On Thu, Aug 15, 2019 at 10:01:04PM -0400, Derrick Stolee wrote: > Here is today's test coverage report. Are the scripts you use to generate these available somewhere? I think it's useful to look at uncovered code, but I often struggle to figure out whether the parts attached to my name are relevant. In particular, I think two changes to the report format might help: 1. Include names alongside commit ids when listing uncovered lines. I know that will end up with some overly-long lines, but it makes it easy to grep for one's name to find relevant sections of the file (as opposed to finding your name at the bottom and cross-referencing with actual content lines). Seeing that an uncovered line is a BUG(), for example, makes it easy to know that it's not really an interesting uncovered case in the code. 2. Include more context. Just taking a random example from this email: > builtin/rebase.c > e191cc8b 129) strbuf_addstr(&buf, strategy_opts); We know what the uncovered line was trying to do, but more interesting is likely the conditional that causes it to be uncovered. In this case the surrounding code is: if (opts->ignore_whitespace) { struct strbuf buf = STRBUF_INIT; if (strategy_opts) strbuf_addstr(&buf, strategy_opts); strbuf_addstr(&buf, " --ignore-space-change"); free(strategy_opts); strategy_opts = strbuf_detach(&buf, NULL); } even the usual 3 lines of diff context would make it a lot quicker to understand what's going on (it only kicks in when multiple strategy options are used). (As an aside, this code leaks the newly allocated buffer and leaves a dangling pointer in opts->strategy_opts, but that's all orthogonal to the uncovered line; I'll send a separate message to the original author). Anyway, I wonder if we could adjust the output of the script to make reading it that way a bit easier. -Peff