#UOFTAE. Foxling Feeding Frenzy

Foxling Feeding Frenzy

You've come across $N$ ($1 \leq N \leq 200$) adorable little Foxlings, and they're hungry! Luckily, you happen to have $M$ ($1 \leq M \leq 200$) crackers on hand, and everyone knows that Foxen love crackers! You'd like to distribute all of your crackers, without splitting any of them, among the Foxlings - but you have to be careful. Foxling $i$ must be fed at least $A_i$ crackers, or it will remain hungry, but no more than $B_i$ of them, or it will become hyper ($1 \leq A_i \leq B_i \leq 200$). You certainly don't want any hungry or hyper Foxlings on your hands, and you're curious as to how many ways this can be accomplished.

There are $T$ ($1 \leq T \leq 100$) scenarios as described above. For each one, you'd like to determine the number of different distributions of your crackers that would satisfy all of the Foxlings, modulo $10^9+7$ (as this value can be quite large).

Input

First line: 1 integer, $T$

For each scenario:

First line: 2 integers, $N$ and $M$

Next $N$ lines: 2 integers, $A_i$ and $B_i$, for $i = 1..N$

Output

For each scenario:

Line 1: 1 integer, the number of valid cracker distributions modulo $10^9+7$

Example

Input:
2
2 5
1 4
2 6
3 5
2 2
2 9
2 3

Output:

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Explanation of Sample:

In the first scenario, you can give either 1, 2, or 3 crackers to the first Foxling, and the remaining 4, 3, or 2 (respectively) to the second.

In the second scenario, each Foxling must receive at least 2 crackers, while you only have 5 to give out, so you have no valid options.