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authorAndrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>2022-06-22 12:23:53 +0100
committerAndrew Burgess <aburgess@redhat.com>2022-10-02 11:57:30 +0100
commit21a52f7d827dab6bf14f81f478e1f9c7bdc7f218 (patch)
tree2f7693de7a3b14790964cdd96d20de704309259f /gdb
parentf7052ade774e66cdbca9e3e4839ea747a88af85b (diff)
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gdb/testsuite: new test for -data-disassemble opcodes format
Add another test for the output of MI command -data-disassemble. The new check validates the format of the 'opcodes' field, specifically, this test checks that the field contains a series of bytes, separated by a single space. We also check that the bytes are in the correct order, that is, the first byte is from the lowest address, and subsequent bytes are from increasing addresses. The motivation for this test (besides more tests being generally good) is that I plan to make changes to how opcode bytes are displayed in the disassembler output, and I want to ensure that I don't break any existing MI behaviour. There should be no user visible changes to GDB after this commit.
Diffstat (limited to 'gdb')
-rw-r--r--gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/mi-disassemble.exp83
-rw-r--r--gdb/testsuite/lib/mi-support.exp27
2 files changed, 110 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/mi-disassemble.exp b/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/mi-disassemble.exp
index 2d3e8e2..b7c5247 100644
--- a/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/mi-disassemble.exp
+++ b/gdb/testsuite/gdb.mi/mi-disassemble.exp
@@ -239,6 +239,88 @@ proc test_disassembly_bogus_args {} {
}
+# Check the format of the opcode bytes.
+proc test_disassembly_opcode_format {} {
+ # First, we need to find a multi-byte instruction that we can
+ # then disassemble using the MI command.
+ set longest_insn_bytes ""
+ set longest_insn_addr ""
+ gdb_test_multiple "disassemble /r main" "" {
+ -re "^disassemble /r main\r\n" {
+ exp_continue
+ }
+
+ -re "^&\"disassemble /r main.n\"\r\n" {
+ exp_continue
+ }
+
+ -re "^~\"Dump of assembler code for function \[^\r\n\]+\r\n" {
+ exp_continue
+ }
+
+ -re "^~\".. ($::hex) <\[^>\]+>:\\\\t(\[^\\\\\]+)\\\\t\[^\r\n\]+\r\n" {
+ set addr $expect_out(1,string)
+ set bytes $expect_out(2,string)
+ if { [string length $bytes] > [string length $longest_insn_bytes] } {
+ set longest_insn_addr $addr
+ set longest_insn_bytes $bytes
+ }
+ exp_continue
+ }
+
+ -re "^~\"End of assembler dump\[^\r\n\]+\r\n" {
+ exp_continue
+ }
+
+ -re "^\\^done\r\n$::mi_gdb_prompt$" {
+ gdb_assert { ![string equal $longest_insn_bytes ""] } \
+ "found the bytes string for a longest instruction"
+ gdb_assert { ![string equal $longest_insn_addr ""] } \
+ "found the address for a longest instruction"
+ }
+ }
+
+ verbose -log "Longest instruction at ${longest_insn_addr} with bytes '${longest_insn_bytes}'"
+
+ # Check that the instruction bytes that we found above consists of
+ # a series of individual bytes separated by a whitespace. Also,
+ # we check that the bytes reported match what can be found in the
+ # inferior memory.
+ set split_bytes [split $longest_insn_bytes " "]
+ set is_bad false
+ set addr $longest_insn_addr
+ set idx 0
+ foreach b $split_bytes {
+ if { [string length $b] != 2 } {
+ set is_bad true
+ }
+
+ # Load the actual byte value from memory, and check it matches
+ # the opcode byte reported in the disassembler output.
+ set addr 0x[format %x [expr $longest_insn_addr + $idx]]
+ set actual [format %02x [mi_get_valueof "/x" "*((unsigned char *) $addr)" "XX"]]
+ gdb_assert [string equal $actual "$b"] \
+ "byte at $addr matches"
+
+ incr idx
+ }
+ gdb_assert { !$is_bad } "check length of each byte"
+ set check_bytes [join $split_bytes " "]
+ gdb_assert { [string equal $check_bytes $longest_insn_bytes] } \
+ "bytes are separated by a single space"
+
+ # Figure out an end address at which to stop the disassembly.
+ set byte_count [llength $split_bytes]
+ set end_addr 0x[format %x [expr $longest_insn_addr + $byte_count]]
+ set start_addr $longest_insn_addr
+
+ verbose -log "Instruction is ${byte_count} bytes, end address ${end_addr}"
+
+ mi_gdb_test "321-data-disassemble -s $start_addr -e $end_addr -- 2" \
+ "321\\^done,asm_insns=\\\[\{address=\"$start_addr\",func-name=\"main\",offset=\"$::decimal\",opcodes=\"$longest_insn_bytes\",inst=\".*\"\}\]" \
+ "data-disassemble checking the opcodes bytes format"
+}
+
mi_clean_restart $binfile
mi_runto_main
test_disassembly_only
@@ -248,6 +330,7 @@ test_disassembly_mixed_with_opcodes
test_disassembly_bogus_args
test_disassembly_lines_limit
test_disassembly_mixed_lines_limit
+test_disassembly_opcode_format
mi_gdb_exit
return 0
diff --git a/gdb/testsuite/lib/mi-support.exp b/gdb/testsuite/lib/mi-support.exp
index e821c0f..2b534f5 100644
--- a/gdb/testsuite/lib/mi-support.exp
+++ b/gdb/testsuite/lib/mi-support.exp
@@ -2833,3 +2833,30 @@ proc mi_is_target_remote {} {
return [gdb_is_target_remote_prompt "$mi_gdb_prompt"]
}
+
+# Retrieve the value of EXP in the inferior, represented in format
+# specified in FMT (using "printFMT"). DEFAULT is used as fallback if
+# print fails. TEST is the test message to use. It can be omitted,
+# in which case a test message is built from EXP.
+#
+# This is an MI version of gdb_valueof.
+
+proc mi_get_valueof { fmt exp default {test ""} } {
+ global mi_gdb_prompt
+
+ if {$test == "" } {
+ set test "get valueof \"${exp}\""
+ }
+
+ set val ${default}
+ gdb_test_multiple "print${fmt} ${exp}" "$test" {
+ -re "~\"\\$\[0-9\]* = (\[^\r\n\]*)\\\\n\"\r\n\\^done\r\n$mi_gdb_prompt$" {
+ set val $expect_out(1,string)
+ pass "$test"
+ }
+ timeout {
+ fail "$test (timeout)"
+ }
+ }
+ return ${val}
+}