We’ve been pretty bad about updating the blog while we’ve been working on things, but there are some pretty big updates coming down the pipeline for Coveralls including a redesign and a new service integration. Stay tuned!
We’ve been pretty bad about updating the blog while we’ve been working on things, but there are some pretty big updates coming down the pipeline for Coveralls including a redesign and a new service integration. Stay tuned!
Thanks to Dac Chartrand for wirting up a short tutorial on how to set up PHpUnit with Coveralls!
http://kizu514.com/blog/setting-up-coveralls-io-with-travis-ci-and-phpunit/
We are still running a large migration and regular service is going to be interrupted until everything is worked through.
We are implementing a big change to how we handle and store build data - so we have to process all the historical data as well as the constant influx of new data. The process is taking longer than we expected to process through all the records. We want to remain free for open source forever, and at this time we have well over billion rows in our DB and we need to adjust to scale easier going forward.

You can now get coverage reports for your source code repositories hosted on both Github and Bitbucket. To start tracking coverage either create a new Bitbucket account now, or if you already use Coveralls with Github, log in and then link your Bitbucket account from your account page (handy link: https://coveralls.io/account). The repo overview has been updated so that you can track coverage across both Bitbucket and Github at the same time.
If you want to keep your Coveralls Bitbucket repos separate, sign out of your Coveralls Github account and OAuth in using Bitbucket and you’ll have a separate account for your Bitbucket projects.
After changes to the underlying Coveralls system, we’ve decided to simplify our pricing model. We are keeping the $5 a month for 1 repo for people who want to check out coveralls, and new subscriptions will now get 30 days free to kick the tires.
Above that we have the Coveralls Pro plan for $25 a month which offers unlimited repo coverage.
Sign up now before the offer expires!
For any users who were on a plan that was less than $25 we haven’t changed anything - you can stay on that plan or upgrade at any time. We aren’t going to sunset the plans ever, so if you just want to let it ride you are free to do so.
We hope that you’ll enjoy this new unlimited Coveralls. Happy testing!

We are proud to announce that Sourcegraph is a new Coveralls Medal of Honor sponsor! Their support of the revolution will help bring the glorious dawn of a fully tested world a little bit closer.
Sourcegraph is reinventing code search for the modern programmer. Find the code you need quickly, see anywhere in the open-source world that a function or library is used, and discover other like-minded programmers. Start using it now at Sourcegraph.com.

We’ve pushed out some updates and optimizations to Coveralls as we are getting back into the post-summer swing of things.
First up on the list is the ability to search for files in your repo. Now when you are looking at a build you’ll find a search box at the top right of the table. Search for a filename there and you’ll get snappy results as you type.

We’ve also pushed out a change to support the renaming of repos. On a repo’s detail page, you’ll now see a red button label “Change Source” that if you press it will take you to a page of all your associated repositories and allow you to change the GitHub repo source.

We had a number of requests for this feature update. Now on the repo pages, you’ll now find a new button under the branch dropdown. If you have remote branches that were deleted in your GitHub repo you’d rather not see on Coveralls, hit the “Sync Branches” button and get that data up to date!
Added support for reStructuredText style badges.
We thank revolutionary leader Travis CI for taking a Medal of Honor level sponsorship with Coveralls!
Travis CI is the leading hosted continuous integration and deployment platform for open source and commercial projects. It’s used by popular projects like Ruby on Rails, Facebook’s HipHop VM, Opscode’s Chef, and customers like Engine Yard, Heroku, and Modcloth.