1FileCheck - Flexible pattern matching file verifier 2=================================================== 3 4.. program:: FileCheck 5 6SYNOPSIS 7-------- 8 9:program:`FileCheck` *match-filename* [*--check-prefix=XXX*] [*--strict-whitespace*] 10 11DESCRIPTION 12----------- 13 14:program:`FileCheck` reads two files (one from standard input, and one 15specified on the command line) and uses one to verify the other. This 16behavior is particularly useful for the testsuite, which wants to verify that 17the output of some tool (e.g. :program:`llc`) contains the expected information 18(for example, a movsd from esp or whatever is interesting). This is similar to 19using :program:`grep`, but it is optimized for matching multiple different 20inputs in one file in a specific order. 21 22The ``match-filename`` file specifies the file that contains the patterns to 23match. The file to verify is read from standard input unless the 24:option:`--input-file` option is used. 25 26OPTIONS 27------- 28 29Options are parsed from the environment variable ``FILECHECK_OPTS`` 30and from the command line. 31 32.. option:: -help 33 34 Print a summary of command line options. 35 36.. option:: --check-prefix prefix 37 38 FileCheck searches the contents of ``match-filename`` for patterns to 39 match. By default, these patterns are prefixed with "``CHECK:``". 40 If you'd like to use a different prefix (e.g. because the same input 41 file is checking multiple different tool or options), the 42 :option:`--check-prefix` argument allows you to specify one or more 43 prefixes to match. Multiple prefixes are useful for tests which might 44 change for different run options, but most lines remain the same. 45 46.. option:: --check-prefixes prefix1,prefix2,... 47 48 An alias of :option:`--check-prefix` that allows multiple prefixes to be 49 specified as a comma separated list. 50 51.. option:: --input-file filename 52 53 File to check (defaults to stdin). 54 55.. option:: --match-full-lines 56 57 By default, FileCheck allows matches of anywhere on a line. This 58 option will require all positive matches to cover an entire 59 line. Leading and trailing whitespace is ignored, unless 60 :option:`--strict-whitespace` is also specified. (Note: negative 61 matches from ``CHECK-NOT`` are not affected by this option!) 62 63 Passing this option is equivalent to inserting ``{{^ *}}`` or 64 ``{{^}}`` before, and ``{{ *$}}`` or ``{{$}}`` after every positive 65 check pattern. 66 67.. option:: --strict-whitespace 68 69 By default, FileCheck canonicalizes input horizontal whitespace (spaces and 70 tabs) which causes it to ignore these differences (a space will match a tab). 71 The :option:`--strict-whitespace` argument disables this behavior. End-of-line 72 sequences are canonicalized to UNIX-style ``\n`` in all modes. 73 74.. option:: --ignore-case 75 76 By default, FileCheck uses case-sensitive matching. This option causes 77 FileCheck to use case-insensitive matching. 78 79.. option:: --implicit-check-not check-pattern 80 81 Adds implicit negative checks for the specified patterns between positive 82 checks. The option allows writing stricter tests without stuffing them with 83 ``CHECK-NOT``\ s. 84 85 For example, "``--implicit-check-not warning:``" can be useful when testing 86 diagnostic messages from tools that don't have an option similar to ``clang 87 -verify``. With this option FileCheck will verify that input does not contain 88 warnings not covered by any ``CHECK:`` patterns. 89 90.. option:: --dump-input <mode> 91 92 Dump input to stderr, adding annotations representing currently enabled 93 diagnostics. Do this either 'always', on 'fail', or 'never'. Specify 'help' 94 to explain the dump format and quit. 95 96.. option:: --dump-input-on-failure 97 98 When the check fails, dump all of the original input. This option is 99 deprecated in favor of `--dump-input=fail`. 100 101.. option:: --enable-var-scope 102 103 Enables scope for regex variables. 104 105 Variables with names that start with ``$`` are considered global and 106 remain set throughout the file. 107 108 All other variables get undefined after each encountered ``CHECK-LABEL``. 109 110.. option:: -D<VAR=VALUE> 111 112 Sets a filecheck pattern variable ``VAR`` with value ``VALUE`` that can be 113 used in ``CHECK:`` lines. 114 115.. option:: -D#<NUMVAR>=<NUMERIC EXPRESSION> 116 117 Sets a filecheck numeric variable ``NUMVAR`` to the result of evaluating 118 ``<NUMERIC EXPRESSION>`` that can be used in ``CHECK:`` lines. See section 119 ``FileCheck Numeric Variables and Expressions`` for details on supported 120 numeric expressions. 121 122.. option:: -version 123 124 Show the version number of this program. 125 126.. option:: -v 127 128 Print good directive pattern matches. However, if ``-input-dump=fail`` or 129 ``-input-dump=always``, add those matches as input annotations instead. 130 131.. option:: -vv 132 133 Print information helpful in diagnosing internal FileCheck issues, such as 134 discarded overlapping ``CHECK-DAG:`` matches, implicit EOF pattern matches, 135 and ``CHECK-NOT:`` patterns that do not have matches. Implies ``-v``. 136 However, if ``-input-dump=fail`` or ``-input-dump=always``, just add that 137 information as input annotations instead. 138 139.. option:: --allow-deprecated-dag-overlap 140 141 Enable overlapping among matches in a group of consecutive ``CHECK-DAG:`` 142 directives. This option is deprecated and is only provided for convenience 143 as old tests are migrated to the new non-overlapping ``CHECK-DAG:`` 144 implementation. 145 146.. option:: --color 147 148 Use colors in output (autodetected by default). 149 150EXIT STATUS 151----------- 152 153If :program:`FileCheck` verifies that the file matches the expected contents, 154it exits with 0. Otherwise, if not, or if an error occurs, it will exit with a 155non-zero value. 156 157TUTORIAL 158-------- 159 160FileCheck is typically used from LLVM regression tests, being invoked on the RUN 161line of the test. A simple example of using FileCheck from a RUN line looks 162like this: 163 164.. code-block:: llvm 165 166 ; RUN: llvm-as < %s | llc -march=x86-64 | FileCheck %s 167 168This syntax says to pipe the current file ("``%s``") into ``llvm-as``, pipe 169that into ``llc``, then pipe the output of ``llc`` into ``FileCheck``. This 170means that FileCheck will be verifying its standard input (the llc output) 171against the filename argument specified (the original ``.ll`` file specified by 172"``%s``"). To see how this works, let's look at the rest of the ``.ll`` file 173(after the RUN line): 174 175.. code-block:: llvm 176 177 define void @sub1(i32* %p, i32 %v) { 178 entry: 179 ; CHECK: sub1: 180 ; CHECK: subl 181 %0 = tail call i32 @llvm.atomic.load.sub.i32.p0i32(i32* %p, i32 %v) 182 ret void 183 } 184 185 define void @inc4(i64* %p) { 186 entry: 187 ; CHECK: inc4: 188 ; CHECK: incq 189 %0 = tail call i64 @llvm.atomic.load.add.i64.p0i64(i64* %p, i64 1) 190 ret void 191 } 192 193Here you can see some "``CHECK:``" lines specified in comments. Now you can 194see how the file is piped into ``llvm-as``, then ``llc``, and the machine code 195output is what we are verifying. FileCheck checks the machine code output to 196verify that it matches what the "``CHECK:``" lines specify. 197 198The syntax of the "``CHECK:``" lines is very simple: they are fixed strings that 199must occur in order. FileCheck defaults to ignoring horizontal whitespace 200differences (e.g. a space is allowed to match a tab) but otherwise, the contents 201of the "``CHECK:``" line is required to match some thing in the test file exactly. 202 203One nice thing about FileCheck (compared to grep) is that it allows merging 204test cases together into logical groups. For example, because the test above 205is checking for the "``sub1:``" and "``inc4:``" labels, it will not match 206unless there is a "``subl``" in between those labels. If it existed somewhere 207else in the file, that would not count: "``grep subl``" matches if "``subl``" 208exists anywhere in the file. 209 210The FileCheck -check-prefix option 211~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 212 213The FileCheck `-check-prefix` option allows multiple test 214configurations to be driven from one `.ll` file. This is useful in many 215circumstances, for example, testing different architectural variants with 216:program:`llc`. Here's a simple example: 217 218.. code-block:: llvm 219 220 ; RUN: llvm-as < %s | llc -mtriple=i686-apple-darwin9 -mattr=sse41 \ 221 ; RUN: | FileCheck %s -check-prefix=X32 222 ; RUN: llvm-as < %s | llc -mtriple=x86_64-apple-darwin9 -mattr=sse41 \ 223 ; RUN: | FileCheck %s -check-prefix=X64 224 225 define <4 x i32> @pinsrd_1(i32 %s, <4 x i32> %tmp) nounwind { 226 %tmp1 = insertelement <4 x i32>; %tmp, i32 %s, i32 1 227 ret <4 x i32> %tmp1 228 ; X32: pinsrd_1: 229 ; X32: pinsrd $1, 4(%esp), %xmm0 230 231 ; X64: pinsrd_1: 232 ; X64: pinsrd $1, %edi, %xmm0 233 } 234 235In this case, we're testing that we get the expected code generation with 236both 32-bit and 64-bit code generation. 237 238The "CHECK-NEXT:" directive 239~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 240 241Sometimes you want to match lines and would like to verify that matches 242happen on exactly consecutive lines with no other lines in between them. In 243this case, you can use "``CHECK:``" and "``CHECK-NEXT:``" directives to specify 244this. If you specified a custom check prefix, just use "``<PREFIX>-NEXT:``". 245For example, something like this works as you'd expect: 246 247.. code-block:: llvm 248 249 define void @t2(<2 x double>* %r, <2 x double>* %A, double %B) { 250 %tmp3 = load <2 x double>* %A, align 16 251 %tmp7 = insertelement <2 x double> undef, double %B, i32 0 252 %tmp9 = shufflevector <2 x double> %tmp3, 253 <2 x double> %tmp7, 254 <2 x i32> < i32 0, i32 2 > 255 store <2 x double> %tmp9, <2 x double>* %r, align 16 256 ret void 257 258 ; CHECK: t2: 259 ; CHECK: movl 8(%esp), %eax 260 ; CHECK-NEXT: movapd (%eax), %xmm0 261 ; CHECK-NEXT: movhpd 12(%esp), %xmm0 262 ; CHECK-NEXT: movl 4(%esp), %eax 263 ; CHECK-NEXT: movapd %xmm0, (%eax) 264 ; CHECK-NEXT: ret 265 } 266 267"``CHECK-NEXT:``" directives reject the input unless there is exactly one 268newline between it and the previous directive. A "``CHECK-NEXT:``" cannot be 269the first directive in a file. 270 271The "CHECK-SAME:" directive 272~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 273 274Sometimes you want to match lines and would like to verify that matches happen 275on the same line as the previous match. In this case, you can use "``CHECK:``" 276and "``CHECK-SAME:``" directives to specify this. If you specified a custom 277check prefix, just use "``<PREFIX>-SAME:``". 278 279"``CHECK-SAME:``" is particularly powerful in conjunction with "``CHECK-NOT:``" 280(described below). 281 282For example, the following works like you'd expect: 283 284.. code-block:: llvm 285 286 !0 = !DILocation(line: 5, scope: !1, inlinedAt: !2) 287 288 ; CHECK: !DILocation(line: 5, 289 ; CHECK-NOT: column: 290 ; CHECK-SAME: scope: ![[SCOPE:[0-9]+]] 291 292"``CHECK-SAME:``" directives reject the input if there are any newlines between 293it and the previous directive. A "``CHECK-SAME:``" cannot be the first 294directive in a file. 295 296The "CHECK-EMPTY:" directive 297~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 298 299If you need to check that the next line has nothing on it, not even whitespace, 300you can use the "``CHECK-EMPTY:``" directive. 301 302.. code-block:: llvm 303 304 declare void @foo() 305 306 declare void @bar() 307 ; CHECK: foo 308 ; CHECK-EMPTY: 309 ; CHECK-NEXT: bar 310 311Just like "``CHECK-NEXT:``" the directive will fail if there is more than one 312newline before it finds the next blank line, and it cannot be the first 313directive in a file. 314 315The "CHECK-NOT:" directive 316~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 317 318The "``CHECK-NOT:``" directive is used to verify that a string doesn't occur 319between two matches (or before the first match, or after the last match). For 320example, to verify that a load is removed by a transformation, a test like this 321can be used: 322 323.. code-block:: llvm 324 325 define i8 @coerce_offset0(i32 %V, i32* %P) { 326 store i32 %V, i32* %P 327 328 %P2 = bitcast i32* %P to i8* 329 %P3 = getelementptr i8* %P2, i32 2 330 331 %A = load i8* %P3 332 ret i8 %A 333 ; CHECK: @coerce_offset0 334 ; CHECK-NOT: load 335 ; CHECK: ret i8 336 } 337 338The "CHECK-COUNT:" directive 339~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 340 341If you need to match multiple lines with the same pattern over and over again 342you can repeat a plain ``CHECK:`` as many times as needed. If that looks too 343boring you can instead use a counted check "``CHECK-COUNT-<num>:``", where 344``<num>`` is a positive decimal number. It will match the pattern exactly 345``<num>`` times, no more and no less. If you specified a custom check prefix, 346just use "``<PREFIX>-COUNT-<num>:``" for the same effect. 347Here is a simple example: 348 349.. code-block:: text 350 351 Loop at depth 1 352 Loop at depth 1 353 Loop at depth 1 354 Loop at depth 1 355 Loop at depth 2 356 Loop at depth 3 357 358 ; CHECK-COUNT-6: Loop at depth {{[0-9]+}} 359 ; CHECK-NOT: Loop at depth {{[0-9]+}} 360 361The "CHECK-DAG:" directive 362~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 363 364If it's necessary to match strings that don't occur in a strictly sequential 365order, "``CHECK-DAG:``" could be used to verify them between two matches (or 366before the first match, or after the last match). For example, clang emits 367vtable globals in reverse order. Using ``CHECK-DAG:``, we can keep the checks 368in the natural order: 369 370.. code-block:: c++ 371 372 // RUN: %clang_cc1 %s -emit-llvm -o - | FileCheck %s 373 374 struct Foo { virtual void method(); }; 375 Foo f; // emit vtable 376 // CHECK-DAG: @_ZTV3Foo = 377 378 struct Bar { virtual void method(); }; 379 Bar b; 380 // CHECK-DAG: @_ZTV3Bar = 381 382``CHECK-NOT:`` directives could be mixed with ``CHECK-DAG:`` directives to 383exclude strings between the surrounding ``CHECK-DAG:`` directives. As a result, 384the surrounding ``CHECK-DAG:`` directives cannot be reordered, i.e. all 385occurrences matching ``CHECK-DAG:`` before ``CHECK-NOT:`` must not fall behind 386occurrences matching ``CHECK-DAG:`` after ``CHECK-NOT:``. For example, 387 388.. code-block:: llvm 389 390 ; CHECK-DAG: BEFORE 391 ; CHECK-NOT: NOT 392 ; CHECK-DAG: AFTER 393 394This case will reject input strings where ``BEFORE`` occurs after ``AFTER``. 395 396With captured variables, ``CHECK-DAG:`` is able to match valid topological 397orderings of a DAG with edges from the definition of a variable to its use. 398It's useful, e.g., when your test cases need to match different output 399sequences from the instruction scheduler. For example, 400 401.. code-block:: llvm 402 403 ; CHECK-DAG: add [[REG1:r[0-9]+]], r1, r2 404 ; CHECK-DAG: add [[REG2:r[0-9]+]], r3, r4 405 ; CHECK: mul r5, [[REG1]], [[REG2]] 406 407In this case, any order of that two ``add`` instructions will be allowed. 408 409If you are defining `and` using variables in the same ``CHECK-DAG:`` block, 410be aware that the definition rule can match `after` its use. 411 412So, for instance, the code below will pass: 413 414.. code-block:: text 415 416 ; CHECK-DAG: vmov.32 [[REG2:d[0-9]+]][0] 417 ; CHECK-DAG: vmov.32 [[REG2]][1] 418 vmov.32 d0[1] 419 vmov.32 d0[0] 420 421While this other code, will not: 422 423.. code-block:: text 424 425 ; CHECK-DAG: vmov.32 [[REG2:d[0-9]+]][0] 426 ; CHECK-DAG: vmov.32 [[REG2]][1] 427 vmov.32 d1[1] 428 vmov.32 d0[0] 429 430While this can be very useful, it's also dangerous, because in the case of 431register sequence, you must have a strong order (read before write, copy before 432use, etc). If the definition your test is looking for doesn't match (because 433of a bug in the compiler), it may match further away from the use, and mask 434real bugs away. 435 436In those cases, to enforce the order, use a non-DAG directive between DAG-blocks. 437 438A ``CHECK-DAG:`` directive skips matches that overlap the matches of any 439preceding ``CHECK-DAG:`` directives in the same ``CHECK-DAG:`` block. Not only 440is this non-overlapping behavior consistent with other directives, but it's 441also necessary to handle sets of non-unique strings or patterns. For example, 442the following directives look for unordered log entries for two tasks in a 443parallel program, such as the OpenMP runtime: 444 445.. code-block:: text 446 447 // CHECK-DAG: [[THREAD_ID:[0-9]+]]: task_begin 448 // CHECK-DAG: [[THREAD_ID]]: task_end 449 // 450 // CHECK-DAG: [[THREAD_ID:[0-9]+]]: task_begin 451 // CHECK-DAG: [[THREAD_ID]]: task_end 452 453The second pair of directives is guaranteed not to match the same log entries 454as the first pair even though the patterns are identical and even if the text 455of the log entries is identical because the thread ID manages to be reused. 456 457The "CHECK-LABEL:" directive 458~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 459 460Sometimes in a file containing multiple tests divided into logical blocks, one 461or more ``CHECK:`` directives may inadvertently succeed by matching lines in a 462later block. While an error will usually eventually be generated, the check 463flagged as causing the error may not actually bear any relationship to the 464actual source of the problem. 465 466In order to produce better error messages in these cases, the "``CHECK-LABEL:``" 467directive can be used. It is treated identically to a normal ``CHECK`` 468directive except that FileCheck makes an additional assumption that a line 469matched by the directive cannot also be matched by any other check present in 470``match-filename``; this is intended to be used for lines containing labels or 471other unique identifiers. Conceptually, the presence of ``CHECK-LABEL`` divides 472the input stream into separate blocks, each of which is processed independently, 473preventing a ``CHECK:`` directive in one block matching a line in another block. 474If ``--enable-var-scope`` is in effect, all local variables are cleared at the 475beginning of the block. 476 477For example, 478 479.. code-block:: llvm 480 481 define %struct.C* @C_ctor_base(%struct.C* %this, i32 %x) { 482 entry: 483 ; CHECK-LABEL: C_ctor_base: 484 ; CHECK: mov [[SAVETHIS:r[0-9]+]], r0 485 ; CHECK: bl A_ctor_base 486 ; CHECK: mov r0, [[SAVETHIS]] 487 %0 = bitcast %struct.C* %this to %struct.A* 488 %call = tail call %struct.A* @A_ctor_base(%struct.A* %0) 489 %1 = bitcast %struct.C* %this to %struct.B* 490 %call2 = tail call %struct.B* @B_ctor_base(%struct.B* %1, i32 %x) 491 ret %struct.C* %this 492 } 493 494 define %struct.D* @D_ctor_base(%struct.D* %this, i32 %x) { 495 entry: 496 ; CHECK-LABEL: D_ctor_base: 497 498The use of ``CHECK-LABEL:`` directives in this case ensures that the three 499``CHECK:`` directives only accept lines corresponding to the body of the 500``@C_ctor_base`` function, even if the patterns match lines found later in 501the file. Furthermore, if one of these three ``CHECK:`` directives fail, 502FileCheck will recover by continuing to the next block, allowing multiple test 503failures to be detected in a single invocation. 504 505There is no requirement that ``CHECK-LABEL:`` directives contain strings that 506correspond to actual syntactic labels in a source or output language: they must 507simply uniquely match a single line in the file being verified. 508 509``CHECK-LABEL:`` directives cannot contain variable definitions or uses. 510 511FileCheck Regex Matching Syntax 512~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 513 514All FileCheck directives take a pattern to match. 515For most uses of FileCheck, fixed string matching is perfectly sufficient. For 516some things, a more flexible form of matching is desired. To support this, 517FileCheck allows you to specify regular expressions in matching strings, 518surrounded by double braces: ``{{yourregex}}``. FileCheck implements a POSIX 519regular expression matcher; it supports Extended POSIX regular expressions 520(ERE). Because we want to use fixed string matching for a majority of what we 521do, FileCheck has been designed to support mixing and matching fixed string 522matching with regular expressions. This allows you to write things like this: 523 524.. code-block:: llvm 525 526 ; CHECK: movhpd {{[0-9]+}}(%esp), {{%xmm[0-7]}} 527 528In this case, any offset from the ESP register will be allowed, and any xmm 529register will be allowed. 530 531Because regular expressions are enclosed with double braces, they are 532visually distinct, and you don't need to use escape characters within the double 533braces like you would in C. In the rare case that you want to match double 534braces explicitly from the input, you can use something ugly like 535``{{[}][}]}}`` as your pattern. Or if you are using the repetition count 536syntax, for example ``[[:xdigit:]]{8}`` to match exactly 8 hex digits, you 537would need to add parentheses like this ``{{([[:xdigit:]]{8})}}`` to avoid 538confusion with FileCheck's closing double-brace. 539 540FileCheck String Substitution Blocks 541~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 542 543It is often useful to match a pattern and then verify that it occurs again 544later in the file. For codegen tests, this can be useful to allow any 545register, but verify that that register is used consistently later. To do 546this, :program:`FileCheck` supports string substitution blocks that allow 547string variables to be defined and substituted into patterns. Here is a simple 548example: 549 550.. code-block:: llvm 551 552 ; CHECK: test5: 553 ; CHECK: notw [[REGISTER:%[a-z]+]] 554 ; CHECK: andw {{.*}}[[REGISTER]] 555 556The first check line matches a regex ``%[a-z]+`` and captures it into the 557string variable ``REGISTER``. The second line verifies that whatever is in 558``REGISTER`` occurs later in the file after an "``andw``". :program:`FileCheck` 559string substitution blocks are always contained in ``[[ ]]`` pairs, and string 560variable names can be formed with the regex ``[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*``. If a 561colon follows the name, then it is a definition of the variable; otherwise, it 562is a substitution. 563 564:program:`FileCheck` variables can be defined multiple times, and substitutions 565always get the latest value. Variables can also be substituted later on the 566same line they were defined on. For example: 567 568.. code-block:: llvm 569 570 ; CHECK: op [[REG:r[0-9]+]], [[REG]] 571 572Can be useful if you want the operands of ``op`` to be the same register, 573and don't care exactly which register it is. 574 575If ``--enable-var-scope`` is in effect, variables with names that 576start with ``$`` are considered to be global. All others variables are 577local. All local variables get undefined at the beginning of each 578CHECK-LABEL block. Global variables are not affected by CHECK-LABEL. 579This makes it easier to ensure that individual tests are not affected 580by variables set in preceding tests. 581 582FileCheck Numeric Substitution Blocks 583~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 584 585:program:`FileCheck` also supports numeric substitution blocks that allow 586defining numeric variables and checking for numeric values that satisfy a 587numeric expression constraint based on those variables via a numeric 588substitution. This allows ``CHECK:`` directives to verify a numeric relation 589between two numbers, such as the need for consecutive registers to be used. 590 591The syntax to define a numeric variable is ``[[#<NUMVAR>:]]`` where 592``<NUMVAR>`` is the name of the numeric variable to define to the matching 593value. 594 595For example: 596 597.. code-block:: llvm 598 599 ; CHECK: mov r[[#REG:]], 42 600 601would match ``mov r5, 42`` and set ``REG`` to the value ``5``. 602 603The syntax of a numeric substitution is ``[[#<expr>]]`` where ``<expr>`` is an 604expression. An expression is recursively defined as: 605 606* a numeric operand, or 607* an expression followed by an operator and a numeric operand. 608 609A numeric operand is a previously defined numeric variable, or an integer 610literal. The supported operators are ``+`` and ``-``. Spaces are accepted 611before, after and between any of these elements. 612 613For example: 614 615.. code-block:: llvm 616 617 ; CHECK: load r[[#REG:]], [r0] 618 ; CHECK: load r[[#REG+1]], [r1] 619 620The above example would match the text: 621 622.. code-block:: gas 623 624 load r5, [r0] 625 load r6, [r1] 626 627but would not match the text: 628 629.. code-block:: gas 630 631 load r5, [r0] 632 load r7, [r1] 633 634due to ``7`` being unequal to ``5 + 1``. 635 636The syntax also supports an empty expression, equivalent to writing {{[0-9]+}}, 637for cases where the input must contain a numeric value but the value itself 638does not matter: 639 640.. code-block:: gas 641 642 ; CHECK-NOT: mov r0, r[[#]] 643 644to check that a value is synthesized rather than moved around. 645 646A numeric variable can also be defined to the result of a numeric expression, 647in which case the numeric expression is checked and if verified the variable is 648assigned to the value. The unified syntax for both defining numeric variables 649and checking a numeric expression is thus ``[[#<NUMVAR>: <expr>]]`` with each 650element as described previously. 651 652The ``--enable-var-scope`` option has the same effect on numeric variables as 653on string variables. 654 655Important note: In its current implementation, an expression cannot use a 656numeric variable defined earlier in the same CHECK directive. 657 658FileCheck Pseudo Numeric Variables 659~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 660 661Sometimes there's a need to verify output that contains line numbers of the 662match file, e.g. when testing compiler diagnostics. This introduces a certain 663fragility of the match file structure, as "``CHECK:``" lines contain absolute 664line numbers in the same file, which have to be updated whenever line numbers 665change due to text addition or deletion. 666 667To support this case, FileCheck expressions understand the ``@LINE`` pseudo 668numeric variable which evaluates to the line number of the CHECK pattern where 669it is found. 670 671This way match patterns can be put near the relevant test lines and include 672relative line number references, for example: 673 674.. code-block:: c++ 675 676 // CHECK: test.cpp:[[# @LINE + 4]]:6: error: expected ';' after top level declarator 677 // CHECK-NEXT: {{^int a}} 678 // CHECK-NEXT: {{^ \^}} 679 // CHECK-NEXT: {{^ ;}} 680 int a 681 682To support legacy uses of ``@LINE`` as a special string variable, 683:program:`FileCheck` also accepts the following uses of ``@LINE`` with string 684substitution block syntax: ``[[@LINE]]``, ``[[@LINE+<offset>]]`` and 685``[[@LINE-<offset>]]`` without any spaces inside the brackets and where 686``offset`` is an integer. 687 688Matching Newline Characters 689~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 690 691To match newline characters in regular expressions the character class 692``[[:space:]]`` can be used. For example, the following pattern: 693 694.. code-block:: c++ 695 696 // CHECK: DW_AT_location [DW_FORM_sec_offset] ([[DLOC:0x[0-9a-f]+]]){{[[:space:]].*}}"intd" 697 698matches output of the form (from llvm-dwarfdump): 699 700.. code-block:: text 701 702 DW_AT_location [DW_FORM_sec_offset] (0x00000233) 703 DW_AT_name [DW_FORM_strp] ( .debug_str[0x000000c9] = "intd") 704 705letting us set the :program:`FileCheck` variable ``DLOC`` to the desired value 706``0x00000233``, extracted from the line immediately preceding "``intd``". 707