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