IMPORTANT: The Bazel docs have moved! Please update your bookmark to https://bazel.build/rules/lib/InstrumentedFilesInfo
You can read about the migration, and let us know what you think.
Extensions >
API reference >
InstrumentedFilesInfo
InstrumentedFilesInfo
Contains information about source files and instrumentation metadata files for rule targets matched by--instrumentation_filter
for purposes of code coverage data collection. When coverage data collection is enabled, a manifest containing the combined paths in instrumented_files
and metadata_files
are passed to the test action as inputs, with the manifest's path noted in the environment variable COVERAGE_MANIFEST
. The metadata files, but not the source files, are also passed to the test action as inputs. When InstrumentedFilesInfo
is returned by an aspect's implementation function, any InstrumentedFilesInfo
from the base rule target is ignored.
instrumented_files
depset InstrumentedFilesInfo.instrumented_files
depset
of File
objects representing instrumented source files for this target and its dependencies.
metadata_files
depset InstrumentedFilesInfo.metadata_files
depset
of File
objects representing coverage metadata files for this target and its dependencies. These files contain additional information required to generate LCOV-format coverage output after the code is executed, e.g. the .gcno
files generated when gcc
is run with -ftest-coverage
.
to_json
string InstrumentedFilesInfo.to_json()Deprecated. This API is deprecated and will be removed soon. Please do not depend on it. It is disabled with
---incompatible_struct_has_no_methods
. Use this flag to verify your code is compatible with its imminent removal. Creates a JSON string from the struct parameter. This method only works if all struct elements (recursively) are strings, ints, booleans, other structs, a list of these types or a dictionary with string keys and values of these types. Quotes and new lines in strings are escaped. Examples:
struct(key=123).to_json() # {"key":123} struct(key=True).to_json() # {"key":true} struct(key=[1, 2, 3]).to_json() # {"key":[1,2,3]} struct(key='text').to_json() # {"key":"text"} struct(key=struct(inner_key='text')).to_json() # {"key":{"inner_key":"text"}} struct(key=[struct(inner_key=1), struct(inner_key=2)]).to_json() # {"key":[{"inner_key":1},{"inner_key":2}]} struct(key=struct(inner_key=struct(inner_inner_key='text'))).to_json() # {"key":{"inner_key":{"inner_inner_key":"text"}}}.
Deprecated: instead, use json.encode(x) or json.encode_indent(x), which work for values other than structs and do not pollute the struct field namespace.
to_proto
string InstrumentedFilesInfo.to_proto()Deprecated. This API is deprecated and will be removed soon. Please do not depend on it. It is disabled with
---incompatible_struct_has_no_methods
. Use this flag to verify your code is compatible with its imminent removal. Creates a text message from the struct parameter. This method only works if all struct elements (recursively) are strings, ints, booleans, other structs or dicts or lists of these types. Quotes and new lines in strings are escaped. Struct keys are iterated in the sorted order. Examples:
struct(key=123).to_proto() # key: 123 struct(key=True).to_proto() # key: true struct(key=[1, 2, 3]).to_proto() # key: 1 # key: 2 # key: 3 struct(key='text').to_proto() # key: "text" struct(key=struct(inner_key='text')).to_proto() # key { # inner_key: "text" # } struct(key=[struct(inner_key=1), struct(inner_key=2)]).to_proto() # key { # inner_key: 1 # } # key { # inner_key: 2 # } struct(key=struct(inner_key=struct(inner_inner_key='text'))).to_proto() # key { # inner_key { # inner_inner_key: "text" # } # } struct(foo={4: 3, 2: 1}).to_proto() # foo: { # key: 4 # value: 3 # } # foo: { # key: 2 # value: 1 # }
Deprecated: use proto.encode_text(x) instead.