I remember Apache having a Clover license. Not sure though. We might use
it...

It looks like the Maven plugin is ASL licensed.
http://docs.atlassian.com/maven-clover2-plugin/2.3.1/license.html

Regards,
Jan-Kees


2010/5/26 Gerhard Petracek <gerhard.petra...@gmail.com>

> hi rudy,
>
> imo we should have such a tool for all sub-projects of myfaces.
> maybe as a part of the gsoc project [1].
> (we can also add it after the gsoc project is finished. if there is an
> issue with the license, we have to add it as external add-on.)
>
> regards,
> gerhard
>
> [1] http://www.mail-archive.com/dev@myfaces.apache.org/msg44776.html
>
> http://www.irian.at
>
> Your JSF powerhouse -
> JSF Consulting, Development and
> Courses in English and German
>
> Professional Support for Apache MyFaces
>
>
>
> 2010/5/26 Rudy De Busscher <rdebussc...@gmail.com>
>
> @All,
>>
>> To ensure maximum code coverage of the JUnit  tests for the next release
>> of ExtVal, I was looking at some code coverage tools.  It seems that there
>> aren't much which have a license compatible with Apache (Or am I missing
>> something?).
>>
>> So I made a try with Cobertura (maven plugin has Apache Licence, cobertura
>> itself is GNU General Public License)
>>
>> I created an Ant buildfile that copies all source codes from the various
>> projects and then does a mvn cobertura:cobertura.  It is only a try so you
>> need to set the maven home directory on your computer in the build file
>> (mine was D:/apache-maven-2.0.9, look for the mavenHome attribute)
>> You can try it yourself by unzipping the attached file in the trunk of the
>> svn checkout you have locally and run the ant command in the newly created
>> cobertura directory.
>>
>> Comments about licensing and other experiences with this topic are off
>> course very welcome.
>>
>> regards
>> Rudy.
>>
>
>

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