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BUGPOINT(1) LLVM BUGPOINT(1)
NAME
bugpoint - automatic test case reduction tool
SYNOPSIS
bugpoint [options] [input LLVM ll/bc files] [LLVM passes] --args
program arguments
DESCRIPTION
bugpoint narrows down the source of problems in LLVM tools and passes.
It can be used to debug three types of failures: optimizer crashes,
miscompilations by optimizers, or bad native code generation (including
problems in the static and JIT compilers). It aims to reduce large
test cases to small, useful ones. For more information on the design
and inner workings of bugpoint, as well as advice for using bugpoint,
see LLVM bugpoint tool: design and usage in the LLVM distribution.
OPTIONS
--additional-so library
Load the dynamic shared object library into the test program
whenever it is run. This is useful if you are debugging programs
which depend on non-LLVM libraries (such as the X or curses
libraries) to run.
--append-exit-code={true,false}
Append the test programs exit code to the output file so that a
change in exit code is considered a test failure. Defaults to false.
--args program args
Pass all arguments specified after --args to the test program
whenever it runs. Note that if any of the program args start with a
"-", you should use:
bugpoint [bugpoint args] --args -- [program args]
The "--" right after the --args option tells bugpoint to consider
any options starting with "-" to be part of the --args option, not
as options to bugpoint itself.
--tool-args tool args
Pass all arguments specified after --tool-args to the LLVM tool
under test (llc, lli, etc.) whenever it runs. You should use this
option in the following way:
bugpoint [bugpoint args] --tool-args -- [tool args]
The "--" right after the --tool-args option tells bugpoint to
consider any options starting with "-" to be part of the --tool-args
option, not as options to bugpoint itself. (See --args, above.)
--safe-tool-args tool args
Pass all arguments specified after --safe-tool-args to the "safe"
execution tool.
--gcc-tool-args gcc tool args
Pass all arguments specified after --gcc-tool-args to the invocation
of gcc.
when attempting to reduce test programs. If you're trying to find a
bug in one of these passes, bugpoint may crash.
--enable-valgrind
Use valgrind to find faults in the optimization phase. This will
allow bugpoint to find otherwise asymptomatic problems caused by
memory mis-management.
-find-bugs
Continually randomize the specified passes and run them on the test
program until a bug is found or the user kills bugpoint.
-help
Print a summary of command line options.
--input filename
Open filename and redirect the standard input of the test program,
whenever it runs, to come from that file.
--load plugin
Load the dynamic object plugin into bugpoint itself. This object
should register new optimization passes. Once loaded, the object
will add new command line options to enable various optimizations.
To see the new complete list of optimizations, use the -help and
--load options together; for example:
bugpoint --load myNewPass.so -help
--mlimit megabytes
Specifies an upper limit on memory usage of the optimization and
codegen. Set to zero to disable the limit.
--output filename
Whenever the test program produces output on its standard output
stream, it should match the contents of filename (the "reference
output"). If you do not use this option, bugpoint will attempt to
generate a reference output by compiling the program with the "safe"
backend and running it.
--run-{int,jit,llc,custom}
Whenever the test program is compiled, bugpoint should generate code
for it using the specified code generator. These options allow you
to choose the interpreter, the JIT compiler, the static native code
compiler, or a custom command (see --exec-command) respectively.
--safe-{llc,custom}
When debugging a code generator, bugpoint should use the specified
code generator as the "safe" code generator. This is a known-good
code generator used to generate the "reference output" if it has not
been provided, and to compile portions of the program that as they
are excluded from the testcase. These options allow you to choose
the static native code compiler, or a custom command, (see
--exec-command) respectively. The interpreter and the JIT backends
cannot currently be used as the "safe" backends.
--exec-command command
This option defines the command to use with the --run-custom and
--safe-custom options to execute the bitcode testcase. This can be
useful for cross-compilation.
This can be useful for testing compiler output without running any
link or execute stages. To generate a reduced unit test, you may add
CHECK directives to the testcase and pass the name of an executable
compile-command script in this form:
#!/bin/sh
llc "$@"
not FileCheck [bugpoint input file].ll < bugpoint-test-program.s
This script will "fail" as long as FileCheck passes. So the result
will be the minimum bitcode that passes FileCheck.
--safe-path path
This option defines the path to the command to execute with the
--safe-{int,jit,llc,custom} option.
--verbose-errors={true,false}
The default behavior of bugpoint is to print "<crash>" when it finds
a reduced test that crashes compilation. This flag prints the output
of the crashing program to stderr. This is useful to make sure it is
the same error being tracked down and not a different error that
happens to crash the compiler as well. Defaults to false.
EXIT STATUS
If bugpoint succeeds in finding a problem, it will exit with 0.
Otherwise, if an error occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value.
SEE ALSO
opt(1)
AUTHOR
Maintained by the LLVM Team (https://llvm.org/).
COPYRIGHT
2003-2023, LLVM Project
15 2023-12-15 BUGPOINT(1)