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authorSimon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>2022-02-08 16:31:09 -0500
committerSimon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>2022-04-07 13:03:46 -0400
commitd3fc98f9117f81fb6473bc2419fbf575e81a9505 (patch)
treecf509676c793d57073a7d83141803004465059e9 /gdb/testsuite
parent524ad5e30fb66ee2f03547b2d9f5c67bccdc8534 (diff)
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gdb/testsuite: make gdb_breakpoint and runto take a linespec
Change gdb_breakpoint to accept a linespec, not just a function. In fact, no behavior changes are necessary, this only changes the parameter name and documentation. Change runto as well, since the two are so close (runto forwards all its arguments to gdb_breakpoint). I wrote this for a downstrean GDB port, but thought it could be useful upstream, eventually, even though not callers take advantage of it yet. Change-Id: I08175fd444d5a60df90fd9985e1b5dfd87c027cc
Diffstat (limited to 'gdb/testsuite')
-rw-r--r--gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp24
1 files changed, 13 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp b/gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp
index 0b242b6..859c473 100644
--- a/gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp
+++ b/gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp
@@ -546,9 +546,11 @@ proc gdb_starti_cmd { {inferior_args {}} } {
return -1
}
-# Set a breakpoint at FUNCTION. If there is an additional argument it is
-# a list of options; the supported options are allow-pending, temporary,
-# message, no-message and qualified.
+# Set a breakpoint using LINESPEC.
+#
+# If there is an additional argument it is a list of options; the supported
+# options are allow-pending, temporary, message, no-message and qualified.
+#
# The result is 1 for success, 0 for failure.
#
# Note: The handling of message vs no-message is messed up, but it's based
@@ -557,7 +559,7 @@ proc gdb_starti_cmd { {inferior_args {}} } {
# no-message: turns off printing of fails (and passes, but they're already off)
# message: turns on printing of passes (and fails, but they're already on)
-proc gdb_breakpoint { function args } {
+proc gdb_breakpoint { linespec args } {
global gdb_prompt
global decimal
@@ -588,9 +590,9 @@ proc gdb_breakpoint { function args } {
set print_pass 1
}
- set test_name "setting breakpoint at $function"
+ set test_name "gdb_breakpoint: set breakpoint at $linespec"
- send_gdb "$break_command $function\n"
+ send_gdb "$break_command $linespec\n"
# The first two regexps are what we get with -g, the third is without -g.
gdb_expect 30 {
-re "$break_message \[0-9\]* at .*: file .*, line $decimal.\r\n$gdb_prompt $" {}
@@ -658,7 +660,7 @@ proc gdb_breakpoint { function args } {
# no-message: turns off printing of fails (and passes, but they're already off)
# message: turns on printing of passes (and fails, but they're already on)
-proc runto { function args } {
+proc runto { linespec args } {
global gdb_prompt
global decimal
@@ -675,14 +677,14 @@ proc runto { function args } {
set print_pass 1
}
- set test_name "running to $function in runto"
+ set test_name "runto: run to $linespec"
# We need to use eval here to pass our varargs args to gdb_breakpoint
# which is also a varargs function.
- # But we also have to be careful because $function may have multiple
+ # But we also have to be careful because $linespec may have multiple
# elements, and we don't want Tcl to move the remaining elements after
- # the first to $args. That is why $function is wrapped in {}.
- if ![eval gdb_breakpoint {$function} $args] {
+ # the first to $args. That is why $linespec is wrapped in {}.
+ if ![eval gdb_breakpoint {$linespec} $args] {
return 0
}