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NAME

       lit - LLVM Integrated Tester

SYNOPSIS

       lit [options] [tests]

DESCRIPTION

       lit  is  a  portable  tool for executing LLVM and Clang style test suites, summarizing their results, and
       providing indication of failures.  lit is designed to be a lightweight testing tool with as simple a user
       interface as possible.

       lit should be run with one or more tests to run specified on the  command  line.   Tests  can  be  either
       individual test files or directories to search for tests (see TEST DISCOVERY).

       Each specified test will be executed (potentially concurrently) and once all tests have been run lit will
       print  summary  information on the number of tests which passed or failed (see TEST STATUS RESULTS).  The
       lit program will execute with a non-zero exit code if any tests fail.

       By default lit will use a succinct progress display and will only  print  summary  information  for  test
       failures.  See OUTPUT OPTIONS for options controlling the lit progress display and output.

       lit  also  includes  a  number  of  options for controlling how tests are executed (specific features may
       depend on the particular test format).  See EXECUTION OPTIONS for more information.

       Finally, lit also supports additional options for only running a subset of the options specified  on  the
       command line, see SELECTION OPTIONS for more information.

       lit  parses  options  from the environment variable LIT_OPTS after parsing options from the command line.
       LIT_OPTS is primarily useful for supplementing or overriding the command-line options supplied to lit  by
       check targets defined by a project’s build system.

       lit  can  also read options from response files which are specified as inputs using the @path/to/file.rsp
       syntax.

       Users interested in the lit architecture or  designing  a  lit  testing  implementation  should  see  LIT
       INFRASTRUCTURE.

GENERAL OPTIONS

       -h, --help
              Show the lit help message.

       -j N, --workers=N
              Run N tests in parallel.  By default, this is automatically chosen to match the number of detected
              available CPUs.

       --config-prefix=NAME
              Search  for  NAME.cfg  and  NAME.site.cfg  when  searching for test suites, instead of lit.cfg and
              lit.site.cfg.

       -D NAME[=VALUE], --param NAME[=VALUE]
              Add a user defined parameter NAME with the given VALUE (or the empty string if  not  given).   The
              meaning and use of these parameters is test suite dependent.

OUTPUT OPTIONS

       -q, --quiet
              Suppress any output except for test failures.

       -s, --succinct
              Show  less  output,  for  example don’t show information on tests that pass.  Also show a progress
              bar, unless --no-progress-bar is specified.

       -v, --verbose
              Show more information on test failures, for example the entire test output  instead  of  just  the
              test result.

       -vv, --echo-all-commands
              Echo  all commands to stdout, as they are being executed.  This can be valuable for debugging test
              failures, as the last echoed command will be the one which has failed.   lit  normally  inserts  a
              no-op command (: in the case of bash) with argument 'RUN: at line N' before each command pipeline,
              and  this  option  also  causes those no-op commands to be echoed to stdout to help you locate the
              source line of the failed command.  This option implies --verbose.

       -a, --show-all
              Show more information about all tests, for example the entire test commandline and output.

       --no-progress-bar
              Do not use curses based progress bar.

       --show-unsupported
              Show the names of unsupported tests.

       --show-xfail
              Show the names of tests that were expected to fail.

EXECUTION OPTIONS

       --path=PATH
              Specify an additional PATH to use when searching for executables in tests.

       --vg   Run individual tests under valgrind (using the memcheck tool).  The --error-exitcode argument  for
              valgrind is used so that valgrind failures will cause the program to exit with a non-zero status.

              When  this option is enabled, lit will also automatically provide a “valgrind” feature that can be
              used to conditionally disable (or expect failure in) certain tests.

       --vg-arg=ARG
              When --vg is used, specify an additional argument to pass to valgrind itself.

       --vg-leak
              When --vg is used, enable memory leak  checks.   When  this  option  is  enabled,  lit  will  also
              automatically  provide  a  “vg_leak”  feature that can be used to conditionally disable (or expect
              failure in) certain tests.

       --time-tests
              Track the wall time individual tests take to execute and  includes  the  results  in  the  summary
              output.  This is useful for determining which tests in a test suite take the most time to execute.

       --ignore-fail
              Exit with status zero even if some tests fail.

       --no-indirectly-run-check
              Do not error if a test would not be run if the user had specified the containing directory instead
              of naming the test directly.

SELECTION OPTIONS

       By  default,  lit  will  run  failing  tests  first, then run tests in descending execution time order to
       optimize concurrency.  The execution order can be changed using the --order option.

       The timing data is stored in the test_exec_root in a file named .lit_test_times.txt. If  this  file  does
       not exist, then lit checks the test_source_root for the file to optionally accelerate clean builds.

       --shuffle
              Run the tests in a random order, not failing/slowest first. Deprecated, use --order instead.

       --max-failures N
              Stop  execution after the given number N of failures.  An integer argument should be passed on the
              command line prior to execution.

       --max-tests=N
              Run at most N tests and then terminate.

       --max-time=N
              Spend at most N seconds (approximately) running tests and then terminate.  Note that this  is  not
              an alias for --timeout; the two are different kinds of maximums.

       --num-shards=M
              Divide the set of selected tests into M equal-sized subsets or “shards”, and run only one of them.
              Must  be  used  with  the  --run-shard=N  option,  which selects the shard to run. The environment
              variable LIT_NUM_SHARDS can also be used in place of this option.  These  two  options  provide  a
              coarse  mechanism  for  partitioning large testsuites, for parallel execution on separate machines
              (say in a large testing farm).

       --order={lexical,random,smart}
              Define the order in which tests are run. The supported values are:

              • lexical - tests will be run in lexical order according to the test file  path.  This  option  is
                useful when predictable test order is desired.

              • random - tests will be run in random order.

              • smart  -  tests  that  failed  previously  will  be  run first, then the remaining tests, all in
                descending execution time order. This is the default as it optimizes concurrency.

       --run-shard=N
              Select which shard to run, assuming the --num-shards=M option was provided. The two  options  must
              be  used  together,  and  the  value  of  N  must  be  in the range 1..M. The environment variable
              LIT_RUN_SHARD can also be used in place of this option.

       --timeout=N
              Spend at most N seconds (approximately) running each individual test.  0 means no time limit,  and
              0  is  the  default. Note that this is not an alias for --max-time; the two are different kinds of
              maximums.

       --filter=REGEXP
              Run only those  tests  whose  name  matches  the  regular  expression  specified  in  REGEXP.  The
              environment  variable  LIT_FILTER  can  be  also used in place of this option, which is especially
              useful in environments where the call to lit is issued indirectly.

       --filter-out=REGEXP
              Filter out those tests whose  name  matches  the  regular  expression  specified  in  REGEXP.  The
              environment  variable LIT_FILTER_OUT can be also used in place of this option, which is especially
              useful in environments where the call to lit is issued indirectly.

       --xfail=LIST
              Treat those tests whose name is in the semicolon separated list LIST as XFAIL. This can be helpful
              when one does not want to modify the test suite. The environment variable LIT_XFAIL  can  be  also
              used  in place of this option, which is especially useful in environments where the call to lit is
              issued indirectly.

              A test name can specified as a file name relative to the test suite directory.  For example:

                 LIT_XFAIL="affinity/kmp-hw-subset.c;offloading/memory_manager.cpp"

              In this case, all of the following tests are treated as XFAIL:

                 libomp :: affinity/kmp-hw-subset.c
                 libomptarget :: nvptx64-nvidia-cuda :: offloading/memory_manager.cpp
                 libomptarget :: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu :: offloading/memory_manager.cpp

              Alternatively, a test name can be specified as the full test name reported  in  LIT  output.   For
              example,  we  can  adjust  the  previous  example  not to treat the nvptx64-nvidia-cuda version of
              offloading/memory_manager.cpp as XFAIL:

                 LIT_XFAIL="affinity/kmp-hw-subset.c;libomptarget :: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu :: offloading/memory_manager.cpp"

       --xfail-not=LIST
              Do not treat the specified tests as XFAIL.  The environment variable  LIT_XFAIL_NOT  can  also  be
              used  in  place of this option.  The syntax is the same as for --xfail and LIT_XFAIL.  --xfail-not
              and LIT_XFAIL_NOT always override all other XFAIL specifications, including an  --xfail  appearing
              later on the command line.  The primary purpose is to suppress an XPASS result without modifying a
              test case that uses the XFAIL directive.

ADDITIONAL OPTIONS

       --debug
              Run lit in debug mode, for debugging configuration issues and lit itself.

       --show-suites
              List the discovered test suites and exit.

       --show-tests
              List all of the discovered tests and exit.

EXIT STATUS

       lit  will  exit  with  an exit code of 1 if there are any FAIL or XPASS results.  Otherwise, it will exit
       with the status 0.  Other exit codes are used for non-test related failures (for example a user error  or
       an internal program error).

TEST DISCOVERY

       The inputs passed to lit can be either individual tests, or entire directories or hierarchies of tests to
       run.   When lit starts up, the first thing it does is convert the inputs into a complete list of tests to
       run as part of test discovery.

       In the lit model, every test must exist inside some test suite.  lit resolves the inputs specified on the
       command line to test suites by searching upwards from  the  input  path  until  it  finds  a  lit.cfg  or
       lit.site.cfg  file.   These  files serve as both a marker of test suites and as configuration files which
       lit loads in order to understand how to find and run the tests inside the test suite.

       Once lit has mapped the inputs into test suites  it  traverses  the  list  of  inputs  adding  tests  for
       individual files and recursively searching for tests in directories.

       This  behavior  makes  it  easy  to specify a subset of tests to run, while still allowing the test suite
       configuration to control exactly how tests are interpreted.  In addition, lit always identifies tests  by
       the  test suite they are in, and their relative path inside the test suite.  For appropriately configured
       projects, this allows lit to provide convenient and flexible support for out-of-tree builds.

TEST STATUS RESULTS

       Each test ultimately produces one of the following eight results:

       PASS
          The test succeeded.

       FLAKYPASS
          The test succeeded after being re-run more than  once.  This  only  applies  to  tests  containing  an
          ALLOW_RETRIES: annotation.

       XFAIL
          The  test  failed,  but that is expected.  This is used for test formats which allow specifying that a
          test does not currently work, but wish to leave it in the test suite.

       XPASS
          The test succeeded, but it was expected to fail.  This is used  for  tests  which  were  specified  as
          expected  to  fail, but are now succeeding (generally because the feature they test was broken and has
          been fixed).

       FAIL
          The test failed.

       UNRESOLVED
          The test result could not be determined.  For example, this occurs when the test could not be run, the
          test itself is invalid, or the test was interrupted.

       UNSUPPORTED
          The test is not supported in this environment.   This  is  used  by  test  formats  which  can  report
          unsupported tests.

       TIMEOUT
          The test was run, but it timed out before it was able to complete. This is considered a failure.

       Depending  on the test format tests may produce additional information about their status (generally only
       for failures).  See the OUTPUT OPTIONS section for more information.

LIT INFRASTRUCTURE

       This section describes the lit testing architecture for users interested in creating a  new  lit  testing
       implementation, or extending an existing one.

       lit  proper  is  primarily an infrastructure for discovering and running arbitrary tests, and to expose a
       single convenient interface to these tests. lit itself doesn’t know how to run tests, rather  this  logic
       is defined by test suites.

   TEST SUITES
       As  described  in  TEST  DISCOVERY,  tests  are always located inside a test suite.  Test suites serve to
       define the format of the tests they contain, the logic  for  finding  those  tests,  and  any  additional
       information to run the tests.

       lit   identifies  test  suites  as  directories  containing  lit.cfg  or  lit.site.cfg  files  (see  also
       --config-prefix).  Test suites are  initially  discovered  by  recursively  searching  up  the  directory
       hierarchy  for  all the input files passed on the command line.  You can use --show-suites to display the
       discovered test suites at startup.

       Once a test suite is discovered, its config file is loaded.  Config files themselves are  Python  modules
       which will be executed.  When the config file is executed, two important global variables are predefined:

       lit_config
          The  global  lit  configuration object (a LitConfig instance), which defines the builtin test formats,
          global configuration parameters, and other helper routines for implementing test configurations.

       config
          This is the config object (a TestingConfig instance) for the test suite,  which  the  config  file  is
          expected  to populate.  The following variables are also available on the config object, some of which
          must be set by the config and others are optional or predefined:

          name [required] The name of the test suite, for use in reports and diagnostics.

          test_format [required] The test format object which will be used to discover and run tests in the test
          suite.  Generally this will be a builtin test format available from the lit.formats module.

          test_source_root The filesystem path to the test suite  root.   For  out-of-dir  builds  this  is  the
          directory that will be scanned for tests.

          test_exec_root  For  out-of-dir  builds,  the path to the test suite root inside the object directory.
          This is where tests will be run and temporary output files placed.

          environment A dictionary representing the environment to use when executing tests in the suite.

          standalone_tests When true, mark a directory with tests expected to be run standalone. Test  discovery
          is   disabled  for  that  directory  and  –no-indirectly-run-check  is  in  effect.  lit.suffixes  and
          lit.excludes must be empty when this variable is true.

          suffixes For lit test formats which scan directories for tests, this variable is a list of suffixes to
          identify test files.  Used by: ShTest.

          substitutions For lit test formats which  substitute  variables  into  a  test  script,  the  list  of
          substitutions to perform.  Used by: ShTest.

          unsupported  Mark an unsupported directory, all tests within it will be reported as unsupported.  Used
          by: ShTest.

          parent The parent configuration, this is the config object  for  the  directory  containing  the  test
          suite, or None.

          root The root configuration.  This is the top-most lit configuration in the project.

          pipefail  Normally a test using a shell pipe fails if any of the commands on the pipe fail. If this is
          not desired, setting this variable to false makes the test fail only if the last command in  the  pipe
          fails.

          available_features A set of features that can be used in XFAIL, REQUIRES, and UNSUPPORTED directives.

   TEST DISCOVERY
       Once test suites are located, lit recursively traverses the source directory (following test_source_root)
       looking  for  tests.   When  lit enters a sub-directory, it first checks to see if a nested test suite is
       defined in that directory.  If so, it loads that test suite  recursively,  otherwise  it  instantiates  a
       local test config for the directory (see LOCAL CONFIGURATION FILES).

       Tests  are  identified  by  the  test  suite they are contained within, and the relative path inside that
       suite.  Note that the relative path may not refer to an actual file on disk; some test formats  (such  as
       GoogleTest)  define “virtual tests” which have a path that contains both the path to the actual test file
       and a subpath to identify the virtual test.

   LOCAL CONFIGURATION FILES
       When lit loads a subdirectory in a test suite, it instantiates a local test configuration by cloning  the
       configuration  for  the  parent  directory  —  the root of this configuration chain will always be a test
       suite.  Once the test configuration is cloned lit checks for a lit.local.cfg file  in  the  subdirectory.
       If  present, this file will be loaded and can be used to specialize the configuration for each individual
       directory.  This facility can be used to define subdirectories of optional  tests,  or  to  change  other
       configuration  parameters  —  for example, to change the test format, or the suffixes which identify test
       files.

   SUBSTITUTIONS
       lit allows patterns to be substituted inside RUN commands. It also provides the  following  base  set  of
       substitutions, which are defined in TestRunner.py:
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             Macro                     Substitution
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %s                        source   path   (path   to  the  file
                                                       currently being run)
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %S                        source dir  (directory  of  the  file
                                                       currently being run)
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %p                        same as %S
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %{pathsep}                path separator
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %{fs-src-root}            root  component  of file system paths
                                                       pointing to the LLVM checkout
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %{fs-tmp-root}            root component of file  system  paths
                                                       pointing   to  the  test’s  temporary
                                                       directory
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %{fs-sep}                 file system path separator
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %t                        temporary file  name  unique  to  the
                                                       test
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %basename_t               The  last  path  component  of %t but
                                                       without the .tmp extension
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %T                        parent directory of %t  (not  unique,
                                                       deprecated, do not use)
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %%                        %
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %/s                       %s but \ is replaced by /
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %/S                       %S but \ is replaced by /
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %/p                       %p but \ is replaced by /
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %/t                       %t but \ is replaced by /
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %/T                       %T but \ is replaced by /
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %{/s:regex_replacement}   %/s   but  escaped  for  use  in  the
                                                       replacement of a s@@@ command in sed
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %{/S:regex_replacement}   %/S  but  escaped  for  use  in   the
                                                       replacement of a s@@@ command in sed
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %{/p:regex_replacement}   %/p   but  escaped  for  use  in  the
                                                       replacement of a s@@@ command in sed
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %{/t:regex_replacement}   %/t  but  escaped  for  use  in   the
                                                       replacement of a s@@@ command in sed
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %{/T:regex_replacement}   %/T   but  escaped  for  use  in  the
                                                       replacement of a s@@@ command in sed
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %:s                       On Windows, %/s but a : is removed if
                                                       its the second character.  Otherwise,
                                                       %s  but  with  a  single  leading   /
                                                       removed.
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %:S                       On Windows, %/S but a : is removed if
                                                       its the second character.  Otherwise,
                                                       %S   but  with  a  single  leading  /
                                                       removed.
                           ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
                             %:p                       On Windows, %/p but a : is removed if
                                                       its the second character.  Otherwise,
                           │                         │ %p  but  with  a  single  leading   / │
                           │                         │ removed.                              │
                           ├─────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                           │ %:t                     │ On Windows, %/t but a : is removed if │
                           │                         │ its the second character.  Otherwise, │
                           │                         │ %t   but  with  a  single  leading  / │
                           │                         │ removed.                              │
                           ├─────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────────────┤
                           │ %:T                     │ On Windows, %/T but a : is removed if │
                           │                         │ its the second character.  Otherwise, │
                           │                         │ %T  but  with  a  single  leading   / │
                           │                         │ removed.                              │
                           └─────────────────────────┴───────────────────────────────────────┘

       Other  substitutions  are provided that are variations on this base set and further substitution patterns
       can be defined by each test module. See the modules LOCAL CONFIGURATION FILES.

       By default, substitutions are expanded exactly once, so that if e.g. a substitution %build is defined  in
       top  of  another  substitution  %cxx,  %build will expand to %cxx textually, not to what %cxx expands to.
       However, if the recursiveExpansionLimit property of the TestingConfig is set to a  non-negative  integer,
       substitutions  will  be  expanded recursively until that limit is reached. It is an error if the limit is
       reached and expanding substitutions again would yield a different result.

       More detailed information on substitutions can be found in the LLVM Testing Infrastructure Guide.

   TEST RUN OUTPUT FORMAT
       The lit output for a test run conforms to the following schema, in both short and verbose modes (although
       in short mode no PASS lines will be shown).  This schema  has  been  chosen  to  be  relatively  easy  to
       reliably parse by a machine (for example in buildbot log scraping), and for other tools to generate.

       Each test result is expected to appear on a line that matches:

          <result code>: <test name> (<progress info>)

       where  <result-code>  is  a  standard  test  result  such  as  PASS,  FAIL,  XFAIL, XPASS, UNRESOLVED, or
       UNSUPPORTED.  The performance result codes of IMPROVED and REGRESSED are also allowed.

       The <test name> field can consist of an arbitrary string containing no newline.

       The <progress info> field can be used to report progress information such as (1/300) or can be empty, but
       even when empty the parentheses are required.

       Each test result may include additional (multiline) log information in the following format:

          <log delineator> TEST '(<test name>)' <trailing delineator>
          ... log message ...
          <log delineator>

       where <test name> should be the name of a preceding reported test, <log delineator> is a  string  of  “*”
       characters  at least four characters long (the recommended length is 20), and <trailing delineator> is an
       arbitrary (unparsed) string.

       The following is an example of a test run output which consists of four tests A, B, C, and D, and  a  log
       message for the failing test C:

          PASS: A (1 of 4)
          PASS: B (2 of 4)
          FAIL: C (3 of 4)
          ******************** TEST 'C' FAILED ********************
          Test 'C' failed as a result of exit code 1.
          ********************
          PASS: D (4 of 4)

   LIT EXAMPLE TESTS
       The  lit  distribution  contains  several  example  implementations  of  test  suites in the ExampleTests
       directory.

SEE ALSO

       valgrind(1)

AUTHOR

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

COPYRIGHT

       2003-2024, LLVM Project

15                                                 2024-04-07                                             LIT(1)