This commit adds a new keyword in lit called ALLOW_RETRIES. This keyword
takes a single integer as an argument, and it allows the test to fail that
number of times before it first succeeds.
This work attempts to make the existing test_retry_attempts more flexible
by allowing by-test customization, as well as eliminate libc++'s FLAKY_TEST
custom logic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76288
Summary:
Remove REQUIRES-ANY alias lit directive since it is hardly used and can
be easily implemented using an OR expression using REQUIRES. Fixup
remaining testcases still using REQUIRES-ANY.
Reviewers: probinson, jdenny, gparker42
Reviewed By: gparker42
Subscribers: eugenis, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, sabuasal, niosHD, delcypher, jrtc27, zzheng, edward-jones, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, PkmX, jocewei, lenary, s.egerton, pzheng, sameer.abuasal, apazos, luismarques, cfe-commits, #sanitizers, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm, #clang, #sanitizers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71408
Without this patch, when using lit's internal shell, if `not` on a lit
RUN line calls `env`, `diff`, or any of the other in-process shell
builtins that lit implements, lit accidentally searches for the latter
as an external executable. What's worse is that works fine when a
developer is testing on a platform where those executables are
available and behave as expected, but it then breaks on other
platforms.
`not` seems useful for some builtins, such as `diff`, so this patch
supports such uses. `not --crash` does not seem useful for builtins,
so this patch diagnoses such uses. In all cases, this patch ensures
shell builtins are found behind any sequence of `env` and `not`
commands.
`not` calling `env` calling an external command appears useful when
the `env` and external command are part of a lit substitution, as in
D65156. This patch supports that by looking through any sequence of
`env` and `not` commands, building the environment from the `env`s,
and storing the `not`s. The `not`s are then added back to the command
line without the `env`s to execute externally. This avoids the need
to replicate the `not` implementation, in particular the `--crash`
option, in lit.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66531
Without this patch, when using lit's internal shell, if `env` on a lit
RUN line calls `env`, lit accidentally searches for the latter as an
external executable. What's worse is that works fine when a developer
is testing on a platform where `env` is available and behaves as
expected, but it then breaks on other platforms.
`env` calling `env` can make sense if one such `env` is within a lit
substitution, as in D65156 and D65121. This patch ensures that lit
executes both as internal commands.
Reviewed By: probinson, mgorny, rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65697
Without this patch, when using lit's internal shell, if `env` on a lit
RUN line calls `cd`, `mkdir`, or any of the other in-process shell
builtins that lit implements, lit accidentally searches for the latter
as an external executable.
This patch puts such builtins in a map so that boilerplate for them
need be implemented only once. This patch moves that handling after
processing of `env` so that `env` calling such a builtin can be
detected. Finally, because such calls appear to be useless, this
patch takes the safe approach of diagnosing them rather than
supporting them.
Reviewed By: probinson, mgorny, rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66506
When using lit's internal shell, RUN lines like the following
accidentally execute an external `diff` instead of lit's internal
`diff`:
```
# RUN: program | diff file -
```
Such cases exist now, in `clang/test/Analysis` for example. We are
preparing patches to ensure lit's internal `diff` is called in such
cases, which will then fail because lit's internal `diff` doesn't
recognize `-` as a command-line option. This patch adds support for
`-` to mean stdin.
Reviewed By: probinson, rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67643
When using lit's internal shell, RUN lines like the following
accidentally execute an external `diff` instead of lit's internal
`diff`:
```
# RUN: program | diff file -
# RUN: not diff file1 file2 | FileCheck %s
```
Such cases exist now, in `clang/test/Analysis` for example. We are
preparing patches to ensure lit's internal `diff` is called in such
cases, which will then fail because lit's internal `diff` cannot
currently be used in pipelines and doesn't recognize `-` as a
command-line option.
To enable pipelines, this patch moves lit's `diff` implementation into
an out-of-process script, similar to lit's `cat` implementation. A
follow-up patch will implement `-` to mean stdin.
Also, when lit's `diff` prints differences to stdout in Windows, this
patch ensures it always terminate lines with `\n` not `\r\n`. That
way, strict FileCheck directives checking the `diff` output succeed in
both Linux and Windows. This wasn't an issue when `diff` was internal
to lit because `diff` didn't then write to the true stdout, which is
where the `\n` -> `\r\n` conversion happened in Python.
Reviewed By: probinson, stella.stamenova
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66574
When using lit's internal shell, RUN lines like the following
accidentally execute an external `diff` instead of lit's internal
`diff`:
```
# RUN: program | diff file -
```
Such cases exist now, in `clang/test/Analysis` for example. We are
preparing patches to ensure lit's internal `diff` is called in such
cases, which will then fail because lit's internal `diff` doesn't
recognize `-` as a command-line option. This patch adds support for
`-` to mean stdin.
Reviewed By: probinson, rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67643
llvm-svn: 375116
When using lit's internal shell, RUN lines like the following
accidentally execute an external `diff` instead of lit's internal
`diff`:
```
# RUN: program | diff file -
# RUN: not diff file1 file2 | FileCheck %s
```
Such cases exist now, in `clang/test/Analysis` for example. We are
preparing patches to ensure lit's internal `diff` is called in such
cases, which will then fail because lit's internal `diff` cannot
currently be used in pipelines and doesn't recognize `-` as a
command-line option.
To enable pipelines, this patch moves lit's `diff` implementation into
an out-of-process script, similar to lit's `cat` implementation. A
follow-up patch will implement `-` to mean stdin.
Reviewed By: probinson, stella.stamenova
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66574
llvm-svn: 375114
Using GNU diff, `--strip-trailing-cr` removes a `\r` appearing before
a `\n` at the end of a line. Without this patch, lit's internal diff
only removes `\r` if it appears as the last character. That seems
useless. This patch fixes that.
This patch also adds `--strip-trailing-cr` to some tests that fail on
Windows bots when D68664 is applied. Based on what I see in the bot
logs, I think the following is happening. In each test there, lit
diff is comparing a file with `\r\n` line endings to a file with `\n`
line endings. Without D68664, lit diff reads those files in text
mode, which in Windows causes `\r\n` to be replaced with `\n`.
However, with D68664, lit diff reads the files in binary mode instead
and thus reports that every line is different, just as GNU diff does
(at least under Ubuntu). Adding `--strip-trailing-cr` to those tests
restores the previous behavior while permitting the behavior of lit
diff to be more like GNU diff.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68839
llvm-svn: 375020
As suggested by rnk at D67643#1673043, instead of reading files
multiple times until an appropriate encoding is found, read them once
as binary, and then try to decode what was read.
For Python >= 3.5, don't fail when attempting to decode the
`diff_bytes` output in order to print it.
Avoid failures for Python 2.7 used on some Windows bots by
transforming diff output with `lit.util.to_string` before writing it
to stdout.
Finally, add some tests for encoding handling.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68664
llvm-svn: 375018
This essentially reverts a commit [1] that removed the adaptor for
Python unittests. The code has been slightly refactored to make it more
additive: all code is contained in LitTestCase.py.
Usage sites will require a small adaption:
```
[old]
import lit.discovery
...
test_suite = lit.discovery.load_test_suite(...)
[new]
import lit.LitTestCase
...
test_suite = lit.LitTestCase.load_test_suite(...)
```
This was put back on request by Daniel Dunbar, since I wrongly assumed
that the functionality is unused. At least llbuild still uses this [2].
[1] 70ca752ccf
[2] https://github.com/apple/swift-llbuild/blob/master/utils/Xcode/LitXCTestAdaptor/LitTests.py#L16
Reviewed By: ddunbar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69002
llvm-svn: 374947
When using lit's internal shell, RUN lines like the following
accidentally execute an external `diff` instead of lit's internal
`diff`:
```
# RUN: program | diff -U1 file -
```
Such cases exist now, in `clang/test/Analysis` for example. We are
preparing patches to ensure lit's internal `diff` is called in such
cases, which will then fail because lit's internal `diff` doesn't
recognize `-U` as a command-line option. This patch adds `-U`
support.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68668
llvm-svn: 374814
Using GNU diff, `--strip-trailing-cr` removes a `\r` appearing before
a `\n` at the end of a line. Without this patch, lit's internal diff
only removes `\r` if it appears as the last character. That seems
useless. This patch fixes that.
This patch also adds `--strip-trailing-cr` to some tests that fail on
Windows bots when D68664 is applied. Based on what I see in the bot
logs, I think the following is happening. In each test there, lit
diff is comparing a file with `\r\n` line endings to a file with `\n`
line endings. Without D68664, lit diff reads those files with
Python's universal newlines support activated, causing `\r` to be
dropped. However, with D68664, lit diff reads the files in binary
mode instead and thus reports that every line is different, just as
GNU diff does (at least under Ubuntu). Adding `--strip-trailing-cr`
to those tests restores the previous behavior while permitting the
behavior of lit diff to be more like GNU diff.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68839
llvm-svn: 374652
To avoid breaking some tests, D66574, D68664, D67643, and D68668
landed together. However, D68664 introduced an issue now addressed by
D68839, with which these are now all relanding.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68668
llvm-svn: 374651
To avoid breaking some tests, D66574, D68664, D67643, and D68668
landed together. However, D68664 introduced an issue now addressed by
D68839, with which these are now all relanding.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67643
llvm-svn: 374650
To avoid breaking some tests, D66574, D68664, D67643, and D68668
landed together. However, D68664 introduced an issue now addressed by
D68839, with which these are now all relanding.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68664
llvm-svn: 374649
To avoid breaking some tests, D66574, D68664, D67643, and D68668
landed together. However, D68664 introduced an issue now addressed by
D68839, with which these are now all relanding.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66574
llvm-svn: 374648
When using lit's internal shell, RUN lines like the following
accidentally execute an external `diff` instead of lit's internal
`diff`:
```
# RUN: program | diff -U1 file -
```
Such cases exist now, in `clang/test/Analysis` for example. We are
preparing patches to ensure lit's internal `diff` is called in such
cases, which will then fail because lit's internal `diff` doesn't
recognize `-U` as a command-line option. This patch adds `-U`
support.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68668
llvm-svn: 374392
When using lit's internal shell, RUN lines like the following
accidentally execute an external `diff` instead of lit's internal
`diff`:
```
# RUN: program | diff file -
```
Such cases exist now, in `clang/test/Analysis` for example. We are
preparing patches to ensure lit's internal `diff` is called in such
cases, which will then fail because lit's internal `diff` doesn't
recognize `-` as a command-line option. This patch adds support for
`-` to mean stdin.
Reviewed By: probinson, rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67643
llvm-svn: 374390
As suggested by rnk at D67643#1673043, instead of reading files
multiple times until an appropriate encoding is found, read them once
as binary, and then try to decode what was read.
For python >= 3.5, don't fail when attempting to decode the
`diff_bytes` output in order to print it.
Finally, add some tests for encoding handling.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68664
llvm-svn: 374389
When using lit's internal shell, RUN lines like the following
accidentally execute an external `diff` instead of lit's internal
`diff`:
```
# RUN: program | diff file -
# RUN: not diff file1 file2 | FileCheck %s
```
Such cases exist now, in `clang/test/Analysis` for example. We are
preparing patches to ensure lit's internal `diff` is called in such
cases, which will then fail because lit's internal `diff` cannot
currently be used in pipelines and doesn't recognize `-` as a
command-line option.
To enable pipelines, this patch moves lit's `diff` implementation into
an out-of-process script, similar to lit's `cat` implementation. A
follow-up patch will implement `-` to mean stdin.
Reviewed By: probinson, stella.stamenova
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66574
llvm-svn: 374388
When using lit's internal shell, RUN lines like the following
accidentally execute an external `diff` instead of lit's internal
`diff`:
```
# RUN: program | diff file -
# RUN: not diff file1 file2 | FileCheck %s
```
Such cases exist now, in `clang/test/Analysis` for example. We are
preparing patches to ensure lit's internal `diff` is called in such
cases, which will then fail because lit's internal `diff` cannot
currently be used in pipelines and doesn't recognize `-` as a
command-line option.
To enable pipelines, this patch moves lit's `diff` implementation into
an out-of-process script, similar to lit's `cat` implementation. A
follow-up patch will implement `-` to mean stdin.
Reviewed By: probinson, stella.stamenova
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66574
llvm-svn: 372035
Without this patch, failing to provide a subcommand to lit's internal
`env` results in either a python `IndexError` or an attempt to execute
the final `env` argument, such as `FOO=1`, as a command. This patch
diagnoses those cases with a more helpful message.
Reviewed By: stella.stamenova
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66482
llvm-svn: 369620
This patch extends lit's test suite to check that lit's internal shell
doesn't accidentally execute internal commands as external commands.
It does so by putting fake failing versions of those commands in
`PATH` while the entire lit test suite is running. Without the fixes
in D65697 but with its tests, this approach catches accidental
external `env` calls.
Reviewed By: probinson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66293
llvm-svn: 369309
Put the main test script in the right directory, and fix a python bug
in a local script.
Reviewed By: stella.stamenova
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65623
llvm-svn: 367751
Similar to `FILECHECK_OPTS` for FileCheck, `LIT_OPTS` makes it easy to
adjust lit behavior when running the test suite via ninja. For
example:
```
$ LIT_OPTS='--time-tests -vv --filter=threadprivate' \
ninja check-clang-openmp
```
Reviewed By: probinson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64135
llvm-svn: 365313
Ensure that the bash script written by lit TestRunner is open with UTF-8
encoding when using Python 3. Otherwise, attempt to write non-ASCII
characters causes UnicodeEncodeError. This happened e.g. with
the following LLD test:
UNRESOLVED: lld :: ELF/format-binary-non-ascii.s (657 of 2119)
******************** TEST 'lld :: ELF/format-binary-non-ascii.s' FAILED ********************
Exception during script execution:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/home/mgorny/llvm-project/llvm/utils/lit/lit/worker.py", line 63, in _execute_test
result = test.config.test_format.execute(test, lit_config)
File "/home/mgorny/llvm-project/llvm/utils/lit/lit/formats/shtest.py", line 25, in execute
self.execute_external)
File "/home/mgorny/llvm-project/llvm/utils/lit/lit/TestRunner.py", line 1644, in executeShTest
res = _runShTest(test, litConfig, useExternalSh, script, tmpBase)
File "/home/mgorny/llvm-project/llvm/utils/lit/lit/TestRunner.py", line 1590, in _runShTest
res = executeScript(test, litConfig, tmpBase, script, execdir)
File "/home/mgorny/llvm-project/llvm/utils/lit/lit/TestRunner.py", line 1157, in executeScript
f.write('{ ' + '; } &&\n{ '.join(commands) + '; }')
UnicodeEncodeError: 'ascii' codec can't encode character '\xa3' in position 274: ordinal not in range(128)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63254
llvm-svn: 363388
Summary:
Various tests in the `lit` testing suite expect specific return codes
and forms of diagnostic message from utility programs. As per
POSIX.1-2017 XCU Section 1.4, Utility Description Defaults, "[the]
format of diagnostic messages for most utilities is unspecified".
The STDERR subsections of the `cat` and `wc` utilities merely indicate
that "[the] standard error shall be used only for diagnostic messages".
The corresponding EXIT STATUS subsections merely indicate, with regard
to errors, an exit value of >0.
The affected tests are updated to accept the applicable diagnostic
message as produced by the utilities on AIX. The exit value is
normalized using `not` as necessary.
Reviewers: xingxue, sfertile, jasonliu
Reviewed By: xingxue
Subscribers: delcypher, jsji, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60553
llvm-svn: 359690
This enables lit to work with unicode file names via mkdir, rm, and redirection.
Lit still uses utf-8 internally, but converts to utf-16 on Windows, or just utf-8
bytes on everything else.
Committed on behalf of Jason Mittertreiner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56754
llvm-svn: 355122
Check that we do not crash if a parallelism group is explicitly set to
None. Permits usage of the following pattern.
[lit.common.cfg]
lit_config.parallelism_groups['my_group'] = None
if <condition>:
lit_config.parallelism_groups['my_group'] = 3
[project/lit.cfg]
config.parallelism_group = 'my_group'
Reviewers: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58305
llvm-svn: 354912
From the docs: `class LitTestCase(unittest.TestCase)`
LitTestCase is an adaptor for providing a 'unittest' compatible
interface to 'lit' tests so that we can run lit tests with standard
python test runners.
It does not seem to be used anywhere.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58264
llvm-svn: 354188
If a user has PYTHONPATH set in the environment, append new entries to
it rather than blindly setting PYTHONPATH to a fixed string. This
allows tests to, for example, find psutil if it is in
PYTHONPATH. Without this change, lit will detect psutil but then
various tests will fail because PYTHONPATH has been overwritten and
psutil cannot be found.
llvm-svn: 350536
Make sure all print statements are compatible with Python 2 and Python3 using
the `from __future__ import print_function` statement.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56249
llvm-svn: 350307
Summary: This is the only test that is still failing on Windows - or rather, it is expected to fail on the bots, but passes on the new bot that we're preparing causing a failure, so I'm going to disable it. Since the test has rarely, if ever, passed on the bots, this should have the same effect and it will unblock the creation of the new bot.
Reviewers: asmith, delcypher, zturner
Subscribers: stella.stamenova, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51871
llvm-svn: 341856
Summary:
Right now this test is failing on the builtbots on Windows but we have a very similar setup where the test passes. The test is meant to test that specifying a timeout works correctly by running an infnite loop and having it timeout - on the buildbot, the infinite loop doesn't actually execute. This change runs all of the tests in the set using an internal shell rather than an external shell. I expect this will make the test pass which means that either the way the external shell is invoked or the external shell setup on the buildbots is not correct. Regardless of whether the test passes with this change, we'll need to undo this change and have a real fix.
@gkistanova was able to get logs from the buildbot to rule out a number of theories as to why this test is failing, but they didn't have enough information to confirm exactly what the issue is. The purpose of this change is to narrow it down, but if someone has a local repro and can aid in debugging, that would make it much speedier (and less prone to making the bots fail).
Reviewers: gkistanova, asmith, zturner, modocache, rnk, delcypher
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: delcypher, llvm-commits, gkistanova
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51326
llvm-svn: 340840
Summary:
In Python2 'unicode' is a distinct type from 'str', but in Python3 'unicode' does not exist and instead all 'str' objects are Unicode string. This change updates the logic in the test logging for lit to correctly process each of the types, and more importantly, to not just fail in Python3.
This change also reverses the use of quotes in several of the cfg files. By using '""' we are guaranteeing that the resulting path will work correctly on Windows while "''" only works correctly sometimes. This also fixes one of the failing tests.
Reviewers: asmith, zturner
Subscribers: stella.stamenova, delcypher, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50397
llvm-svn: 339179
Summary:
The problem here is that on windows double quotes are used for paths (usually) while single quotes are not. This is not generally a problem for the tests because the lit infrastructure tends to treat both the same. One (and possibly only) exception is when some tests are run in an external shell such as some of the shtest-format tests. In this case on windows the path to python was not created correctly because it had single quotes and the test failed.
This same test is already failing with python 3 which is why our testing missed the new failure. This patch will take care of the immediate failure with python 2 and I'll send a follow up for the python 3 failure.
Reviewers: asmith, zturner
Subscribers: delcypher, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50373
llvm-svn: 339091
Summary:
The issue with the python path is that the path to python on Windows can contain spaces. To make the tests always work, the path to python needs to be surrounded by quotes.
This change updates several configuration files which specify the path to python as a substitution and also remove quotes from existing tests.
Reviewers: asmith, zturner, alexshap, jakehehrlich
Reviewed By: zturner, alexshap, jakehehrlich
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, nemanjai, eraman, kbarton, jakehehrlich, steven_wu, dexonsmith, stella.stamenova, delcypher, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50206
llvm-svn: 339073
(Relands r333584, reverted in 333592.)
When debugging test failures with -vv (or -v in the case of the
internal shell), this makes it easier to locate the RUN line that
failed. For example, clang's test/Driver/linux-ld.c has 892 total RUN
lines, and clang's test/Driver/arm-cortex-cpus.c has 424 RUN lines
after concatenation for line continuations.
When reading the generated shell script, this also makes it easier to
locate the RUN line that produced each command.
To support reporting RUN line numbers in the case of the internal
shell, this patch extends the internal shell to support the null
command, ":", except pipelines are not supported.
To support reporting RUN line numbers in the case of windows cmd.exe
as the external shell, this patch extends -vv to set "echo on" instead
of "echo off" in bat files. (Support for windows cmd.exe as a lit
external shell will likely be dropped later, but I found out too
late.)
Reviewed By: delcypher, asmith, stella.stamenova, jmorse, lebedev.ri, rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44598
llvm-svn: 333614
(Relands r330755 (reverted in r330848) with fix for PR37239.)
When debugging test failures with -vv (or -v in the case of the
internal shell), this makes it easier to locate the RUN line that
failed. For example, clang's test/Driver/linux-ld.c has 892 total RUN
lines, and clang's test/Driver/arm-cortex-cpus.c has 424 RUN lines
after concatenation for line continuations.
When reading the generated shell script, this also makes it easier to
locate the RUN line that produced each command.
To support reporting RUN line numbers in the case of the internal
shell, this patch extends the internal shell to support the null
command, ":", except pipelines are not supported.
To support reporting RUN line numbers in the case of windows cmd.exe
as the external shell, this patch extends -vv to set "echo on" instead
of "echo off" in bat files. (Support for windows cmd.exe as a lit
external shell will likely be dropped later, but I found out too
late.)
Reviewed By: delcypher, asmith, stella.stamenova, jmorse, lebedev.ri, rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44598
llvm-svn: 333584
larger timeout value. This really isn't very good because it will
still be susceptible to machine performance.
While we are here also fix a bug in validation of
`maxIndividualTestTime` where previously it wasn't checked if the
type was an int.
rdar://problem/40221572
llvm-svn: 332987
The program used to be used in `quick_then_slow.py` but that was
removed in r328702. The tests always run `slow.py` on its own but
this doesn't really test additional code so we'll just drop running
`slow.py` so the tests run faster.
rdar://problem/40221572
llvm-svn: 332986
Summary:
This sequence ends the CDATA block so any characters after that are no
longer escaped. This can be fixed by replacing "]]>" with "]]]]><![CDATA[>".
Reviewers: cmatthews
Reviewed By: cmatthews
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46886
llvm-svn: 332440
When debugging test failures with -vv (or -v in the case of the
internal shell), this makes it easier to locate the RUN line that
failed. For example, clang's test/Driver/linux-ld.c has 892 total RUN
lines, and clang's test/Driver/arm-cortex-cpus.c has 424 RUN lines
after concatenation for line continuations.
When reading the generated shell script, this also makes it easier to
locate the RUN line that produced each command.
To support reporting RUN line numbers in the case of the internal
shell, this patch extends the internal shell to support the null
command, ":", except pipelines are not supported.
Reviewed By: asmith, delcypher
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44598
llvm-svn: 330755
The `shtest-timeout.py` test was failing intermittently. It looks like
the issue is that on a resource constrained system lit is unable to run
`quick_then_slow.py` twice and print out the messages the tests expects
within the one second timeout.
The underlying issue is that the test is dependent on the performance of
the host machine is a rather fragile way. This is due to hardcoding
timeout values and having assumptions that the host machine is able to
perform a certain amount of work within the hardcoded timeout values.
We could increase the timeout values but that doesn't really fix the
underlying issue. Instead this patch removes one of fragile assumptions
in the hope that this will be enough to fix the bots.
There are other fragile assumptions in this test (e.g. `quick.py` can be
executed in less than 1 second). If the bots continue to fail we'll have
to revisit this.
rdar://problem/38774530
llvm-svn: 328702
Summary:
This reverts commit r328596.
Checking if the arguments are strings before testing if they contain "/dev/null".
Reviewers: rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: delcypher, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44914
llvm-svn: 328603
Summary:
These changes are to allow to a Result object to have nested Result objects in
order to support microbenchmarks. Currently lit is restricted to reporting one
result object for one test, this change provides support tests that want to
report individual timings for individual kernels.
This revision is the result of the discussions in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D32272#794759,
https://reviews.llvm.org/D37421#f8003b27 and https://reviews.llvm.org/D38496.
It is a separation of the changes purposed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D40077.
This change will enable adding LCALS (Livermore Compiler Analysis Loop Suite)
collection of loop kernels to the llvm test suite using the google benchmark
library (https://reviews.llvm.org/D43319) with tracking of individual kernel
timings.
Previously microbenchmarks had been handled by using macros to section groups
of microbenchmarks together and build many executables while still getting a
grouped timing (MultiSource/TSVC). Recently the google benchmark library was
added to the test suite and utilized with a litsupport plugin. However the
limitation of 1 test 1 result limited its use to passing a runtime option to
run only 1 microbenchmark with several hand written tests
(MicroBenchmarks/XRay). This runs the same executable many times with different
hand-written tests. I will update the litsupport plugin to utilize the new
functionality (https://reviews.llvm.org/D43316).
These changes allow lit to report micro test results if desired in order to get
many precise timing results from 1 run of 1 test executable.
Reviewers: MatzeB, hfinkel, rengolin, delcypher
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43314
llvm-svn: 327422
Summary:
That would allow to recursively compare directories in tests using
"diff -r" on Windows in a similar way as it can be done on Linux or Mac.
Reviewers: zturner, morehouse, vsk
Reviewed By: zturner
Subscribers: kcc, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41776
llvm-svn: 322102
This refers to a temporary path that can be shared across all tests,
identified by a particular label. This can be used for things like
caches.
At the moment, the character set for the LABEL is limited to C
identifier characters, plus '-', '+', '=', and '.'. This is the same
set of characters currently allowed in REQUIRES clause identifiers.
llvm-svn: 315697
This has gone back and forth, but it seems this is necessary
after all. realpath is not sufficient because if you have a
file named 'C:\foo.txt', then both realpath('c:\foo.txt') and
realpath(C:\foo.txt') return the string that was passed to them
exactly as is, meaning the case of the drive-letter won't match.
The problem before was not that we were normalizing the case of
items going into the config map, but rather that we were
normalizing the case of something we needed to print. The value
that is used to key on the config map should never be printed.
llvm-svn: 313918
This makes all paths lowercase on Windows, which seemed like a
good idea at the time, but it means that tests can't properly
use FileCheck to match expected path names.
llvm-svn: 313889
Config map is not exposed through the command line, so testing this
is somewhat tricky. But basically we need a test that if a custom
driver builds a config map and passes it to main, it gets respected.
A config map allows config files in the source tree to be mapped
to alternate config files in the build tree. This particular test
works by having two config files in separate directories, and
setting up a config map to have that redirects A/lit.site.cfg
to B/altconfig. Then, we print a message in A/lit.site.cfg
and B/altconfig and check that we do see the output from B
but don't see the output from A. Additionally we test that
the test suite specified by A's config map is properly discovered.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38105
llvm-svn: 313887
Many editors and Python-related diagnostics tools such as
debuggers break or fail in mysterious ways when python files
don't end in .py. This is especially true on Windows, but
still exists on other platforms. I don't want to be too heavy
handed in changing everything across the board, but I do want
to at least *allow* lit configs to have .py extensions. This
patch makes the discovery process first look for a config file
with a .py extension, and if one is not found, then looks for
a config file using the old method. So for existing users, there
should be no functional change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37838
llvm-svn: 313849
This is an updated version of https://reviews.llvm.org/D22144 by @jlpeyton.
The patch was accepted but not landed.
This is useful functionality and I would like to use this to enable lit tests for environment variable behaviour.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36403
llvm-svn: 311180
Summary:
This is an alternative solution to running the lit test suite on bots
without polluting the source directory. Each input test suite gets an
auto-generated site config in the build directory that points back to
the test input source directory.
This adds some cmake comlexity, but now we don't need to remove and
re-copy the test input directory before every test.
Reviewers: delcypher, modocache
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36026
llvm-svn: 309602
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "llvm/utils/lit/tests/Inputs/shtest-format/external_shell/write-bad-encoding.py", line 5, in <module>
sys.stdout.write(b"a line with bad encoding: \xc2.")
sys.stdout.write doesn't accept bytes but sys.stdout.buffer.write accepts.
llvm-svn: 309473
When using win32 cmd.exe, turn off command echoing at the beginning of
the script (@echo off).
Replace a bash shell script with a python script for the
fail_with_bad_encoding test.
llvm-svn: 309399
Summary:
The technique of directly calling subprocess.Popen on a python script
doesn't work on Windows. The executable path of the command must refer
to a valid win32 executable.
Instead, rename all the python scripts masquerading as gtest executables
to have .py extensions, so we can easily detect then and call the python
executable for them. Do this on Linux as well as Windows for
consistency.
The test suite directory names also come out in lower-case on Windows.
We can consider removing that in a later patch. This change just updates
the FileCheck lines to match on Windows.
Fixes PR33933
Reviewers: modocache, mgorny
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35909
llvm-svn: 309347
Summary:
An expectation in `utils/lit/tests/Inputs/shtest-shell/redirects.txt`
expects that first a string printed to stdout is seen, and then a
string printed to stderr. Add `flush()` calls to ensure that stdout is
printed before stderr, as expected.
Reviewers: rnk, mgorny, jroelofs
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35947
llvm-svn: 309292
Rewrite the write-to-stderr.sh and write-to-stdout-and-stderr.sh shell
scripts as python scripts and call python on them.
Fixes PR33940
llvm-svn: 309200
This is necessary to pass the lit test suite at llvm/utils/lit/tests.
There are some pre-existing failures here, but now switching to pools
doesn't regress any tests.
I had to change test-data/lit.cfg to import DummyConfig from a module to
fix pickling problems, but I think it'll be OK if we require test
formats to be written in real .py modules outside lit.cfg files.
I also discovered that in some circumstances AsyncResult.wait() will not
raise KeyboardInterrupt in a timely manner, but you can pass a non-zero
timeout to work around this. This makes threading.Condition.wait use a
polling loop that runs through the interpreter, so it's capable of
asynchronously raising KeyboardInterrupt.
llvm-svn: 299605
and UNSUPPORTED"
After r292904 llvm-lit fails to emit the test results in the XML format for
Apple's internal buildbots.
rdar://30164800
llvm-svn: 292942
A `lit` condition line is now a comma-separated list of boolean expressions.
Comma-separated expressions act as if each expression were on its own
condition line:
For REQUIRES, if every expression is true then the test will run.
For UNSUPPORTED, if every expression is false then the test will run.
For XFAIL, if every expression is false then the test is expected to succeed.
As a special case "XFAIL: *" expects the test to fail.
Examples:
# Test is expected fail on 64-bit Apple simulators and pass everywhere else
XFAIL: x86_64 && apple && !macosx
# Test is unsupported on Windows and on non-Ubuntu Linux
# and supported everywhere else
UNSUPPORTED: linux && !ubuntu, system-windows
Syntax:
* '&&', '||', '!', '(', ')'. 'true' is true. 'false' is false.
* Each test feature is a true identifier.
* Substrings of the target triple are true identifiers for UNSUPPORTED
and XFAIL, but not for REQUIRES. (This matches the current behavior.)
* All other identifiers are false.
* Identifiers are [-+=._a-zA-Z0-9]+
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18185
llvm-svn: 292904
A `lit` condition line is now a comma-separated list of boolean expressions.
Comma-separated expressions act as if each expression were on its own
condition line:
For REQUIRES, if every expression is true then the test will run.
For UNSUPPORTED, if every expression is false then the test will run.
For XFAIL, if every expression is false then the test is expected to succeed.
As a special case "XFAIL: *" expects the test to fail.
Examples:
# Test is expected fail on 64-bit Apple simulators and pass everywhere else
XFAIL: x86_64 && apple && !macosx
# Test is unsupported on Windows and on non-Ubuntu Linux
# and supported everywhere else
UNSUPPORTED: linux && !ubuntu, system-windows
Syntax:
* '&&', '||', '!', '(', ')'. 'true' is true. 'false' is false.
* Each test feature is a true identifier.
* Substrings of the target triple are true identifiers for UNSUPPORTED
and XFAIL, but not for REQUIRES. (This matches the current behavior.)
* All other identifiers are false.
* Identifiers are [-+=._a-zA-Z0-9]+
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18185
llvm-svn: 292896
Summary:
Libc++ frequently has the need to parse more than just the builtin *test keywords* (`RUN`, `REQUIRES`, `XFAIL`, ect). For example libc++ currently needs a new keyword `MODULES-DEFINES: macro list...`. Instead of re-implementing the script parsing in libc++ this patch allows `parseIntegratedTestScript` to take custom parsers.
This patch introduces a new class `IntegratedTestKeywordParser` which implements the logic to parse/process a test keyword. Parsing of various keyword "kinds" are supported out of the box, including 'TAG', 'COMMAND', and 'LIST', which parse keywords such as `END.`, `RUN:` and `XFAIL:` respectively.
As an example after this change libc++ can implement the `MODULES-DEFINES` simply using:
```
mparser = IntegratedTestKeywordParser('MODULES-DEFINES:', ParserKind.LIST)
parseIntegratedTestScript(test, additional_parsers=[mparser])
macro_list = mparser.getValue()
```
Reviewers: ddunbar, modocache, rnk, danalbert, jroelofs
Subscribers: mgrang, llvm-commits, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27005
llvm-svn: 288694