By just running lcov on the produced .gcda data files, we don't account
for source files that are not touched by tests at all. To fix that, run
lcov --initial to create a base line info file with all zero counters,
and merge that with the actual counters when creating the final report.
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
This is the way lcov was intended to be used. It is much faster and
more robust and makes the makefiles simpler than running it in each
subdirectory.
The previous coding ran gcov before lcov, but that is useless because
lcov/geninfo call gcov internally and use that information. Moreover,
this led to complications and failures during parallel make. This
separates the two targets: You either use "make coverage" to get
textual output from gcov or "make coverage-html" to get an HTML report
via lcov. (Using both is still problematic because they write the same
output files.)
Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
Before, make check-world would create a new temporary installation for
each test suite, which is slow and wasteful. Instead, we now create one
test installation that is used by all test suites that are part of a
make run.
The management of the temporary installation is removed from pg_regress
and handled in the makefiles. This allows for better control, and
unifies the code with that of test suites not run through pg_regress.
review and msvc support by Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
more review by Fabien Coelho <coelho@cri.ensmp.fr>
This will hopefully be easier to use than pg_config for users who are
already used to the pkg-config interface. It also works better for
multi-arch installations.
reviewed by Tom Lane