# Compiler Test Documentation In the Rust project, we use a special set of commands embedded in comments to test the Rust compiler. There are two groups of commands: 1. Header commands 2. Error info commands Both types of commands are inside comments, but header commands should be in a comment before any code. ## Summary of Error Info Commands Error commands specify something about certain lines of the program. They tell the test what kind of error and what message you are expecting. * `~`: Associates the following error level and message with the current line * `~|`: Associates the following error level and message with the same line as the previous comment * `~^`: Associates the following error level and message with the previous line. Each caret (`^`) that you add adds a line to this, so `~^^^^^^^` is seven lines up. The error levels that you can have are: 1. `ERROR` 2. `WARNING` 3. `NOTE` 4. `HELP` and `SUGGESTION`* \* **Note**: `SUGGESTION` must follow immediately after `HELP`. ## Summary of Header Commands Header commands specify something about the entire test file as a whole, instead of just a few lines inside the test. * `ignore-X` where `X` is an architecture, OS or stage will ignore the test accordingly * `ignore-pretty` will not compile the pretty-printed test (this is done to test the pretty-printer, but might not always work) * `ignore-test` always ignores the test * `ignore-lldb` and `ignore-gdb` will skip the debuginfo tests * `min-{gdb,lldb}-version` * `should-fail` indicates that the test should fail; used for "meta testing", where we test the compiletest program itself to check that it will generate errors in appropriate scenarios. This header is ignored for pretty-printer tests. ## Revisions Certain classes of tests support "revisions" (as of the time of this writing, this includes run-pass, compile-fail, run-fail, and incremental, though incremental tests are somewhat different). Revisions allow a single test file to be used for multiple tests. This is done by adding a special header at the top of the file: ``` // revisions: foo bar baz ``` This will result in the test being compiled (and tested) three times, once with `--cfg foo`, once with `--cfg bar`, and once with `--cfg baz`. You can therefore use `#[cfg(foo)]` etc within the test to tweak each of these results. You can also customize headers and expected error messages to a particular revision. To do this, add `[foo]` (or `bar`, `baz`, etc) after the `//` comment, like so: ``` // A flag to pass in only for cfg `foo`: //[foo]compile-flags: -Z verbose #[cfg(foo)] fn test_foo() { let x: usize = 32_u32; //[foo]~ ERROR mismatched types } ``` Note that not all headers have meaning when customized to a revision. For example, the `ignore-test` header (and all "ignore" headers) currently only apply to the test as a whole, not to particular revisions. The only headers that are intended to really work when customized to a revision are error patterns and compiler flags.