commit
c834b7ed95
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@ -1 +1 @@
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493c38ba371929579fe136df26eccd9516347c7a
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ae9173d7dd4a31806c950c90dcc331f1508b4d17
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@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ Here's the list of the notification groups:
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- [ARM](./arm.md)
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- [Cleanup Crew](./cleanup-crew.md)
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- [Emscripten](./emscripten.md)
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- [LLVM](./llvm.md)
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- [LLVM Icebreakers](./llvm.md)
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- [RISC-V](./risc-v.md)
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- [WASI](./wasi.md)
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- [WebAssembly](./wasm.md)
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@ -83,7 +83,7 @@ group. For example:
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@rustbot ping arm
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@rustbot ping cleanup-crew
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@rustbot ping emscripten
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@rustbot ping llvm
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@rustbot ping icebreakers-llvm
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@rustbot ping risc-v
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@rustbot ping wasi
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@rustbot ping wasm
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@ -1,13 +1,16 @@
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# LLVM Notification group
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# LLVM Icebreakers Notification group
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**Github Label:** [A-LLVM] <br>
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**Ping command:** `@rustbot ping llvm`
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**Ping command:** `@rustbot ping icebreakers-llvm`
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[A-LLVM]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/labels/A-LLVM
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The "LLVM Notification Group" are focused on bugs that center around LLVM.
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These bugs often arise because of LLVM optimizations gone awry, or as
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the result of an LLVM upgrade. The goal here is:
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*Note*: this notification group is *not* the same as the LLVM working group
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(WG-llvm).
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The "LLVM Icebreakers Notification Group" are focused on bugs that center around
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LLVM. These bugs often arise because of LLVM optimizations gone awry, or as the
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result of an LLVM upgrade. The goal here is:
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- to determine whether the bug is a result of us generating invalid LLVM IR,
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or LLVM misoptimizing;
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@ -180,6 +180,8 @@ their results can be seen [here](https://github.com/rust-lang-ci/rust/actions),
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although usually you will be notified of the result by a comment made by bors on
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the corresponding PR.
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Note that if you start the default try job using `@bors try`, it will skip building several `dist` components and running post-optimization tests, to make the build duration shorter. If you want to execute the full build as it would happen before a merge, add an explicit `try-job` pattern with the name of the default try job (currently `dist-x86_64-linux`).
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Multiple try builds can execute concurrently across different PRs.
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<div class="warning">
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@ -202,6 +202,12 @@ several ways to match the message with the line (see the examples below):
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* `~|`: Associates the error level and message with the *same* line as the
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*previous comment*. This is more convenient than using multiple carets when
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there are multiple messages associated with the same line.
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* `~v`: Associates the error level and message with the *next* error
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annotation line. Each symbol (`v`) that you add adds a line to this, so `~vvv`
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is three lines below the error annotation line.
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* `~?`: Used to match error levels and messages with errors not having line
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information. These can be placed on any line in the test file, but are
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conventionally placed at the end.
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Example:
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@ -270,10 +276,35 @@ fn main() {
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//~| ERROR this pattern has 1 field, but the corresponding tuple struct has 3 fields [E0023]
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```
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#### Positioned above error line
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Use the `//~v` idiom with number of v's in the string to indicate the number
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of lines below. This is typically used in lexer or parser tests matching on errors like unclosed
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delimiter or unclosed literal happening at the end of file.
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```rust,ignore
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// ignore-tidy-trailing-newlines
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//~v ERROR this file contains an unclosed delimiter
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fn main((ؼ
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```
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#### Error without line information
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Use `//~?` to match an error without line information.
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`//~?` is precise and will not match errors if their line information is available.
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It should be preferred to using `error-pattern`, which is imprecise and non-exhaustive.
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```rust,ignore
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//@ compile-flags: --print yyyy
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//~? ERROR unknown print request: `yyyy`
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```
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### `error-pattern`
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The `error-pattern` [directive](directives.md) can be used for messages that don't
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have a specific span.
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The `error-pattern` [directive](directives.md) can be used for runtime messages, which don't
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have a specific span, or for compile time messages if imprecise matching is required due to
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multi-line platform specific diagnostics.
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Let's think about this test:
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@ -300,7 +331,9 @@ fn main() {
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}
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```
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But for strict testing, try to use the `ERROR` annotation as much as possible.
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But for strict testing, try to use the `ERROR` annotation as much as possible,
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including `//~?` annotations for diagnostics without span.
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For compile time diagnostics `error-pattern` should very rarely be necessary.
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### Error levels
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@ -353,7 +386,7 @@ would be a `.mir.stderr` and `.thir.stderr` file with the different outputs of
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the different revisions.
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> Note: cfg revisions also work inside the source code with `#[cfg]` attributes.
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>
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>
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> By convention, the `FALSE` cfg is used to have an always-false config.
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## Controlling pass/fail expectations
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|
|
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Loading…
Reference in New Issue