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GCOV(1)				      GNU			       GCOV(1)

NAME
       gcov - coverage testing tool

SYNOPSIS
       gcov [-v|--version] [-h|--help]
	    [-a|--all-blocks]
	    [-b|--branch-probabilities]
	    [-c|--branch-counts]
	    [-g|--conditions]
	    [-d|--display-progress]
	    [-f|--function-summaries]
	    [-j|--json-format]
	    [-H|--human-readable]
	    [-k|--use-colors]
	    [-l|--long-file-names]
	    [-m|--demangled-names]
	    [-n|--no-output]
	    [-o|--object-directory directory|file]
	    [-p|--preserve-paths]
	    [-q|--use-hotness-colors]
	    [-r|--relative-only]
	    [-s|--source-prefix	directory]
	    [-t|--stdout]
	    [-u|--unconditional-branches]
	    [-x|--hash-filenames]
	    files

DESCRIPTION
       gcov is a test coverage program.	 Use it	in concert with	GCC to analyze
       your programs to	help create more efficient, faster running code	and to
       discover	untested parts of your program.	 You can use gcov as a
       profiling tool to help discover where your optimization efforts will
       best affect your	code.  You can also use	gcov along with	the other
       profiling tool, gprof, to assess	which parts of your code use the
       greatest	amount of computing time.

       Profiling tools help you	analyze	your code's performance.  Using	a
       profiler	such as	gcov or	gprof, you can find out	some basic performance
       statistics, such	as:

       *   how often each line of code executes

       *   what	lines of code are actually executed

       *   how much computing time each	section	of code	uses

       Once you	know these things about	how your code works when compiled, you
       can look	at each	module to see which modules should be optimized.  gcov
       helps you determine where to work on optimization.

       Software	  developers   also  use  coverage  testing  in	 concert  with
       testsuites, to make  sure  software  is	actually  good	enough	for  a
       release.	  Testsuites  can  verify  that	a program works	as expected; a
       coverage	program	tests to see how much of the program is	 exercised  by
       the  testsuite.	Developers can then determine what kinds of test cases
       need to be added	to the testsuites to create both better	testing	and  a
       better final product.

       You  should  compile  your code without optimization if you plan	to use
       gcov because the	optimization, by combining some	lines of code into one
       function, may not give you as much information as you need to look  for
       `hot  spots'  where  the	 code  is using	a great	deal of	computer time.
       Likewise, because gcov accumulates statistics by	line  (at  the	lowest
       resolution),  it	 works	best with a programming	style that places only
       one statement on	each line.  If you use complicated macros that	expand
       to  loops  or  to  other	 control  structures,  the statistics are less
       helpful---they only report on the line where the	 macro	call  appears.
       If your complex macros behave like functions, you can replace them with
       inline functions	to solve this problem.

       gcov  creates a logfile called sourcefile.gcov which indicates how many
       times each line of a source file	sourcefile.c has  executed.   You  can
       use  these  logfiles  along  with  gprof	 to  aid  in  fine-tuning  the
       performance of your programs.  gprof gives timing information  you  can
       use along with the information you get from gcov.

       gcov  works  only on code compiled with GCC.  It	is not compatible with
       any other profiling or test coverage mechanism.

OPTIONS
       -a
       --all-blocks
	   Write individual execution counts for every basic block.   Normally
	   gcov	 outputs  execution counts only	for the	main blocks of a line.
	   With	this option you	can determine if blocks	within a  single  line
	   are not being executed.

       -b
       --branch-probabilities
	   Write  branch  frequencies  to  the	output	file, and write	branch
	   summary info	to the standard	output.	 This option allows you	to see
	   how often each branch in your  program  was	taken.	 Unconditional
	   branches will not be	shown, unless the -u option is given.

       -c
       --branch-counts
	   Write  branch  frequencies  as the number of	branches taken,	rather
	   than	the percentage of branches taken.

       -g
       --conditions
	   Write condition coverage to the output file,	 and  write  condition
	   summary info	to the standard	output.	 This option allows you	to see
	   if  the conditions in your program at least once had	an independent
	   effect  on  the  outcome  of	 the  boolean	expression   (modified
	   condition/decision  coverage).   This  requires  you	to compile the
	   source with -fcondition-coverage.

       -d
       --display-progress
	   Display the progress	on the standard	output.

       -f
       --function-summaries
	   Output summaries for	each function in addition to  the  file	 level
	   summary.

       -h
       --help
	   Display  help  about	 using gcov (on	the standard output), and exit
	   without doing any further processing.

       -j
       --json-format
	   Output gcov file in an easy-to-parse	JSON intermediate format which
	   does	not require source code	for  generation.   The	JSON  file  is
	   compressed  with  gzip  compression	algorithm  and	the files have
	   .gcov.json.gz extension.

	   Structure of	the JSON is following:

		   {
		     "current_working_directory": "foo/bar",
		     "data_file": "a.out",
		     "format_version": "2",
		     "gcc_version": "11.1.1 20210510"
		     "files": ["$file"]
		   }

	   Fields of the root element have following semantics:

	   *   current_working_directory:   working    directory    where    a
	       compilation unit	was compiled

	   *   data_file: name of the data file	(GCDA)

	   *   format_version: semantic	version	of the format

	       Changes in version 2:

	       *   calls: information about function calls is added

	   *   gcc_version: version of the GCC compiler

	   Each	file has the following form:

		   {
		     "file": "a.c",
		     "functions": ["$function"],
		     "lines": ["$line"]
		   }

	   Fields of the file element have following semantics:

	   *   file_name: name of the source file

	   Each	function has the following form:

		   {
		     "blocks": 2,
		     "blocks_executed":	2,
		     "demangled_name": "foo",
		     "end_column": 1,
		     "end_line": 4,
		     "execution_count":	1,
		     "name": "foo",
		     "start_column": 5,
		     "start_line": 1
		   }

	   Fields of the function element have following semantics:

	   *   blocks: number of blocks	that are in the	function

	   *   blocks_executed:	number of executed blocks of the function

	   *   demangled_name: demangled name of the function

	   *   end_column: column in the source	file where the function	ends

	   *   end_line: line in the source file where the function ends

	   *   execution_count:	number of executions of	the function

	   *   name: name of the function

	   *   start_column:  column  in  the  source  file where the function
	       begins

	   *   start_line: line	in the source file where the function begins

	   Note	that line numbers and column numbers number from  1.   In  the
	   current  implementation, start_line and start_column	do not include
	   any template	parameters and the leading return type but  that  this
	   is likely to	be fixed in the	future.

	   Each	line has the following form:

		   {
		     "block_ids": ["$block_id"],
		     "branches": ["$branch"],
		     "calls": ["$call"],
		     "count": 2,
		     "conditions": ["$condition"],
		     "line_number": 15,
		     "unexecuted_block": false,
		     "function_name": "foo",
		   }

	   Branches  and calls are present only	with -b	option.	 Fields	of the
	   line	element	have following semantics:

	   *   block_ids: IDs of basic blocks that belong to the line

	   *   count: number of	executions of the line

	   *   line_number: line number

	   *   unexecuted_block: flag whether the line contains	an  unexecuted
	       block (not all statements on the	line are executed)

	   *   function_name: a	name of	a function this	line belongs to	(for a
	       line with an inlined statements can be not set)

	   Each	branch has the following form:

		   {
		     "count": 11,
		     "destination_block_id": 17,
		     "fallthrough": true,
		     "source_block_id":	13,
		     "throw": false
		   }

	   Fields of the branch	element	have following semantics:

	   *   count: number of	executions of the branch

	   *   fallthrough: true when the branch is a fall through branch

	   *   throw: true when	the branch is an exceptional branch

	   *   isource_block_id:  ID  of  the  basic  block  where this	branch
	       happens

	   *   destination_block_id: ID	of the basic block this	 branch	 jumps
	       to

	   Each	call has the following form:

		   {
		     "destination_block_id": 1,
		     "returned": 11,
		     "source_block_id":	13
		   }

	   Fields of the call element have following semantics:

	   *   returned:  number of times a function call returned (call count
	       is equal	to line::count)

	   *   isource_block_id: ID of the basic block where this call happens

	   *   destination_block_id:  ID  of  the  basic  block	  this	 calls
	       continues after return

	   Each	condition has the following form:

		   {
		     "count": 4,
		     "covered":	2,
		     "not_covered_false": [],
		     "not_covered_true": [0, 1],
		   }

	   Fields of the condition element have	following semantics:

	   *   count: number of	condition outcomes in this expression

	   *   covered:	  number   of	covered	 condition  outcomes  in  this
	       expression

	   *   not_covered_true: terms,	by index, not seen  as	true  in  this
	       expression

	   *   not_covered_false:  terms,  by index, not seen as false in this
	       expression

       -H
       --human-readable
	   Write counts	in human readable format (like 24.6k).

       -k
       --use-colors
	   Use colors for lines	of code	that have zero coverage.  We  use  red
	   color  for  non-exceptional	lines  and cyan	for exceptional.  Same
	   colors are used for basic blocks with -a option.

       -l
       --long-file-names
	   Create long file names for included source files.  For example,  if
	   the	header	file  x.h  contains code, and was included in the file
	   a.c,	then running gcov on the file a.c will produce an output  file
	   called  a.c##x.h.gcov  instead  of x.h.gcov.	 This can be useful if
	   x.h is included in multiple source files and	you want  to  see  the
	   individual  contributions.	If  you	 use  the  -p option, both the
	   including and included file names will be complete path names.

       -m
       --demangled-names
	   Display demangled function names in output. The default is to  show
	   mangled function names.

       -n
       --no-output
	   Do not create the gcov output file.

       -o directory|file
       --object-directory directory
       --object-file file
	   Specify either the directory	containing the gcov data files,	or the
	   object path name.  The .gcno, and .gcda data	files are searched for
	   using this option.  If a directory is specified, the	data files are
	   in  that directory and named	after the input	file name, without its
	   extension.  If a file is specified here, the	data files  are	 named
	   after that file, without its	extension.

       -p
       --preserve-paths
	   Preserve  complete path information in the names of generated .gcov
	   files.  Without this	option,	just the filename component  is	 used.
	   With	 this  option,	all  directories  are  used, with / characters
	   translated to # characters,	.  directory  components  removed  and
	   unremoveable	 ..   components  renamed  to  ^.   This  is useful if
	   sourcefiles are in several different	directories.

       -q
       --use-hotness-colors
	   Emit	perf-like colored output for hot lines.	 Legend	of  the	 color
	   scale is printed at the very	beginning of the output	file.

       -r
       --relative-only
	   Only	output information about source	files with a relative pathname
	   (after  source  prefix elision).  Absolute paths are	usually	system
	   header files	and  coverage  of  any	inline	functions  therein  is
	   normally uninteresting.

       -s directory
       --source-prefix directory
	   A prefix for	source file names to remove when generating the	output
	   coverage  files.  This option is useful when	building in a separate
	   directory, and the pathname to the source directory is  not	wanted
	   when	 determining  the  output  file	 names.	 Note that this	prefix
	   detection is	applied	before determining whether the source file  is
	   absolute.

       -t
       --stdout
	   Output to standard output instead of	output files.

       -u
       --unconditional-branches
	   When	branch probabilities are given,	include	those of unconditional
	   branches.  Unconditional branches are normally not interesting.

       -v
       --version
	   Display  the	gcov version number (on	the standard output), and exit
	   without doing any further processing.

       -w
       --verbose
	   Print verbose informations related to basic blocks and arcs.

       -x
       --hash-filenames
	   When	using --preserve-paths,	gcov uses the  full  pathname  of  the
	   source  files  to create an output filename.	 This can lead to long
	   filenames that can overflow filesystem limits.  This	option creates
	   names of the	 form  source-file##md5.gcov,  where  the  source-file
	   component  is  the  final  filename	part  and the md5 component is
	   calculated from the full mangled name that  would  have  been  used
	   otherwise.  The option is an	alternative to the --preserve-paths on
	   systems which have a	filesystem limit.

       gcov should be run with the current directory the same as that when you
       invoked	the  compiler.	 Otherwise  it	will not be able to locate the
       source files.  gcov  produces  files  called  mangledname.gcov  in  the
       current	directory.   These  contain  the  coverage  information	of the
       source file they	correspond to.	One .gcov file is  produced  for  each
       source  (or header) file	containing code, which was compiled to produce
       the data	files.	The mangledname	 part  of  the	output	file  name  is
       usually	simply	the  source  file  name,  but  can  be	something more
       complicated if the -l or	-p options are given.  Refer to	those  options
       for details.

       If  you	invoke	gcov with multiple input files,	the contributions from
       each input file are summed.  Typically you would	 invoke	 it  with  the
       same list of files as the final link of your executable.

       The  .gcov  files  contain  the	:  separated fields along with program
       source code.  The format	is

	       <execution_count>:<line_number>:<source line text>

       Additional block	information may	succeed	each line, when	 requested  by
       command	line option.  The execution_count is - for lines containing no
       code.  Unexecuted lines are marked #####	or =====, depending on whether
       they are	reachable by non-exceptional paths or only  exceptional	 paths
       such  as	 C++  exception	 handlers,  respectively. Given	the -a option,
       unexecuted blocks are marked $$$$$ or %%%%%,  depending	on  whether  a
       basic  block  is	 reachable  via	 non-exceptional or exceptional	paths.
       Executed	basic blocks having a statement	with zero execution_count  end
       with * character	and are	colored	with magenta color with	the -k option.
       This functionality is not supported in Ada.

       Note  that  GCC	can completely remove the bodies of functions that are
       not needed -- for  instance  if	they  are  inlined  everywhere.	  Such
       functions  are  marked  with  -,	 which	can  be	 confusing.   Use  the
       -fkeep-inline-functions and -fkeep-static-functions options  to	retain
       these functions and allow gcov to properly show their execution_count.

       Some lines of information at the	start have line_number of zero.	 These
       preamble	lines are of the form

	       -:0:<tag>:<value>

       The  ordering  and  number of these preamble lines will be augmented as
       gcov  development  progresses  ---  do  not  rely  on  them   remaining
       unchanged.  Use tag to locate a particular preamble line.

       The additional block information	is of the form

	       <tag> <information>

       The information is human	readable, but designed to be simple enough for
       machine parsing too.

       When printing percentages, 0% and 100% are only printed when the	values
       are  exactly  0%	 and  100%  respectively.   Other  values  which would
       conventionally be rounded to 0% or 100%	are  instead  printed  as  the
       nearest non-boundary value.

       When using gcov,	you must first compile your program with a special GCC
       option  --coverage.   This  tells  the  compiler	to generate additional
       information needed by gcov (basically a flow graph of the program)  and
       also  includes  additional  code	in the object files for	generating the
       extra profiling information needed by gcov.  These additional files are
       placed in the directory where the object	file is	located.

       Running the program will	cause profile output  to  be  generated.   For
       each  source  file  compiled with -fprofile-arcs, an accompanying .gcda
       file will be placed in the object file directory.

       Running gcov with your program's	source file names  as  arguments  will
       now produce a listing of	the code along with frequency of execution for
       each  line.   For  example,  if your program is called tmp.cpp, this is
       what you	see when you use the basic gcov	facility:

	       $ g++ --coverage	tmp.cpp	-c
	       $ g++ --coverage	tmp.o
	       $ a.out
	       $ gcov tmp.cpp -m
	       File 'tmp.cpp'
	       Lines executed:92.86% of	14
	       Creating	'tmp.cpp.gcov'

       The file	tmp.cpp.gcov contains output from gcov.	 Here is a sample:

		       -:    0:Source:tmp.cpp
		       -:    0:Working directory:/home/gcc/testcase
		       -:    0:Graph:tmp.gcno
		       -:    0:Data:tmp.gcda
		       -:    0:Runs:1
		       -:    0:Programs:1
		       -:    1:#include	<stdio.h>
		       -:    2:
		       -:    3:template<class T>
		       -:    4:class Foo
		       -:    5:{
		       -:    6:	 public:
		      1*:    7:	 Foo():	b (1000) {}
	       ------------------
	       Foo<char>::Foo():
		   #####:    7:	 Foo():	b (1000) {}
	       ------------------
	       Foo<int>::Foo():
		       1:    7:	 Foo():	b (1000) {}
	       ------------------
		      2*:    8:	 void inc () { b++; }
	       ------------------
	       Foo<char>::inc():
		   #####:    8:	 void inc () { b++; }
	       ------------------
	       Foo<int>::inc():
		       2:    8:	 void inc () { b++; }
	       ------------------
		       -:    9:
		       -:   10:	 private:
		       -:   11:	 int b;
		       -:   12:};
		       -:   13:
		       -:   14:template	class Foo<int>;
		       -:   15:template	class Foo<char>;
		       -:   16:
		       -:   17:int
		       1:   18:main (void)
		       -:   19:{
		       -:   20:	 int i,	total;
		       1:   21:	 Foo<int> counter;
		       -:   22:
		       1:   23:	 counter.inc();
		       1:   24:	 counter.inc();
		       1:   25:	 total = 0;
		       -:   26:
		      11:   27:	 for (i	= 0; i < 10; i++)
		      10:   28:	   total += i;
		       -:   29:
		      1*:   30:	 int v = total > 100 ? 1 : 2;
		       -:   31:
		       1:   32:	 if (total != 45)
		   #####:   33:	   printf ("Failure\n");
		       -:   34:	 else
		       1:   35:	   printf ("Success\n");
		       1:   36:	 return	0;
		       -:   37:}

       Note that line  7  is  shown  in	 the  report  multiple	times.	 First
       occurrence  presents total number of execution of the line and the next
       two belong to instances of class	Foo constructors.   As	you  can  also
       see,  line  30 contains some unexecuted basic blocks and	thus execution
       count has asterisk symbol.

       When you	use the	-a option, you will get	individual block  counts,  and
       the output looks	like this:

		       -:    0:Source:tmp.cpp
		       -:    0:Working directory:/home/gcc/testcase
		       -:    0:Graph:tmp.gcno
		       -:    0:Data:tmp.gcda
		       -:    0:Runs:1
		       -:    0:Programs:1
		       -:    1:#include	<stdio.h>
		       -:    2:
		       -:    3:template<class T>
		       -:    4:class Foo
		       -:    5:{
		       -:    6:	 public:
		      1*:    7:	 Foo():	b (1000) {}
	       ------------------
	       Foo<char>::Foo():
		   #####:    7:	 Foo():	b (1000) {}
	       ------------------
	       Foo<int>::Foo():
		       1:    7:	 Foo():	b (1000) {}
	       ------------------
		      2*:    8:	 void inc () { b++; }
	       ------------------
	       Foo<char>::inc():
		   #####:    8:	 void inc () { b++; }
	       ------------------
	       Foo<int>::inc():
		       2:    8:	 void inc () { b++; }
	       ------------------
		       -:    9:
		       -:   10:	 private:
		       -:   11:	 int b;
		       -:   12:};
		       -:   13:
		       -:   14:template	class Foo<int>;
		       -:   15:template	class Foo<char>;
		       -:   16:
		       -:   17:int
		       1:   18:main (void)
		       -:   19:{
		       -:   20:	 int i,	total;
		       1:   21:	 Foo<int> counter;
		       1:   21-block  0
		       -:   22:
		       1:   23:	 counter.inc();
		       1:   23-block  0
		       1:   24:	 counter.inc();
		       1:   24-block  0
		       1:   25:	 total = 0;
		       -:   26:
		      11:   27:	 for (i	= 0; i < 10; i++)
		       1:   27-block  0
		      11:   27-block  1
		      10:   28:	   total += i;
		      10:   28-block  0
		       -:   29:
		      1*:   30:	 int v = total > 100 ? 1 : 2;
		       1:   30-block  0
		   %%%%%:   30-block  1
		       1:   30-block  2
		       -:   31:
		       1:   32:	 if (total != 45)
		       1:   32-block  0
		   #####:   33:	   printf ("Failure\n");
		   %%%%%:   33-block  0
		       -:   34:	 else
		       1:   35:	   printf ("Success\n");
		       1:   35-block  0
		       1:   36:	 return	0;
		       1:   36-block  0
		       -:   37:}

       In  this	 mode,	each basic block is only shown on one line -- the last
       line of the block.  A multi-line	block  will  only  contribute  to  the
       execution count of that last line, and other lines will not be shown to
       contain	code,  unless  previous	 blocks	end on those lines.  The total
       execution count of a line  is  shown  and  subsequent  lines  show  the
       execution  counts  for  individual blocks that end on that line.	 After
       each block, the branch and call counts of the block will	be  shown,  if
       the -b option is	given.

       Because	of  the	 way  GCC instruments calls, a call count can be shown
       after a line with no individual	blocks.	  As  you  can	see,  line  33
       contains	a basic	block that was not executed.

       When you	use the	-b option, your	output looks like this:

		       -:    0:Source:tmp.cpp
		       -:    0:Working directory:/home/gcc/testcase
		       -:    0:Graph:tmp.gcno
		       -:    0:Data:tmp.gcda
		       -:    0:Runs:1
		       -:    0:Programs:1
		       -:    1:#include	<stdio.h>
		       -:    2:
		       -:    3:template<class T>
		       -:    4:class Foo
		       -:    5:{
		       -:    6:	 public:
		      1*:    7:	 Foo():	b (1000) {}
	       ------------------
	       Foo<char>::Foo():
	       function	Foo<char>::Foo() called	0 returned 0% blocks executed 0%
		   #####:    7:	 Foo():	b (1000) {}
	       ------------------
	       Foo<int>::Foo():
	       function	Foo<int>::Foo()	called 1 returned 100% blocks executed 100%
		       1:    7:	 Foo():	b (1000) {}
	       ------------------
		      2*:    8:	 void inc () { b++; }
	       ------------------
	       Foo<char>::inc():
	       function	Foo<char>::inc() called	0 returned 0% blocks executed 0%
		   #####:    8:	 void inc () { b++; }
	       ------------------
	       Foo<int>::inc():
	       function	Foo<int>::inc()	called 2 returned 100% blocks executed 100%
		       2:    8:	 void inc () { b++; }
	       ------------------
		       -:    9:
		       -:   10:	 private:
		       -:   11:	 int b;
		       -:   12:};
		       -:   13:
		       -:   14:template	class Foo<int>;
		       -:   15:template	class Foo<char>;
		       -:   16:
		       -:   17:int
	       function	main called 1 returned 100% blocks executed 81%
		       1:   18:main (void)
		       -:   19:{
		       -:   20:	 int i,	total;
		       1:   21:	 Foo<int> counter;
	       call    0 returned 100%
	       branch  1 taken 100% (fallthrough)
	       branch  2 taken 0% (throw)
		       -:   22:
		       1:   23:	 counter.inc();
	       call    0 returned 100%
	       branch  1 taken 100% (fallthrough)
	       branch  2 taken 0% (throw)
		       1:   24:	 counter.inc();
	       call    0 returned 100%
	       branch  1 taken 100% (fallthrough)
	       branch  2 taken 0% (throw)
		       1:   25:	 total = 0;
		       -:   26:
		      11:   27:	 for (i	= 0; i < 10; i++)
	       branch  0 taken 91% (fallthrough)
	       branch  1 taken 9%
		      10:   28:	   total += i;
		       -:   29:
		      1*:   30:	 int v = total > 100 ? 1 : 2;
	       branch  0 taken 0% (fallthrough)
	       branch  1 taken 100%
		       -:   31:
		       1:   32:	 if (total != 45)
	       branch  0 taken 0% (fallthrough)
	       branch  1 taken 100%
		   #####:   33:	   printf ("Failure\n");
	       call    0 never executed
	       branch  1 never executed
	       branch  2 never executed
		       -:   34:	 else
		       1:   35:	   printf ("Success\n");
	       call    0 returned 100%
	       branch  1 taken 100% (fallthrough)
	       branch  2 taken 0% (throw)
		       1:   36:	 return	0;
		       -:   37:}

       For  each  function,  a	line  is  printed  showing  how	many times the
       function	is called, how many times it returns and  what	percentage  of
       the function's blocks were executed.

       For  each  basic	 block,	 a  line is printed after the last line	of the
       basic block describing the branch or call that ends  the	 basic	block.
       There  can  be  multiple	 branches and calls listed for a single	source
       line if there are multiple basic	blocks that end	on that	line.  In this
       case, the branches and calls are	each given  a  number.	 There	is  no
       simple  way  to map these branches and calls back to source constructs.
       In general, though, the lowest numbered branch or call will  correspond
       to the leftmost construct on the	source line.

       For  a  branch,	if  it	was  executed at least once, then a percentage
       indicating the number of	times the branch  was  taken  divided  by  the
       number  of  times  the branch was executed will be printed.  Otherwise,
       the message "never executed" is printed.

       For a call, if it  was  executed	 at  least  once,  then	 a  percentage
       indicating  the number of times the call	returned divided by the	number
       of times	the call was executed will be printed.	This will  usually  be
       100%,  but may be less for functions that call "exit" or	"longjmp", and
       thus may	not return every time they are called.

       The execution counts are	 cumulative.   If  the	example	 program  were
       executed	 again	without	 removing  the	.gcda  file, the count for the
       number of times each line in the	source was executed would be added  to
       the  results  of	 the  previous	run(s).	 This is potentially useful in
       several ways.  For example, it could be used to accumulate data over  a
       number  of  program  runs  as  part of a	test verification suite, or to
       provide more accurate long-term information  over  a  large  number  of
       program runs.

       The  data  in  the  .gcda files is saved	immediately before the program
       exits.	For  each  source  file	 compiled  with	 -fprofile-arcs,   the
       profiling code first attempts to	read in	an existing .gcda file;	if the
       file  doesn't  match  the  executable  (differing number	of basic block
       counts) it will ignore the contents of the file.	 It then adds  in  the
       new execution counts and	finally	writes the data	to the file.

   Using gcov with GCC Optimization
       If  you	plan  to  use  gcov to help optimize your code,	you must first
       compile your program with a special GCC option --coverage.  Aside  from
       that,  you can use any other GCC	options; but if	you want to prove that
       every single line in your program was executed, you should not  compile
       with optimization at the	same time.  On some machines the optimizer can
       eliminate  some	simple	code lines by combining	them with other	lines.
       For example, code like this:

	       if (a !=	b)
		 c = 1;
	       else
		 c = 0;

       can be compiled into one	instruction on some machines.  In  this	 case,
       there  is  no  way  for gcov to calculate separate execution counts for
       each line because there isn't separate code for each line.   Hence  the
       gcov   output  looks  like  this	 if  you  compiled  the	 program  with
       optimization:

		     100:   12:if (a !=	b)
		     100:   13:	 c = 1;
		     100:   14:else
		     100:   15:	 c = 0;

       The output shows	that this block	of  code,  combined  by	 optimization,
       executed	100 times.  In one sense this result is	correct, because there
       was  only  one  instruction  representing  all  four  of	 these	lines.
       However,	the output does	not indicate how many times the	result	was  0
       and how many times the result was 1.

       Inlineable  functions  can  create unexpected line counts.  Line	counts
       are shown for the source	code of	the inlineable function, but  what  is
       shown depends on	where the function is inlined, or if it	is not inlined
       at all.

       If  the	function is not	inlined, the compiler must emit	an out of line
       copy of the function, in	any object file	that needs it.	If fileA.o and
       fileB.o both contain out	of line	 bodies	 of  a	particular  inlineable
       function,  they	will  also  both  contain  coverage  counts  for  that
       function.  When fileA.o and fileB.o are	linked	together,  the	linker
       will,  on  many systems,	select one of those out	of line	bodies for all
       calls to	that function, and remove or ignore the	other.	Unfortunately,
       it will not remove the coverage counters	for the	unused function	 body.
       Hence  when  instrumented,  all	but one	use of that function will show
       zero counts.

       If the function is inlined in several places, the  block	 structure  in
       each  location  might not be the	same.  For instance, a condition might
       now be calculable at compile  time  in  some  instances.	  Because  the
       coverage	 of  all the uses of the inline	function will be shown for the
       same source lines, the line counts themselves might seem	inconsistent.

       Long-running applications can use the "__gcov_reset" and	 "__gcov_dump"
       facilities  to  restrict	 profile  collection  to the program region of
       interest. Calling "__gcov_reset(void)" will clear all run-time  profile
       counters	 to  zero,  and	 calling  "__gcov_dump(void)"  will  cause the
       profile information collected at	that  point  to	 be  dumped  to	 .gcda
       output  files.	Instrumented applications use a	static destructor with
       priority	99 to invoke the "__gcov_dump" function. Thus "__gcov_dump" is
       executed	after all user defined static destructors, as well as handlers
       registered with "atexit".

       If  an  executable  loads  a   dynamic	shared	 object	  via	dlopen
       functionality,  -Wl,--dynamic-list-data	is  needed to dump all profile
       data.

       Profiling run-time library reports various errors  related  to  profile
       manipulation  and  profile  saving.   Errors  are printed into standard
       error output or GCOV_ERROR_FILE file, if	environment variable is	 used.
       In   order   to	terminate  immediately	after  an  errors  occurs  set
       GCOV_EXIT_AT_ERROR environment variable.	 That can help users  to  find
       profile clashing	which leads to a misleading profile.

SEE ALSO
       gpl(7), gfdl(7),	fsf-funding(7),	gcc(1) and the Info entry for gcc.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (c) 1996-2024 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

       Permission  is  granted to copy,	distribute and/or modify this document
       under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version  1.3  or
       any  later  version published by	the Free Software Foundation; with the
       Invariant Sections being	"GNU General Public License" and "Funding Free
       Software", the Front-Cover texts	being (a) (see below),	and  with  the
       Back-Cover  Texts  being	 (b)  (see  below).   A	copy of	the license is
       included	in the gfdl(7) man page.

       (a) The FSF's Front-Cover Text is:

	    A GNU Manual

       (b) The FSF's Back-Cover	Text is:

	    You	have freedom to	copy and modify	this GNU Manual, like GNU
	    software.  Copies published	by the Free Software Foundation	raise
	    funds for GNU development.

gcc-14.2.1			  2025-03-29			       GCOV(1)

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