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FILECHECK(1)			     LLVM			  FILECHECK(1)

NAME
       FileCheck - Flexible pattern matching file verifier

SYNOPSIS
       FileCheck match-filename	[--check-prefix=XXX] [--strict-whitespace]

DESCRIPTION
       FileCheck  reads	 two files (one	from standard input, and one specified
       on the command line) and	uses one to verify the other.	This  behavior
       is  particularly	 useful	 for the testsuite, which wants	to verify that
       the output of some tool (e.g. llc) contains  the	 expected  information
       (for  example,  a  movsd	from esp or whatever is	interesting).  This is
       similar to using	grep, but it is	optimized for matching	multiple  dif-
       ferent inputs in	one file in a specific order.

       The  match-filename  file specifies the file that contains the patterns
       to match.  The file to verify is	read from standard  input  unless  the
       --input-file option is used.

OPTIONS
       Options	are  parsed  from  the environment variable FILECHECK_OPTS and
       from the	command	line.

       -help  Print a summary of command line options.

       --check-prefix prefix
	      FileCheck	searches the contents of match-filename	 for  patterns
	      to   match.   By	default,  these	 patterns  are	prefixed  with
	      "CHECK:".	 If you'd like to use a	different prefix (e.g. because
	      the same input file is checking multiple different tool  or  op-
	      tions), the --check-prefix argument allows you to	specify	(with-
	      out  the	trailing  ":") one or more prefixes to match. Multiple
	      prefixes are useful for tests which might	change	for  different
	      run options, but most lines remain the same.

	      FileCheck	 does  not permit duplicate prefixes, even if one is a
	      check prefix and one is a	comment	prefix (see --comment-prefixes
	      below).

       --check-prefixes	prefix1,prefix2,...
	      An alias of --check-prefix that allows multiple prefixes	to  be
	      specified	as a comma separated list.

       --comment-prefixes prefix1,prefix2,...
	      By  default,  FileCheck ignores any occurrence in	match-filename
	      of any check prefix if it	is preceded on the same	line by	"COM:"
	      or "RUN:". See the section The "COM:" directive  for  usage  de-
	      tails.

	      These   default	comment	  prefixes   can   be	overridden  by
	      --comment-prefixes if they are not appropriate for your  testing
	      environment.  However,  doing  so	 is  not recommended in	LLVM's
	      LIT-based	test suites, which should be  easier  to  maintain  if
	      they  all	 follow	a consistent comment style. In that case, con-
	      sider proposing a	change to the  default	comment	 prefixes  in-
	      stead.

       --allow-unused-prefixes
	      This  option controls the	behavior when using more than one pre-
	      fix as specified by --check-prefix or --check-prefixes, and some
	      of these prefixes	are missing in the test	file. If true, this is
	      allowed, if false, FileCheck will	report an error,  listing  the
	      missing prefixes.

	      It  is currently,	temporarily, true by default, and will be sub-
	      sequently	switched to false.

       --input-file filename
	      File to check (defaults to stdin).

       --match-full-lines
	      By default, FileCheck allows matches of anywhere on a line. This
	      option will require all positive	matches	 to  cover  an	entire
	      line.   Leading  and  trailing  whitespace  is  ignored,	unless
	      --strict-whitespace is also specified. (Note:  negative  matches
	      from CHECK-NOT are not affected by this option!)

	      Passing  this option is equivalent to inserting {{^ *}} or {{^}}
	      before, and {{ *$}} or {{$}} after every positive	check pattern.

       --strict-whitespace
	      By default, FileCheck canonicalizes input	horizontal  whitespace
	      (spaces and tabs)	which causes it	to ignore these	differences (a
	      space  will match	a tab).	 The --strict-whitespace argument dis-
	      ables this behavior. End-of-line sequences are canonicalized  to
	      UNIX-style \n in all modes.

       --ignore-case
	      By  default, FileCheck uses case-sensitive matching. This	option
	      causes FileCheck to use case-insensitive matching.

       --implicit-check-not check-pattern
	      Adds implicit negative checks for	the specified patterns between
	      positive checks. The option allows writing stricter tests	 with-
	      out stuffing them	with CHECK-NOTs.

	      For  example, "--implicit-check-not warning:" can	be useful when
	      testing diagnostic messages from tools that don't	have an	option
	      similar to clang -verify.	With this option FileCheck will	verify
	      that input does not contain warnings not covered by  any	CHECK:
	      patterns.

       --dump-input <value>
	      Dump  input to stderr, adding annotations	representing currently
	      enabled diagnostics.  When there	are  multiple  occurrences  of
	      this option, the <value> that appears earliest in	the list below
	      has precedence.  The default is fail.

	      	help   - Explain input dump and	quit

	      	always - Always	dump input

	      	fail   - Dump input on failure

	      	never  - Never dump input

       --dump-input-context <N>
	      In the dump requested by --dump-input, print <N> input lines be-
	      fore and <N> input lines after any lines specified by --dump-in-
	      put-filter.  When	there are multiple occurrences of this option,
	      the largest specified <N>	has precedence.	 The default is	5.

       --dump-input-filter <value>
	      In the dump requested by --dump-input, print only	input lines of
	      kind <value> plus	any context specified by --dump-input-context.
	      When  there are multiple occurrences of this option, the <value>
	      that appears earliest in the list	below has precedence.  The de-
	      fault  is	 error	when  --dump-input=fail,  and  it's  all  when
	      --dump-input=always.

	      	all		- All input lines

	      	annotation-full	- Input	lines with annotations

	      	annotation	 - Input lines with starting points of annota-
		tions

	      	error		- Input	lines with starting  points  of	 error
		annotations

       --enable-var-scope
	      Enables scope for	regex variables.

	      Variables	with names that	start with $ are considered global and
	      remain set throughout the	file.

	      All   other  variables  get  undefined  after  each  encountered
	      CHECK-LABEL.

       -D<VAR=VALUE>
	      Sets a filecheck pattern variable	VAR with value VALUE that  can
	      be used in CHECK:	lines.

       -D#<FMT>,<NUMVAR>=<NUMERIC EXPRESSION>
	      Sets  a filecheck	numeric	variable NUMVAR	of matching format FMT
	      to the result of evaluating <NUMERIC  EXPRESSION>	 that  can  be
	      used  in	CHECK: lines.  See section FileCheck Numeric Variables
	      and Expressions for details on supported numeric expressions.

       -version
	      Show the version number of this program.

       -v     Print good directive pattern  matches.   However,	 if  -dump-in-
	      put=fail or -dump-input=always, add those	matches	as input anno-
	      tations instead.

       -vv    Print  information  helpful in diagnosing	internal FileCheck is-
	      sues, such as discarded overlapping CHECK-DAG: matches, implicit
	      EOF pattern matches, and CHECK-NOT: patterns that	 do  not  have
	      matches.	Implies	-v.  However, if -dump-input=fail or -dump-in-
	      put=always,  just	 add that information as input annotations in-
	      stead.

       --allow-deprecated-dag-overlap
	      Enable overlapping among	matches	 in  a	group  of  consecutive
	      CHECK-DAG:  directives.	This  option is	deprecated and is only
	      provided for convenience as old tests are	migrated  to  the  new
	      non-overlapping CHECK-DAG: implementation.

       --allow-empty
	      Allow checking empty input. By default, empty input is rejected.

       --color
	      Use colors in output (autodetected by default).

EXIT STATUS
       If  FileCheck  verifies that the	file matches the expected contents, it
       exits with 0.  Otherwise, if not, or if an error	occurs,	it  will  exit
       with a non-zero value.

TUTORIAL
       FileCheck  is  typically	used from LLVM regression tests, being invoked
       on the RUN line of the test.  A simple example of using FileCheck  from
       a RUN line looks	like this:

	  ; RUN: llvm-as < %s |	llc -march=x86-64 | FileCheck %s

       This  syntax  says  to  pipe the	current	file ("%s") into llvm-as, pipe
       that into llc, then pipe	the output of llc into FileCheck.  This	 means
       that  FileCheck	will  be verifying its standard	input (the llc output)
       against the filename argument specified (the original .ll  file	speci-
       fied  by	 "%s").	  To see how this works, let's look at the rest	of the
       .ll file	(after the RUN line):

	  define void @sub1(i32* %p, i32 %v) {
	  entry:
	  ; CHECK: sub1:
	  ; CHECK: subl
		  %0 = tail call i32 @llvm.atomic.load.sub.i32.p0i32(i32* %p, i32 %v)
		  ret void
	  }

	  define void @inc4(i64* %p) {
	  entry:
	  ; CHECK: inc4:
	  ; CHECK: incq
		  %0 = tail call i64 @llvm.atomic.load.add.i64.p0i64(i64* %p, i64 1)
		  ret void
	  }

       Here you	can see	some "CHECK:" lines specified in  comments.   Now  you
       can  see	 how the file is piped into llvm-as, then llc, and the machine
       code output is what we are verifying.   FileCheck  checks  the  machine
       code output to verify that it matches what the "CHECK:" lines specify.

       The syntax of the "CHECK:" lines	is very	simple:	they are fixed strings
       that  must  occur  in order.  FileCheck defaults	to ignoring horizontal
       whitespace differences (e.g. a space is allowed to  match  a  tab)  but
       otherwise,  the contents	of the "CHECK:"	line is	required to match some
       thing in	the test file exactly.

       One nice	thing about FileCheck (compared	to grep)  is  that  it	allows
       merging	test cases together into logical groups.  For example, because
       the test	above is checking for the "sub1:" and "inc4:" labels, it  will
       not  match unless there is a "subl" in between those labels.  If	it ex-
       isted somewhere else in the file, that would  not  count:  "grep	 subl"
       matches if "subl" exists	anywhere in the	file.

   The FileCheck -check-prefix option
       The  FileCheck -check-prefix option allows multiple test	configurations
       to be driven from one .ll file.	This is	useful in many	circumstances,
       for example, testing different architectural variants with llc.	Here's
       a simple	example:

	  ; RUN: llvm-as < %s |	llc -mtriple=i686-apple-darwin9	-mattr=sse41 \
	  ; RUN:	      |	FileCheck %s -check-prefix=X32
	  ; RUN: llvm-as < %s |	llc -mtriple=x86_64-apple-darwin9 -mattr=sse41 \
	  ; RUN:	      |	FileCheck %s -check-prefix=X64

	  define <4 x i32> @pinsrd_1(i32 %s, <4	x i32> %tmp) nounwind {
		  %tmp1	= insertelement	<4 x i32>; %tmp, i32 %s, i32 1
		  ret <4 x i32>	%tmp1
	  ; X32: pinsrd_1:
	  ; X32:    pinsrd $1, 4(%esp),	%xmm0

	  ; X64: pinsrd_1:
	  ; X64:    pinsrd $1, %edi, %xmm0
	  }

       In  this	 case,	we're testing that we get the expected code generation
       with both 32-bit	and 64-bit code	generation.

   The "COM:" directive
       Sometimes you want to disable a FileCheck directive without removing it
       entirely, or you	want to	write comments that  mention  a	 directive  by
       name.  The  "COM:" directive makes it easy to do	this. For example, you
       might have:

	  ; X32: pinsrd_1:
	  ; X32:    pinsrd $1, 4(%esp),	%xmm0

	  ; COM: FIXME:	X64 isn't working correctly yet	for this part of codegen, but
	  ; COM: X64 will have something similar to X32:
	  ; COM:
	  ; COM:   X64:	pinsrd_1:
	  ; COM:   X64:	   pinsrd $1, %edi, %xmm0

       Without "COM:", you would need to use some combination of rewording and
       directive syntax	mangling to prevent  FileCheck	from  recognizing  the
       commented  occurrences  of "X32:" and "X64:" above as directives. More-
       over, FileCheck diagnostics have	 been  proposed	 that  might  complain
       about  the  above occurrences of	"X64" that don't have the trailing ":"
       because they look like directive	typos. Dodging all these problems  can
       be  tedious  for	 a test	author,	and directive syntax mangling can make
       the purpose of test code	unclear.  "COM:" avoids	all these problems.

       A few important usage notes:

        "COM:"	within another directive's pattern does	not  comment  out  the
	 remainder of the pattern. For example:

	    ; X32: pinsrd $1, 4(%esp), %xmm0 COM: This is part of the X32 pattern!

	 If you	need to	temporarily comment out	part of	a directive's pattern,
	 move  it  to another line. The	reason is that FileCheck parses	"COM:"
	 in the	same manner as any other directive: only the  first  directive
	 on the	line is	recognized as a	directive.

        For  the  sake	 of  LIT, FileCheck treats "RUN:" just like "COM:". If
	 this	is   not   suitable   for   your   test	   environment,	   see
	 --comment-prefixes.

        FileCheck  does  not recognize	"COM", "RUN", or any user-defined com-
	 ment prefix as	a comment directive if it's combined with one  of  the
	 usual	check  directive  suffixes,  such as "-NEXT:" or "-NOT:", dis-
	 cussed	below.	FileCheck treats such a	combination as plain text  in-
	 stead.	 If it needs to	act as a comment directive for your test envi-
	 ronment, define it as such with --comment-prefixes.

   The "CHECK-NEXT:" directive
       Sometimes you want to match lines and would like	to verify that matches
       happen on exactly consecutive lines with	 no  other  lines  in  between
       them.   In this case, you can use "CHECK:" and "CHECK-NEXT:" directives
       to specify this.	 If you	specified a  custom  check  prefix,  just  use
       "<PREFIX>-NEXT:".   For example,	something like this works as you'd ex-
       pect:

	  define void @t2(<2 x double>*	%r, <2 x double>* %A, double %B) {
	       %tmp3 = load <2 x double>* %A, align 16
	       %tmp7 = insertelement <2	x double> undef, double	%B, i32	0
	       %tmp9 = shufflevector <2	x double> %tmp3,
				      <2 x double> %tmp7,
				      <2 x i32>	< i32 0, i32 2 >
	       store <2	x double> %tmp9, <2 x double>* %r, align 16
	       ret void

	  ; CHECK:	    t2:
	  ; CHECK:	       movl    8(%esp),	%eax
	  ; CHECK-NEXT:	       movapd  (%eax), %xmm0
	  ; CHECK-NEXT:	       movhpd  12(%esp), %xmm0
	  ; CHECK-NEXT:	       movl    4(%esp),	%eax
	  ; CHECK-NEXT:	       movapd  %xmm0, (%eax)
	  ; CHECK-NEXT:	       ret
	  }

       "CHECK-NEXT:" directives	reject the input unless	there is  exactly  one
       newline	between	it and the previous directive.	A "CHECK-NEXT:"	cannot
       be the first directive in a file.

   The "CHECK-SAME:" directive
       Sometimes you want to match lines and would like	to verify that matches
       happen on the same line as the previous match.  In this case,  you  can
       use  "CHECK:"  and  "CHECK-SAME:"  directives  to specify this.	If you
       specified a custom check	prefix,	just use "<PREFIX>-SAME:".

       "CHECK-SAME:" is	particularly powerful in conjunction with "CHECK-NOT:"
       (described below).

       For example, the	following works	like you'd expect:

	  !0 = !DILocation(line: 5, scope: !1, inlinedAt: !2)

	  ; CHECK:	 !DILocation(line: 5,
	  ; CHECK-NOT:		     column:
	  ; CHECK-SAME:		     scope: ![[SCOPE:[0-9]+]]

       "CHECK-SAME:" directives	reject the input if there are any newlines be-
       tween it	and the	previous directive.

       "CHECK-SAME:" is	also useful to avoid writing matchers  for  irrelevant
       fields.	For example, suppose you're writing a test which parses	a tool
       that generates output like this:

	  Name:	foo
	  Field1: ...
	  Field2: ...
	  Field3: ...
	  Value: 1

	  Name:	bar
	  Field1: ...
	  Field2: ...
	  Field3: ...
	  Value: 2

	  Name:	baz
	  Field1: ...
	  Field2: ...
	  Field3: ...
	  Value: 1

       To write	a test that verifies foo has the  value	 1,  you  might	 first
       write this:

	  CHECK: Name: foo
	  CHECK: Value:	1{{$}}

       However,	 this  would  be a bad test: if	the value for foo changes, the
       test would still	pass because the "CHECK: Value:	1"  line  would	 match
       the  value from baz. To fix this, you could add CHECK-NEXT matchers for
       every FieldN: line, but that would be verbose, and need to  be  updated
       when  Field4  is	 added.	A more succint way to write the	test using the
       "CHECK-SAME:" matcher would be as follows:

	  CHECK:      Name: foo
	  CHECK:      Value:
	  CHECK-SAME:	     {{	1$}}

       This verifies that the next time	"Value:" appears in the	output,	it has
       the value 1.

       Note: a "CHECK-SAME:" cannot be the first directive in a	file.

   The "CHECK-EMPTY:" directive
       If you need to check that the next line has nothing  on	it,  not  even
       whitespace, you can use the "CHECK-EMPTY:" directive.

	  declare void @foo()

	  declare void @bar()
	  ; CHECK: foo
	  ; CHECK-EMPTY:
	  ; CHECK-NEXT:	bar

       Just  like  "CHECK-NEXT:" the directive will fail if there is more than
       one newline before it finds the next blank line,	and it cannot  be  the
       first directive in a file.

   The "CHECK-NOT:" directive
       The  "CHECK-NOT:" directive is used to verify that a string doesn't oc-
       cur between two matches (or before the first match, or after  the  last
       match).	For example, to	verify that a load is removed by a transforma-
       tion, a test like this can be used:

	  define i8 @coerce_offset0(i32	%V, i32* %P) {
	    store i32 %V, i32* %P

	    %P2	= bitcast i32* %P to i8*
	    %P3	= getelementptr	i8* %P2, i32 2

	    %A = load i8* %P3
	    ret	i8 %A
	  ; CHECK: @coerce_offset0
	  ; CHECK-NOT: load
	  ; CHECK: ret i8
	  }

   The "CHECK-COUNT:" directive
       If you need to match multiple lines with	the same pattern over and over
       again  you  can	repeat a plain CHECK: as many times as needed. If that
       looks   too   boring   you   can	  instead   use	  a   counted	 check
       "CHECK-COUNT-<num>:", where <num> is a positive decimal number. It will
       match  the  pattern  exactly  <num>  times, no more and no less.	If you
       specified a custom check	prefix,	just use  "<PREFIX>-COUNT-<num>:"  for
       the same	effect.	 Here is a simple example:

	  Loop at depth	1
	  Loop at depth	1
	  Loop at depth	1
	  Loop at depth	1
	    Loop at depth 2
	      Loop at depth 3

	  ; CHECK-COUNT-6: Loop	at depth {{[0-9]+}}
	  ; CHECK-NOT:	   Loop	at depth {{[0-9]+}}

   The "CHECK-DAG:" directive
       If  it's	 necessary to match strings that don't occur in	a strictly se-
       quential	order, "CHECK-DAG:" could be used to verify them  between  two
       matches (or before the first match, or after the	last match). For exam-
       ple,  clang emits vtable	globals	in reverse order. Using	CHECK-DAG:, we
       can keep	the checks in the natural order:

	  // RUN: %clang_cc1 %s	-emit-llvm -o -	| FileCheck %s

	  struct Foo { virtual void method(); };
	  Foo f;  // emit vtable
	  // CHECK-DAG:	@_ZTV3Foo =

	  struct Bar { virtual void method(); };
	  Bar b;
	  // CHECK-DAG:	@_ZTV3Bar =

       CHECK-NOT: directives could be mixed with CHECK-DAG: directives to  ex-
       clude  strings  between the surrounding CHECK-DAG: directives. As a re-
       sult, the surrounding CHECK-DAG:	directives cannot be  reordered,  i.e.
       all occurrences matching	CHECK-DAG: before CHECK-NOT: must not fall be-
       hind occurrences	matching CHECK-DAG: after CHECK-NOT:. For example,

	  ; CHECK-DAG: BEFORE
	  ; CHECK-NOT: NOT
	  ; CHECK-DAG: AFTER

       This case will reject input strings where BEFORE	occurs after AFTER.

       With  captured variables, CHECK-DAG: is able to match valid topological
       orderings of a DAG with edges from the definition of a variable to  its
       use.   It's  useful, e.g., when your test cases need to match different
       output sequences	from the instruction scheduler.	For example,

	  ; CHECK-DAG: add [[REG1:r[0-9]+]], r1, r2
	  ; CHECK-DAG: add [[REG2:r[0-9]+]], r3, r4
	  ; CHECK:     mul r5, [[REG1]], [[REG2]]

       In this case, any order of that two add instructions will be allowed.

       If you are defining and using variables in the same  CHECK-DAG:	block,
       be aware	that the definition rule can match after its use.

       So, for instance, the code below	will pass:

	  ; CHECK-DAG: vmov.32 [[REG2:d[0-9]+]][0]
	  ; CHECK-DAG: vmov.32 [[REG2]][1]
	  vmov.32 d0[1]
	  vmov.32 d0[0]

       While this other	code, will not:

	  ; CHECK-DAG: vmov.32 [[REG2:d[0-9]+]][0]
	  ; CHECK-DAG: vmov.32 [[REG2]][1]
	  vmov.32 d1[1]
	  vmov.32 d0[0]

       While this can be very useful, it's also	dangerous, because in the case
       of  register sequence, you must have a strong order (read before	write,
       copy before use,	etc). If the  definition  your	test  is  looking  for
       doesn't	match (because of a bug	in the compiler), it may match further
       away from the use, and mask real	bugs away.

       In those	cases, to enforce the order, use a non-DAG  directive  between
       DAG-blocks.

       A  CHECK-DAG:  directive	 skips matches that overlap the	matches	of any
       preceding CHECK-DAG: directives in the same CHECK-DAG: block.  Not only
       is this non-overlapping behavior	consistent with	other directives,  but
       it's  also  necessary to	handle sets of non-unique strings or patterns.
       For example, the	following directives look for  unordered  log  entries
       for two tasks in	a parallel program, such as the	OpenMP runtime:

	  // CHECK-DAG:	[[THREAD_ID:[0-9]+]]: task_begin
	  // CHECK-DAG:	[[THREAD_ID]]: task_end
	  //
	  // CHECK-DAG:	[[THREAD_ID:[0-9]+]]: task_begin
	  // CHECK-DAG:	[[THREAD_ID]]: task_end

       The  second  pair of directives is guaranteed not to match the same log
       entries as the first pair even though the patterns  are	identical  and
       even  if	the text of the	log entries is identical because the thread ID
       manages to be reused.

   The "CHECK-LABEL:" directive
       Sometimes in a file containing  multiple	 tests	divided	 into  logical
       blocks,	one  or	 more  CHECK:  directives may inadvertently succeed by
       matching	lines in a later block.	While an error will usually eventually
       be generated, the check flagged as causing the error may	 not  actually
       bear any	relationship to	the actual source of the problem.

       In  order  to  produce  better  error  messages	in  these  cases,  the
       "CHECK-LABEL:" directive	can be used. It	is treated  identically	 to  a
       normal  CHECK  directive	 except	that FileCheck makes an	additional as-
       sumption	that a line matched by the directive cannot also be matched by
       any other check present in match-filename; this is intended to be  used
       for  lines containing labels or other unique identifiers. Conceptually,
       the presence of CHECK-LABEL divides  the	 input	stream	into  separate
       blocks,	each  of which is processed independently, preventing a	CHECK:
       directive in one	block matching a line  in  another  block.   If	 --en-
       able-var-scope is in effect, all	local variables	are cleared at the be-
       ginning of the block.

       For example,

	  define %struct.C* @C_ctor_base(%struct.C* %this, i32 %x) {
	  entry:
	  ; CHECK-LABEL: C_ctor_base:
	  ; CHECK: mov [[SAVETHIS:r[0-9]+]], r0
	  ; CHECK: bl A_ctor_base
	  ; CHECK: mov r0, [[SAVETHIS]]
	    %0 = bitcast %struct.C* %this to %struct.A*
	    %call = tail call %struct.A* @A_ctor_base(%struct.A* %0)
	    %1 = bitcast %struct.C* %this to %struct.B*
	    %call2 = tail call %struct.B* @B_ctor_base(%struct.B* %1, i32 %x)
	    ret	%struct.C* %this
	  }

	  define %struct.D* @D_ctor_base(%struct.D* %this, i32 %x) {
	  entry:
	  ; CHECK-LABEL: D_ctor_base:

       The  use	of CHECK-LABEL:	directives in this case	ensures	that the three
       CHECK: directives only accept lines corresponding to the	 body  of  the
       @C_ctor_base  function, even if the patterns match lines	found later in
       the file. Furthermore, if one of	these three  CHECK:  directives	 fail,
       FileCheck will recover by continuing to the next	block, allowing	multi-
       ple test	failures to be detected	in a single invocation.

       There  is  no  requirement that CHECK-LABEL: directives contain strings
       that correspond to actual syntactic labels in a source or  output  lan-
       guage:  they must simply	uniquely match a single	line in	the file being
       verified.

       CHECK-LABEL: directives cannot contain variable definitions or uses.

   Directive modifiers
       A directive modifier can	be append to a directive by following the  di-
       rective with {<modifier>} where the only	supported value	for <modifier>
       is LITERAL.

       The  LITERAL directive modifier can be used to perform a	literal	match.
       The modifier results in the directive not  recognizing  any  syntax  to
       perform	regex matching,	variable capture or any	substitutions. This is
       useful when the text to match would require excessive  escaping	other-
       wise.  For  example,  the following will	perform	literal	matches	rather
       than considering	these as regular expressions:

	  Input: [[[10,	20]], [[30, 40]]]
	  Output %r10: [[10, 20]]
	  Output %r10: [[30, 40]]

	  ; CHECK{LITERAL}: [[[10, 20]], [[30, 40]]]
	  ; CHECK-DAG{LITERAL}:	[[30, 40]]
	  ; CHECK-DAG{LITERAL}:	[[10, 20]]

   FileCheck Regex Matching Syntax
       All FileCheck directives	take a pattern to match.   For	most  uses  of
       FileCheck,  fixed  string  matching  is perfectly sufficient.  For some
       things, a more flexible form of matching	is desired.  To	support	 this,
       FileCheck  allows  you  to  specify  regular  expressions  in  matching
       strings,	surrounded by double braces: {{yourregex}}.  FileCheck	imple-
       ments  a	 POSIX	regular	expression matcher; it supports	Extended POSIX
       regular expressions (ERE). Because we want to use fixed string matching
       for a majority of what we do, FileCheck has been	 designed  to  support
       mixing  and  matching  fixed  string matching with regular expressions.
       This allows you to write	things like this:

	  ; CHECK: movhpd      {{[0-9]+}}(%esp), {{%xmm[0-7]}}

       In this case, any offset	from the ESP register will be allowed, and any
       xmm register will be allowed.

       Because regular expressions are enclosed	with double braces,  they  are
       visually	 distinct,  and	you don't need to use escape characters	within
       the double braces like you would	in C.  In the rare case	that you  want
       to match	double braces explicitly from the input, you can use something
       ugly  like {{[}][}]}} as	your pattern.  Or if you are using the repeti-
       tion count syntax, for example [[:xdigit:]]{8} to match exactly	8  hex
       digits,	  you	 would	  need	  to   add   parentheses   like	  this
       {{([[:xdigit:]]{8})}} to	avoid confusion	with FileCheck's closing  dou-
       ble-brace.

   FileCheck String Substitution Blocks
       It  is  often  useful to	match a	pattern	and then verify	that it	occurs
       again later in the file.	 For codegen tests, this can be	useful to  al-
       low  any	 register,  but	verify that that register is used consistently
       later.  To do this, FileCheck supports string substitution blocks  that
       allow  string  variables	 to  be	defined	and substituted	into patterns.
       Here is a simple	example:

	  ; CHECK: test5:
	  ; CHECK:    notw     [[REGISTER:%[a-z]+]]
	  ; CHECK:    andw     {{.*}}[[REGISTER]]

       The first check line matches a regex %[a-z]+ and	captures it  into  the
       string variable REGISTER.  The second line verifies that	whatever is in
       REGISTER	 occurs	 later	in  the	file after an "andw". FileCheck	string
       substitution blocks are always contained	in [[  ]]  pairs,  and	string
       variable	names can be formed with the regex [a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*.  If
       a colon follows the name, then it is a definition of the	variable; oth-
       erwise, it is a substitution.

       FileCheck  variables  can  be defined multiple times, and substitutions
       always get the latest value.  Variables can also	be  substituted	 later
       on the same line	they were defined on. For example:

	  ; CHECK: op [[REG:r[0-9]+]], [[REG]]

       Can  be	useful if you want the operands	of op to be the	same register,
       and don't care exactly which register it	is.

       If --enable-var-scope is	in effect, variables  with  names  that	 start
       with  $	are  considered	 to be global. All others variables are	local.
       All local variables get undefined at the	beginning of each  CHECK-LABEL
       block. Global variables are not affected	by CHECK-LABEL.	 This makes it
       easier  to  ensure  that	individual tests are not affected by variables
       set in preceding	tests.

   FileCheck Numeric Substitution Blocks
       FileCheck also supports numeric substitution blocks that	allow defining
       numeric variables and checking for numeric values that  satisfy	a  nu-
       meric expression	constraint based on those variables via	a numeric sub-
       stitution.  This	 allows	CHECK: directives to verify a numeric relation
       between two numbers, such as the	need for consecutive registers	to  be
       used.

       The  syntax  to	capture	 a  numeric value is [[#%<fmtspec>,<NUMVAR>:]]
       where:

        %<fmtspec>, is	an optional format specifier to	indicate  what	number
	 format	to match and the minimum number	of digits to expect.

        <NUMVAR>:  is	an  optional  definition of variable <NUMVAR> from the
	 captured value.

       The syntax of <fmtspec> is: #.<precision><conversion specifier> where:

        # is an optional flag available for hex values	(see <conversion spec-
	 ifier>	below) which requires the value	matched	to be prefixed by 0x.

        .<precision> is an optional printf-style precision specifier in which
	 <precision> indicates the minimum number of  digits  that  the	 value
	 matched must have, expecting leading zeros if needed.

        <conversion  specifier>  is an	optional scanf-style conversion	speci-
	 fier to indicate what number format to	match (e.g. hex	number).  Cur-
	 rently	accepted format	specifiers are %u, %d, %x and %X.  If  absent,
	 the format specifier defaults to %u.

       For example:

	  ; CHECK: mov r[[#REG:]], 0x[[#%.8X,ADDR:]]

       would  match  mov r5, 0x0000FEFE	and set	REG to the value 5 and ADDR to
       the value 0xFEFE. Note that due to the precision	it would fail to match
       mov r5, 0xFEFE.

       As a result of the numeric variable definition being  optional,	it  is
       possible	 to only check that a numeric value is present in a given for-
       mat. This can be	useful when the	value itself is	not  useful,  for  in-
       stance:

	  ; CHECK-NOT: mov r0, r[[#]]

       to check	that a value is	synthesized rather than	moved around.

       The  syntax  of	a  numeric substitution	is [[#%<fmtspec>, <constraint>
       <expr>]]	where:

        <fmtspec> is the same format specifier	as for defining	a variable but
	 in this context indicating how	a numeric expression value  should  be
	 matched  against.  If absent, both components of the format specifier
	 are inferred from the matching	format of the numeric variable(s) used
	 by the	expression constraint if any, and defaults to %u if no numeric
	 variable is used, denoting that the value should be unsigned with  no
	 leading  zeros. In case of conflict between format specifiers of sev-
	 eral numeric variables, the conversion	 specifier  becomes  mandatory
	 but the precision specifier remains optional.

        <constraint> is the constraint	describing how the value to match must
	 relate	to the value of	the numeric expression.	The only currently ac-
	 cepted	 constraint  is	 ==  for  an exact match and is	the default if
	 <constraint> is not provided. No matching constraint must  be	speci-
	 fied when the <expr> is empty.

        <expr>	is an expression. An expression	is in turn recursively defined
	 as:

	  a numeric operand, or

	  an expression followed by an	operator and a numeric operand.

	 A  numeric operand is a previously defined numeric variable, an inte-
	 ger literal, or a function. Spaces are	accepted before, after and be-
	 tween any of these elements. Numeric operands have 64-bit  precision.
	 Overflow and underflow	are rejected. There is no support for operator
	 precedence,  but parentheses can be used to change the	evaluation or-
	 der.

       The supported operators are:

	   + -	Returns	the sum	of its two operands.

	   - -	Returns	the difference of its two operands.

       The syntax of a function	call is	<name>(<arguments>) where:

        name is a predefined string literal. Accepted values are:

	  add - Returns the sum of its	two operands.

	  div - Returns the quotient of its two operands.

	  max - Returns the largest of	its two	operands.

	  min - Returns the smallest of its two operands.

	  mul - Returns the product of	its two	operands.

	  sub - Returns the difference	of its two operands.

        <arguments> is	a comma	separated list of expressions.

       For example:

	  ; CHECK: load	r[[#REG:]], [r0]
	  ; CHECK: load	r[[#REG+1]], [r1]
	  ; CHECK: Loading from	0x[[#%x,ADDR:]]
	  ; CHECK-SAME:	to 0x[[#ADDR + 7]]

       The above example would match the text:

	  load r5, [r0]
	  load r6, [r1]
	  Loading from 0xa0463440 to 0xa0463447

       but would not match the text:

	  load r5, [r0]
	  load r7, [r1]
	  Loading from 0xa0463440 to 0xa0463443

       Due to 7	being unequal to 5 + 1 and a0463443 being unequal to  a0463440
       + 7.

       A  numeric  variable can	also be	defined	to the result of a numeric ex-
       pression, in which case the numeric expression  constraint  is  checked
       and if verified the variable is assigned	to the value. The unified syn-
       tax for both checking a numeric expression and capturing	its value into
       a   numeric   variable  is  thus	 [[#%<fmtspec>,<NUMVAR>:  <constraint>
       <expr>]]	with each element as described previously. One	can  use  this
       syntax  to  make	a testcase more	self-describing	by using variables in-
       stead of	values:

	  ; CHECK: mov r[[#REG_OFFSET:]], 0x[[#%X,FIELD_OFFSET:12]]
	  ; CHECK-NEXT:	load r[[#]], [r[[#REG_BASE:]], r[[#REG_OFFSET]]]

       which would match:

	  mov r4, 0xC
	  load r6, [r5,	r4]

       The --enable-var-scope option has the same effect on numeric  variables
       as on string variables.

       Important note: In its current implementation, an expression cannot use
       a numeric variable defined earlier in the same CHECK directive.

   FileCheck Pseudo Numeric Variables
       Sometimes there's a need	to verify output that contains line numbers of
       the  match  file,  e.g. when testing compiler diagnostics.  This	intro-
       duces a certain fragility of the	 match	file  structure,  as  "CHECK:"
       lines  contain absolute line numbers in the same	file, which have to be
       updated whenever	line numbers change due	to text	addition or deletion.

       To support this case, FileCheck expressions understand the @LINE	pseudo
       numeric variable	which evaluates	to the line number of the  CHECK  pat-
       tern where it is	found.

       This way	match patterns can be put near the relevant test lines and in-
       clude relative line number references, for example:

	  // CHECK: test.cpp:[[# @LINE + 4]]:6:	error: expected	';' after top level declarator
	  // CHECK-NEXT: {{^int	a}}
	  // CHECK-NEXT: {{^	 \^}}
	  // CHECK-NEXT: {{^	 ;}}
	  int a

       To support legacy uses of @LINE as a special string variable, FileCheck
       also accepts the	following uses of @LINE	with string substitution block
       syntax:	[[@LINE]],  [[@LINE+<offset>]]	and [[@LINE-<offset>]] without
       any spaces inside the brackets and where	offset is an integer.

   Matching Newline Characters
       To match	newline	characters in regular expressions the character	 class
       [[:space:]] can be used.	For example, the following pattern:

	  // CHECK: DW_AT_location [DW_FORM_sec_offset]	([[DLOC:0x[0-9a-f]+]]){{[[:space:]].*}}"intd"

       matches output of the form (from	llvm-dwarfdump):

	  DW_AT_location [DW_FORM_sec_offset]	(0x00000233)
	  DW_AT_name [DW_FORM_strp]  ( .debug_str[0x000000c9] =	"intd")

       letting	us  set	 the  FileCheck	 variable  DLOC	 to  the desired value
       0x00000233, extracted from the line immediately preceding "intd".

AUTHOR
       Maintained by the LLVM Team (https://llvm.org/).

COPYRIGHT
       2003-2025, LLVM Project

13				  2025-04-17			  FILECHECK(1)

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