Book Image

Java EE 8 Development with Eclipse - Third Edition

By : Ram Kulkarni
Book Image

Java EE 8 Development with Eclipse - Third Edition

By: Ram Kulkarni

Overview of this book

Java EE is one of the most popular tools for enterprise application design and development. With recent changes to Java EE 8 specifications, Java EE application development has become a lot simpler with the new specifications, some of which compete with the existing specifications. This guide provides a complete overview of developing highly performant, robust and secure enterprise applications with Java EE with Eclipse. The book begins by exploring different Java EE technologies and how to use them (JSP, JSF, JPA, JDBC, EJB, and more), along with suitable technologies for different scenarios. You will learn how to set up the development environment for Java EE applications and understand Java EE specifications in detail, with an emphasis on examples. The book takes you through deployment of an application in Tomcat, GlassFish Servers, and also in the cloud. It goes beyond the basics and covers topics like debugging, testing, deployment, and securing your Java EE applications. You'll also get to know techniques to develop cloud-ready microservices in Java EE.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Free Chapter
1
Introducing JEE and Eclipse
Index

Calculating unit test coverage


Unit tests tell you whether your application code behaves as expected. Unit tests are important to maintain code quality and catch errors early in the development cycle. However, this goal is at risk if you do not write enough unit tests to test your application code, or if you have not tested all possible input conditions in the test cases and the exception paths. To measure the quality and adequacy of your test cases, you need to calculate the coverage of your test cases. In simple terms, coverage tells you what percentage of your application code was touched by running your unit tests. There are different measures to calculate coverage:

  • Number of lines covered
  • Number of branches covered (created using the if, else, elseif, switch, and try/catch statements)
  • Number of functions covered

Together, these three measures give a fair measurement of the quality of your unit tests. There are many code coverage tools for Java. In this chapter, we will take a look at an...