| Checker is a testing tool which compiles a given test file and compares the |
| state of the control-flow graph before and after each optimization pass |
| against a set of assertions specified alongside the tests. |
| |
| Tests are written in Java or Smali, turned into DEX and compiled with the |
| Optimizing compiler. "Check lines" are assertions formatted as comments of the |
| source file. They begin with prefix "/// CHECK" or "## CHECK", respectively, |
| followed by a pattern that the engine attempts to match in the compiler output. |
| |
| Assertions are tested in groups which correspond to the individual compiler |
| passes. Each group of check lines therefore must start with a 'CHECK-START' |
| header which specifies the output group it should be tested against. The group |
| name must exactly match one of the groups recognized in the output (they can |
| be listed with the '--list-passes' command-line flag). |
| |
| Matching of check lines is carried out in the order of appearance in the |
| source file. There are three types of check lines: |
| - CHECK: Must match an output line which appears in the output group |
| later than lines matched against any preceeding checks. Output |
| lines must therefore match the check lines in the same order. |
| These are referred to as "in-order" checks in the code. |
| - CHECK-DAG: Must match an output line which appears in the output group |
| later than lines matched against any preceeding in-order checks. |
| In other words, the order of output lines does not matter |
| between consecutive DAG checks. |
| - CHECK-NOT: Must not match any output line which appears in the output group |
| later than lines matched against any preceeding checks and |
| earlier than lines matched against any subsequent checks. |
| Surrounding non-negative checks (or boundaries of the group) |
| therefore create a scope within which the assertion is verified. |
| - CHECK-NEXT: Must match the output line which comes right after the line which |
| matched the previous check. Cannot be used after any but the |
| in-order CHECK. |
| - CHECK-EVAL: Specifies a Python expression which must evaluate to 'True'. |
| |
| Check-line patterns are treated as plain text rather than regular expressions |
| but are whitespace agnostic. |
| |
| Actual regex patterns can be inserted enclosed in '{{' and '}}' brackets. If |
| curly brackets need to be used inside the body of the regex, they need to be |
| enclosed in round brackets. For example, the pattern '{{foo{2}}}' will parse |
| the invalid regex 'foo{2', but '{{(fo{2})}}' will match 'foo'. |
| |
| Regex patterns can be named and referenced later. A new variable is defined |
| with '<<name:regex>>' and can be referenced with '<<name>>'. Variables are |
| only valid within the scope of the defining group. Within a group they cannot |
| be redefined or used undefined. |
| |
| Example: |
| The following assertions can be placed in a Java source file: |
| |
| /// CHECK-START: int MyClass.MyMethod() constant_folding (after) |
| /// CHECK: <<ID:i\d+>> IntConstant {{11|22}} |
| /// CHECK: Return [<<ID>>] |
| |
| The engine will attempt to match the check lines against the output of the |
| group named on the first line. Together they verify that the CFG after |
| constant folding returns an integer constant with value either 11 or 22. |
| |
| |
| Of the language constructs above, 'CHECK-EVAL' lines support only referencing of |
| variables. Any other surrounding text will be passed to Python's `eval` as is. |
| |
| Example: |
| /// CHECK-START: int MyClass.MyMethod() liveness (after) |
| /// CHECK: InstructionA liveness:<<VarA:\d+>> |
| /// CHECK: InstructionB liveness:<<VarB:\d+>> |
| /// CHECK-EVAL: <<VarA>> != <<VarB>> |
| |
| |
| A group of check lines can be made architecture-specific by inserting '-<arch>' |
| after the 'CHECK-START' keyword. The previous example can be updated to run for |
| arm64 only with: |
| |
| Example: |
| /// CHECK-START-ARM64: int MyClass.MyMethod() constant_folding (after) |
| /// CHECK: <<ID:i\d+>> IntConstant {{11|22}} |
| /// CHECK: Return [<<ID>>] |