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2022-11-18gdb/testsuite: add (and use) a new build-id compile optionAndrew Burgess1-0/+9
I noticed that the gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp test was failing when run with Clang as the compiler. This test relies on the compiled binaries having a build-id within them. For GCC, really GNU ld, the default is to always include a build-id. When compiling with Clang though, the default is for no build-id. I did consider *always* turning on the build-id feature when the compiler is Clang, but that felt a little weird. Instead, I propose that we add a new 'build-id' compiler option to gdb_compile, this flag indicates that the test _requires_ a build-id. In gcc_compile we can then add the required flags if the compiler is Clang so that we do get a build-id. With this change the gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp test now (mostly) passes with Clang 9.0.1 and 15.0.2, and still passes with gcc. The 'mostly' part is an unrelated issue, and will be addressed in a later commit in this series. Reviewed-By: Lancelot SIX <lancelot.six@amd.com>
2022-11-16[gdb/testsuite] Modernize gdb.arch/i386-biarch-core.expTom de Vries1-4/+14
I noticed in test-case gdb.arch/i386-biarch-core.exp that we run into the completion limit for "complete set gnutarget": ... set gnutarget vms-libtxt^M set gnutarget *** List may be truncated, max-completions reached. ***^M (gdb) PASS: gdb.arch/i386-biarch-core.exp: complete set gnutarget ... Fix this by using get_set_option_choices. Also use get_set_option_choices for "complete set architecture i386", which required extending get_set_option_choices to accept a second argument, such that we can do: ... set archs [get_set_option_choices "set architecture" "i386"] ... because this returns an empty list: ... set archs [get_set_option_choices "set architecture i386"] ... because it does "complete set architecture i386 ". Also clean up the explicit gdb_exit/gdb_start and use clean_restart instead. Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-11-16[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.arch/ppc64-symtab-cordic.exp without bzip2Tom de Vries1-0/+22
After de-installing bzip2, I run into: ... Running ppc64-symtab-cordic.exp ... sh: bzip2: command not found PATH: gdb.arch/ppc64-symtab-cordic.exp: failed bzip2 for \ src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/cordic.ko.bz2 ... Fix these by: - using remote_exec instead of catch system, and - using file tail in the untested message. I've tried making output redirection work with remote_exec, but that seems to be broken, so we now: - copy the file $f.bz2 into the desired location $dir/$f.bz2, and - decompress the bz2 file using "bzip2 -df $dir/$f.bz2", resulting in a file $dir/$f. Factor out new function decompress_bz2 to make the test-case less verbose, and also use it in gdb.arch/i386-biarch-core.exp. Tested on x86_64-linux, without and with bzip2 installed.
2022-11-15gdb/testsuite: get_set_option_choices: expect \r\n after each itemSimon Marchi1-2/+7
I get some random failures since commit 8d45c3a82a0e ("[gdb/testsuite] Set completions to unlimited in get_set_option_choices"), which can be reproduced with: $ make check-read1 TESTS="gdb.base/parse_number.exp" For instance: set architecture A^M Ambiguous item "A".^M (gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/parse_number.exp: arch=A: set architecture A The problem is the regexp in get_set_option_choices, it is possible that is only matches part of a completion result. With check-read1, that is always one letter. Fix this by expecting the \r\n at the end of the line, so we only match entire results. Use ^ in match patterns to ensure we don't miss any output. Approved-By: Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de> Change-Id: Ib1733737feab7dde0f7095866e089081a891054e
2022-11-15[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/print-file-var.exp for remote targetTom de Vries1-15/+25
When running test-case gdb.base/print-file-var.exp with target board remote-gdbserver-on-localhost (using REMOTE_TARGET_USERNAME) we run into some failures. Fix these by using the name of a shared lib as returned by gdb_load_shlib. This required splitting up the gdb_load_shlib functionality, which is now defined as: ... proc gdb_load_shlib { file } { set dest [gdb_download_shlib $file] gdb_locate_shlib $file return $dest } ... such that we can do gdb_download_shlib before gdb is started. Tested on x86_64-linux. Co-Authored-by: Ivan Tetyushkin <ivan.tetyushkin@syntacore.com>
2022-11-15[gdb/testssuite] Skip aarch64 in skip_gdbserver_test if no xml supportTom de Vries1-0/+1
On aarch64-linux, with a gdb build without libexpat, so without xml support, I run into: ... (gdb) builtin_spawn attach-no-multi-process^M attach 26808^M Attaching to Remote target^M warning: Can not parse XML target description; XML support was disabled at \ compile time^M Reading symbols from attach-no-multi-process...^M Remote 'g' packet reply is too long (expected 788 bytes, got 796 bytes): ... ^M ... The test-case checks for skip_gdbserver_tests and that one contains a check for xml support: ... # If GDB is lack of XML support, and targets, like arm, have # multiple target descriptions, GDB doesn't know which target # description GDBserver uses, and may fail to parse 'g' packet # after connection. if { [gdb_skip_xml_test] && ([istarget "arm*-*-linux*"] || [istarget "mips*-*-linux*"] || [istarget "powerpc*-*-linux*"] || [istarget "s390*-*-linux*"] || [istarget "x86_64-*-linux*"] || [istarget "i\[34567\]86-*-linux*"]) } { return 1 } ... but it doesn't trigger because aarch64 is missing. Fix this by adding istarget "aarch64*-*-linux*". Tested on aarch64-linux. Approved-By: Luis Machado <luis.machado@arm.com>
2022-11-14PowerPC, fix support for printing the function return value for non-trivial ↵Carl Love1-0/+8
values. Currently, a non-trivial return value from a function cannot currently be reliably determined on PowerPC. This is due to the fact that the PowerPC ABI uses register r3 to store the address of the buffer containing the non-trivial return value when the function is called. The PowerPC ABI does not guarantee the value in register r3 is not modified in the function. Thus the value in r3 cannot be reliably used to obtain the return addreses on exit from the function. This patch adds a new gdbarch method to allow PowerPC to access the value of r3 on entry to a function. On PowerPC, the new gdbarch method attempts to use the DW_OP_entry_value for the DWARF entries, when exiting the function, to determine the value of r3 on entry to the function. This requires the use of the -fvar-tracking compiler option to compile the user application thus generating the DW_OP_entry_value in the binary. The DW_OP_entry_value entries in the binary file allows GDB to resolve the DW_TAG_call_site entries. This new gdbarch method is used to get the return buffer address, in the case of a function returning a nontrivial data type, on exit from the function. The GDB function should_stop checks to see if RETURN_BUF is non-zero. By default, RETURN_BUF will be set to zero by the new gdbarch method call for all architectures except PowerPC. The get_return_value function will be used to obtain the return value on all other architectures as is currently being done if RETURN_BUF is zero. On PowerPC, the new gdbarch method will return a nonzero address in RETURN_BUF if the value can be determined. The value_at function uses the return buffer address to get the return value. This patch fixes five testcase failures in gdb.cp/non-trivial-retval.exp. The correct function return values are now reported. Note this patch is dependent on patch: "PowerPC, function ppc64_sysv_abi_return_value add missing return value convention". This patch has been tested on Power 10 and x86-64 with no regressions.
2022-11-14[gdb/testsuite] Handle with_set archTom de Vries1-2/+20
I realized that the more irregular output of show arch: ... (gdb) show arch^M The target architecture is set to "auto" (currently "i386").^M ... would be a problem for something like: ... with_set arch powerpc:common64 {} ... and indeed: ... (gdb) set arch powerpc:common64^M The target architecture is set to "powerpc:common64".^M (gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/foo.exp: set arch powerpc:common64 ... and: ... (gdb) set arch set to "auto" (currently "i386")^M Undefined item: "set".^M ... Fix this in with_set by handling this type of output. Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-11-14[gdb/testsuite] Set completions to unlimited in get_set_option_choicesTom de Vries1-23/+31
In some test-case I tried to use get_set_option_choices "set architecture" and ran into max-completions: ... set architecture simple^M set architecture tomcat^M set architecture xscale^M set architecture *** List may be truncated, max-completions reached. ***^M (gdb) PASS: gdb.base/foo.exp: complete set architecture ... There's only one test-case using this currently: gdb.base/parse_number.exp, and it locally sets max-completions to unlimited. Fix this by: - factoring out a new proc with_set out of proc with_complaints, and - using it to temporarily set max-completions to unlimited in get_set_option_choice. Tested on x86_64-linux, by running test-cases that excercise get_set_option_choice and with_complaints.
2022-11-11[gdb/testsuite] Don't timeout on prompt in gdb_start_cmdTom de Vries1-0/+1
We're currently running into a timeout at: ... (gdb) start ^M Error in expression, near `1'.^M (gdb) UNTESTED: gdb.ada/start.exp: start failed to land inside the right \ procedure ... due to the fact that gdb_start_cmd doesn't handle a prompt as reaction to the start command. Fix this by handling the prompt. Reduces execution time of the test-case from 1m1s to 1s. Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-11-11[gdb/testsuite] Better error checking in has_hw_wp_supportTom de Vries1-2/+10
With gdb 12.1, on powerpc64le I ran into ERRORs related to has_hw_wp_support usage, which was already fixed on trunk by commits: - 13f72372413 ("gdb/testsuite: fix gdb.base/break-idempotent.exp on ppc"), and - 01a32ee0b8c ("PowerPC, fix gdb.base/watchpoint.exp on Power 9") While looking into these ERRORs and the commits that fix them, it occurred to me that while the commits fix the root cause, the failure mode is not great. The test-cases expect a running instance of gdb upon return, which is not there, so there's an long stream of ERRORs generated as a result. Fix this at the start of has_hw_wp_support, by (instead of accomodating a running gdb instance by calling gdb_exit), checking whether it's called without a running gdb instance, and erroring out otherwise. This way, there's just one error. I also noticed that in case we do an early exit due to !runto_main, we don't clean up, so copy the missing cleanups (gdb_exit and $obj file deletion) from the regular exit. Tested on x86_64-linux, using has_hw_wp_support for x86_64 in skip_hw_watchpoint_tests.
2022-11-10gdb/testsuite: allowed for function_range to deal with mangled functionsBruno Larsen1-1/+1
When calling get_func_info inside a test case, it would cause failures if the function was printed using a C++ style mangled name. The current patch fixes this by allowing for mangled names along with the current rules. Approved-By: Tom Tromey <tom@tromey.com>
2022-11-08[gdb/testsuite] Fix find_core_file for core named coreTom de Vries1-1/+2
With test-case gdb.base/bigcore.exp I run into: ... (gdb) PASS: gdb.base/bigcore.exp: get inferior pid signal SIGABRT^M Continuing with signal SIGABRT.^M ^M Program terminated with signal SIGABRT, Aborted.^M The program no longer exists.^M (gdb) PASS: gdb.base/bigcore.exp: signal SIGABRT UNTESTED: gdb.base/bigcore.exp: can't generate a core file ... due to find_core_file returning "". There is a core file name core: ... $ ls ./outputs/gdb.base/bigcore bigcore bigcore.corefile core gdb.cmd.1 gdb.in.1 gdbserver.cmd.1 ... but it's not found. The problem is this statement: ... lappend files [list ${::testfile}.core core] ... which adds a single list item "${::testfile}.core core". Fix this in the most readable way: ... lappend files ${::testfile}.core lappend files core ... Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-10-27[gdb/testsuite] Fix silent timeouts in gdb.mi/mi-exec-run.exp with remote hostTom de Vries1-1/+1
I noticed that running test-case gdb.mi/mi-exec-run.exp with host board local-remote-host.exp takes about 44 seconds. I found two silent timeouts responsible for this. The first is in mi_gdb_exit, where we have: ... if { [is_remote host] && [board_info host exists fileid] } { send_gdb "999-gdb-exit\n" gdb_expect 10 { -re "y or n" { send_gdb "y\n" exp_continue } -re "Undefined command.*$gdb_prompt $" { send_gdb "quit\n" exp_continue } -re "DOSEXIT code" { } } } ... so in gdb.log we see: ... 999-gdb-exit^M 999^exit^M =thread-exited,id="1",group-id="i1"^M =thread-group-exited,id="i1"^M ... after which expect just waits for the timeout. Fix this by adding a gdb_expect clause to parse the exit: ... -re "\r\n999\\^exit\r\n" { } ... Note that we're not parsing the thread-exited/thread-group-exited messages, because they may not be present: ... $ gdb -i=mi =thread-group-added,id="i1" (gdb) 999-gdb-exit 999^exit $ ... After fixing that, we have: ... (gdb) ^M saw mi error PASS: gdb.mi/mi-exec-run.exp: inferior-tty=separate: mi=separate: \ force-fail=1: run failure detected quit^M &"quit\n"^M ... What seems to be happening is that default_gdb_exit sends a cli interpreter quit command to an mi interpreter, after which again expect just waits for the timeout. Fix this by adding mi_gdb_exit to the end of the test-case, as in many other gdb.mi/*.exp test-cases. After these two fixes, the test-case takes about 4 seconds. Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-10-25[gdb/testsuite] Handle missing .note.GNU-stackTom de Vries2-0/+4
On openSUSE Tumbleweed I run into this for the dwarf assembly test-cases, and some hardcoded assembly test-cases: ... Running gdb.dwarf2/fission-absolute-dwo.exp ... gdb compile failed, ld: warning: fission-absolute-dwo.o: \ missing .note.GNU-stack section implies executable stack ld: NOTE: This behaviour is deprecated and will be removed in a future \ version of the linker === gdb Summary === # of untested testcases 1 ... Fix the dwarf assembly test-cases by adding the missing .note.GNU-stack in proc Dwarf::assemble. Fix the hard-coded test-cases using this command: ... $ for f in $(find gdb/testsuite/gdb.* -name *.S); do if ! grep -q note.GNU-stack $f; then echo -e "\t.section\t.note.GNU-stack,\"\",@progbits" >> $f; fi; done ... Likewise for .s files, and gdb/testsuite/lib/my-syscalls.S. The idiom for arm seems to be to use %progbits instead, see commit 9a5911c08be ("gdb/testsuite/gdb.dwarf2: Replace @ with % for ARM compatability"), so hand-edit gdb/testsuite/gdb.arch/arm-disp-step.S to use %progbits instead. Note that dwarf assembly testcases use %progbits as decided by proc _section. Tested on x86_64-linux. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29674
2022-10-20[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.mi/mi-disassemble.exp with check-read1Tom de Vries1-1/+1
With test-case gdb.mi/mi-disassemble.exp and check-read1 I run into: ... FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-disassemble.exp: disassemble /b main FAIL: gdb.mi/mi-disassemble.exp: get valueof "*((unsigned char *) 0x400549)" ... The problem for both FAILs is that the output is parsed using gdb_test_multiple, which has implicit clauses using $gdb_prompt, which can match before the explicit clauses using $mi_gdb_prompt. Fix this by passing -prompt "$mi_gdb_prompt$" to gdb_test_multiple. Tested on x86-64-linux.
2022-10-19gdb/testsuite: avoid temporary file in gdb/testsuite (unittest.exp)Andrew Burgess1-0/+110
I spotted that the gdb.gdb/unittest.exp script causes a temporary file inserters_extractors-2.txt to be created in build/gdb/testsuite/ instead of in build/gdb/testsuite/output/gdb.gdb/unittest/. This is because some of the 'maint selftest' tests create temporary files in GDB's current directory, specifically, the two source files: gdb/unittests/basic_string_view/inserters/wchar_t/2.cc gdb/unittests/basic_string_view/inserters/char/2.cc both create a temporary file called inserters_extractors-2.txt, though we only run the second of these as part of GDB's selftests. I initially proposed just using GDB's 'cd' command in unittest.exp to switch to the test output directory before running the selftests, however, Pedro pointed out that there was a risk here that, if GDB crashed during shutdown, the generated core file would be left in the test output directory rather than in the testsuite directory. As a result, our clever core file spotting logic would fail to spot the core file and alert the user. Instead, I propose this slightly more involved solution. I've added a new with_gdb_cwd directory proc, used like this: with_gdb_cwd $directory { # Tests here... } The new proc temporarily switches to $directory and then runs the tests within the block. After running the tests the previous current working directory is restored. Additionally, after switching back to the previous cwd, we check that GDB is still responsive. This means that if GDB crashed immediately prior to restoring the previous directory, and left the core file in the wrong place, then the responsiveness check will fail, and a FAIL will be emitted, this should be enough to alert the user that something has gone wrong. With this commit in place the unittest.exp script now leaves its temporary file in the test output directory.
2022-10-18gdb, gdbserver: support dlmopen()Markus Metzger1-0/+96
In glibc, the r_debug structure contains (amongst others) the following fields: int r_version: Version number for this protocol. It should be greater than 0. If r_version is 2, struct r_debug is extended to struct r_debug_extended with one additional field: struct r_debug_extended *r_next; Link to the next r_debug_extended structure. Each r_debug_extended structure represents a different namespace. The first r_debug_extended structure is for the default namespace. 1. Change solib_svr4_r_map argument to take the debug base. 2. Add solib_svr4_r_next to find the link map in the next namespace from the r_next field. 3. Update svr4_current_sos_direct to get the link map in the next namespace from the r_next field. 4. Don't check shared libraries in other namespaces when updating shared libraries in a new namespace. 5. Update svr4_same to check the load offset in addition to the name 6. Update svr4_default_sos to also set l_addr_inferior 7. Change the flat solib_list into a per-namespace list using the namespace's r_debug address to identify the namespace. Add gdb.base/dlmopen.exp to test this. To remain backwards compatible with older gdbserver, we reserve the namespace zero for a flat list of solibs from all namespaces. Subsequent patches will extend RSP to allow listing libraries grouped by namespace. This fixes PR 11839. Co-authored-by: Lu, Hongjiu <hongjiu.lu@intel.com>
2022-10-18gdb, testsuite: extend gdb_test_multiple checksMarkus Metzger1-0/+8
Check for warning: Corrupted shared library list and for Invalid cast. warning: Probes-based dynamic linker interface failed. Reverting to original interface. in gdb_test_multiple.
2022-10-14[gdb] Fix heap-buffer-overflow in find_program_interpreterTom de Vries1-1/+6
With the test-case included in this patch, we run into: ... (gdb) target remote localhost:2347^M `target:twice-connect' has disappeared; keeping its symbols.^M Remote debugging using localhost:2347^M warning: Unable to find dynamic linker breakpoint function.^M GDB will be unable to debug shared library initializers^M and track explicitly loaded dynamic code.^M Reading /usr/lib/debug/.build-id/$hex/$hex.debug from remote target...^M 0x00007ffff7dd4550 in ?? ()^M (gdb) PASS: gdb.server/twice-connect.exp: session=second: gdbserver started FAIL: gdb.server/twice-connect.exp: found interpreter ... The problem originates in find_program_interpreter, where bfd_get_section_contents is called to read .interp, but fails. The function returns false but the result is ignored, so find_program_interpreter returns some random string. Fix this by checking the result of the call to bfd_get_section_contents. Tested on x86_64-linux. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29652
2022-10-14[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.base/infoline-reloc-main-from-zero.exp with clangTom de Vries1-6/+6
With test-case gdb.base/infoline-reloc-main-from-zero.exp and clang I run into: ... gdb compile failed, clang-13.0: warning: -e main: 'linker' input unused \ [-Wunused-command-line-argument] clang-13.0: warning: -Wl,-Ttext=0x00: 'linker' input unused \ [-Wunused-command-line-argument] clang-13.0: warning: -Wl,-N: 'linker' input unused \ [-Wunused-command-line-argument] UNTESTED: gdb.base/infoline-reloc-main-from-zero.exp: \ infoline-reloc-main-from-zero.exp UNTESTED: gdb.base/infoline-reloc-main-from-zero.exp: failed to compile ... Fix this by using ldflags instead of additional_flags. Likewise, fix all occurrences of: ... $ find gdb/testsuite -name *.exp | xargs grep additional_flags.*Wl ... Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-10-14[gdb/testsuite] Fix nopie test-cases with target board unix/-fPIE/-pieTom de Vries1-1/+4
Compilers default to either PIE or no-PIE executables. In order to test PIE executables with a compiler that produces non-PIE by default, we can use target board unix/-fPIE/-pie, which set the multilib_flags of the target board to "-fPIE -pie". Likewise, we can use target board unix/-fno-PIE/-no-pie with a compiler that produces PIE by default. The target board unix/-fno-PIE/-no-pie has a potential problem when compiling shared libs, because the multilib_flags will override the attempts of gdb_compile_shlib to compile with -fPIC. This is taken care of by running the body of gdb_compile_shlib wrapped in with_PIE_multilib_flags_filtered. The target board unix/-fPIE/-pie has a problem with nopie compilations. The current approach is to do the compilation hoping for the best, and if we find out that the resulting executable is PIE despite specifying nopie, we error out with the standard error message "nopie failed to prevent PIE executable". That however does not work for hard-coded assembly nopie test-cases, which will just noisily refuse to compile: ... ld: amd64-disp-step0.o: relocation R_X86_64_32S against `.text' can not be \ used when making a PIE object; recompile with -fPIE^M ... Fix this in gdb_compile by filtering out the PIE settings in the target board multilib_flags when pie or nopie is specified. Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-10-14[gdb/testsuite] Factor out with_PIE_multilib_flags_filteredTom de Vries1-7/+22
Factor out new procs with_PIE_multilib_flags_filtered and with_multilib_flags_filtered from proc gdb_compile_shlib. Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-10-14[gdb/testsuite] Add cond_wrap procTom de Vries1-0/+20
Add a new proc cond_wrap, that can be used to replace the repetitive: ... if { $cond } { wrap { <body> } } else { <body> } ... with the shorter: ... cond_wrap $cond wrap { <body> } ... Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-10-13[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.dwarf2/macro-source-path.exp with -m32Tom de Vries1-5/+2
With test-case gdb.dwarf2/macro-source-path.exp and target board unix/-m32, I run into: ... as: macro-source-path-gcc11-ld238-dw5-filename-641.o: \ unsupported relocation type: 0x1^M ... The problem is that we have 64-bit dwarf so the debug_line offset in the .debug_macro section is an 8-byte entity, emitted using ".8byte": ... .section .debug_macro .Lcu_macros4: .2byte 5 /* version */ .byte 3 /* flags */ .8byte .LLlines3 /* debug_line offset */ ... but the linker doesn't support 8-byte relocation types on a 32-bit architecture. This is similar to what was fixed in commit a5ac8e7fa3b ("[gdb/testsuite] Fix 64-bit dwarf test-cases with -m32") for for instance .debug_abbrev. Fix this in the same way, by using _op_offset to emit the debug_line offset. Tested on x86_64-linux with native and target board unix/-m32.
2022-10-11[gdb/testsuite] Fix prompt parsing in capture_command_outputTom de Vries1-19/+13
I noticed in capture_command_output that the output of a single command is matched using two gdb_test_multiples: - the first one matching the echoed command and skipping an optional prefix, - the second one matching the output and the prompt. This is error-prone, because the first gdb_test_multiple has implicit clauses which may consume the prompt. The problem is easy to spot with an example. First consider: ... set output [capture_command_output "print 1" "\\\$1 = "] gdb_assert { [string equal $output "1"] } ... for which we get: ... PASS: [string equal $output "1"] ... If we change the prefix string to a no-match, say "1 = ", and update the output string match accordingly, we get instead: ... FAIL: capture_command_output for print 1 FAIL: [string equal $output "\$1 = 1"] ... The first FAIL is produced by the first gdb_test_multiple, consuming the prompt. The second gdb_test_multiple then silently times out waiting for another prompt, after which the second FAIL is produced. Note that the timeout is silent because the gdb_test_multiple is called with an empty message argument. The second FAIL is because capture_command_output returns "", given that all the command output was consumed by the first gdb_test_multiple. Fix this by rewriting capture_command_output to use only a single gdb_test_multiple. Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-10-10gdb/testsuite: fix race in gdb.base/async-shell.expSimon Marchi1-7/+22
I see some random failures in this test: FAIL: gdb.base/async-shell.exp: run & (timeout) It can be reliably reproduced on a recent enough GNU/Linux with this change: diff --git a/gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp b/gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp index 44cc28b30051..2a3c8253ba5a 100644 --- a/gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp +++ b/gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp @@ -1301,6 +1301,7 @@ proc gdb_test_multiple { command message args } { } set gdb_test_name "$message" + sleep 2 set result 0 set code [catch {gdb_expect $code} string] "recent enough" means a system where libpthread.so was merged with libc.so, so at least glibc 2.34. The problem is that the `run &` command prints some things after the prompt: (gdb) [Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled] Using host libthread_db library "/usr/lib/../lib/libthread_db.so.1". If expect is quick enough, it will consume only up to the prompt. But if it is slow enough, it will consume those messages at the same time as the prompt, in which case the gdb_test used for "run &" won't match. By default, the prompt used by gdb_test uses a `$` to anchor the match at the end of the buffer. If there's anything following the prompt, it won't match. The diff above adds a delay between sending the command and consuming the output, giving GDB more time to output the messages, giving a good chance that expect consumes them at the same time as the prompt. This is normally handled by using gdb_test_multiple and specifying a pattern that ends with "$gdb_prompt", but not a trailing $. I think this is common enough that it deserves its own gdb_test option. Therefore, add the -no-anchor-prompt option to gdb_test, and gdb_test_no_output for completeness. Use it in gdb.base/async-shell.exp. Change-Id: I9051d8800d1c10a2e95db1a575991f7723492f1b Approved-By: Tom de Vries <tdevries@suse.de>
2022-10-10[gdb/testsuite] Detect trailing ^C/^D in commandTom de Vries1-0/+4
Detect a trailing ^C/^D in the command argument of gdb_test_multiple, and error out. Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-10-10[gdb/testsuite] Fix error message for cmd with trailing newlineTom de Vries1-1/+1
I noticed that the error message in gdb_test_multiple about trailing newline in a command does not mention the offending command, nor the word command: ... if [string match "*\[\r\n\]" $command] { error "Invalid trailing newline in \"$message\" test" } ... Fix this by using instead: ... error "Invalid trailing newline in \"$command\" command" ... Also add a test-case to trigger this: gdb.testsuite/gdb-test.exp. Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-10-10gdb: include the base address in in-memory bfd filenamesAndrew Burgess2-3/+31
The struct target_buffer (in gdb_bfd.c) is used to hold information about an in-memory BFD object created by GDB. For now this mechanism is used by GDB when loading information about JIT symfiles. This commit updates target_buffer (in gdb_bfd.c) to be more C++ like, and, at the same time, adds the base address of the symfile into the BFD filename. Right now, every in-memory BFD is given the filename "<in-memory>". This filename is visible in things like 'maint info symtabs' and 'maint info line-table'. If there are multiple in-memory BFD objects then it can be hard to match keep track if which BFD is which. This commit changes the name to be "<in-memory@ADDRESS>" where ADDRESS is replaced with the base address for where the in-memory symbol file was read from. As an example of how this is useful, here's the output of 'maint info jit' showing a single loaded JIT symfile: (gdb) maintenance info jit jit_code_entry address symfile address symfile size 0x00000000004056b0 0x0000000007000000 17320 And here's part of the output from 'maint info symtabs': (gdb) maintenance info symtabs ...snip... { objfile <in-memory@0x7000000> ((struct objfile *) 0x5258250) { ((struct compunit_symtab *) 0x4f0afb0) debugformat DWARF 4 producer GNU C17 9.3.1 20200408 (Red Hat 9.3.1-2) -mtune=generic -march=x86-64 -g -fno-stack-protector -fpic name jit-elf-solib.c dirname /tmp/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite blockvector ((struct blockvector *) 0x5477850) user ((struct compunit_symtab *) (null)) { symtab /tmp/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/../../../src/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/jit-elf-solib.c ((struct symtab *) 0x4f0b030) fullname (null) linetable ((struct linetable *) 0x5477880) } } } I've added a new test that checks the new in-memory file names are generated correctly, and also checks that the in-memory JIT files can be dumped back out using 'dump binary memory'.
2022-10-07[gdb/testsuite] Handle host cleanfilesTom de Vries1-8/+19
When running test-case gdb.server/abspath.exp with host board local-remote-host-notty, I get: ... $ git sti ... deleted: gdb/testsuite/gdb.xml/trivial.xml ... This happens as follows. The test-case calls skip_gdbserver_test, which calls gdb_skip_xml_test, which does: ... set xml_file [gdb_remote_download host "${srcdir}/gdb.xml/trivial.xml"] ... Then proc gdb_remote_download appends $xml_file (which for this particular host board happens to be ${srcdir}/gdb.xml/trivial.xml) to cleanfiles, which ends up being handled in gdb_finish by: ... eval remote_file target delete $cleanfiles ... The problem is that a host file is deleted using target delete. Fix this by splitting cleanfiles up in cleanfiles_target and cleanfiles_host. Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-10-07[gdb/testsuite] Fix have_mpx with remote-gdbserver-on-localhostTom de Vries1-1/+1
With target board remote-gdbserver-on-localhost and gdb.arch/i386-mpx-call.exp I run into: ... FAIL: gdb.arch/i386-mpx-call.exp: upper_bnd0: continue to a bnd violation ... This is due to the have_mpx test which should return 0, but instead returns 1 because the captured output: ... No MPX support No MPX support ... does not match the used regexp: ... set status [expr ($status == 0) \ && ![regexp "^No MPX support\r\n" $output]] ... which does match the captured output with native: ... No MPX support^M No MPX support^M ... Fix this by making the \r in the regexp optional. Tested on x86_64-linux, with native and target board remote-gdbserver-on-localhost.
2022-10-07[gdb/testsuite] Fix path in test name in gdb_load_shlibTom de Vries1-1/+2
When running test-case gdb.server/solib-list.exp with target board remote-gdbserver-on-localhost, I run into: ... (gdb) set solib-search-path $outputs/gdb.server/solib-list^M (gdb) PASS: gdb.server/solib-list.exp: non-stop 0: \ set solib-search-path $outputs/gdb.server/solib-list PATH: gdb.server/solib-list.exp: non-stop 0: \ set solib-search-path $outputs/gdb.server/solib-list ... This is due to this code in gdb_load_shlib: ... gdb_test "set solib-search-path [file dirname $file]" "" "" ... Fix this by setting an explicit test name. Tested on x86_64-linux, with native and target boards remote-gdbserver-on-localhost, native-gdbserver and native-extended-gdbserver.
2022-10-02gdb/testsuite: rewrite capture_command_output procAndrew Burgess1-3/+32
I noticed a test failure in gdb.base/completion.exp for RISC-V on a native Linux target. Upon investigation I discovered a couple of reasons for the failure, this commit addresses one of them. A later commit will address the other issue. The completion.exp test makes use of the capture_command_output proc to collect the output of the 'maint print registers' command. For RISC-V this command produces a lot of output. Currently the capture_command_output proc tries to collect the complete command output in a single expect buffer, and what I see is an error caused by the expect buffer becoming full. This commit rewrites capture_command_output to make use of gdb_test_multiple to collect the command output line at a time, in this way we avoid overflowing the expect buffer. The capture_command_output proc has some logic for skipping a prefix pattern, which is passed in to the proc as an argument. In order to handle this correctly (only matching the prefix at the start of the command output), I use two gdb_test_multiple calls, the first spots and discards the echoed command and the (optional) prefix pattern, the second gdb_test_multiple call then collects the rest of the command output line at a time until a prompt is seen. There is one slight oddity with the current implementation, which I have changed in my rewrite, this does, slightly, change the behaviour of the proc. The current implementation uses this pattern: -re "[string_to_regexp ${command}]\[\r\n\]+${prefix}(.*)\[\r\n\]+$gdb_prompt $" Now a typical command output will look like this: output here\r\n (gdb) As the TCL regexp matching is greedy, TCL will try to match as much as possible in one part of the pattern before moving on to the next. Thus, when this matches against (.*)[\r\n]+, the (.*) will end up matching against 'output here\r' and the [\r\n]+ will match '\n' only. In short the previous implementation would leave the '\r' on the end of the returned text, but not the final trailing '\n'. Now clearly I could make a new version of capture_command_output that maintained this behaviour, but I couldn't see any reason to do this. So, my new implementation drops the final '\r\n' completely, in our example above we now return 'output here' with no '\r'. This change doesn't seem to affect any of the existing tests, but I thought it was worth mentioning.
2022-10-02gdb/testsuite: new test for -data-disassemble opcodes formatAndrew Burgess1-0/+27
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.
2022-09-30[gdb/testsuite] Add aranges to gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dir-file-name.expTom de Vries1-2/+13
Since commit 52b920c5d20 ("[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dir-file-name.exp for ppc64le"), the test-case fails with target board cc-with-debug-names, due to missing .debug_aranges info. Add the missing .debug_aranges info. Also add a file_id option to Dwarf::assemble, to make it possible to contribute to an already open file. Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-09-26gdb/testsuite: use gdb_test in gdb.gdb/python-helper.expSimon Marchi1-4/+4
If some command in there gives the wrong answer, we currently have to wait for a timeout for the test to continue. For instance, I currently see: print *val->type $1 = Python Exception <class 'gdb.error'>: Cannot take address of method length. (outer-gdb) FAIL: gdb.gdb/python-helper.exp: pretty print type (timeout) We can avoid this and modernize the test at the same time by using the -prompt option of gdb_test. gdb_test_no_output currently accepts a -prompt_re option (the variable name passed to parse_args defines the option name), but I think it's a typo. It's supposed to be -prompt, like gdb_test. I can't find anything using -prompt_re using grep. Change it to just "prompt". Change-Id: Icc0a9a0ef482e62460c708bccdd544c11d711eca
2022-09-26gdb/testsuite: bump duration for the whole test in do_self_testsSimon Marchi1-28/+8
When running gdb.gdb/python-helper.exp, I get some timeouts: continue Continuing. print 1 FAIL: gdb.gdb/python-helper.exp: hit breakpoint in outer gdb (timeout) At this time, GDB is actually processing the stop and reading in some CUs. selftest_setup does bump the timeout, but it's not for the whole test. Since debugging GDB with GDB is (unfortunately) a bit slow, bump the timeout for the whole duration of the setup and body. On my optimized build, the command takes just a bit more than the current timeout of 10 seconds. But it's much slower if running the test on an unoptimized build, so I think it's necessary to bump the timeout for that in any case. Change-Id: I4d38285870e76c94f9d0bfdb60648a2e7f2cfa5d
2022-09-23gdb/testsuite/tui: start GDB with "set filename-display basename"Simon Marchi1-1/+7
The test gdb.tui/tui-missing-src.exp fails on my CI machine, and I concluded that it is caused by the long source directory name: /home/jenkins/workspace/binutils-gdb_master_linuxbuild/platform/jammy-amd64/target_board/unix/src/binutils-gdb The long name causes some particular redrawing that doesn't happen for shorter directories, and causes a Term::command call to return too early. This can be reproduced by cloning the binutils-gdb repo in a directory with a name similar to the one shown above. $ pwd /home/simark/workspace/binutils-gdb_master_linuxbuild/platform/jammy-amd64/target_board/unix/src/binutils-gdb/build/gdb $ make check-read1 TESTS="gdb.tui/tui-missing-src.exp" FAIL: gdb.tui/tui-missing-src.exp: checking if inside f2 () FAIL: gdb.tui/tui-missing-src.exp: f2.c must be displayed in source window FAIL: gdb.tui/tui-missing-src.exp: check source box is empty after return FAIL: gdb.tui/tui-missing-src.exp: Back in main Note that using "make check" instead of "make check-read1" only shows the last 2 failures for me. When running gdb.tui/tui-missing-src.exp in a directory with a shorter name, the terminal looks like this by the time the "checking if inside f2" test runs: Screen Dump (size 80 columns x 24 rows, cursor at column 6, row 23): 0 +-...ld/binutils-gdb-noasan/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.tui/tui-missing-src/f2.c-+ 1 | 1 | 2 | 2 int | 3 | 3 f2 (int x) | 4 | 4 { | 5 | > 5 x <<= 1; | 6 | 6 return x+5; | 7 | 7 } | 8 | 8 | 9 | 9 | 10 | 10 | 11 | 11 | 12 | 12 | 13 | 13 | 14 +------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ 15 multi-thre Thread 0x7ffff7cc07 In: f2 L5 PC: 0x555555555143 16 at /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-noasan/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.tui/tui- 17 missing-src/main.c:6 18 (gdb) next 19 (gdb) step 20 f2 (x=4) 21 at /home/simark/build/binutils-gdb-noasan/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.tui/tui- 22 missing-src/f2.c:5 23 (gdb) PASS: gdb.tui/tui-missing-src.exp: checking if inside f2 () When running the `Term::command "step"` just before, GDB writes the "step", which makes the `wait_for` proc go in the "looking for the prompt" mode, to know when the command's execution is complete. As some new output appears, lines that must disappear are deleted using the "Delete Line" operation [1] and some new ones are drawn. The source window gets redrawn with the contents of the f2.c file. Then, GDB writes the prompt (at line 23 above), which satisfies `wait_for`, which then returns. The state of the terminal is therefore correct for the "check if inside f2" and "f2.c must be displayed in the source window" tests. In the non-working case, the terminal looks like this by the time the "check if inside f2" test runs: Screen Dump (size 80 columns x 24 rows, cursor at column 6, row 17): 0 +------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ 1 | | 2 | | 3 | | 4 | | 5 | | 6 | | 7 | [ No Source Available ] | 8 | | 9 | | 10 | | 11 | | 12 | | 13 | | 14 +------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ 15 multi-thre Thread 0x7ffff7cc1b In: main L7 PC: 0x555555555128 16 sing-src/main.c:6 17 (gdb) ary breakpoint 1, main () 18 at /home/simark/workspace/binutils-gdb_master_linuxbuild/platform/jammy-amd6 19 4/target_board/unix/src/binutils-gdb/build/gdb/testsuite/outputs/gdb.tui/tui-mis 20 sing-src/main.c:6 21 (gdb) next 22 (gdb) step 23 FAIL: gdb.tui/tui-missing-src.exp: checking if inside f2 () What happened is: GDB wrote the "step" command, which make the `wait_for` proc go in its "looking for the prompt" mode. However, curses decided to redraw whatever scrolled up to line 17 using some standard character insertion operations: +++ Cursor Down (1), cursor: (16, 0) -> (17, 0) +++ Inserting string '(' +++ Inserted char '(', cursor: (17, 0) -> (17, 1) +++ Inserted string '(', cursor: (17, 0) -> (17, 1) +++ Inserting string 'g' +++ Inserted char 'g', cursor: (17, 1) -> (17, 2) +++ Inserted string 'g', cursor: (17, 1) -> (17, 2) +++ Inserting string 'd' +++ Inserted char 'd', cursor: (17, 2) -> (17, 3) +++ Inserted string 'd', cursor: (17, 2) -> (17, 3) +++ Inserting string 'b' +++ Inserted char 'b', cursor: (17, 3) -> (17, 4) +++ Inserted string 'b', cursor: (17, 3) -> (17, 4) +++ Inserting string ')' +++ Inserted char ')', cursor: (17, 4) -> (17, 5) +++ Inserted string ')', cursor: (17, 4) -> (17, 5) +++ Inserting string ' ' +++ Inserted char ' ', cursor: (17, 5) -> (17, 6) +++ Inserted string ' ', cursor: (17, 5) -> (17, 6) And that causes `wait_for` to think the "step" command is complete. This is wrong, as the prompt at line 17 isn't the prompt drawn after the completion of the "step" command. The subsequent tests now run with a partially updated screen (what is shown above) and obviously fail. The ideal way to fix this would be for `wait_for` to be smarter, to avoid it confusing the different prompts drawn. However, I would also like to reduce the variations in TUI test results due to the directories (source and build) in which tests are ran. TUI tests are more prone to differences in test results due to variations in directory names than other tests, as it makes curses take different redrawing decisions. So in this patch, I propose to make TUI tests use "set filename-display basename", which makes GDB omit directory names when it prints file names. This way, regardless of where you run the tests, you should get the same results (all other things being equal). Doing this happens to fix my failures and makes my CI happy (which in turns makes me happy). To be clear, I understand that this does not fix the root issue of `proc wait_for` being confused. However, it makes TUI test runs be more similar for everyone, such that there's less chance of TUI tests randomly failing for somebody. If some other change triggers the `wait_for` problem again in the future, hopefully everybody will see the problem and we can work on getting it fixed more easily than if just one unlucky person sees the problem. Note that there are other reasons why TUI tests could vary, like different curses library versions taking different re-drawing decisions. However, I think my change is a good step towards more stable test results. [1] https://vt100.net/docs/vt510-rm/DL.html Change-Id: Ib18da83317e7b78a46f77892af0d2e39bd261bf5
2022-09-22gdb/testsuite/lib/future.exp: follow dejagnu default_target_compileLancelot SIX1-1/+5
GDB's testsuite can override dejagnu's default_target_compile if the system provided dejagnu installation does not provide support to compile languages GDB needs. Recent version of dejagnu (1.6.3, installed on RHEL-9) includes ba60272 "Establish a default C compiler by evaluating [find_gcc] if no other compiler is given."[1]. This commit removed calls such as `set_board_info compiler "[find_gcc]"` from the various baseboards and has default_target_compile call `find_gcc` itself to find a compiler if none was specified by the board description. On systems with dejagnu-1.6.3, if GDB's overrides is needed to support languages still unknown to dejagnu, we end up in the following situation: - The system board files do not set the C compiler anymore, - GDB's replacement for default_target_compile assumes that the compiler should have been set up by the board file. In this situation, no one sets the C compiler for the board and as a result many test are not compiled and not executed: [...] Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/bt-on-error-and-warning.exp ... gdb compile failed, default_target_compile: No compiler to compile with Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/dprintf-non-stop.exp ... gdb compile failed, default_target_compile: No compiler to compile with Running .../gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/structs3.exp ... gdb compile failed, default_target_compile: No compiler to compile with [...] We are observing this error with ROCgdb[2], a downstream port of GDB supporting AMD GPUs. This port needs to use GDB's override of default_target_compile to compile HIP programs since dejagnu does not provide support for this language yet. This patch changes gdb_default_target_compile_1 in a similar way default_target_compile has been updated so both implementations remain compatible. Even if this is not strictly required by GDB just yet, I believe keeping both implementations in sync desirable. Using board files provided with dejagnu <=1.6.2 is still supported: if the compiler is set by the board file, gdb_default_target_compile_1 uses it and does not need `find_gcc`. Patch tested on x86_64 RHEL-9 and ubuntu-20.04 on top of GDB and ROCgdb. [1] http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=dejagnu.git;a=commit;h=ba60272a5ac6f6a7012acca03f596a6ed003f044 [2] https://github.com/ROCm-Developer-Tools/ROCgdb Change-Id: Ibff52684d9cab8243a7c6748ecbd29f50c37e669
2022-09-22gdb/testsuite: Add a proc to test where compiler links the epilogueBruno Larsen1-0/+32
Different compilers link the epilogue of functions to different lines. As an example, gcc links it to the closing brace of the function, whereas clang links it to the last statement of the function. This difference is important for the testsuite, since the where GDB will land after a step can be wildly different. Where possible, this dependency should be side-stepped in the testsuite, but it isn't always possible, so this commit adds a gdb_caching_proc that is able to detect where the epilogue is linked, so tests can react accordingly.
2022-09-20gdb/testsuite: add a debuginfod-support.exp helper libraryAndrew Burgess1-0/+196
We currently have a single test for GDB's debuginfod support, this is gdb.debuginfod/fetch_src_and_symbols.exp, this script does all the setup, starts debuginfod, and then does the testing. This commit tries to split the existing script in two, there is a new library lib/debuginfod-support.exp, which contains a helper functions related to running debuginfod tests. All the code in the new library is basically copied from the existing test case (which is why I retained the copyright date range on the new library), with some minor adjustments to try and make the code a little more generic. One change I made, for example, is the library offers functions to shut down debuginfod, previously we just relied on expect shutting down debuginfod when dejagnu completed. The existing test script is updated to make use of the new library code, and this test is still passing for me. The only change in the test results is a single test where I changed the name to remove the port number from the test name - the port number can change from run to run, so could make it hard to compare test results. I have also done a little light house keeping on the original test script, updating and adding new comments, and making use of proc_with_prefix in a couple of places.
2022-09-13gdb/testsuite: introduce gdb_step_untilBruno Larsen1-0/+30
Currently, GDB's testsuite uses a set amount of step commands to exit functions. This is a problem if a compiler emits different epilogue information from gcc, or emits no epilogue information at all. It was most noticeable if Clang was used to test GDB. To fix this unreliability, this commit introduces a new proc that will step the inferior until it is stopped at a line that matches the given regexp, or until it steps too many times - defined as an optional argument. If the line is found, it shows up as a single PASS in the test, and if the line is not found, a single FAIL is emitted. This patch only introduces this proc, but does not add it to any existing tests, these will be introduced in the following commit.
2022-09-12[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dir-file-name.exp for ppc64leTom de Vries1-6/+1
In commit cd919f5533c ("[gdb/testsuite] Fix gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dir-file-name.exp"), I made gdb.dwarf2/dw2-dir-file-name.exp independent of prologue analyzers, using this change: ... - gdb_breakpoint $func + gdb_breakpoint *$func ... That however caused a regression on ppc64le. For PowerPC, as described in the ELFv2 ABI, a function can have a global and local entry point. Setting a breakpoint on *$func effectively creates a breakpoint for the global entry point, so if the function is entered through the local entry point, the breakpoint doesn't trigger. Fix this by reverting commit cd919f5533c, and setting the breakpoint on ${func}_label instead. Tested on x86_64-linux and ppc64le-linux.
2022-09-06[gdb/symtab] Support .debug_names section with TUs in .debug_infoTom de Vries1-4/+17
When running test-case gdb.cp/cpexprs-debug-types.exp on target board cc-with-debug-names/gdb:debug_flags=-gdwarf-5, we get an executable with a .debug_names section, but no .debug_types section. For dwarf-5, the TUs are no longer put in a separate unit, but instead they're put in the .debug_info section. When loading the executable, the .debug_names section is silently ignored because of this check in dwarf2_read_debug_names: ... if (map->tu_count != 0) { /* We can only handle a single .debug_types when we have an index. */ if (per_bfd->types.size () != 1) return false; ... which triggers because per_bfd->types.size () == 0. The intention of the check is to make sure we don't have more that one .debug_types section, as can happen in a object file (see PR12984): ... $ grep "\.debug_types" 11.s .section .debug_types,"G",@progbits,wt.75c042c23a9a07ee,comdat .section .debug_types,"G",@progbits,wt.c59c413bf50a4607,comdat ... Fix this by: - changing the check condition to "per_bfd->types.size () > 1", and - handling per_bfd->types.size () == 0. Tested on x86_64-linux. Bug: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=29385
2022-09-06[gdb/testsuite] Add gdb.dwarf2/debug-names-bad-cu-index.expTom de Vries1-8/+24
Add test-case gdb.dwarf2/debug-names-bad-cu-index.exp, a regression test for commit 2fe9a3c41fa ("[gdb/symtab] Fix bad compile unit index complaint"). Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-09-06[gdb/testsuite] Add gdb.dwarf2/debug-names-tu.expTom de Vries1-12/+44
Add a test-case gdb.dwarf2/debug-names-tu.exp, that uses the dwarf assembler to specify a .debug_names index with the TU list referring to a TU from the .debug_types section. This is intended to produce something similar to: ... $ gcc -g -fdebug-types-section ~/hello.c -gdwarf-4 $ gdb-add-index -dwarf-5 a.out ... Tested on x86_64-linux.
2022-08-31gdb, testsuite: adapt function_range expected nameNils-Christian Kempke1-4/+8
When writing a dwarf testcase for some C++ code I wanted to use the MACRO_AT_range which in turn uses the function_range proc in dwarf.exp to extract the bounds of 'main'. However, the macro failed as GDB prints the C++ 'main' with its arguments as 'main(int, char**)' or 'main()'. The reason for this is that in read.c::dwarf2_compute_name we call c_type_print_args on C++ functions and append their arguments to the function name. This happens to all C++ functions, but is only visible when the function doesn't have a linkage name. An example might make this more clear. Given the following code >> cat c.cpp int foo (int a, float b) { return 0; } int main (int argc, char **argv) { return 0; } which is legal in both languages, C and C++, and compiling it with e.g. clang or gcc will make the disassemble command look like: >> clang --version clang version 10.0.0-4ubuntu1 ... >> clang -O0 -g ./c.cpp >> gdb -q ./a.out -ex "start" ... (gdb) disassemble main Dump of assembler code for function main(int, char**): 0x0000000000401120 <+0>: push %rbp 0x0000000000401121 <+1>: mov %rsp,%rbp ... 0x0000000000401135 <+21>: ret End of assembler dump. (gdb) disassemble foo Dump of assembler code for function _Z3fooif: 0x0000000000401110 <+0>: push %rbp 0x0000000000401111 <+1>: mov %rsp,%rbp ... 0x000000000040111f <+15>: ret End of assembler dump. Note, that main is emitted with its arguments while for foo the linkage name is being printed, as also visible in its DWARF: >> objdump ./a.out --dwarf=info | grep "foo" -A3 -B3 <2b> DW_AT_low_pc : 0x401110 <33> DW_AT_high_pc : 0x10 <37> DW_AT_frame_base : 1 byte block: 56 (DW_OP_reg6 (rbp)) <39> DW_AT_linkage_name: (indirect string, offset: 0x39): _Z3fooif <3d> DW_AT_name : (indirect string, offset: 0x42): foo <41> DW_AT_decl_file : 1 <42> DW_AT_decl_line : 1 <43> DW_AT_type : <0x9a> Now, let's rename the C++ file and compile it as C: >> mv c.cpp c.c >> clang -O0 -g ./c.c >> gdb -q ./a.out -ex "start' ... (gdb) disassemble main Dump of assembler code for function main: 0x0000000000401120 <+0>: push %rbp 0x0000000000401121 <+1>: mov %rsp,%rbp ... 0x0000000000401135 <+21>: ret End of assembler dump. (gdb) disassemble foo Dump of assembler code for function foo: 0x0000000000401110 <+0>: push %rbp 0x0000000000401111 <+1>: mov %rsp,%rbp ... 0x000000000040111f <+15>: ret End of assembler dump. Note, for foo we did not get a linkage name emitted in DWARF, so it is printed by its name: >> objdump --dwarf=info ./a.out | grep foo -A3 -B3 <2b> DW_AT_low_pc : 0x401110 <33> DW_AT_high_pc : 0x10 <37> DW_AT_frame_base : 1 byte block: 56 (DW_OP_reg6 (rbp)) <39> DW_AT_name : (indirect string, offset: 0x37): foo <3d> DW_AT_decl_file : 1 <3e> DW_AT_decl_line : 1 <3f> DW_AT_prototyped : 1 To make the macro and proc work with C++ as well, an optional argument list was added to the regex matching the function name in the disassemble command in function_range. This does not change any used behavior as currently, there exists no C++ test using the proc function_range. Signed-off-by: Nils-Christian Kempke <nils-christian.kempke@intel.com>
2022-08-19gdb, testsuite: Enable testcases that suppress specific warnings, for icc/icx.Felix Willgerodt1-3/+7
To cite gdb.exp: Some C/C++ testcases unconditionally pass -Wno-foo as additional options to disable some warning. That is OK with GCC, because by design, GCC accepts any -Wno-foo option, even if it doesn't support -Wfoo. Clang however warns about unknown -Wno-foo by default, unless you pass -Wno-unknown-warning-option as well. We do that here, so that individual testcases don't have to worry about it. This patch adds the same option that already exists for clang for icx and adds the equivalent icc option.
2022-08-18Add test for AArch64 Scalable Vector ExtensionThiago Jung Bauermann2-4/+6
It exercises a bug that GDB previously had where it would lose track of some registers when the inferior changed its vector length. It also checks that the vg register and the size of the z0-z31 registers correctly reflect the new vector length.