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Add print-cfg tests

pull/3/head
Morgan Phillips 8 years ago
parent
commit
5bcce51bd9
  1. 1
      test-all.sh
  2. 14
      tests/cfg/README.rst
  3. 30
      tests/cfg/loop.cton
  4. 38
      tests/cfg/run.sh
  5. 18
      tests/cfg/traps_early.cton
  6. 16
      tests/cfg/unused_node.cton

1
test-all.sh

@ -35,5 +35,6 @@ export CTONUTIL="$topdir/src/tools/target/release/cton-util"
echo ====== Parser tests ====== echo ====== Parser tests ======
cd "$topdir/tests" cd "$topdir/tests"
parser/run.sh parser/run.sh
cfg/run.sh
echo ====== OK ====== echo ====== OK ======

14
tests/cfg/README.rst

@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
CFG tests
============
This directory contains test cases for the Cretonne cfg printer.
Each test case consists of a `foo.cton` input file annotated with its expected connections.
Annotations are comments of the form: `ebbx:insty -> ebbz` where ebbx is connected to ebbz via
a branch or jump instruction at line y. Instructions are labeled by line number starting from zero: `inst0` .. `instn`.
Each input file is run through the `cton-util print-cfg` command and the
output is compared against the specially formatted comments to ensure that
expected connections exist. This scheme allows for changes to graph style
without the need to update tests.

30
tests/cfg/loop.cton

@ -0,0 +1,30 @@
; For testing cfg generation. This code is nonsense.
function nonsense(i32, i32) -> f32 {
ebb0(v1: i32, v2: i32):
v3 = f64const 0x0.0
brz v2, ebb2 ;;;; ebb0:inst1 -> ebb2
v4 = iconst.i32 0
jump ebb1(v4) ;;;; ebb0:inst3 -> ebb1
ebb1(v5: i32):
v6 = imul_imm v5, 4
v7 = iadd v1, v6
v8 = f32const 0.0
v9 = f32const 0.0
v10 = f32const 0.0
v11 = fadd v9, v10
v12 = iadd_imm v5, 1
v13 = icmp ult, v12, v2
brnz v13, ebb1(v12) ;;;; ebb1:inst12 -> ebb1
v14 = f64const 0.0
v15 = f64const 0.0
v16 = fdiv v14, v15
v17 = f32const 0.0
return v17
ebb2:
v100 = f32const 0.0
return v100
}

38
tests/cfg/run.sh

@ -0,0 +1,38 @@
#!/bin/bash
# Go to tests directory.
cd $(dirname "$0")/..
# The path to cton-util should be in $CTONUTIL.
if [ -z "$CTONUTIL" ]; then
CTONUTIL=../src/tools/target/debug/cton-util
fi
if [ ! -x "$CTONUTIL" ]; then
echo "Can't fund executable cton-util: $CTONUTIL" 1>&2
exit 1
fi
declare -a fails
for testcase in $(find cfg -name '*.cton'); do
annotations=$(cat $testcase | awk /';;;;'/ | awk -F ";;;;" '{print $2}' | sort)
connections=$("${CTONUTIL}" print-cfg "$testcase" | awk /"->"/ | sort)
if diff -u <(echo $annotations) <(echo $connections); then
echo OK $testcase
else
fails=(${fails[@]} "$testcase")
echo FAIL $testcase
fi
done
if [ ${#fails[@]} -ne 0 ]; then
echo
echo Failures:
for f in "${fails[@]}"; do
echo " $f"
done
exit 1
else
echo "All passed"
fi

18
tests/cfg/traps_early.cton

@ -0,0 +1,18 @@
; For testing cfg generation. This code explores the implications of encountering
; a terminating instruction before any connections have been made.
function nonsense(i32) {
ebb0(v1: i32):
trap
brnz v1, ebb2 ;;;; ebb0:inst1 -> ebb2
jump ebb1 ;;;; ebb0:inst2 -> ebb1
ebb1:
v2 = iconst.i32 0
v3 = iadd v1, v3
jump ebb0(v3) ;;;; ebb1:inst5 -> ebb0
ebb2:
return v1
}

16
tests/cfg/unused_node.cton

@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
; For testing cfg generation where some block is never reached.
function not_reached(i32) -> i32 {
ebb0(v0: i32):
brnz v0, ebb2 ;;;; ebb0:inst0 -> ebb2
trap
ebb1:
v1 = iconst.i32 1
v2 = iadd v0, v1
jump ebb0(v2) ;;;; ebb1:inst4 -> ebb0
ebb2:
return v0
}
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