Thomas Preudhomme via llvm-dev
2018-Jul-12 14:34 UTC
[llvm-dev] Syntax for FileCheck numeric variables and expressions
Hi all, I've written a patch to extend FileCheck to support matching arithmetic expressions involving variable [1] (eg. to match REG+1 where REG is a variable with a numeric value). It was suggested to me in the review to introduce the concept of numeric variable and to allow for specifying the base the value are written in. [1] https://reviews.llvm.org/D49084 I think the syntax should satisfy the below requirements: * based off the [[]] construct since anything else might overload an existing valid syntax (eg. $$ is supposed to match literally now) * consistent with syntax for expressions using @LINE * consistent with using ':' to define regular variable * allows to specify base of the number a numeric variable is being set to * allows to specify base of the result of the numeric expression I've come up with the following syntax for which I'd like feedback: Numeric variable definition: [[#X<base:]] (eg. [[#ADDR<16:]]) where X is the numeric variable being defined and <base is optional in which case base defaults to 10 Numeric variable use: [[#X>base]] (eg. [[#ADDR]]>2) where <base is optional in which case base defaults 10 Numeric expression: [[exp>base]] (eg. [[#ADDR+2>16]] where expression must contain at least one numeric variable I'm not a big fan of the > for the output base being inside the expression but [[exp]]>base would match >base literally. Any suggestions / opinions? Best regards, Thomas
James Henderson via llvm-dev
2018-Jul-13 14:51 UTC
[llvm-dev] Syntax for FileCheck numeric variables and expressions
Hi Thomas, In general, I think this is a good proposal. However, I don't think that using ">" or "<" to specify base (at least alone) is a good idea, as it might clash with future ideas to do comparisons etc. I also think it would be nice to have the syntax consistent between definition and use. My first thought on a reasonable alternative was to use commas to separate the two parts, so something like: [[# VAR, 16:]] to capture a hexadecimal number (where the spaces are optional). [[# VAR, 16]] to use a variable, converted to a hexadecimal string. In both cases, the base component is optional, and defaults to decimal. This led me to thing that it might be better to use something similar to printf style for the latter half, so to capture a hexadecimal number with a leading "0x" would be: "0x[[# VAR, %x:]]" and to use it would be "0x[[# VAR, %x]]". Indeed, that would allow straightforward conversions between formats, so say you defined it by capturing a decimal integer and using it to match a hexadecimal in upper case, with leading 0x and 8 digits following the 0x: CHECK: [[# VAR, %d:]] # Defines CHECK: 0x[[# VAR + 1, %8X]] # Uses Of course, if we go down that route, it would probably make more sense to reverse the two sides (e.g. to become "[[# %d, VAR:]]" to capture a decimal and "[[# %8X, VAR + 1]]" to use it). Regards, James On 12 July 2018 at 15:34, Thomas Preudhomme via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:> Hi all, > > I've written a patch to extend FileCheck to support matching > arithmetic expressions involving variable [1] (eg. to match REG+1 > where REG is a variable with a numeric value). It was suggested to me > in the review to introduce the concept of numeric variable and to > allow for specifying the base the value are written in. > > [1] https://reviews.llvm.org/D49084 > > I think the syntax should satisfy the below requirements: > > * based off the [[]] construct since anything else might overload an > existing valid syntax (eg. $$ is supposed to match literally now) > * consistent with syntax for expressions using @LINE > * consistent with using ':' to define regular variable > * allows to specify base of the number a numeric variable is being set to > * allows to specify base of the result of the numeric expression > > I've come up with the following syntax for which I'd like feedback: > > Numeric variable definition: [[#X<base:]] (eg. [[#ADDR<16:]]) where X > is the numeric variable being defined and <base is optional in which > case base defaults to 10 > Numeric variable use: [[#X>base]] (eg. [[#ADDR]]>2) where <base is > optional in which case base defaults 10 > Numeric expression: [[exp>base]] (eg. [[#ADDR+2>16]] where expression > must contain at least one numeric variable > > > I'm not a big fan of the > for the output base being inside the > expression but [[exp]]>base would match >base literally. > > Any suggestions / opinions? > > Best regards, > > Thomas > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20180713/d32e4d5b/attachment-0001.html>
Thomas Preudhomme via llvm-dev
2018-Jul-16 10:23 UTC
[llvm-dev] Syntax for FileCheck numeric variables and expressions
Hi James, I like that suggestion very much but I think keeping the order of the two sides as initially proposed makes more sense. In printf/scanf the string is first because the primary use of these functions is to do I/O and so you first specify what you are going to output/input and then where to capture variables. The primary objective of FileCheck variables and expressions is to capture/print them, the specifier is an addon to allow some conversion. Does it make sense? In the interest of speeding things up I plan to start implementing this proposal starting tomorrow unless someone gives some more feedback. Best regards, Thomas On Fri, 13 Jul 2018 at 15:51, James Henderson <jh7370.2008 at my.bristol.ac.uk> wrote:> > Hi Thomas, > > In general, I think this is a good proposal. However, I don't think that using ">" or "<" to specify base (at least alone) is a good idea, as it might clash with future ideas to do comparisons etc. I also think it would be nice to have the syntax consistent between definition and use. My first thought on a reasonable alternative was to use commas to separate the two parts, so something like: > > [[# VAR, 16:]] to capture a hexadecimal number (where the spaces are optional). [[# VAR, 16]] to use a variable, converted to a hexadecimal string. In both cases, the base component is optional, and defaults to decimal. > > This led me to thing that it might be better to use something similar to printf style for the latter half, so to capture a hexadecimal number with a leading "0x" would be: "0x[[# VAR, %x:]]" and to use it would be "0x[[# VAR, %x]]". Indeed, that would allow straightforward conversions between formats, so say you defined it by capturing a decimal integer and using it to match a hexadecimal in upper case, with leading 0x and 8 digits following the 0x: > > CHECK: [[# VAR, %d:]] # Defines > CHECK: 0x[[# VAR + 1, %8X]] # Uses > > Of course, if we go down that route, it would probably make more sense to reverse the two sides (e.g. to become "[[# %d, VAR:]]" to capture a decimal and "[[# %8X, VAR + 1]]" to use it). > > Regards, > > James > > On 12 July 2018 at 15:34, Thomas Preudhomme via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: >> >> Hi all, >> >> I've written a patch to extend FileCheck to support matching >> arithmetic expressions involving variable [1] (eg. to match REG+1 >> where REG is a variable with a numeric value). It was suggested to me >> in the review to introduce the concept of numeric variable and to >> allow for specifying the base the value are written in. >> >> [1] https://reviews.llvm.org/D49084 >> >> I think the syntax should satisfy the below requirements: >> >> * based off the [[]] construct since anything else might overload an >> existing valid syntax (eg. $$ is supposed to match literally now) >> * consistent with syntax for expressions using @LINE >> * consistent with using ':' to define regular variable >> * allows to specify base of the number a numeric variable is being set to >> * allows to specify base of the result of the numeric expression >> >> I've come up with the following syntax for which I'd like feedback: >> >> Numeric variable definition: [[#X<base:]] (eg. [[#ADDR<16:]]) where X >> is the numeric variable being defined and <base is optional in which >> case base defaults to 10 >> Numeric variable use: [[#X>base]] (eg. [[#ADDR]]>2) where <base is >> optional in which case base defaults 10 >> Numeric expression: [[exp>base]] (eg. [[#ADDR+2>16]] where expression >> must contain at least one numeric variable >> >> >> I'm not a big fan of the > for the output base being inside the >> expression but [[exp]]>base would match >base literally. >> >> Any suggestions / opinions? >> >> Best regards, >> >> Thomas >> _______________________________________________ >> LLVM Developers mailing list >> llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org >> http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev > >
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