# Copyright 2008-2019 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 this program. If not, see . */ # This file is part of the GDB testsuite. It tests 'until' and # 'advance' in precord logfile. # This test suitable only for process record-replay if ![supports_process_record] { return } standard_testfile until-reverse.c ur1.c set precsave [standard_output_file until.precsave] if { [prepare_for_testing "failed to prepare" $testfile \ [list $srcfile $srcfile2]] } { return -1 } set bp_location1 [gdb_get_line_number "set breakpoint 1 here"] set bp_location7 [gdb_get_line_number "set breakpoint 7 here"] set bp_location8 [gdb_get_line_number "set breakpoint 8 here" "$srcfile2"] set bp_location19 [gdb_get_line_number "set breakpoint 19 here"] set bp_location20 [gdb_get_line_number "set breakpoint 20 here"] set bp_location21 [gdb_get_line_number "set breakpoint 21 here"] runto main if [supports_process_record] { # Activate process record/replay gdb_test_no_output "record" "turn on process record" } set end_of_main [gdb_get_line_number "set breakpoint 10a here" ] gdb_test "break $end_of_main" \ "Breakpoint $decimal at .*$srcfile, line $end_of_main\." \ "breakpoint at end of main" # This can take awhile. with_timeout_factor 20 { gdb_test_multiple "continue" "run to end of main" { -wrap -re "Breakpoint .* set breakpoint 10a here .*" { pass $gdb_test_name } -wrap -re "Process record does not support instruction 0xfae64 at.*" { kfail "gdb/25038" $gdb_test_name return -1 } } } # So can this, against gdbserver, for example. with_timeout_factor 10 { gdb_test "record save $precsave" \ "Saved core file $precsave with execution log\." \ "save process recfile" } gdb_test "kill" "" "kill process, prepare to debug log file" \ "Kill the program being debugged\\? \\(y or n\\) " "y" gdb_test "record restore $precsave" \ "Restored records from core file .*" \ "reload core file" # Verify that plain vanilla "until " works. # gdb_test "until $bp_location1" \ "main .* at .*:$bp_location1.*" \ "until line number" # Advance up to factorial, outer invocation # gdb_test "advance factorial" \ "factorial .value=6..*$srcfile:$bp_location7.*" \ "advance to factorial" # At this point, 'until' should continue the inferior up to when all the # inner invocations of factorial() are completed and we are back at this # frame. # gdb_test "until $bp_location19" \ "factorial .value=720.*${srcfile}:$bp_location19.*" \ "until factorial, recursive function" # Finish out to main scope # gdb_test "finish" \ "main .*$srcfile:.*" \ "finish to main" # Advance to a function called by main (marker2) # gdb_test "advance marker2" \ "marker2 .a=43.*$srcfile2:$bp_location8.*" \ "advance to marker2" # Now issue an until with another function, not called by the current # frame, as argument. This should not work, i.e. the program should # stop at main, the caller, where we put the 'guard' breakpoint. # set test_msg "until func, not called by current frame" gdb_test_multiple "until marker3" "$test_msg" { -re "main .*at .*${srcfile}:$bp_location20.*$gdb_prompt $" { pass "$test_msg" } -re "main .*at .*${srcfile}:$bp_location21.*$gdb_prompt $" { pass "$test_msg" } } ### ### ### # Set reverse execution direction gdb_test_no_output "set exec-dir reverse" "set reverse execution" # # We should now be at main, after the return from marker2. # "Advance" backward into marker2. # gdb_test "advance marker2" \ "marker2 .a=43.*$srcfile2:$bp_location8.*" \ "reverse-advance to marker2" # Finish out to main scope (backward) gdb_test "finish" \ " in main .*$srcfile:$bp_location20.*" \ "reverse-finish from marker2" # Advance backward to last line of factorial (outer invocation) gdb_test "advance $bp_location19" \ "factorial .value=720.*${srcfile}:$bp_location19.*" \ "reverse-advance to final return of factorial" # Now do "until" across the recursive calls, # ending up in the same frame where we are now. gdb_test "until $bp_location7" \ "factorial .value=6..*$srcfile:$bp_location7.*" \ "reverse-until to entry of factorial"