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llvm-mirror/utils/update_llc_test_checks.py

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#!/usr/bin/env python3
Add a new utility script that helps update very simple regression tests. This script is currently specific to x86 and limited to use with very small regression or feature tests using 'llc' and 'FileCheck' in a reasonably canonical way. It is in no way general purpose or robust at this point. However, it works quite well for simple examples. Here is the intended workflow: - Make a change that requires updating N test files and M functions' assertions within those files. - Stash the change. - Update those N test files' RUN-lines to look "canonical"[1]. - Refresh the FileCheck lines for either the entire file or select functions by running this script. - The script will parse the RUN lines and run the 'llc' binary you give it according to each line, collecting the asm. - It will then annotate each function with the appropriate FileCheck comments to check every instruction from the start of the first basic block to the last return. - There will be numerous cases where the script either fails to remove the old lines, or inserts checks which need to be manually editted, but the manual edits tend to be deletions or replacements of registers with FileCheck variables which are fast manual edits. - A common pattern is to have the script insert complete checking of every instruction, and then edit it down to only check the relevant ones. - Be careful to do all of these cleanups though! The script is designed to make transferring and formatting the asm output of llc into a test case fast, it is *not* designed to be authoratitive about what constitutes a good test! - Commit the nice fresh baseline of checks. - Unstash your change and rebuild llc. - Re-run script to regenerate the FileCheck annotations - Remember to re-cleanup these annotations!!! - Check the diff to make sure this is sane, checking the things you expected it to, and check that the newly updated tests actually pass. - Profit! Also, I'm *terrible* at writing Python, and frankly I didn't spend a lot of time making this script beautiful or well engineered. But it's useful to me and may be useful to others so I thought I'd send it out. http://reviews.llvm.org/D5546 llvm-svn: 225618
2015-01-12 05:43:18 +01:00
"""A test case update script.
This script is a utility to update LLVM 'llc' based test cases with new
Add a new utility script that helps update very simple regression tests. This script is currently specific to x86 and limited to use with very small regression or feature tests using 'llc' and 'FileCheck' in a reasonably canonical way. It is in no way general purpose or robust at this point. However, it works quite well for simple examples. Here is the intended workflow: - Make a change that requires updating N test files and M functions' assertions within those files. - Stash the change. - Update those N test files' RUN-lines to look "canonical"[1]. - Refresh the FileCheck lines for either the entire file or select functions by running this script. - The script will parse the RUN lines and run the 'llc' binary you give it according to each line, collecting the asm. - It will then annotate each function with the appropriate FileCheck comments to check every instruction from the start of the first basic block to the last return. - There will be numerous cases where the script either fails to remove the old lines, or inserts checks which need to be manually editted, but the manual edits tend to be deletions or replacements of registers with FileCheck variables which are fast manual edits. - A common pattern is to have the script insert complete checking of every instruction, and then edit it down to only check the relevant ones. - Be careful to do all of these cleanups though! The script is designed to make transferring and formatting the asm output of llc into a test case fast, it is *not* designed to be authoratitive about what constitutes a good test! - Commit the nice fresh baseline of checks. - Unstash your change and rebuild llc. - Re-run script to regenerate the FileCheck annotations - Remember to re-cleanup these annotations!!! - Check the diff to make sure this is sane, checking the things you expected it to, and check that the newly updated tests actually pass. - Profit! Also, I'm *terrible* at writing Python, and frankly I didn't spend a lot of time making this script beautiful or well engineered. But it's useful to me and may be useful to others so I thought I'd send it out. http://reviews.llvm.org/D5546 llvm-svn: 225618
2015-01-12 05:43:18 +01:00
FileCheck patterns. It can either update all of the tests in the file or
a single test function.
"""
from __future__ import print_function
Add a new utility script that helps update very simple regression tests. This script is currently specific to x86 and limited to use with very small regression or feature tests using 'llc' and 'FileCheck' in a reasonably canonical way. It is in no way general purpose or robust at this point. However, it works quite well for simple examples. Here is the intended workflow: - Make a change that requires updating N test files and M functions' assertions within those files. - Stash the change. - Update those N test files' RUN-lines to look "canonical"[1]. - Refresh the FileCheck lines for either the entire file or select functions by running this script. - The script will parse the RUN lines and run the 'llc' binary you give it according to each line, collecting the asm. - It will then annotate each function with the appropriate FileCheck comments to check every instruction from the start of the first basic block to the last return. - There will be numerous cases where the script either fails to remove the old lines, or inserts checks which need to be manually editted, but the manual edits tend to be deletions or replacements of registers with FileCheck variables which are fast manual edits. - A common pattern is to have the script insert complete checking of every instruction, and then edit it down to only check the relevant ones. - Be careful to do all of these cleanups though! The script is designed to make transferring and formatting the asm output of llc into a test case fast, it is *not* designed to be authoratitive about what constitutes a good test! - Commit the nice fresh baseline of checks. - Unstash your change and rebuild llc. - Re-run script to regenerate the FileCheck annotations - Remember to re-cleanup these annotations!!! - Check the diff to make sure this is sane, checking the things you expected it to, and check that the newly updated tests actually pass. - Profit! Also, I'm *terrible* at writing Python, and frankly I didn't spend a lot of time making this script beautiful or well engineered. But it's useful to me and may be useful to others so I thought I'd send it out. http://reviews.llvm.org/D5546 llvm-svn: 225618
2015-01-12 05:43:18 +01:00
import argparse
import os # Used to advertise this file's name ("autogenerated_note").
Add a new utility script that helps update very simple regression tests. This script is currently specific to x86 and limited to use with very small regression or feature tests using 'llc' and 'FileCheck' in a reasonably canonical way. It is in no way general purpose or robust at this point. However, it works quite well for simple examples. Here is the intended workflow: - Make a change that requires updating N test files and M functions' assertions within those files. - Stash the change. - Update those N test files' RUN-lines to look "canonical"[1]. - Refresh the FileCheck lines for either the entire file or select functions by running this script. - The script will parse the RUN lines and run the 'llc' binary you give it according to each line, collecting the asm. - It will then annotate each function with the appropriate FileCheck comments to check every instruction from the start of the first basic block to the last return. - There will be numerous cases where the script either fails to remove the old lines, or inserts checks which need to be manually editted, but the manual edits tend to be deletions or replacements of registers with FileCheck variables which are fast manual edits. - A common pattern is to have the script insert complete checking of every instruction, and then edit it down to only check the relevant ones. - Be careful to do all of these cleanups though! The script is designed to make transferring and formatting the asm output of llc into a test case fast, it is *not* designed to be authoratitive about what constitutes a good test! - Commit the nice fresh baseline of checks. - Unstash your change and rebuild llc. - Re-run script to regenerate the FileCheck annotations - Remember to re-cleanup these annotations!!! - Check the diff to make sure this is sane, checking the things you expected it to, and check that the newly updated tests actually pass. - Profit! Also, I'm *terrible* at writing Python, and frankly I didn't spend a lot of time making this script beautiful or well engineered. But it's useful to me and may be useful to others so I thought I'd send it out. http://reviews.llvm.org/D5546 llvm-svn: 225618
2015-01-12 05:43:18 +01:00
from UpdateTestChecks import asm, common
# llc is the only llc-like in the LLVM tree but downstream forks can add
# additional ones here if they have them.
LLC_LIKE_TOOLS = ('llc',)
Add a new utility script that helps update very simple regression tests. This script is currently specific to x86 and limited to use with very small regression or feature tests using 'llc' and 'FileCheck' in a reasonably canonical way. It is in no way general purpose or robust at this point. However, it works quite well for simple examples. Here is the intended workflow: - Make a change that requires updating N test files and M functions' assertions within those files. - Stash the change. - Update those N test files' RUN-lines to look "canonical"[1]. - Refresh the FileCheck lines for either the entire file or select functions by running this script. - The script will parse the RUN lines and run the 'llc' binary you give it according to each line, collecting the asm. - It will then annotate each function with the appropriate FileCheck comments to check every instruction from the start of the first basic block to the last return. - There will be numerous cases where the script either fails to remove the old lines, or inserts checks which need to be manually editted, but the manual edits tend to be deletions or replacements of registers with FileCheck variables which are fast manual edits. - A common pattern is to have the script insert complete checking of every instruction, and then edit it down to only check the relevant ones. - Be careful to do all of these cleanups though! The script is designed to make transferring and formatting the asm output of llc into a test case fast, it is *not* designed to be authoratitive about what constitutes a good test! - Commit the nice fresh baseline of checks. - Unstash your change and rebuild llc. - Re-run script to regenerate the FileCheck annotations - Remember to re-cleanup these annotations!!! - Check the diff to make sure this is sane, checking the things you expected it to, and check that the newly updated tests actually pass. - Profit! Also, I'm *terrible* at writing Python, and frankly I didn't spend a lot of time making this script beautiful or well engineered. But it's useful to me and may be useful to others so I thought I'd send it out. http://reviews.llvm.org/D5546 llvm-svn: 225618
2015-01-12 05:43:18 +01:00
def main():
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description=__doc__)
parser.add_argument('--llc-binary', default=None,
Add a new utility script that helps update very simple regression tests. This script is currently specific to x86 and limited to use with very small regression or feature tests using 'llc' and 'FileCheck' in a reasonably canonical way. It is in no way general purpose or robust at this point. However, it works quite well for simple examples. Here is the intended workflow: - Make a change that requires updating N test files and M functions' assertions within those files. - Stash the change. - Update those N test files' RUN-lines to look "canonical"[1]. - Refresh the FileCheck lines for either the entire file or select functions by running this script. - The script will parse the RUN lines and run the 'llc' binary you give it according to each line, collecting the asm. - It will then annotate each function with the appropriate FileCheck comments to check every instruction from the start of the first basic block to the last return. - There will be numerous cases where the script either fails to remove the old lines, or inserts checks which need to be manually editted, but the manual edits tend to be deletions or replacements of registers with FileCheck variables which are fast manual edits. - A common pattern is to have the script insert complete checking of every instruction, and then edit it down to only check the relevant ones. - Be careful to do all of these cleanups though! The script is designed to make transferring and formatting the asm output of llc into a test case fast, it is *not* designed to be authoratitive about what constitutes a good test! - Commit the nice fresh baseline of checks. - Unstash your change and rebuild llc. - Re-run script to regenerate the FileCheck annotations - Remember to re-cleanup these annotations!!! - Check the diff to make sure this is sane, checking the things you expected it to, and check that the newly updated tests actually pass. - Profit! Also, I'm *terrible* at writing Python, and frankly I didn't spend a lot of time making this script beautiful or well engineered. But it's useful to me and may be useful to others so I thought I'd send it out. http://reviews.llvm.org/D5546 llvm-svn: 225618
2015-01-12 05:43:18 +01:00
help='The "llc" binary to use to generate the test case')
parser.add_argument(
'--function', help='The function in the test file to update')
parser.add_argument(
'--extra_scrub', action='store_true',
help='Always use additional regex to further reduce diffs between various subtargets')
parser.add_argument(
'--x86_scrub_sp', action='store_true', default=True,
help='Use regex for x86 sp matching to reduce diffs between various subtargets')
parser.add_argument(
'--no_x86_scrub_sp', action='store_false', dest='x86_scrub_sp')
parser.add_argument(
'--x86_scrub_rip', action='store_true', default=False,
help='Use more regex for x86 rip matching to reduce diffs between various subtargets')
parser.add_argument(
'--no_x86_scrub_rip', action='store_false', dest='x86_scrub_rip')
parser.add_argument(
'--no_x86_scrub_mem_shuffle', action='store_true', default=False,
help='Reduce scrubbing shuffles with memory operands')
Add a new utility script that helps update very simple regression tests. This script is currently specific to x86 and limited to use with very small regression or feature tests using 'llc' and 'FileCheck' in a reasonably canonical way. It is in no way general purpose or robust at this point. However, it works quite well for simple examples. Here is the intended workflow: - Make a change that requires updating N test files and M functions' assertions within those files. - Stash the change. - Update those N test files' RUN-lines to look "canonical"[1]. - Refresh the FileCheck lines for either the entire file or select functions by running this script. - The script will parse the RUN lines and run the 'llc' binary you give it according to each line, collecting the asm. - It will then annotate each function with the appropriate FileCheck comments to check every instruction from the start of the first basic block to the last return. - There will be numerous cases where the script either fails to remove the old lines, or inserts checks which need to be manually editted, but the manual edits tend to be deletions or replacements of registers with FileCheck variables which are fast manual edits. - A common pattern is to have the script insert complete checking of every instruction, and then edit it down to only check the relevant ones. - Be careful to do all of these cleanups though! The script is designed to make transferring and formatting the asm output of llc into a test case fast, it is *not* designed to be authoratitive about what constitutes a good test! - Commit the nice fresh baseline of checks. - Unstash your change and rebuild llc. - Re-run script to regenerate the FileCheck annotations - Remember to re-cleanup these annotations!!! - Check the diff to make sure this is sane, checking the things you expected it to, and check that the newly updated tests actually pass. - Profit! Also, I'm *terrible* at writing Python, and frankly I didn't spend a lot of time making this script beautiful or well engineered. But it's useful to me and may be useful to others so I thought I'd send it out. http://reviews.llvm.org/D5546 llvm-svn: 225618
2015-01-12 05:43:18 +01:00
parser.add_argument('tests', nargs='+')
initial_args = common.parse_commandline_args(parser)
Add a new utility script that helps update very simple regression tests. This script is currently specific to x86 and limited to use with very small regression or feature tests using 'llc' and 'FileCheck' in a reasonably canonical way. It is in no way general purpose or robust at this point. However, it works quite well for simple examples. Here is the intended workflow: - Make a change that requires updating N test files and M functions' assertions within those files. - Stash the change. - Update those N test files' RUN-lines to look "canonical"[1]. - Refresh the FileCheck lines for either the entire file or select functions by running this script. - The script will parse the RUN lines and run the 'llc' binary you give it according to each line, collecting the asm. - It will then annotate each function with the appropriate FileCheck comments to check every instruction from the start of the first basic block to the last return. - There will be numerous cases where the script either fails to remove the old lines, or inserts checks which need to be manually editted, but the manual edits tend to be deletions or replacements of registers with FileCheck variables which are fast manual edits. - A common pattern is to have the script insert complete checking of every instruction, and then edit it down to only check the relevant ones. - Be careful to do all of these cleanups though! The script is designed to make transferring and formatting the asm output of llc into a test case fast, it is *not* designed to be authoratitive about what constitutes a good test! - Commit the nice fresh baseline of checks. - Unstash your change and rebuild llc. - Re-run script to regenerate the FileCheck annotations - Remember to re-cleanup these annotations!!! - Check the diff to make sure this is sane, checking the things you expected it to, and check that the newly updated tests actually pass. - Profit! Also, I'm *terrible* at writing Python, and frankly I didn't spend a lot of time making this script beautiful or well engineered. But it's useful to me and may be useful to others so I thought I'd send it out. http://reviews.llvm.org/D5546 llvm-svn: 225618
2015-01-12 05:43:18 +01:00
script_name = os.path.basename(__file__)
Add a new utility script that helps update very simple regression tests. This script is currently specific to x86 and limited to use with very small regression or feature tests using 'llc' and 'FileCheck' in a reasonably canonical way. It is in no way general purpose or robust at this point. However, it works quite well for simple examples. Here is the intended workflow: - Make a change that requires updating N test files and M functions' assertions within those files. - Stash the change. - Update those N test files' RUN-lines to look "canonical"[1]. - Refresh the FileCheck lines for either the entire file or select functions by running this script. - The script will parse the RUN lines and run the 'llc' binary you give it according to each line, collecting the asm. - It will then annotate each function with the appropriate FileCheck comments to check every instruction from the start of the first basic block to the last return. - There will be numerous cases where the script either fails to remove the old lines, or inserts checks which need to be manually editted, but the manual edits tend to be deletions or replacements of registers with FileCheck variables which are fast manual edits. - A common pattern is to have the script insert complete checking of every instruction, and then edit it down to only check the relevant ones. - Be careful to do all of these cleanups though! The script is designed to make transferring and formatting the asm output of llc into a test case fast, it is *not* designed to be authoratitive about what constitutes a good test! - Commit the nice fresh baseline of checks. - Unstash your change and rebuild llc. - Re-run script to regenerate the FileCheck annotations - Remember to re-cleanup these annotations!!! - Check the diff to make sure this is sane, checking the things you expected it to, and check that the newly updated tests actually pass. - Profit! Also, I'm *terrible* at writing Python, and frankly I didn't spend a lot of time making this script beautiful or well engineered. But it's useful to me and may be useful to others so I thought I'd send it out. http://reviews.llvm.org/D5546 llvm-svn: 225618
2015-01-12 05:43:18 +01:00
for ti in common.itertests(initial_args.tests, parser,
script_name='utils/' + script_name):
triple_in_ir = None
for l in ti.input_lines:
m = common.TRIPLE_IR_RE.match(l)
if m:
triple_in_ir = m.groups()[0]
break
run_list = []
for l in ti.run_lines:
if '|' not in l:
common.warn('Skipping unparseable RUN line: ' + l)
continue
commands = [cmd.strip() for cmd in l.split('|')]
assert len(commands) >= 2
preprocess_cmd = None
if len(commands) > 2:
preprocess_cmd = " | ".join(commands[:-2])
llc_cmd = commands[-2]
filecheck_cmd = commands[-1]
llc_tool = llc_cmd.split(' ')[0]
triple_in_cmd = None
m = common.TRIPLE_ARG_RE.search(llc_cmd)
if m:
triple_in_cmd = m.groups()[0]
march_in_cmd = None
m = common.MARCH_ARG_RE.search(llc_cmd)
if m:
march_in_cmd = m.groups()[0]
common.verify_filecheck_prefixes(filecheck_cmd)
if llc_tool not in LLC_LIKE_TOOLS:
common.warn('Skipping non-llc RUN line: ' + l)
Add a new utility script that helps update very simple regression tests. This script is currently specific to x86 and limited to use with very small regression or feature tests using 'llc' and 'FileCheck' in a reasonably canonical way. It is in no way general purpose or robust at this point. However, it works quite well for simple examples. Here is the intended workflow: - Make a change that requires updating N test files and M functions' assertions within those files. - Stash the change. - Update those N test files' RUN-lines to look "canonical"[1]. - Refresh the FileCheck lines for either the entire file or select functions by running this script. - The script will parse the RUN lines and run the 'llc' binary you give it according to each line, collecting the asm. - It will then annotate each function with the appropriate FileCheck comments to check every instruction from the start of the first basic block to the last return. - There will be numerous cases where the script either fails to remove the old lines, or inserts checks which need to be manually editted, but the manual edits tend to be deletions or replacements of registers with FileCheck variables which are fast manual edits. - A common pattern is to have the script insert complete checking of every instruction, and then edit it down to only check the relevant ones. - Be careful to do all of these cleanups though! The script is designed to make transferring and formatting the asm output of llc into a test case fast, it is *not* designed to be authoratitive about what constitutes a good test! - Commit the nice fresh baseline of checks. - Unstash your change and rebuild llc. - Re-run script to regenerate the FileCheck annotations - Remember to re-cleanup these annotations!!! - Check the diff to make sure this is sane, checking the things you expected it to, and check that the newly updated tests actually pass. - Profit! Also, I'm *terrible* at writing Python, and frankly I didn't spend a lot of time making this script beautiful or well engineered. But it's useful to me and may be useful to others so I thought I'd send it out. http://reviews.llvm.org/D5546 llvm-svn: 225618
2015-01-12 05:43:18 +01:00
continue
if not filecheck_cmd.startswith('FileCheck '):
common.warn('Skipping non-FileChecked RUN line: ' + l)
Add a new utility script that helps update very simple regression tests. This script is currently specific to x86 and limited to use with very small regression or feature tests using 'llc' and 'FileCheck' in a reasonably canonical way. It is in no way general purpose or robust at this point. However, it works quite well for simple examples. Here is the intended workflow: - Make a change that requires updating N test files and M functions' assertions within those files. - Stash the change. - Update those N test files' RUN-lines to look "canonical"[1]. - Refresh the FileCheck lines for either the entire file or select functions by running this script. - The script will parse the RUN lines and run the 'llc' binary you give it according to each line, collecting the asm. - It will then annotate each function with the appropriate FileCheck comments to check every instruction from the start of the first basic block to the last return. - There will be numerous cases where the script either fails to remove the old lines, or inserts checks which need to be manually editted, but the manual edits tend to be deletions or replacements of registers with FileCheck variables which are fast manual edits. - A common pattern is to have the script insert complete checking of every instruction, and then edit it down to only check the relevant ones. - Be careful to do all of these cleanups though! The script is designed to make transferring and formatting the asm output of llc into a test case fast, it is *not* designed to be authoratitive about what constitutes a good test! - Commit the nice fresh baseline of checks. - Unstash your change and rebuild llc. - Re-run script to regenerate the FileCheck annotations - Remember to re-cleanup these annotations!!! - Check the diff to make sure this is sane, checking the things you expected it to, and check that the newly updated tests actually pass. - Profit! Also, I'm *terrible* at writing Python, and frankly I didn't spend a lot of time making this script beautiful or well engineered. But it's useful to me and may be useful to others so I thought I'd send it out. http://reviews.llvm.org/D5546 llvm-svn: 225618
2015-01-12 05:43:18 +01:00
continue
llc_cmd_args = llc_cmd[len(llc_tool):].strip()
Add a new utility script that helps update very simple regression tests. This script is currently specific to x86 and limited to use with very small regression or feature tests using 'llc' and 'FileCheck' in a reasonably canonical way. It is in no way general purpose or robust at this point. However, it works quite well for simple examples. Here is the intended workflow: - Make a change that requires updating N test files and M functions' assertions within those files. - Stash the change. - Update those N test files' RUN-lines to look "canonical"[1]. - Refresh the FileCheck lines for either the entire file or select functions by running this script. - The script will parse the RUN lines and run the 'llc' binary you give it according to each line, collecting the asm. - It will then annotate each function with the appropriate FileCheck comments to check every instruction from the start of the first basic block to the last return. - There will be numerous cases where the script either fails to remove the old lines, or inserts checks which need to be manually editted, but the manual edits tend to be deletions or replacements of registers with FileCheck variables which are fast manual edits. - A common pattern is to have the script insert complete checking of every instruction, and then edit it down to only check the relevant ones. - Be careful to do all of these cleanups though! The script is designed to make transferring and formatting the asm output of llc into a test case fast, it is *not* designed to be authoratitive about what constitutes a good test! - Commit the nice fresh baseline of checks. - Unstash your change and rebuild llc. - Re-run script to regenerate the FileCheck annotations - Remember to re-cleanup these annotations!!! - Check the diff to make sure this is sane, checking the things you expected it to, and check that the newly updated tests actually pass. - Profit! Also, I'm *terrible* at writing Python, and frankly I didn't spend a lot of time making this script beautiful or well engineered. But it's useful to me and may be useful to others so I thought I'd send it out. http://reviews.llvm.org/D5546 llvm-svn: 225618
2015-01-12 05:43:18 +01:00
llc_cmd_args = llc_cmd_args.replace('< %s', '').replace('%s', '').strip()
if ti.path.endswith('.mir'):
[utils] Add minimal support for MIR inputs to update_llc_test_checks.py update_{llc,mir}_test_checks.py applicability is determined by the output (assembly or MIR), not the input, which makes update_llc_test_checks.py the right tool to generate tests that start at MIR and stop at the final assembly. This commit adds the minimal support for this path. Main limitation that remains: - MIR has to have LLVM IR section, and the CHECK lines will be inserted into the LLVM IR functions that correspond to the MIR functions. Running ../utils/update_llc_test_checks.py --llc-binary ./bin/llc on a slightly modified ../test/CodeGen/X86/bad-tls-fold.mir produces the following diff: +# NOTE: Assertions have been autogenerated by utils/update_llc_test_checks.py +# RUN: llc %s -o - | FileCheck %s --- | target triple = "x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu" @@ -6,17 +7,31 @@ @i = external thread_local global i32 define i32 @or() { + ; CHECK-LABEL: or: + ; CHECK: # %bb.0: # %entry + ; CHECK-NEXT: movq {{.*}}(%rip), %rax + ; CHECK-NEXT: orq $7, %rax + ; CHECK-NEXT: movq i@{{.*}}(%rip), %rcx + ; CHECK-NEXT: orq %rax, %rcx + ; CHECK-NEXT: movl %fs:(%rcx), %eax + ; CHECK-NEXT: retq entry: ret i32 undef } - define i32 @and() { + ; CHECK-LABEL: and: + ; CHECK: # %bb.0: # %entry + ; CHECK-NEXT: movq {{.*}}(%rip), %rax + ; CHECK-NEXT: orq $7, %rax + ; CHECK-NEXT: movq i@{{.*}}(%rip), %rcx + ; CHECK-NEXT: andq %rax, %rcx + ; CHECK-NEXT: movl %fs:(%rcx), %eax + ; CHECK-NEXT: retq entry: ret i32 undef } ... (not applied) llvm-svn: 372277
2019-09-19 01:44:17 +02:00
llc_cmd_args += ' -x mir'
check_prefixes = [item for m in common.CHECK_PREFIX_RE.finditer(filecheck_cmd)
for item in m.group(1).split(',')]
Add a new utility script that helps update very simple regression tests. This script is currently specific to x86 and limited to use with very small regression or feature tests using 'llc' and 'FileCheck' in a reasonably canonical way. It is in no way general purpose or robust at this point. However, it works quite well for simple examples. Here is the intended workflow: - Make a change that requires updating N test files and M functions' assertions within those files. - Stash the change. - Update those N test files' RUN-lines to look "canonical"[1]. - Refresh the FileCheck lines for either the entire file or select functions by running this script. - The script will parse the RUN lines and run the 'llc' binary you give it according to each line, collecting the asm. - It will then annotate each function with the appropriate FileCheck comments to check every instruction from the start of the first basic block to the last return. - There will be numerous cases where the script either fails to remove the old lines, or inserts checks which need to be manually editted, but the manual edits tend to be deletions or replacements of registers with FileCheck variables which are fast manual edits. - A common pattern is to have the script insert complete checking of every instruction, and then edit it down to only check the relevant ones. - Be careful to do all of these cleanups though! The script is designed to make transferring and formatting the asm output of llc into a test case fast, it is *not* designed to be authoratitive about what constitutes a good test! - Commit the nice fresh baseline of checks. - Unstash your change and rebuild llc. - Re-run script to regenerate the FileCheck annotations - Remember to re-cleanup these annotations!!! - Check the diff to make sure this is sane, checking the things you expected it to, and check that the newly updated tests actually pass. - Profit! Also, I'm *terrible* at writing Python, and frankly I didn't spend a lot of time making this script beautiful or well engineered. But it's useful to me and may be useful to others so I thought I'd send it out. http://reviews.llvm.org/D5546 llvm-svn: 225618
2015-01-12 05:43:18 +01:00
if not check_prefixes:
check_prefixes = ['CHECK']
# FIXME: We should use multiple check prefixes to common check lines. For
# now, we just ignore all but the last.
run_list.append((check_prefixes, llc_tool, llc_cmd_args, preprocess_cmd,
triple_in_cmd, march_in_cmd))
Add a new utility script that helps update very simple regression tests. This script is currently specific to x86 and limited to use with very small regression or feature tests using 'llc' and 'FileCheck' in a reasonably canonical way. It is in no way general purpose or robust at this point. However, it works quite well for simple examples. Here is the intended workflow: - Make a change that requires updating N test files and M functions' assertions within those files. - Stash the change. - Update those N test files' RUN-lines to look "canonical"[1]. - Refresh the FileCheck lines for either the entire file or select functions by running this script. - The script will parse the RUN lines and run the 'llc' binary you give it according to each line, collecting the asm. - It will then annotate each function with the appropriate FileCheck comments to check every instruction from the start of the first basic block to the last return. - There will be numerous cases where the script either fails to remove the old lines, or inserts checks which need to be manually editted, but the manual edits tend to be deletions or replacements of registers with FileCheck variables which are fast manual edits. - A common pattern is to have the script insert complete checking of every instruction, and then edit it down to only check the relevant ones. - Be careful to do all of these cleanups though! The script is designed to make transferring and formatting the asm output of llc into a test case fast, it is *not* designed to be authoratitive about what constitutes a good test! - Commit the nice fresh baseline of checks. - Unstash your change and rebuild llc. - Re-run script to regenerate the FileCheck annotations - Remember to re-cleanup these annotations!!! - Check the diff to make sure this is sane, checking the things you expected it to, and check that the newly updated tests actually pass. - Profit! Also, I'm *terrible* at writing Python, and frankly I didn't spend a lot of time making this script beautiful or well engineered. But it's useful to me and may be useful to others so I thought I'd send it out. http://reviews.llvm.org/D5546 llvm-svn: 225618
2015-01-12 05:43:18 +01:00
if ti.path.endswith('.mir'):
check_indent = ' '
else:
check_indent = ''
[utils] Add minimal support for MIR inputs to update_llc_test_checks.py update_{llc,mir}_test_checks.py applicability is determined by the output (assembly or MIR), not the input, which makes update_llc_test_checks.py the right tool to generate tests that start at MIR and stop at the final assembly. This commit adds the minimal support for this path. Main limitation that remains: - MIR has to have LLVM IR section, and the CHECK lines will be inserted into the LLVM IR functions that correspond to the MIR functions. Running ../utils/update_llc_test_checks.py --llc-binary ./bin/llc on a slightly modified ../test/CodeGen/X86/bad-tls-fold.mir produces the following diff: +# NOTE: Assertions have been autogenerated by utils/update_llc_test_checks.py +# RUN: llc %s -o - | FileCheck %s --- | target triple = "x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu" @@ -6,17 +7,31 @@ @i = external thread_local global i32 define i32 @or() { + ; CHECK-LABEL: or: + ; CHECK: # %bb.0: # %entry + ; CHECK-NEXT: movq {{.*}}(%rip), %rax + ; CHECK-NEXT: orq $7, %rax + ; CHECK-NEXT: movq i@{{.*}}(%rip), %rcx + ; CHECK-NEXT: orq %rax, %rcx + ; CHECK-NEXT: movl %fs:(%rcx), %eax + ; CHECK-NEXT: retq entry: ret i32 undef } - define i32 @and() { + ; CHECK-LABEL: and: + ; CHECK: # %bb.0: # %entry + ; CHECK-NEXT: movq {{.*}}(%rip), %rax + ; CHECK-NEXT: orq $7, %rax + ; CHECK-NEXT: movq i@{{.*}}(%rip), %rcx + ; CHECK-NEXT: andq %rax, %rcx + ; CHECK-NEXT: movl %fs:(%rcx), %eax + ; CHECK-NEXT: retq entry: ret i32 undef } ... (not applied) llvm-svn: 372277
2019-09-19 01:44:17 +02:00
builder = common.FunctionTestBuilder(
run_list=run_list,
flags=type('', (object,), {
'verbose': ti.args.verbose,
'function_signature': False,
'check_attributes': False,
'replace_value_regex': []}),
scrubber_args=[ti.args],
path=ti.path)
for prefixes, llc_tool, llc_args, preprocess_cmd, triple_in_cmd, march_in_cmd in run_list:
common.debug('Extracted LLC cmd:', llc_tool, llc_args)
common.debug('Extracted FileCheck prefixes:', str(prefixes))
raw_tool_output = common.invoke_tool(ti.args.llc_binary or llc_tool,
llc_args, ti.path, preprocess_cmd,
verbose=ti.args.verbose)
triple = triple_in_cmd or triple_in_ir
if not triple:
triple = asm.get_triple_from_march(march_in_cmd)
scrubber, function_re = asm.get_run_handler(triple)
builder.process_run_line(function_re, scrubber, raw_tool_output, prefixes)
func_dict = builder.finish_and_get_func_dict()
Add a new utility script that helps update very simple regression tests. This script is currently specific to x86 and limited to use with very small regression or feature tests using 'llc' and 'FileCheck' in a reasonably canonical way. It is in no way general purpose or robust at this point. However, it works quite well for simple examples. Here is the intended workflow: - Make a change that requires updating N test files and M functions' assertions within those files. - Stash the change. - Update those N test files' RUN-lines to look "canonical"[1]. - Refresh the FileCheck lines for either the entire file or select functions by running this script. - The script will parse the RUN lines and run the 'llc' binary you give it according to each line, collecting the asm. - It will then annotate each function with the appropriate FileCheck comments to check every instruction from the start of the first basic block to the last return. - There will be numerous cases where the script either fails to remove the old lines, or inserts checks which need to be manually editted, but the manual edits tend to be deletions or replacements of registers with FileCheck variables which are fast manual edits. - A common pattern is to have the script insert complete checking of every instruction, and then edit it down to only check the relevant ones. - Be careful to do all of these cleanups though! The script is designed to make transferring and formatting the asm output of llc into a test case fast, it is *not* designed to be authoratitive about what constitutes a good test! - Commit the nice fresh baseline of checks. - Unstash your change and rebuild llc. - Re-run script to regenerate the FileCheck annotations - Remember to re-cleanup these annotations!!! - Check the diff to make sure this is sane, checking the things you expected it to, and check that the newly updated tests actually pass. - Profit! Also, I'm *terrible* at writing Python, and frankly I didn't spend a lot of time making this script beautiful or well engineered. But it's useful to me and may be useful to others so I thought I'd send it out. http://reviews.llvm.org/D5546 llvm-svn: 225618
2015-01-12 05:43:18 +01:00
is_in_function = False
is_in_function_start = False
func_name = None
prefix_set = set([prefix for p in run_list for prefix in p[0]])
common.debug('Rewriting FileCheck prefixes:', str(prefix_set))
output_lines = []
include_generated_funcs = common.find_arg_in_test(ti,
lambda args: ti.args.include_generated_funcs,
'--include-generated-funcs',
True)
if include_generated_funcs:
# Generate the appropriate checks for each function. We need to emit
# these in the order according to the generated output so that CHECK-LABEL
# works properly. func_order provides that.
# We can't predict where various passes might insert functions so we can't
# be sure the input function order is maintained. Therefore, first spit
# out all the source lines.
common.dump_input_lines(output_lines, ti, prefix_set, ';')
# Now generate all the checks.
common.add_checks_at_end(output_lines, run_list, builder.func_order(),
check_indent + ';',
lambda my_output_lines, prefixes, func:
asm.add_asm_checks(my_output_lines,
check_indent + ';',
prefixes, func_dict, func))
else:
for input_info in ti.iterlines(output_lines):
input_line = input_info.line
args = input_info.args
if is_in_function_start:
if input_line == '':
continue
if input_line.lstrip().startswith(';'):
m = common.CHECK_RE.match(input_line)
if not m or m.group(1) not in prefix_set:
output_lines.append(input_line)
continue
# Print out the various check lines here.
asm.add_asm_checks(output_lines, check_indent + ';', run_list, func_dict, func_name)
is_in_function_start = False
if is_in_function:
if common.should_add_line_to_output(input_line, prefix_set):
# This input line of the function body will go as-is into the output.
output_lines.append(input_line)
else:
Add a new utility script that helps update very simple regression tests. This script is currently specific to x86 and limited to use with very small regression or feature tests using 'llc' and 'FileCheck' in a reasonably canonical way. It is in no way general purpose or robust at this point. However, it works quite well for simple examples. Here is the intended workflow: - Make a change that requires updating N test files and M functions' assertions within those files. - Stash the change. - Update those N test files' RUN-lines to look "canonical"[1]. - Refresh the FileCheck lines for either the entire file or select functions by running this script. - The script will parse the RUN lines and run the 'llc' binary you give it according to each line, collecting the asm. - It will then annotate each function with the appropriate FileCheck comments to check every instruction from the start of the first basic block to the last return. - There will be numerous cases where the script either fails to remove the old lines, or inserts checks which need to be manually editted, but the manual edits tend to be deletions or replacements of registers with FileCheck variables which are fast manual edits. - A common pattern is to have the script insert complete checking of every instruction, and then edit it down to only check the relevant ones. - Be careful to do all of these cleanups though! The script is designed to make transferring and formatting the asm output of llc into a test case fast, it is *not* designed to be authoratitive about what constitutes a good test! - Commit the nice fresh baseline of checks. - Unstash your change and rebuild llc. - Re-run script to regenerate the FileCheck annotations - Remember to re-cleanup these annotations!!! - Check the diff to make sure this is sane, checking the things you expected it to, and check that the newly updated tests actually pass. - Profit! Also, I'm *terrible* at writing Python, and frankly I didn't spend a lot of time making this script beautiful or well engineered. But it's useful to me and may be useful to others so I thought I'd send it out. http://reviews.llvm.org/D5546 llvm-svn: 225618
2015-01-12 05:43:18 +01:00
continue
if input_line.strip() == '}':
is_in_function = False
Add a new utility script that helps update very simple regression tests. This script is currently specific to x86 and limited to use with very small regression or feature tests using 'llc' and 'FileCheck' in a reasonably canonical way. It is in no way general purpose or robust at this point. However, it works quite well for simple examples. Here is the intended workflow: - Make a change that requires updating N test files and M functions' assertions within those files. - Stash the change. - Update those N test files' RUN-lines to look "canonical"[1]. - Refresh the FileCheck lines for either the entire file or select functions by running this script. - The script will parse the RUN lines and run the 'llc' binary you give it according to each line, collecting the asm. - It will then annotate each function with the appropriate FileCheck comments to check every instruction from the start of the first basic block to the last return. - There will be numerous cases where the script either fails to remove the old lines, or inserts checks which need to be manually editted, but the manual edits tend to be deletions or replacements of registers with FileCheck variables which are fast manual edits. - A common pattern is to have the script insert complete checking of every instruction, and then edit it down to only check the relevant ones. - Be careful to do all of these cleanups though! The script is designed to make transferring and formatting the asm output of llc into a test case fast, it is *not* designed to be authoratitive about what constitutes a good test! - Commit the nice fresh baseline of checks. - Unstash your change and rebuild llc. - Re-run script to regenerate the FileCheck annotations - Remember to re-cleanup these annotations!!! - Check the diff to make sure this is sane, checking the things you expected it to, and check that the newly updated tests actually pass. - Profit! Also, I'm *terrible* at writing Python, and frankly I didn't spend a lot of time making this script beautiful or well engineered. But it's useful to me and may be useful to others so I thought I'd send it out. http://reviews.llvm.org/D5546 llvm-svn: 225618
2015-01-12 05:43:18 +01:00
continue
# If it's outside a function, it just gets copied to the output.
output_lines.append(input_line)
m = common.IR_FUNCTION_RE.match(input_line)
if not m:
continue
func_name = m.group(1)
if args.function is not None and func_name != args.function:
# When filtering on a specific function, skip all others.
continue
is_in_function = is_in_function_start = True
Add a new utility script that helps update very simple regression tests. This script is currently specific to x86 and limited to use with very small regression or feature tests using 'llc' and 'FileCheck' in a reasonably canonical way. It is in no way general purpose or robust at this point. However, it works quite well for simple examples. Here is the intended workflow: - Make a change that requires updating N test files and M functions' assertions within those files. - Stash the change. - Update those N test files' RUN-lines to look "canonical"[1]. - Refresh the FileCheck lines for either the entire file or select functions by running this script. - The script will parse the RUN lines and run the 'llc' binary you give it according to each line, collecting the asm. - It will then annotate each function with the appropriate FileCheck comments to check every instruction from the start of the first basic block to the last return. - There will be numerous cases where the script either fails to remove the old lines, or inserts checks which need to be manually editted, but the manual edits tend to be deletions or replacements of registers with FileCheck variables which are fast manual edits. - A common pattern is to have the script insert complete checking of every instruction, and then edit it down to only check the relevant ones. - Be careful to do all of these cleanups though! The script is designed to make transferring and formatting the asm output of llc into a test case fast, it is *not* designed to be authoratitive about what constitutes a good test! - Commit the nice fresh baseline of checks. - Unstash your change and rebuild llc. - Re-run script to regenerate the FileCheck annotations - Remember to re-cleanup these annotations!!! - Check the diff to make sure this is sane, checking the things you expected it to, and check that the newly updated tests actually pass. - Profit! Also, I'm *terrible* at writing Python, and frankly I didn't spend a lot of time making this script beautiful or well engineered. But it's useful to me and may be useful to others so I thought I'd send it out. http://reviews.llvm.org/D5546 llvm-svn: 225618
2015-01-12 05:43:18 +01:00
common.debug('Writing %d lines to %s...' % (len(output_lines), ti.path))
with open(ti.path, 'wb') as f:
f.writelines(['{}\n'.format(l).encode('utf-8') for l in output_lines])
Add a new utility script that helps update very simple regression tests. This script is currently specific to x86 and limited to use with very small regression or feature tests using 'llc' and 'FileCheck' in a reasonably canonical way. It is in no way general purpose or robust at this point. However, it works quite well for simple examples. Here is the intended workflow: - Make a change that requires updating N test files and M functions' assertions within those files. - Stash the change. - Update those N test files' RUN-lines to look "canonical"[1]. - Refresh the FileCheck lines for either the entire file or select functions by running this script. - The script will parse the RUN lines and run the 'llc' binary you give it according to each line, collecting the asm. - It will then annotate each function with the appropriate FileCheck comments to check every instruction from the start of the first basic block to the last return. - There will be numerous cases where the script either fails to remove the old lines, or inserts checks which need to be manually editted, but the manual edits tend to be deletions or replacements of registers with FileCheck variables which are fast manual edits. - A common pattern is to have the script insert complete checking of every instruction, and then edit it down to only check the relevant ones. - Be careful to do all of these cleanups though! The script is designed to make transferring and formatting the asm output of llc into a test case fast, it is *not* designed to be authoratitive about what constitutes a good test! - Commit the nice fresh baseline of checks. - Unstash your change and rebuild llc. - Re-run script to regenerate the FileCheck annotations - Remember to re-cleanup these annotations!!! - Check the diff to make sure this is sane, checking the things you expected it to, and check that the newly updated tests actually pass. - Profit! Also, I'm *terrible* at writing Python, and frankly I didn't spend a lot of time making this script beautiful or well engineered. But it's useful to me and may be useful to others so I thought I'd send it out. http://reviews.llvm.org/D5546 llvm-svn: 225618
2015-01-12 05:43:18 +01:00
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()