Gregory Anders 135b91aecd
Treat blocks with "return" as "noreturn"
Block statements that end with "break" should not be considered
"noreturn" for the enclosing scope, but other "noreturn" instructions
(return, panic, compile error, etc.) should be. This differentiation
necessitates handling "break" differently from the other "noreturn"
instructions when inside a block statement.
2022-06-06 13:13:52 +03:00
..
2022-05-24 01:20:18 -07:00

Test Case Quick Reference

Use comments at the end of the file to indicate metadata about the test case. Here are examples of different kinds of tests:

Compile Error Test

If you want it to be run with zig test and match expected error messages:

// error
// is_test=1
//
// :4:13: error: 'try' outside function scope

Execution

This will do zig run on the code and expect exit code 0.

// run

Incremental Compilation

Make multiple files that have ".", and then an integer, before the ".zig" extension, like this:

hello.0.zig
hello.1.zig
hello.2.zig

Each file can be a different kind of test, such as expecting compile errors, or expecting to be run and exit(0). The test harness will use these to simulate incremental compilation.

At the time of writing there is no way to specify multiple files being changed as part of an update.

Subdirectories

Subdirectories do not have any semantic meaning but they can be used for organization since the test harness will recurse into them. The full directory path will be prepended as a prefix on the test case name.

Limiting which Backends and Targets are Tested

// run
// backend=stage2,llvm
// target=x86_64-linux,x86_64-macos

Possible backends are:

  • stage1: equivalent to -fstage1.
  • stage2: equivalent to passing -fno-stage1 -fno-LLVM.
  • llvm: equivalent to -fLLVM -fno-stage1.