</h3>
139<p>
140  It does. To make the JaCoCo agent work please set the VM option
141  <code>-Xshareclasses:none</code>.
142</p>
143
144<h3>Why do I get an error "<code>ClassNotFoundException: org.jacoco.agent[...]Offline</code>"?</h3>
145<p>
146  If you use <a href="offline.html">offline instrumentation</a> the instrumented
147  classes get a direct dependency on the JaCoCo runtime. Therefore
148  <code>jacocoagent.jar</code> of the same JaCoCo version must be on the
149  classpath and accessible from by the instrumented classes.
150</p>
151
152<h3>Why do I get a <code>StackOverflowError</code> during code coverage analysis?</h3>
153<p>
154  There are two known reasons for this:
155</p>
156<ul>
157  <li>Misconfiguration: If you configure two JaCoCo agents of different releases
158      they will instrument each other and cause a endless recursion. Check the
159      effective java command line and avoid such configurations.</li>
160  <li>Heavy stack usage: JaCoCo instrumentation adds a small runtime overhead
161      by adding a local variable to each method. If your application is already
162      close to the maximum stack size this can eventually lead to an
163      <code>StackOverflowError</code>. Increase the maximum java stack size with
164      the <code>-Xss</code> JVM option.</li>
165</ul>
166
167</div>
168<div class="footer">
169  <span class="right"><a href="@jacoco.home.url@">JaCoCo</a> @qualified.bundle.version@</span>
170  <a href="license.html">Copyright</a> &copy; @copyright.years@ Mountainminds GmbH &amp; Co. KG and Contributors
171</div>
172
173</body>
174</html>
175