# Copyright (C) 2009-2020 Free Software Foundation, Inc. # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or # (at your option) any later version. # # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with GCC; see the file COPYING3. If not see # . global gdb_tests set gdb_tests {} # Scan a file for markers and fill in the gdb_marker array for that # file. Any error in this script is simply thrown; errors here are # programming errors in the test suite itself and should not be # caught. proc scan_gdb_markers {filename} { global gdb_markers if {[info exists gdb_markers($filename,-)]} { return } set fd [open $filename] set lineno 1 while {! [eof $fd]} { set line [gets $fd] if {[regexp -- "Mark (\[a-zA-Z0-9\]+)" $line ignore marker]} { set gdb_markers($filename,$marker) $lineno } incr lineno } close $fd set gdb_markers($filename,-) {} } # Find a marker in a source file, and return the marker's line number. proc get_line_number {filename marker} { global gdb_markers scan_gdb_markers $filename return $gdb_markers($filename,$marker) } # Make note of a gdb test. A test consists of a variable name and an # expected result. proc note-test {var result} { global gdb_tests lappend gdb_tests $var $result print 0 } # A test that uses a regular expression. This is like note-test, but # the result is a regular expression that is matched against the # output. proc regexp-test {var result} { global gdb_tests lappend gdb_tests $var $result print 1 } # A test of 'whatis'. This tests a type rather than a variable. proc whatis-test {var result} { global gdb_tests lappend gdb_tests $var $result whatis 0 } # A test of 'whatis' that uses a regular expression. This tests a type rather # than a variable. proc whatis-regexp-test {var result} { global gdb_tests lappend gdb_tests $var $result whatis 1 } # Utility for testing variable values using gdb, invoked via dg-final. # Tests all tests indicated by note-test and regexp-test. # # Argument 0 is the marker on which to put a breakpoint # Argument 2 handles expected failures and the like proc gdb-test { marker {selector {}} {load_xmethods 0} } { if { ![isnative] || [is_remote target] } { return } if {[string length $selector] > 0} { switch [dg-process-target $selector] { "S" { } "N" { return } "F" { setup_xfail "*-*-*" } "P" { } } } set do_whatis_tests [gdb_batch_check "python print(gdb.type_printers)" \ "\\\[\\\]"] if {!$do_whatis_tests} { send_log "skipping 'whatis' tests - gdb too old" } # This assumes that we are three frames down from dg-test, and that # it still stores the filename of the testcase in a local variable "name". # A cleaner solution would require a new DejaGnu release. upvar 2 name testcase upvar 2 prog prog set line [get_line_number $prog $marker] set gdb_name $::env(GUALITY_GDB_NAME) set testname "$testcase" set output_file "[file rootname [file tail $prog]].exe" set cmd_file "[file rootname [file tail $prog]].gdb" global srcdir set printer_code [file join $srcdir .. python libstdcxx v6 printers.py] set xmethod_code [file join $srcdir .. python libstdcxx v6 xmethods.py] global gdb_tests set fd [open $cmd_file "w"] # We don't want the system copy of the pretty-printers loaded puts $fd "set auto-load no" # Now that we've disabled auto-load, it's safe to set the target file puts $fd "file ./$output_file" # Load & register *our* copy of the pretty-printers puts $fd "source $printer_code" puts $fd "python register_libstdcxx_printers(None)" if { $load_xmethods } { # Load a& register xmethods. puts $fd "source $xmethod_code" puts $fd "python register_libstdcxx_xmethods(None)" } # And start the program puts $fd "break $line" puts $fd "run" # So we can verify that we're using the right libs ... puts $fd "info share" set count 0 foreach {var result kind rexp} $gdb_tests { incr count set gdb_var($count) $var set gdb_expected($count) $result if {$kind == "whatis"} { if {$do_whatis_tests} { set gdb_is_type($count) 1 set gdb_is_regexp($count) $rexp set gdb_command($count) "whatis $var" } else { unsupported "$testname" close $fd return } } else { set gdb_is_type($count) 0 set gdb_is_regexp($count) $rexp set gdb_command($count) "print $var" } puts $fd $gdb_command($count) } set gdb_tests {} puts $fd "quit" close $fd set res [remote_spawn target "$gdb_name -nx -nw -quiet -batch -x $cmd_file "] if { $res < 0 || $res == "" } { unsupported "$testname" return } set test_counter 0 remote_expect target [timeout_value] { -re {^(type|\$([0-9]+)) = ([^\n\r]*)[\n\r]+} { send_log "got: $expect_out(buffer)" incr test_counter set first $expect_out(3,string) if {$gdb_is_type($test_counter)} { if {$expect_out(1,string) != "type"} { error "gdb failure" } } if {$gdb_is_regexp($test_counter)} { set match [regexp -- $gdb_expected($test_counter) $first] } else { set match [expr {![string compare $first \ $gdb_expected($test_counter)]}] } if {$match} { pass "$testname $gdb_command($test_counter)" } else { fail "$testname $gdb_command($test_counter)" verbose " got =>$first<=" verbose "expected =>$gdb_expected($test_counter)<=" } if {$test_counter == $count} { remote_close target return } else { exp_continue } } -re {Python scripting is not supported in this copy of GDB.[\n\r]+} { unsupported "$testname" remote_close target return } -re {Error while executing Python code.[\n\r]} { fail "$testname" remote_close target return } -re {^[^$][^\n\r]*[\n\r]+} { send_log "skipping: $expect_out(buffer)" exp_continue } timeout { unsupported "$testname" remote_close target return } } remote_close target unsupported "$testname" return } # Invoke gdb with a command and pattern-match the output. proc gdb_batch_check {command pattern} { set gdb_name $::env(GUALITY_GDB_NAME) set cmd "$gdb_name -nw -nx -quiet -batch -ex \"$command\"" send_log "Spawning: $cmd\n" if [catch { set res [remote_spawn target "$cmd"] } ] { return 0 } if { $res < 0 || $res == "" } { return 0 } remote_expect target [timeout_value] { -re $pattern { return 1 } -re {^[^\n\r]*[\n\r]+} { verbose "skipping: $expect_out(buffer)" exp_continue } timeout { remote_close target return 0 } } remote_close target return 0 } # Check for a new-enough version of gdb. The pretty-printer tests # require gdb 7.3, but we don't want to test versions, so instead we # check for the python "lookup_global_symbol" method, which is in 7.3 # but not earlier versions. # Return 1 if the version is ok, 0 otherwise. proc gdb_version_check {} { return [gdb_batch_check "python print(gdb.lookup_global_symbol)" \ ""] } # Check for a version of gdb which supports xmethod tests. It is done # in a manner similar to the check for a version of gdb which supports the # pretty-printer tests below. proc gdb_version_check_xmethods {} { return [gdb_batch_check \ "python import gdb.xmethod; print(gdb.xmethod.XMethod)" \ ""] } # Like dg-runtest but keep the .exe around. dg-test has an option for # this but there is no way to pass it through dg-runtest. proc gdb-dg-runtest {args} { global dg-interpreter-batch-mode set saved-dg-interpreter-batch-mode ${dg-interpreter-batch-mode} set dg-interpreter-batch-mode 1 eval dg-runtest $args set dg-interpreter-batch-mode ${saved-dg-interpreter-batch-mode} }