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Barebones code coverage for JavaScript, in JavaScript.
Currently only supports Jasmine.
slim-cover [...options]
Executes tests and prints coverage information. slim-cover will only report on coverage for files that are included by your test code and satisfy the configuration options. If there are .js files in your configuration that are not imported by either your tests or the code under test, coverage for those files will not be reported.
--project <directory>
Sets the project directory in which to execute tests. For example, if your Jasmine spec folder is in a subdirectory called dev, run slim-cover --project dev to execute those tests.
By default, the current working directory is considered to be the project directory.
--include <file or directory>
Specifies a file or directory to include in the coverage report. For example, slim-cover --include index.js will only report on code coverage for index.js, whereas slim-cover --include src will report on coverage for all .js files under the src directory. This option can be used as many times as needed, for example slim-cover --include index.js --include src.
By default, all .js files under the project directory are included.
--exclude <file or directory>
Specifies a file or directory to exclude from the coverage report. For example, slim-cover --exclude node_modules will report on code coverage for all .js files under the project directory except for those found under the node_modules directory. This option can be used as many times as needed, for example slim-cover --exclude spec --exclude benchmark.js.
By default, nothing is excluded.
--reporter <type>[,<destination>]
Specifies a type of reporter to be used to output coverage information as well as an optional file to output to. This option can be used as many times as needed, for example slim-cover --reporter terminal --reporter codecov,coverage.json
By default, the terminal reporter is outputted to stdout. If a reporter is specified but not a destination, it is outputted to stdout.
slim-cover can be combined with jasmine and esm to test code written using ES modules. Add esm as a helper in your jasmine.json ("../node_modules/esm" worked for me) and set the "esm" field to your package.json to { "cache": false }.
Disabling this esm option is necessary because if esm caches your files before running slim-cover they will not be picked up when you run slim-cover. Additionally, if esm caches your files while running slim-cover, you will get errors when not running slim-cover because it has not been initialized.
FAQs
Barebones code coverage for JavaScript, in JavaScript
We found that slim-cover demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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Security News
Multiple high-impact npm maintainers confirm they have been targeted in the same social engineering campaign that compromised Axios.

Security News
Axios compromise traced to social engineering, showing how attacks on maintainers can bypass controls and expose the broader software supply chain.

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Node.js has paused its bug bounty program after funding ended, removing payouts for vulnerability reports but keeping its security process unchanged.