A smaller version of compiletest-rs
## Magic behavior
* Tests are run in order of their filenames (files first, then recursing into folders).
So if you have any slow tests, prepend them with a small integral number to make them get run first, taking advantage of parallelism as much as possible (instead of waiting for the slow tests at the end).
## Supported magic comment annotations
If your test tests for failure, you need to add a `//~` annotation where the error is happening
to make sure that the test will always keep failing with a specific message at the annotated line.
`//~ ERROR: XXX` make sure the stderr output contains `XXX` for an error in the line where this comment is written
* Also supports `HELP`, `WARN` or `NOTE` for different kind of message
* if one of those levels is specified explicitly, *all* diagnostics of this level or higher need an annotation. If you want to avoid this, just leave out the all caps level note entirely.
* If the all caps note is left out, a message of any level is matched. Leaving it out is not allowed for `ERROR` levels.
* This checks the output *before* normalization, so you can check things that get normalized away, but need to
be careful not to accidentally have a pattern that differs between platforms.
* if `XXX` is of the form `/XXX/` it is treated as a regex instead of a substring and will succeed if the regex matches.
In order to change how a single test is tested, you can add various `//@` comments to the test.
Any other comments will be ignored, and all `//@` comments must be formatted precisely as
their command specifies, or the test will fail without even being run.
* `//@ignore-C` avoids running the test when condition `C` is met.
* `C` can be `target-XXX`, which checks whether the target triple contains `XXX`.
* `C` can also be one of `64bit`, `32bit` or `16bit`.
* `C` can also be `on-host`, which will only run the test during cross compilation testing.
* `//@only-C` **only** runs the test when condition `C` is met. The conditions are the same as with `ignore`.
* `//@needs-asm-support` **only** runs the test when the target supports `asm!`.
* `//@stderr-per-bitwidth` produces one stderr file per bitwidth, as they may differ significantly sometimes
* `//@error-pattern: XXX` makes sure the stderr output contains `XXX`
* `//@revisions: XXX YYY` runs the test once for each space separated name in the list
* emits one stderr file per revision
* `//~` comments can be restricted to specific revisions by adding the revision name after the `~` in square brackets: `//~[XXX]`
* `//@` comments can be restricted to specific revisions by adding the revision name after the `@` in square brackets: `//@[XXX]`
* Note that you cannot add revisions to the `revisions` command.
* `//@compile-flags: XXX` appends `XXX` to the command line arguments passed to the rustc driver
* you can specify this multiple times, and all the flags will accumulate
* `//@rustc-env: XXX=YYY` sets the env var `XXX` to `YYY` for the rustc driver execution.
* for Miri these env vars are used during compilation via rustc and during the emulation of the program
* you can specify this multiple times, accumulating all the env vars
* `//@normalize-stderr-test: "REGEX" -> "REPLACEMENT"` replaces all matches of `REGEX` in the stderr with `REPLACEMENT`. The replacement may specify `$1` and similar backreferences to paste captures.
* you can specify multiple such commands, there is no need to create a single regex that handles multiple replacements that you want to perform.
* `//@require-annotations-for-level: LEVEL` can be used to change the level of diagnostics that require a corresponding annotation.
* this is only useful if there are any annotations like `HELP`, `WARN` or `NOTE`, as these would automatically require annotations for all other diagnostics of the same or higher level.
* `//@check-pass` overrides the `Config::mode` and will make the test behave as if the test suite were in `Mode::Pass`.
* `//@edition: EDITION` overwrites the default edition (2021) to the given edition.
* `//@run-rustfix` runs rustfix on the output and recompiles the result. The result must suceed to compile.
* `//@aux-build: filename` looks for a file in the `auxiliary` directory (within the directory of the test), compiles it as a library and links the current crate against it. This allows you import the crate with `extern crate` or just via `use` statements.
* you can optionally specify a crate type via `//@aux-build: filename.rs:proc-macro`. This is necessary for some crates (like proc macros), but can also be used to change the linkage against the aux build.
* `//@run` compiles the test and runs the resulting binary. The resulting binary must exit successfully. Stdout and stderr are taken from the resulting binary. Any warnings during compilation are ignored.
* You can also specify a different exit code/status that is expected via e.g. `//@run: 1` or `//@run: 101` (the latter is the standard Rust exit code for panics).
## Significant differences to compiletest-rs
* `ignore-target-*` and `only-target-*` operate solely on the triple, instead of supporting things like `macos`
* only `//~` comments can be individualized per revision
* only supports `ui` tests
* tests are run in named order, so you can prefix slow tests with `0` in order to make them get run first