A GitHub action that reports about your code coverage in every pull request.
This action uses Jest to extract code coverage, and comments it on pull request. Inspired by Size-limit action. Features:
- Reporting code coverage on each pull request. 📃
- Rejecting pull request, if coverage is under threshold. ❌
- Comparing coverage with base branch. 🔍
- Showing spoiler in the comment for all new covered files. 🆕
- Showing spoiler in the comment for all files, in which coverage was reduced. 🔻
- Install and configure Jest.
- Create new action inside
.github/workflows
:
Minimal configuration
name: 'coverage'
on:
pull_request:
branches:
- master
jobs:
coverage:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
env:
CI_JOB_NUMBER: 1
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v1
- uses: artiomtr/[email protected]
with:
github_token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
# threshold: 80 # optional parameter
- Pay attention to the action parameters. You can specify custom threshold or test script
- That's it!
If you want to set minimal accepted coverage for the PR, you can pass and optional parameter threshold.
For example, if you want to reject every pull request, with total line coverage less than 80%:
with:
github_token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
threshold: 80 # value in percents
By default, this action will run this command, to extract coverage:
npx jest --silent --ci --coverage --coverageReporters="text" --coverageReporters="text-summary"
If you're not satisfied with default behaviour, you can specify your own command, by passing custom option test_script
.
⚠ IMPORTANT ⚠: Please, note that this is not simple
npx jest --coverage
script call. If you're specify your custom script, YOU SHOULD PASS SAME COVERAGE REPORTERS as it does default script (text
andtext-summary
reporters). Without those options, your action will not work.
For instance, if you want to run test:coverage
npm script:
with:
github_token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
test_script: npm run test:coverage
Pull requests are welcome. For major changes, please open an issue first to discuss what you would like to change.
Please make sure to update tests as appropriate.
MIT © Artiom Tretjakovas