Hi Carl, >> I'd expect the "-runnable" test case focuses on testing for run. Normally, >> the one without "-runnable" would focus on testing for compiling (scan some >> desired insn), but this altivec-1.c and altivec-1-runnable.c seems to test >> for different things, maybe we should separate them into different names >> if they don't test for a same test point. > > The altivec-1-runnable.c and altivec-2-runnable.c tests were added for various > built-ins that didn't have any test cases. There wasn't an intention that > there was > any connection to the existing altivec-*.c test files. I started creating > runnable > when I started adding support for built-ins that we claimed to support but > had never > actually been implemented. I created runnable tests to make sure my > implementation > actually worked. I continued to add runnable tests for built-ins > that existed but didn't have a test case. Adding runnable tests did find a > couple > of issues where the existing implementation had a bug. > > That all said, if we want tochange the name of altivec-1-runnable.c and > altivec-2-runnable.c a different naming scheme that is fine with me. Perhaps > we should > finish fixing the header for this test file, then do altivec-1-runnable, and > then > a final patch that does all the file renaming?
Yes, that's what I preferred, maybe something like altivec-run-n.c or altivec-runnable-n.c to avoid the possible confusion. >>> That said, I don't like not having a -mdejagnu-cpu=... here. >>> I think for our server cpus, this is fine, but on an embedded system >>> with a old ISA default for -mcpu=... (so we be doing a dg-do compile), >>> just adding -maltivec to that default may not make much sense for that >>> default and probably should be an error. Maybe something like: >> >> Yes, for some embedded cpus, there will be some error messages, but since >> we have powerpc_altivec_ok effective target, the error would make that >> effective target checking fail so I'd expect it'll stop it being tested >> (unsupported). >> >>> >>> /* { dg-do run { target vmx_hw } } */ >>> /* { dg-do compile { target { ! vmx_hw } } } */ >>> /* { dg-require-effective-target powerpc_altivec_ok } */ >>> /* { dg-options "-O2 -mdejagnu=power7" } */ >>> ... > We had -mdejagnu=power8 before, but it looks like we want to go to power7 now. > > It sounds like we want the following: > > /* { dg-do run { target vmx_hw } } */ > /* { dg-do compile { target { ! vmx_hw } } } */ > /* { dg-options "-O2 -mdejagnu=power7" } */ > /* { dg-require-effective-target powerpc_altivec } */ As mentioned above, I'd expect powerpc_altivec can stop this being tested without altivec feature support, so IMHO an explicit cpu type isn't necessary (though I'm not opposed to specifying it), btw, s/-mdejagnu/-mdejagnu-cpu/. BR, Kewen