This was done through the aid of a terrible Perl creation. I will not
paste any of the horrors here. Suffice to say, it require multiple
staged rounds of replacements, state carried between, and a few
nested-construct-parsing hacks that I'm not proud of. It happens, by
luck, to be able to deal with all the TCL-quoting patterns in evidence
in the LLVM test suite.
If anyone is maintaining large out-of-tree test trees, feel free to poke
me and I'll send you the steps I used to convert things, as well as
answer any painful questions etc. IRC works best for this type of thing
I find.
Once converted, switch the LLVM lit config to use ShTests the same as
Clang. In addition to being able to delete large amounts of Python code
from 'lit', this will also simplify the entire test suite and some of
lit's architecture.
Finally, the test suite runs 33% faster on Linux now. ;]
For my 16-hardware-thread (2x 4-core xeon e5520): 36s -> 24s
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@159525 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Update the test suite to accommodate the change from signed integer types
to signless integer types. The changes were of only a few kinds:
1. Make sure llvm-upgrade is run on the source which does the bulk of the
changes automatically.
2. Change things like "grep 'int'" to "grep 'i32'"
3. In several tests bitcasting caused the same name to be reused in the
same type plane. These had to be manually fixed. The fix was (generally)
to leave the bitcast and provide the instruction with a new name. This
should not affect the semantics of the test. In a few cases, the
bitcasts were known to be superfluous and irrelevant to the test case
so they were removed.
4. One test case uses a bytecode file which needed to be updated to the
latest bytecode format.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@32789 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8