These docs are for v4.6. Click to read the latest docs for v2023.

Pull Request Comments

Detailed report commented directly into your pull request

The Codecov pull request comment is a quick overview of how a pull request (and relevant commits) will affect the code coverage. This simple integration allows developers to see the effects of their work, without having to leave the familiar Github UI. The PR comment provides details on the coverage changes in the pull request that help with speeding up code reviews, and ensuring that all incoming features and fixes are well tested. The comment is customizable to adjust the behavior and logic, as well as the actual output, please see below for configuration details.

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Codecov Delta

It is important to understand what absolute <relative> (impact) represents. Learn all about the Codecov Delta.

Disable comment

To disable the comment, simply set the top-level comment key to false in your codecov.yml, as shown below.

comment: false

You can do this in your Team Yaml, to take effect on all your repositories.

For more troubleshooting options, be sure to read about the Team Bot

Configuration

comment:                  # this is a top-level key
  layout: "reach, diff, flags, files"
  behavior: default
  require_changes: false  # if true: only post the comment if coverage changes
  require_base: no        # [yes :: must have a base report to post]
  require_head: yes       # [yes :: must have a head report to post]

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Setting the comment key to true is not a valid configuration, as it will overwrite the default configuration with a boolean value and preclude the sending of any comment.

Layout

Customize your comment layout by choosing the order and types of components to include. The following are components you can add or choose to opt out of. Omitting any of these from your layout will cause them to not show up.

  • Reach is a coverage graph embedded into the comment.
  • Diff is the Coverage Diff of the pull request.
  • Flags are a list of user defined Flags, and the impact on their coverage
    • Learn more about setting up Flags.
  • Files or Tree are a list of files that are impacted by the pull request (coverage changes, file is new or removed).
  • Header is the top of the comment showing the two commits being merged, the change in coverage, and the diff coverage.
  • Footer is the bottom of a comment that contains the legend, last updated commits, and docs link.
  • Feedback is a section that provides a link to provide feedback to Codecov.

Behavior

Choose the way Codecov submits comments in your pull requests.

  • default: update, if exists. Otherwise post new.
  • once: update, if exists. Otherwise post new. Skip if deleted.
  • new: delete old and post new.

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Behavior: default

When updating, the creation date of the comment will stay the same. There will be an edited link with a drop-down where you can check the times updated.

Emails will be submitted to all subscribers of the pull request only when posting a new comment. There is no way to disable email notifications. This is a limitation of the Supported CI Providers.

Requiring Changes

You may desire to change when the comment is posted, if any changes are discovered in coverage.

comment:
  require_changes: true

Comments will now only post when coverage changes. Furthermore, if a comment already exists, and a newer commit results in no coverage change for the entire pull, the comment will be deleted.

Requiring the Base and/or Head Commit

You can force comments to post on pull requests even if Codecov doesn't have coverage reports for either the base or head commit. This generally isn't recommended since, without base and head coverage report information, the resulting comment is not very helpful.

However, setting both require_base and require_head to no can allow you to test the ability of Codecov to post a comment to your pull requests without needing to upload coverage for both the base and head commit.

comment:
  require_head: no     # default yes
  require_base: no     # default yes

after_n_builds

By default codecov will post and/or update the pull request comment after it processes each report uploaded for a particular pull request commit. If your CI process uploads many reports to codecov, this can be confusing for team members viewing the pull request as reports are processing.

To remedy this, you can delay the posting of a pull request comment until a certain number of reports are received and processed by Codecov, using the after_n_builds setting.

Generally, you should set after_n_builds equal to the number of reports you upload per commit. However, this is not required. If after_n_builds is greater than the number of reports you upload for a commit, no comment will post. If it is less, the comment will post when after_n_builds is reached and (by default) continue to update on each additional report upload.

show_carryforward_flags

For those using the Carryforward Flags feature, Carryforward Flags do not show in the pull request comment by default.

You can configure presence of Carryforward Flags in the flags table via advanced usage of Carryforward Flags.


What’s Next

It is important to learn about the Codecov Delta syntax to fully understand pull request comments.