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****************
Testing Cretonne
****************
Cretonne is tested at multiple levels of abstraction and integration. When
possible, Rust unit tests are used to verify single functions and types. When
testing the interaction between compiler passes, file-level tests are
appropriate.
The top-level shell script :file:`test-all.sh` runs all of the tests in the
Cretonne repository.
Rust tests
==========
.. highlight:: rust
Rust and Cargo have good support for testing. Cretonne uses unit tests, doc
tests, and integration tests where appropriate.
Unit tests
----------
Unit test live in a ``tests`` sub-module of the code they are testing::
pub fn add(x: u32, y: u32) -> u32 {
x + y
}
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
use super::add;
#[test]
check_add() {
assert_eq!(add(2, 2), 4);
}
}
Since sub-modules have access to non-public items in a Rust module, unit tests
can be used to test module-internal functions and types too.
Doc tests
---------
Documentation comments can contain code snippets which are also compiled and
tested::
//! The `Flags` struct is immutable once it has been created. A `Builder` instance is used to
//! create it.
//!
//! # Example
//! ```
//! use cretonne::settings::{self, Configurable};
//!
//! let mut b = settings::builder();
//! b.set("opt_level", "fastest");
//!
//! let f = settings::Flags::new(&b);
//! assert_eq!(f.opt_level(), settings::OptLevel::Fastest);
//! ```
These tests are useful for demonstrating how to use an API, and running them
regularly makes sure that they stay up to date. Documentation tests are not
appropriate for lots of assertions; use unit tests for that.
Integration tests
-----------------
Integration tests are Rust source files that are compiled and linked
individually. They are used to exercise the external API of the crates under
test.
These tests are usually found in the :file:`tests` top-level directory where
they have access to all the crates in the Cretonne repository. The
:file:`lib/cretonne` and :file:`lib/reader` crates have no external
dependencies, which can make testing tedious. Integration tests that don't need
to depend on other crates can be placed in :file:`lib/cretonne/tests` and
:file:`lib/reader/tests`.
File tests
==========
.. highlight:: cton
Compilers work with large data structures representing programs, and it quickly
gets unwieldy to generate test data programmatically. File-level tests make it
easier to provide substantial input functions for the compiler tests.
File tests are :file:`*.cton` files in the :file:`filetests/` directory
hierarchy. Each file has a header describing what to test followed by a number
of input functions in the :doc:`Cretonne textual intermediate language
<langref>`:
.. productionlist::
test_file : test_header `function_list`
test_header : test_commands (`isa_specs` | `settings`)
test_commands : test_command { test_command }
test_command : "test" test_name { option } "\n"
The available test commands are described below.
Many test comands only make sense in the context of a target instruction set
architecture. These tests require one or more ISA specifications in the test
header:
.. productionlist::
isa_specs : { [`settings`] isa_spec }
isa_spec : "isa" isa_name { `option` } "\n"
The options given on the ``isa`` line modify the ISA-specific settings defined in
:file:`lib/cretonne/meta/isa/*/settings.py`.
All types of tests allow shared Cretonne settings to be modified:
.. productionlist::
settings : { setting }
setting : "set" { option } "\n"
option : flag | setting "=" value
The shared settings available for all target ISAs are defined in
:file:`lib/cretonne/meta/cretonne/settings.py`.
The ``set`` lines apply settings cumulatively::
test legalizer
set opt_level=best
set is_64bit=1
isa riscv
set is_64bit=0
isa riscv supports_m=false
function foo() {}
This example will run the legalizer test twice. Both runs will have
``opt_level=best``, but they will have different ``is_64bit`` settings. The 32-bit
run will also have the RISC-V specific flag ``supports_m`` disabled.
Filecheck
---------
Many of the test commands described below use *filecheck* to verify their
output. Filecheck is a Rust implementation of the LLVM tool of the same name.
See the :file:`lib/filecheck` `documentation <https://docs.rs/filecheck/>`_ for
details of its syntax.
Comments in :file:`.cton` files are associated with the entity they follow.
This typically means an instruction or the whole function. Those tests that
use filecheck will extract comments associated with each function (or its
entities) and scan them for filecheck directives. The test output for each
function is then matched against the filecheck directives for that function.
Comments appearing before the first function in a file apply to every function.
This is useful for defining common regular expression variables with the
``regex:`` directive, for example.
Note that LLVM's file tests don't separate filecheck directives by their
associated function. It verifies the concatenated output against all filecheck
directives in the test file. LLVM's :command:`FileCheck` command has a
``CHECK-LABEL:`` directive to help separate the output from different functions.
Cretonne's tests don't need this.
Filecheck variables
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Cretonne's IL parser causes entities like values and EBBs to be renumbered. It
maintains a source mapping to resolve references in the text, but when a
function is written out as text as part of a test, all of the entities have the
new numbers. This can complicate the filecheck directives since they need to
refer to the new entity numbers, not the ones in the adjacent source text.
To help with this, the parser's source-to-entity mapping is made available as
predefined filecheck variables. A value by the source name ``v10`` can be
referenced as the filecheck variable ``$v10``. The variable expands to the
renumbered entity name.
`test cat`
----------
This is one of the simplest file tests, used for testing the conversion to and
from textual IL. The ``test cat`` command simply parses each function and
converts it back to text again. The text of each function is then matched
against the associated filecheck directives.
Example::
function r1() -> i32, f32 {
ebb1:
v10 = iconst.i32 3
v20 = f32const 0.0
return v10, v20
}
; sameln: function r1() -> i32, f32 {
; nextln: ebb0:
; nextln: v0 = iconst.i32 3
; nextln: v1 = f32const 0.0
; nextln: return v0, v1
; nextln: }
Notice that the values ``v10`` and ``v20`` in the source were renumbered to
``v0`` and ``v1`` respectively during parsing. The equivalent test using
filecheck variables would be::
function r1() -> i32, f32 {
ebb1:
v10 = iconst.i32 3
v20 = f32const 0.0
return v10, v20
}
; sameln: function r1() -> i32, f32 {
; nextln: ebb0:
; nextln: $v10 = iconst.i32 3
; nextln: $v20 = f32const 0.0
; nextln: return $v10, $v20
; nextln: }
`test verifier`
---------------
Run each function through the IL verifier and check that it produces the
expected error messages.
Expected error messages are indicated with an ``error:`` directive *on the
instruction that produces the verifier error*. Both the error message and
reported location of the error is verified::
test verifier
function test(i32) {
ebb0(v0: i32):
jump ebb1 ; error: terminator
return
}
This example test passes if the verifier fails with an error message containing
the sub-string ``"terminator"`` *and* the error is reported for the ``jump``
instruction.
If a function contains no ``error:`` annotations, the test passes if the
function verifies correctly.
`test print-cfg`
----------------
Print the control flow graph of each function as a Graphviz graph, and run
filecheck over the result. See also the :command:`cton-util print-cfg`
command::
; For testing cfg generation. This code is nonsense.
test print-cfg
test verifier
function nonsense(i32, i32) -> f32 {
; check: digraph nonsense {
; regex: I=\binst\d+\b
; check: label="{ebb0 | <$(BRZ=$I)>brz ebb2 | <$(JUMP=$I)>jump ebb1}"]
ebb0(v1: i32, v2: i32):
brz v2, ebb2 ; unordered: ebb0:$BRZ -> ebb2
v4 = iconst.i32 0
jump ebb1(v4) ; unordered: ebb0:$JUMP -> ebb1
ebb1(v5: i32):
return v1
ebb2:
v100 = f32const 0.0
return v100
}
`test domtree`
--------------
Compute the dominator tree of each function and validate it against the
``dominates:`` annotations::
test domtree
function test(i32) {
ebb0(v0: i32):
jump ebb1 ; dominates: ebb1
ebb1:
brz v0, ebb3 ; dominates: ebb3
jump ebb2 ; dominates: ebb2
ebb2:
jump ebb3
ebb3:
return
}
Every reachable extended basic block except for the entry block has an
*immediate dominator* which is a jump or branch instruction. This test passes
if the ``dominates:`` annotations on the immediate dominator instructions are
both correct and complete.
`test legalizer`
----------------
Legalize each function for the specified target ISA and run the resulting
function through filecheck. This test command can be used to validate the
encodings selected for legal instructions as well as the instruction
transformations performed by the legalizer.
`test regalloc`
---------------
Test the register allocator.
First, each function is legalized for the specified target ISA. This is
required for register allocation since the instruction encodings provide
register class constraints to the register allocator.
Second, the register allocator is run on the function, inserting spill code and
assigning registers and stack slots to all values.
The resulting function is then run through filecheck.