Commit Graph

6 Commits (1cf54887565cd46dccc97b98ee0b9696235e1a52)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Mike Gerwitz e6325c4c1d tamer: tests/xmli: Estimate tamec time in milliseconds
Going higher than that doesn't make sense because we're in shell and
invoking commands all around this, so even milliseconds isn't going to be
entirely accurate here.  However, what I am more interested in is observing
time relative to other runs; this isn't intended for profiling, but for
eyeballing unexpected behavior.

DEV-13708
2023-03-10 14:27:59 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz b84ee356d5 tamer: tests/xmli: Formatted and more informative output
There's a lot to look at, especially in the event of failure.  Further, I
wanted to add additional statistics that could be eyeballed.

Right now, tamec is too fast (at least on my machine) for the precision of
/usr/bin/time: we need milliseconds, but we only get hundredths of a
second.  So it'll all show as 0:00.00s.  Which is okay, for now; it just
shouldn't exceed that. ;)

DEV-13708
2023-03-10 14:27:59 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz a261e75fe0 tamer: tests/xmli: Break apart single test case
This would have gotten unwieldy as time goes on, and already made looking at
traces very difficult.

DEV-13708
2023-03-10 14:27:59 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz 286f4cb679 tamer: tests/xmli: Reduce output on failure
This won't try the fixpoint test if the prior one fails, which will always
cause that one to fail.  And it further won't attempt the diff on
compilation failure.

DEV-13708
2023-03-10 14:27:59 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz 6cbcdb1774 tamer: tests/xmli: Add fixpoint test
See documentation for more information.

DEV-13708
2023-03-10 14:27:58 -05:00
Mike Gerwitz 82915f11af tamer: asg::graph::object::xir: Initial rate element reconstruction
This extends the POC a bit by beginning to reconstruct rate blocks (note
that NIR isn't producing sub-expressions yet).

Importantly, this also adds the first system tests, now that we have an
end-to-end system.  This not only gives me confidence that the system is
producing the expected output, but serves as a compromise: writing unit or
integration tests for this program derivation would be a great deal of work,
and wouldn't even catch the bugs I'm worried most about; the lowering
operation can be written in such a way as to give me high confidence in its
correctness without those more granular tests, or in conjunction with unit
or integration tests for a smaller portion.

DEV-13708
2023-03-10 14:27:58 -05:00