Adds an option (-m, --min_coverage, or {cover_opts, {min_coverage,X}})
to the 'cover' command, where the value is an integer between 0 and 100.
If the total coverage during the analysis is below the value received,
the command will fail with output like:
===> Requiring 64% coverage to pass. Only 62% obtained
If the rate is correct, the command silently passes as it currently
does.
This feature allows to enforce code coverage standards in a project if
desired.
* only try to cover compile directories that actually exist
* recover from failures where source files don't contain required
attributes for cover compilation and print warning
* modify compiler interface to work on either application objects or
directories containing source files
* compile all sources in `src_dirs` to the application `ebin` dir and
all sources in `extra_src_dirs` to a directory mirroring it's
position in the app's `_build` directory. for example, `apps/foo/more`
would compile to `_build/default/lib/foo/more`
for `extra_src_dirs` in the root of a project with multiple
applications (so orphan directories that don't "belong" to an
application) compile to `_build/default/extras/more`
* copy directories specified in `extra_src_dirs` into the `_build`
directory so tools like `ct` and `xref` that expect source to be
in a particular location still work
* clean compiled artifacts from all `extra_src_dirs`
* alter `eunit`, `ct` and `cover` to work with the new directory
structure
* billions of new tests
`rebar.config` or via the `-c\--cover` flag given to the appropriate
task) from the `eunit` and `ct` tasks and add a `cover` task to
write coverage analysis to disk