JetBrains' dotCover 2.0 Released: Check out .NET code coverage tool with integrated test runner!
dotCover is a unit test runner and code coverage tool that enables .NET developers to easily see how successful they are in covering their applications with unit tests.
JetBrains' dotCover is a .NET code coverage tool with an integrated test runner that enables developers to easily determine how much of their code is covered by
tests. Code coverage analysis can be executed right from within Visual Studio 2005, 2008, 2010, and 2012 RC. dotCover seamlessly integrates with JetBrains'
ReSharper’s unit test runner to enable analyzing coverage of unit tests. If you don’t have ReSharper installed, you can use dotCover's integrated test runner
to run and analyze coverage of unit tests based on MSTest, NUnit, xUnit, or the MSpec framework. Coverage details are presented as a tree view.
.NET Code Coverage Analysis
dotCover calculates and reports statement-level code coverage for applications built with .NET Framework 1.0 to 4.0, as well as in Silverlight 4 and 5. dotCover
helps you learn to what extent your code is covered with unit tests. It also helps developers and QA engineers test software products as thoroughly as
possible by reporting code coverage for automated and manual test runs.
Visual Studio Integration
dotCover is a plug-in to Visual Studio giving you the advantage of analyzing and visualizing code coverage without leaving your code editor. Currently dotCover
integrates into Visual Studio 2005, 2008, 2010, and 2012 Release Candidate.
Coverage Highlighting in Visual Studio
In addition to the tree view for visualizing coverage data, dotCover can highlight covered and uncovered lines of code right in the Visual Studio code editor. You
can specify light, medium, or dark color schemes for code highlighting to match your preferred Visual Studio theme.
Running and Managing Unit Tests
dotCover comes bundled with a unit test runner that it shares with ReSharper,
JetBrains' .NET developer productivity tool, to enable analyzing coverage of unit tests based on MSTest, NUnit, xUnit, or MSpec. However, even if you don’t
have ReSharper installed, you can still use dotCover for running and analyzing coverage of unit tests based on NUnit and MSTest. In case you have both
ReSharper and dotCover installed, you can choose which unit test runner you want to use, or alternatively use them both.
Filtering and Excluding Nodes
From within the coverage tree view, you can exclude a specific node or all nodes except the current node from the coverage calculation. As soon as you've
excluded a node or nodes, dotCover instantly recalculates percentages of covered and uncovered code. This is useful for focusing on production code or filtering
out code that you're not interested in testing right now.
In addition to including or excluding nodes in the coverage tree, you can set global or solution-specific coverage filters based on project, namespace, type,
or type member names. Attribute filters are also available that restrict gathering coverage information from code marked with certain attributes.
dotCover uses these filters to include or exclude coverage data during a coverage run.
Continuous Coverage Analysis
dotCover includes a command line runner, which is a great fit with continuous integration servers and can easily be called from build scripts. JetBrains' own
continuous integration product, TeamCity, bundles dotCover's coverage analysis engine, which helps schedule coverage runs
as part of the continuous integration process and generating server-side coverage reports. Via the TeamCity add-in for Visual Studio, dotCover is able
to obtain coverage data from a TeamCity server — without running coverage analysis on a local machine.
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