We were seeing an intermittent local test failure of utils\lit\tests\test-output.py in which the elapsed time output was being given in scientific notation. Python automatically represents small floating-point values in scientific notation so I have altered these tests regex to capture output in that format.
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- rG LLVM Github Monorepo
Unit Tests
Unit Tests
Time | Test | |
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60,050 ms | x64 debian > MLIR.Examples/standalone::test.toy |
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Intermittent error below:
[09:50:05] : [Step 3/3] next:10'0 X error: no match found [09:50:05] : [Step 3/3] 11: "elapsed": 7.295608520507812e-05,
llvm/utils/lit/tests/test-output-micro.py | ||
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42 | If the goal is to be strict, then . needs to be escaped to make it literal. However, is it important to be so strict here? What about something simple like {{[-+0-9.eE]+}}? |
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LGTM. Thanks for the fix.
If there's a publicly viewable build log showing the original error, it would be nice to link to that from the review.
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Apologies @jdenny, the failure was occurring on a private build job and has no public access. The test failure can be found below:
08:56:44 ******************** TEST 'lit :: test-output.py' FAILED ******************** 08:56:44 Script: 08:56:44 -- 08:56:44 : 'RUN: at line 1'; env -u FILECHECK_OPTS "C:\Program Files\Python310\python.exe" D:\BuildAgent\work\e280ceab0c58d514\llvm\utils\lit\lit.py -j1 --order=lexical -v Inputs/test-data --output D:\BuildAgent\work\e280ceab0c58d514\build\utils\lit\tests\Output\test-output.py.tmp.results.out > D:\BuildAgent\work\e280ceab0c58d514\build\utils\lit\tests\Output\test-output.py.tmp.out 08:56:44 : 'RUN: at line 2'; FileCheck < D:\BuildAgent\work\e280ceab0c58d514\build\utils\lit\tests\Output\test-output.py.tmp.results.out D:\BuildAgent\work\e280ceab0c58d514\build\utils\lit\tests\test-output.py 08:56:44 -- 08:56:44 Exit Code: 1 08:56:44 08:56:44 Command Output (stdout): 08:56:44 -- 08:56:44 $ ":" "RUN: at line 1" 08:56:44 $ "env" "-u" "FILECHECK_OPTS" "C:\Program Files\Python310\python.exe" "D:\BuildAgent\work\e280ceab0c58d514\llvm\utils\lit\lit.py" "-j1" "--order=lexical" "-v" "Inputs/test-data" "--output" "D:\BuildAgent\work\e280ceab0c58d514\build\utils\lit\tests\Output\test-output.py.tmp.results.out" 08:56:44 $ ":" "RUN: at line 2" 08:56:44 $ "FileCheck" "D:\BuildAgent\work\e280ceab0c58d514\build\utils\lit\tests\test-output.py" 08:56:44 # command stderr: 08:56:44 D:\BuildAgent\work\e280ceab0c58d514\build\utils\lit\tests\test-output.py:10:15: error: CHECK-NEXT: expected string not found in input 08:56:44 # CHECK-NEXT: "elapsed": {{[0-9.]+}}, 08:56:44 ^ 08:56:44 <stdin>:10:17: note: scanning from here 08:56:44 "code": "PASS", 08:56:44 ^ 08:56:44 <stdin>:11:2: note: possible intended match here 08:56:44 "elapsed": 7.510185241699219e-05, 08:56:44 ^ 08:56:44 08:56:44 Input file: <stdin> 08:56:44 Check file: D:\BuildAgent\work\e280ceab0c58d514\build\utils\lit\tests\test-output.py 08:56:44 08:56:44 -dump-input=help explains the following input dump. 08:56:44 08:56:44 Input was: 08:56:44 <<<<<< 08:56:44 . 08:56:44 . 08:56:44 . 08:56:44 5: 0 08:56:44 6: ], 08:56:44 7: "elapsed": 0.46836328506469727, 08:56:44 8: "tests": [ 08:56:44 9: { 08:56:44 10: "code": "PASS", 08:56:44 next:10'0 X error: no match found 08:56:44 11: "elapsed": 7.510185241699219e-05, 08:56:44 next:10'0 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 08:56:44 next:10'1 ? possible intended match 08:56:44 12: "metrics": { 08:56:44 next:10'0 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 08:56:44 13: "value0": 1, 08:56:44 next:10'0 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 08:56:44 14: "value1": 2.3456 08:56:44 next:10'0 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 08:56:44 15: }, 08:56:44 next:10'0 ~~~~ 08:56:44 16: "name": "test-data :: metrics.ini", 08:56:44 next:10'0 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 08:56:44 . 08:56:44 . 08:56:44 . 08:56:44 >>>>>> 08:56:44 08:56:44 error: command failed with exit status: 1
If the goal is to be strict, then . needs to be escaped to make it literal.
However, is it important to be so strict here? What about something simple like {{[-+0-9.eE]+}}?