FileCheck.rst 25 KB

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  1. FileCheck - Flexible pattern matching file verifier
  2. ===================================================
  3. .. program:: FileCheck
  4. SYNOPSIS
  5. --------
  6. :program:`FileCheck` *match-filename* [*--check-prefix=XXX*] [*--strict-whitespace*]
  7. DESCRIPTION
  8. -----------
  9. :program:`FileCheck` reads two files (one from standard input, and one
  10. specified on the command line) and uses one to verify the other. This
  11. behavior is particularly useful for the testsuite, which wants to verify that
  12. the output of some tool (e.g. :program:`llc`) contains the expected information
  13. (for example, a movsd from esp or whatever is interesting). This is similar to
  14. using :program:`grep`, but it is optimized for matching multiple different
  15. inputs in one file in a specific order.
  16. The ``match-filename`` file specifies the file that contains the patterns to
  17. match. The file to verify is read from standard input unless the
  18. :option:`--input-file` option is used.
  19. OPTIONS
  20. -------
  21. Options are parsed from the environment variable ``FILECHECK_OPTS``
  22. and from the command line.
  23. .. option:: -help
  24. Print a summary of command line options.
  25. .. option:: --check-prefix prefix
  26. FileCheck searches the contents of ``match-filename`` for patterns to
  27. match. By default, these patterns are prefixed with "``CHECK:``".
  28. If you'd like to use a different prefix (e.g. because the same input
  29. file is checking multiple different tool or options), the
  30. :option:`--check-prefix` argument allows you to specify one or more
  31. prefixes to match. Multiple prefixes are useful for tests which might
  32. change for different run options, but most lines remain the same.
  33. .. option:: --check-prefixes prefix1,prefix2,...
  34. An alias of :option:`--check-prefix` that allows multiple prefixes to be
  35. specified as a comma separated list.
  36. .. option:: --input-file filename
  37. File to check (defaults to stdin).
  38. .. option:: --match-full-lines
  39. By default, FileCheck allows matches of anywhere on a line. This
  40. option will require all positive matches to cover an entire
  41. line. Leading and trailing whitespace is ignored, unless
  42. :option:`--strict-whitespace` is also specified. (Note: negative
  43. matches from ``CHECK-NOT`` are not affected by this option!)
  44. Passing this option is equivalent to inserting ``{{^ *}}`` or
  45. ``{{^}}`` before, and ``{{ *$}}`` or ``{{$}}`` after every positive
  46. check pattern.
  47. .. option:: --strict-whitespace
  48. By default, FileCheck canonicalizes input horizontal whitespace (spaces and
  49. tabs) which causes it to ignore these differences (a space will match a tab).
  50. The :option:`--strict-whitespace` argument disables this behavior. End-of-line
  51. sequences are canonicalized to UNIX-style ``\n`` in all modes.
  52. .. option:: --implicit-check-not check-pattern
  53. Adds implicit negative checks for the specified patterns between positive
  54. checks. The option allows writing stricter tests without stuffing them with
  55. ``CHECK-NOT``\ s.
  56. For example, "``--implicit-check-not warning:``" can be useful when testing
  57. diagnostic messages from tools that don't have an option similar to ``clang
  58. -verify``. With this option FileCheck will verify that input does not contain
  59. warnings not covered by any ``CHECK:`` patterns.
  60. .. option:: --dump-input <mode>
  61. Dump input to stderr, adding annotations representing currently enabled
  62. diagnostics. Do this either 'always', on 'fail', or 'never'. Specify 'help'
  63. to explain the dump format and quit.
  64. .. option:: --dump-input-on-failure
  65. When the check fails, dump all of the original input. This option is
  66. deprecated in favor of `--dump-input=fail`.
  67. .. option:: --enable-var-scope
  68. Enables scope for regex variables.
  69. Variables with names that start with ``$`` are considered global and
  70. remain set throughout the file.
  71. All other variables get undefined after each encountered ``CHECK-LABEL``.
  72. .. option:: -D<VAR=VALUE>
  73. Sets a filecheck pattern variable ``VAR`` with value ``VALUE`` that can be
  74. used in ``CHECK:`` lines.
  75. .. option:: -D#<NUMVAR>=<NUMERIC EXPRESSION>
  76. Sets a filecheck numeric variable ``NUMVAR`` to the result of evaluating
  77. ``<NUMERIC EXPRESSION>`` that can be used in ``CHECK:`` lines. See section
  78. ``FileCheck Numeric Variables and Expressions`` for details on supported
  79. numeric expressions.
  80. .. option:: -version
  81. Show the version number of this program.
  82. .. option:: -v
  83. Print good directive pattern matches. However, if ``-input-dump=fail`` or
  84. ``-input-dump=always``, add those matches as input annotations instead.
  85. .. option:: -vv
  86. Print information helpful in diagnosing internal FileCheck issues, such as
  87. discarded overlapping ``CHECK-DAG:`` matches, implicit EOF pattern matches,
  88. and ``CHECK-NOT:`` patterns that do not have matches. Implies ``-v``.
  89. However, if ``-input-dump=fail`` or ``-input-dump=always``, just add that
  90. information as input annotations instead.
  91. .. option:: --allow-deprecated-dag-overlap
  92. Enable overlapping among matches in a group of consecutive ``CHECK-DAG:``
  93. directives. This option is deprecated and is only provided for convenience
  94. as old tests are migrated to the new non-overlapping ``CHECK-DAG:``
  95. implementation.
  96. .. option:: --color
  97. Use colors in output (autodetected by default).
  98. EXIT STATUS
  99. -----------
  100. If :program:`FileCheck` verifies that the file matches the expected contents,
  101. it exits with 0. Otherwise, if not, or if an error occurs, it will exit with a
  102. non-zero value.
  103. TUTORIAL
  104. --------
  105. FileCheck is typically used from LLVM regression tests, being invoked on the RUN
  106. line of the test. A simple example of using FileCheck from a RUN line looks
  107. like this:
  108. .. code-block:: llvm
  109. ; RUN: llvm-as < %s | llc -march=x86-64 | FileCheck %s
  110. This syntax says to pipe the current file ("``%s``") into ``llvm-as``, pipe
  111. that into ``llc``, then pipe the output of ``llc`` into ``FileCheck``. This
  112. means that FileCheck will be verifying its standard input (the llc output)
  113. against the filename argument specified (the original ``.ll`` file specified by
  114. "``%s``"). To see how this works, let's look at the rest of the ``.ll`` file
  115. (after the RUN line):
  116. .. code-block:: llvm
  117. define void @sub1(i32* %p, i32 %v) {
  118. entry:
  119. ; CHECK: sub1:
  120. ; CHECK: subl
  121. %0 = tail call i32 @llvm.atomic.load.sub.i32.p0i32(i32* %p, i32 %v)
  122. ret void
  123. }
  124. define void @inc4(i64* %p) {
  125. entry:
  126. ; CHECK: inc4:
  127. ; CHECK: incq
  128. %0 = tail call i64 @llvm.atomic.load.add.i64.p0i64(i64* %p, i64 1)
  129. ret void
  130. }
  131. Here you can see some "``CHECK:``" lines specified in comments. Now you can
  132. see how the file is piped into ``llvm-as``, then ``llc``, and the machine code
  133. output is what we are verifying. FileCheck checks the machine code output to
  134. verify that it matches what the "``CHECK:``" lines specify.
  135. The syntax of the "``CHECK:``" lines is very simple: they are fixed strings that
  136. must occur in order. FileCheck defaults to ignoring horizontal whitespace
  137. differences (e.g. a space is allowed to match a tab) but otherwise, the contents
  138. of the "``CHECK:``" line is required to match some thing in the test file exactly.
  139. One nice thing about FileCheck (compared to grep) is that it allows merging
  140. test cases together into logical groups. For example, because the test above
  141. is checking for the "``sub1:``" and "``inc4:``" labels, it will not match
  142. unless there is a "``subl``" in between those labels. If it existed somewhere
  143. else in the file, that would not count: "``grep subl``" matches if "``subl``"
  144. exists anywhere in the file.
  145. The FileCheck -check-prefix option
  146. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  147. The FileCheck `-check-prefix` option allows multiple test
  148. configurations to be driven from one `.ll` file. This is useful in many
  149. circumstances, for example, testing different architectural variants with
  150. :program:`llc`. Here's a simple example:
  151. .. code-block:: llvm
  152. ; RUN: llvm-as < %s | llc -mtriple=i686-apple-darwin9 -mattr=sse41 \
  153. ; RUN: | FileCheck %s -check-prefix=X32
  154. ; RUN: llvm-as < %s | llc -mtriple=x86_64-apple-darwin9 -mattr=sse41 \
  155. ; RUN: | FileCheck %s -check-prefix=X64
  156. define <4 x i32> @pinsrd_1(i32 %s, <4 x i32> %tmp) nounwind {
  157. %tmp1 = insertelement <4 x i32>; %tmp, i32 %s, i32 1
  158. ret <4 x i32> %tmp1
  159. ; X32: pinsrd_1:
  160. ; X32: pinsrd $1, 4(%esp), %xmm0
  161. ; X64: pinsrd_1:
  162. ; X64: pinsrd $1, %edi, %xmm0
  163. }
  164. In this case, we're testing that we get the expected code generation with
  165. both 32-bit and 64-bit code generation.
  166. The "CHECK-NEXT:" directive
  167. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  168. Sometimes you want to match lines and would like to verify that matches
  169. happen on exactly consecutive lines with no other lines in between them. In
  170. this case, you can use "``CHECK:``" and "``CHECK-NEXT:``" directives to specify
  171. this. If you specified a custom check prefix, just use "``<PREFIX>-NEXT:``".
  172. For example, something like this works as you'd expect:
  173. .. code-block:: llvm
  174. define void @t2(<2 x double>* %r, <2 x double>* %A, double %B) {
  175. %tmp3 = load <2 x double>* %A, align 16
  176. %tmp7 = insertelement <2 x double> undef, double %B, i32 0
  177. %tmp9 = shufflevector <2 x double> %tmp3,
  178. <2 x double> %tmp7,
  179. <2 x i32> < i32 0, i32 2 >
  180. store <2 x double> %tmp9, <2 x double>* %r, align 16
  181. ret void
  182. ; CHECK: t2:
  183. ; CHECK: movl 8(%esp), %eax
  184. ; CHECK-NEXT: movapd (%eax), %xmm0
  185. ; CHECK-NEXT: movhpd 12(%esp), %xmm0
  186. ; CHECK-NEXT: movl 4(%esp), %eax
  187. ; CHECK-NEXT: movapd %xmm0, (%eax)
  188. ; CHECK-NEXT: ret
  189. }
  190. "``CHECK-NEXT:``" directives reject the input unless there is exactly one
  191. newline between it and the previous directive. A "``CHECK-NEXT:``" cannot be
  192. the first directive in a file.
  193. The "CHECK-SAME:" directive
  194. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  195. Sometimes you want to match lines and would like to verify that matches happen
  196. on the same line as the previous match. In this case, you can use "``CHECK:``"
  197. and "``CHECK-SAME:``" directives to specify this. If you specified a custom
  198. check prefix, just use "``<PREFIX>-SAME:``".
  199. "``CHECK-SAME:``" is particularly powerful in conjunction with "``CHECK-NOT:``"
  200. (described below).
  201. For example, the following works like you'd expect:
  202. .. code-block:: llvm
  203. !0 = !DILocation(line: 5, scope: !1, inlinedAt: !2)
  204. ; CHECK: !DILocation(line: 5,
  205. ; CHECK-NOT: column:
  206. ; CHECK-SAME: scope: ![[SCOPE:[0-9]+]]
  207. "``CHECK-SAME:``" directives reject the input if there are any newlines between
  208. it and the previous directive. A "``CHECK-SAME:``" cannot be the first
  209. directive in a file.
  210. The "CHECK-EMPTY:" directive
  211. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  212. If you need to check that the next line has nothing on it, not even whitespace,
  213. you can use the "``CHECK-EMPTY:``" directive.
  214. .. code-block:: llvm
  215. declare void @foo()
  216. declare void @bar()
  217. ; CHECK: foo
  218. ; CHECK-EMPTY:
  219. ; CHECK-NEXT: bar
  220. Just like "``CHECK-NEXT:``" the directive will fail if there is more than one
  221. newline before it finds the next blank line, and it cannot be the first
  222. directive in a file.
  223. The "CHECK-NOT:" directive
  224. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  225. The "``CHECK-NOT:``" directive is used to verify that a string doesn't occur
  226. between two matches (or before the first match, or after the last match). For
  227. example, to verify that a load is removed by a transformation, a test like this
  228. can be used:
  229. .. code-block:: llvm
  230. define i8 @coerce_offset0(i32 %V, i32* %P) {
  231. store i32 %V, i32* %P
  232. %P2 = bitcast i32* %P to i8*
  233. %P3 = getelementptr i8* %P2, i32 2
  234. %A = load i8* %P3
  235. ret i8 %A
  236. ; CHECK: @coerce_offset0
  237. ; CHECK-NOT: load
  238. ; CHECK: ret i8
  239. }
  240. The "CHECK-COUNT:" directive
  241. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  242. If you need to match multiple lines with the same pattern over and over again
  243. you can repeat a plain ``CHECK:`` as many times as needed. If that looks too
  244. boring you can instead use a counted check "``CHECK-COUNT-<num>:``", where
  245. ``<num>`` is a positive decimal number. It will match the pattern exactly
  246. ``<num>`` times, no more and no less. If you specified a custom check prefix,
  247. just use "``<PREFIX>-COUNT-<num>:``" for the same effect.
  248. Here is a simple example:
  249. .. code-block:: text
  250. Loop at depth 1
  251. Loop at depth 1
  252. Loop at depth 1
  253. Loop at depth 1
  254. Loop at depth 2
  255. Loop at depth 3
  256. ; CHECK-COUNT-6: Loop at depth {{[0-9]+}}
  257. ; CHECK-NOT: Loop at depth {{[0-9]+}}
  258. The "CHECK-DAG:" directive
  259. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  260. If it's necessary to match strings that don't occur in a strictly sequential
  261. order, "``CHECK-DAG:``" could be used to verify them between two matches (or
  262. before the first match, or after the last match). For example, clang emits
  263. vtable globals in reverse order. Using ``CHECK-DAG:``, we can keep the checks
  264. in the natural order:
  265. .. code-block:: c++
  266. // RUN: %clang_cc1 %s -emit-llvm -o - | FileCheck %s
  267. struct Foo { virtual void method(); };
  268. Foo f; // emit vtable
  269. // CHECK-DAG: @_ZTV3Foo =
  270. struct Bar { virtual void method(); };
  271. Bar b;
  272. // CHECK-DAG: @_ZTV3Bar =
  273. ``CHECK-NOT:`` directives could be mixed with ``CHECK-DAG:`` directives to
  274. exclude strings between the surrounding ``CHECK-DAG:`` directives. As a result,
  275. the surrounding ``CHECK-DAG:`` directives cannot be reordered, i.e. all
  276. occurrences matching ``CHECK-DAG:`` before ``CHECK-NOT:`` must not fall behind
  277. occurrences matching ``CHECK-DAG:`` after ``CHECK-NOT:``. For example,
  278. .. code-block:: llvm
  279. ; CHECK-DAG: BEFORE
  280. ; CHECK-NOT: NOT
  281. ; CHECK-DAG: AFTER
  282. This case will reject input strings where ``BEFORE`` occurs after ``AFTER``.
  283. With captured variables, ``CHECK-DAG:`` is able to match valid topological
  284. orderings of a DAG with edges from the definition of a variable to its use.
  285. It's useful, e.g., when your test cases need to match different output
  286. sequences from the instruction scheduler. For example,
  287. .. code-block:: llvm
  288. ; CHECK-DAG: add [[REG1:r[0-9]+]], r1, r2
  289. ; CHECK-DAG: add [[REG2:r[0-9]+]], r3, r4
  290. ; CHECK: mul r5, [[REG1]], [[REG2]]
  291. In this case, any order of that two ``add`` instructions will be allowed.
  292. If you are defining `and` using variables in the same ``CHECK-DAG:`` block,
  293. be aware that the definition rule can match `after` its use.
  294. So, for instance, the code below will pass:
  295. .. code-block:: text
  296. ; CHECK-DAG: vmov.32 [[REG2:d[0-9]+]][0]
  297. ; CHECK-DAG: vmov.32 [[REG2]][1]
  298. vmov.32 d0[1]
  299. vmov.32 d0[0]
  300. While this other code, will not:
  301. .. code-block:: text
  302. ; CHECK-DAG: vmov.32 [[REG2:d[0-9]+]][0]
  303. ; CHECK-DAG: vmov.32 [[REG2]][1]
  304. vmov.32 d1[1]
  305. vmov.32 d0[0]
  306. While this can be very useful, it's also dangerous, because in the case of
  307. register sequence, you must have a strong order (read before write, copy before
  308. use, etc). If the definition your test is looking for doesn't match (because
  309. of a bug in the compiler), it may match further away from the use, and mask
  310. real bugs away.
  311. In those cases, to enforce the order, use a non-DAG directive between DAG-blocks.
  312. A ``CHECK-DAG:`` directive skips matches that overlap the matches of any
  313. preceding ``CHECK-DAG:`` directives in the same ``CHECK-DAG:`` block. Not only
  314. is this non-overlapping behavior consistent with other directives, but it's
  315. also necessary to handle sets of non-unique strings or patterns. For example,
  316. the following directives look for unordered log entries for two tasks in a
  317. parallel program, such as the OpenMP runtime:
  318. .. code-block:: text
  319. // CHECK-DAG: [[THREAD_ID:[0-9]+]]: task_begin
  320. // CHECK-DAG: [[THREAD_ID]]: task_end
  321. //
  322. // CHECK-DAG: [[THREAD_ID:[0-9]+]]: task_begin
  323. // CHECK-DAG: [[THREAD_ID]]: task_end
  324. The second pair of directives is guaranteed not to match the same log entries
  325. as the first pair even though the patterns are identical and even if the text
  326. of the log entries is identical because the thread ID manages to be reused.
  327. The "CHECK-LABEL:" directive
  328. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  329. Sometimes in a file containing multiple tests divided into logical blocks, one
  330. or more ``CHECK:`` directives may inadvertently succeed by matching lines in a
  331. later block. While an error will usually eventually be generated, the check
  332. flagged as causing the error may not actually bear any relationship to the
  333. actual source of the problem.
  334. In order to produce better error messages in these cases, the "``CHECK-LABEL:``"
  335. directive can be used. It is treated identically to a normal ``CHECK``
  336. directive except that FileCheck makes an additional assumption that a line
  337. matched by the directive cannot also be matched by any other check present in
  338. ``match-filename``; this is intended to be used for lines containing labels or
  339. other unique identifiers. Conceptually, the presence of ``CHECK-LABEL`` divides
  340. the input stream into separate blocks, each of which is processed independently,
  341. preventing a ``CHECK:`` directive in one block matching a line in another block.
  342. If ``--enable-var-scope`` is in effect, all local variables are cleared at the
  343. beginning of the block.
  344. For example,
  345. .. code-block:: llvm
  346. define %struct.C* @C_ctor_base(%struct.C* %this, i32 %x) {
  347. entry:
  348. ; CHECK-LABEL: C_ctor_base:
  349. ; CHECK: mov [[SAVETHIS:r[0-9]+]], r0
  350. ; CHECK: bl A_ctor_base
  351. ; CHECK: mov r0, [[SAVETHIS]]
  352. %0 = bitcast %struct.C* %this to %struct.A*
  353. %call = tail call %struct.A* @A_ctor_base(%struct.A* %0)
  354. %1 = bitcast %struct.C* %this to %struct.B*
  355. %call2 = tail call %struct.B* @B_ctor_base(%struct.B* %1, i32 %x)
  356. ret %struct.C* %this
  357. }
  358. define %struct.D* @D_ctor_base(%struct.D* %this, i32 %x) {
  359. entry:
  360. ; CHECK-LABEL: D_ctor_base:
  361. The use of ``CHECK-LABEL:`` directives in this case ensures that the three
  362. ``CHECK:`` directives only accept lines corresponding to the body of the
  363. ``@C_ctor_base`` function, even if the patterns match lines found later in
  364. the file. Furthermore, if one of these three ``CHECK:`` directives fail,
  365. FileCheck will recover by continuing to the next block, allowing multiple test
  366. failures to be detected in a single invocation.
  367. There is no requirement that ``CHECK-LABEL:`` directives contain strings that
  368. correspond to actual syntactic labels in a source or output language: they must
  369. simply uniquely match a single line in the file being verified.
  370. ``CHECK-LABEL:`` directives cannot contain variable definitions or uses.
  371. FileCheck Regex Matching Syntax
  372. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  373. All FileCheck directives take a pattern to match.
  374. For most uses of FileCheck, fixed string matching is perfectly sufficient. For
  375. some things, a more flexible form of matching is desired. To support this,
  376. FileCheck allows you to specify regular expressions in matching strings,
  377. surrounded by double braces: ``{{yourregex}}``. FileCheck implements a POSIX
  378. regular expression matcher; it supports Extended POSIX regular expressions
  379. (ERE). Because we want to use fixed string matching for a majority of what we
  380. do, FileCheck has been designed to support mixing and matching fixed string
  381. matching with regular expressions. This allows you to write things like this:
  382. .. code-block:: llvm
  383. ; CHECK: movhpd {{[0-9]+}}(%esp), {{%xmm[0-7]}}
  384. In this case, any offset from the ESP register will be allowed, and any xmm
  385. register will be allowed.
  386. Because regular expressions are enclosed with double braces, they are
  387. visually distinct, and you don't need to use escape characters within the double
  388. braces like you would in C. In the rare case that you want to match double
  389. braces explicitly from the input, you can use something ugly like
  390. ``{{[}][}]}}`` as your pattern. Or if you are using the repetition count
  391. syntax, for example ``[[:xdigit:]]{8}`` to match exactly 8 hex digits, you
  392. would need to add parentheses like this ``{{([[:xdigit:]]{8})}}`` to avoid
  393. confusion with FileCheck's closing double-brace.
  394. FileCheck String Substitution Blocks
  395. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  396. It is often useful to match a pattern and then verify that it occurs again
  397. later in the file. For codegen tests, this can be useful to allow any
  398. register, but verify that that register is used consistently later. To do
  399. this, :program:`FileCheck` supports string substitution blocks that allow
  400. string variables to be defined and substituted into patterns. Here is a simple
  401. example:
  402. .. code-block:: llvm
  403. ; CHECK: test5:
  404. ; CHECK: notw [[REGISTER:%[a-z]+]]
  405. ; CHECK: andw {{.*}}[[REGISTER]]
  406. The first check line matches a regex ``%[a-z]+`` and captures it into the
  407. string variable ``REGISTER``. The second line verifies that whatever is in
  408. ``REGISTER`` occurs later in the file after an "``andw``". :program:`FileCheck`
  409. string substitution blocks are always contained in ``[[ ]]`` pairs, and string
  410. variable names can be formed with the regex ``[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*``. If a
  411. colon follows the name, then it is a definition of the variable; otherwise, it
  412. is a substitution.
  413. :program:`FileCheck` variables can be defined multiple times, and substitutions
  414. always get the latest value. Variables can also be substituted later on the
  415. same line they were defined on. For example:
  416. .. code-block:: llvm
  417. ; CHECK: op [[REG:r[0-9]+]], [[REG]]
  418. Can be useful if you want the operands of ``op`` to be the same register,
  419. and don't care exactly which register it is.
  420. If ``--enable-var-scope`` is in effect, variables with names that
  421. start with ``$`` are considered to be global. All others variables are
  422. local. All local variables get undefined at the beginning of each
  423. CHECK-LABEL block. Global variables are not affected by CHECK-LABEL.
  424. This makes it easier to ensure that individual tests are not affected
  425. by variables set in preceding tests.
  426. FileCheck Numeric Substitution Blocks
  427. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  428. :program:`FileCheck` also supports numeric substitution blocks that allow
  429. defining numeric variables and checking for numeric values that satisfy a
  430. numeric expression constraint based on those variables via a numeric
  431. substitution. This allows ``CHECK:`` directives to verify a numeric relation
  432. between two numbers, such as the need for consecutive registers to be used.
  433. The syntax to define a numeric variable is ``[[#<NUMVAR>:]]`` where
  434. ``<NUMVAR>`` is the name of the numeric variable to define to the matching
  435. value.
  436. For example:
  437. .. code-block:: llvm
  438. ; CHECK: mov r[[#REG:]], 42
  439. would match ``mov r5, 42`` and set ``REG`` to the value ``5``.
  440. The syntax of a numeric substitution is ``[[#<expr>]]`` where ``<expr>`` is an
  441. expression. An expression is recursively defined as:
  442. * a numeric operand, or
  443. * an expression followed by an operator and a numeric operand.
  444. A numeric operand is a previously defined numeric variable, or an integer
  445. literal. The supported operators are ``+`` and ``-``. Spaces are accepted
  446. before, after and between any of these elements.
  447. For example:
  448. .. code-block:: llvm
  449. ; CHECK: load r[[#REG:]], [r0]
  450. ; CHECK: load r[[#REG+1]], [r1]
  451. The above example would match the text:
  452. .. code-block:: gas
  453. load r5, [r0]
  454. load r6, [r1]
  455. but would not match the text:
  456. .. code-block:: gas
  457. load r5, [r0]
  458. load r7, [r1]
  459. due to ``7`` being unequal to ``5 + 1``.
  460. The syntax also supports an empty expression, equivalent to writing {{[0-9]+}},
  461. for cases where the input must contain a numeric value but the value itself
  462. does not matter:
  463. .. code-block:: gas
  464. ; CHECK-NOT: mov r0, r[[#]]
  465. to check that a value is synthesized rather than moved around.
  466. A numeric variable can also be defined to the result of a numeric expression,
  467. in which case the numeric expression is checked and if verified the variable is
  468. assigned to the value. The unified syntax for both defining numeric variables
  469. and checking a numeric expression is thus ``[[#<NUMVAR>: <expr>]]`` with each
  470. element as described previously.
  471. The ``--enable-var-scope`` option has the same effect on numeric variables as
  472. on string variables.
  473. Important note: In its current implementation, an expression cannot use a
  474. numeric variable defined earlier in the same CHECK directive.
  475. FileCheck Pseudo Numeric Variables
  476. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  477. Sometimes there's a need to verify output that contains line numbers of the
  478. match file, e.g. when testing compiler diagnostics. This introduces a certain
  479. fragility of the match file structure, as "``CHECK:``" lines contain absolute
  480. line numbers in the same file, which have to be updated whenever line numbers
  481. change due to text addition or deletion.
  482. To support this case, FileCheck expressions understand the ``@LINE`` pseudo
  483. numeric variable which evaluates to the line number of the CHECK pattern where
  484. it is found.
  485. This way match patterns can be put near the relevant test lines and include
  486. relative line number references, for example:
  487. .. code-block:: c++
  488. // CHECK: test.cpp:[[# @LINE + 4]]:6: error: expected ';' after top level declarator
  489. // CHECK-NEXT: {{^int a}}
  490. // CHECK-NEXT: {{^ \^}}
  491. // CHECK-NEXT: {{^ ;}}
  492. int a
  493. To support legacy uses of ``@LINE`` as a special string variable,
  494. :program:`FileCheck` also accepts the following uses of ``@LINE`` with string
  495. substitution block syntax: ``[[@LINE]]``, ``[[@LINE+<offset>]]`` and
  496. ``[[@LINE-<offset>]]`` without any spaces inside the brackets and where
  497. ``offset`` is an integer.
  498. Matching Newline Characters
  499. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  500. To match newline characters in regular expressions the character class
  501. ``[[:space:]]`` can be used. For example, the following pattern:
  502. .. code-block:: c++
  503. // CHECK: DW_AT_location [DW_FORM_sec_offset] ([[DLOC:0x[0-9a-f]+]]){{[[:space:]].*}}"intd"
  504. matches output of the form (from llvm-dwarfdump):
  505. .. code-block:: text
  506. DW_AT_location [DW_FORM_sec_offset] (0x00000233)
  507. DW_AT_name [DW_FORM_strp] ( .debug_str[0x000000c9] = "intd")
  508. letting us set the :program:`FileCheck` variable ``DLOC`` to the desired value
  509. ``0x00000233``, extracted from the line immediately preceding "``intd``".