From 4ce774750042043fca78f50575f154f68296ab18 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Daniel Dunbar
Date: Thu, 21 May 2009 16:28:43 +0000
Subject: Start basic Regexp.c example for klee. - A few other web page
tweaks.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/klee/trunk@72215 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
---
www/Examples.html | 114 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++---
www/GetInvolved.html | 25 ++++++----
www/GetStarted.html | 10 ++--
www/menu.html.incl | 2 +-
www/resources/Regexp.c.html | 78 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
5 files changed, 208 insertions(+), 21 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 www/resources/Regexp.c.html
(limited to 'www')
diff --git a/www/Examples.html b/www/Examples.html
index 23584053..25ee6fb0 100644
--- a/www/Examples.html
+++ b/www/Examples.html
@@ -15,19 +15,119 @@
KLEE Examples
-FIXME: Intro.
+Here is a basic example of using KLEE to test a simple regular expression matching function. You can find the basic example in the source tree under examples/regexp.
-Basic Sort Example
+Example: Regexp.c
-FIXME: Write.
+Regexp.c contains a simple regular expression matching function, and
+the bare bones testing harness (in main) need to explore this code with
+klee. You can see a version of the source
+code here.
-FIXME: More complicated example
+This example will show to build and run the example using KLEE, as well as
+how to interpret the output, and some additional KLEE features that can be used
+when writing a test driver by hand.
-FIXME: Write: show the important klee.h functions.
+We'll start by showing how to build and run the example, and then explain how
+the test harness works in more detail.
+
+Step 1: Building the example
-FIXME: Write: show the important klee tools.
+The first step is to compile the source code using a compiler which can
+generate object files in LLVM bitcode format. Here we use llvm-gcc,
+but Clang works just as well!
-FIXME: Write: show the important klee options.
+From within the examples/regexp directory:
+
+ $ llvm-gcc -I ../../include -emit-llvm -c -g Regexp.c
+
+which should create a Regexp.o file in LLVM bitcode
+format. The -I argument is used so that the compiler can
+find "klee/klee.h",which
+contains definitions for the intrinsic functions used to interact with the KLEE
+virtual machine. -c is used because we only want to compile the code to
+an object file (not a native executable), and finally -g causes
+additional debug information to be stored in the object file, which KLEE will
+use to determine source line number information.
+
+If you have the LLVM tools installed in your path, you can verify that this step
+worked by running llvm-nm on the generated file:
+
+
+ $ llvm-nm Regexp.o
+ t matchstar
+ t matchhere
+ T match
+ T main
+ U klee_make_symbolic_name
+ d LC
+ d LC1
+
+
+
+Normally before running this program we would need to link it to create a
+native executable. However, KLEE runs directly on LLVM bitcode files -- since
+this program only has a single file there is no need to link. For "real"
+programs with multiple inputs,
+the llvm-link
+and llvm-ld tools can
+be used in place of the regular link step to merge multiple LLVM bitcode files
+into a single module which can be executed by KLEE.
+
+Step 2: Executing the code with KLEE
+
+
+The next step is to execute the code with KLEE:
+
+
+$ klee --only-output-states-covering-new Regexp.o
+KLEE: output directory = "klee-out-1"
+KLEE: ERROR: .../klee/examples/regexp/Regexp.c:23: memory error: out of bound pointer
+KLEE: NOTE: now ignoring this error at this location
+KLEE: ERROR: .../klee/examples/regexp/Regexp.c:25: memory error: out of bound pointer
+KLEE: NOTE: now ignoring this error at this location
+KLEE: done: total instructions = 6334861
+KLEE: done: completed paths = 7692
+KLEE: done: generated tests = 22
+
+
+
+On startup, KLEE prints the directory used to store output (in this
+case klee-out-1). By default klee will use the first
+free klee-out-N directory and also create a klee-last
+symlink which will point to the most recent created directory. You can specify a
+directory to use for outputs using the -output-dir=path
+command line argument.
+
+While KLEE is running, it will print status messages for "important" events,
+for example when it finds an error in the program. In this case, KLEE detected
+to invalid memory accesses on lines 23 and 25 of our test program. We'll look
+more at this in a moment.
+
+Finally, when KLEE finishes execution it prints out a few statistics about
+the run. Here we see that KLEE executed a total of ~6 million instructions,
+explored 7,692 paths, and generated 22 test cases.
+
+Note that many realistic programs have an infinite (or extremely large)
+number of paths through them, and it is common that KLEE will not terminate. By
+default KLEE will run until the user presses Control-C (i.e. klee gets
+a SIGINT), but there are additional options to limit KLEE's runtime and memory
+usage:
+
+ - -max-time=seconds: Halt execution after the given number
+ of seconds.
+ - -max-forks=N: Stop forking after N symbolic
+ branches, and run the remaining paths to termination.
+ - -max-memory=N: Try to limit memory consumption
+ to N megabytes.
+
+
+
+Step ?: Changing the test harness
+
+FIXME: Step through & explain the test harness, and how we can modify it.
+
+FIXME: Write: show the important klee.h functions.
diff --git a/www/GetInvolved.html b/www/GetInvolved.html
index b8afcbb3..41c84e54 100644
--- a/www/GetInvolved.html
+++ b/www/GetInvolved.html
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
-
Getting Involved with the klee Project
+
Getting Involved with the KLEE Project
-
FIXME: Intro.
+
If you are interested in following development of KLEE, or would like to
+contribute, here are some resources that may prove useful.
Mailing Lists
-
klee-dev
+
Currently the main list for KLEE discussion (both for users and developers)
+is klee-dev.
-
klee-commits
+
Commit messages to the KLEE repository go to
+klee-commits. This
+is also the place to send patches if you are interested in contributing to
+KLEE.
Working with the Code
-
FIXME: Point at pertinent LLVM docs.
-
-
FIXME: Point at doxygen.
+
KLEE developer documentation is written in doxygen and you may have it online here:
+ doxygen
+ (this is updated nightly from the source tree).
+
+
Many parts of KLEE rely on the LLVM infrastructure, you can find more
+information about programming for LLVM here:
+LLVM's General Programming Documentation.
diff --git a/www/GetStarted.html b/www/GetStarted.html
index 07083d4f..5f28b1d3 100644
--- a/www/GetStarted.html
+++ b/www/GetStarted.html
@@ -39,12 +39,12 @@ Started with the LLVM System for more information.