# Copyright 2020-2022 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 .
# Test the 'maint print xml-tdesc' command. This file picks up every
# XML file matching the pattern maint-xml-dump-*.xml (in the same
# directory as this script) and passes each in turn to the command
# 'maint print xml-tdesc'.
#
# The expected output is generated by parsing the input XML file. The
# rules for changing an XML file into the expected output are:
#
# 1. Blank lines, and lines starting with a comment are stripped from
# the expected output.
#
# 2. The and entities are optional,
# suitable defaults will be added if these lines are missing from
# the input file.
#
# 3. A trailing comment on a line will replace the expected output for
# that line but with the indentation of the line preserved. So
# this (The '|' marks the start of the line):
# |
# Will actually look for the following output:
# |
#
# 4. Indentation of lines will be preserved so your input file needs
# to follow the expected indentation.
if {[gdb_skip_xml_test]} {
unsupported "xml tests not being run"
return -1
}
gdb_start
# Read the XML file FILENAME and produce an output pattern that should
# match what GDB produces with the 'maint print xml-desc' command.
proc build_pattern { filename } {
set pattern {}
set xml_version_line {}
set doc_type_line {}
set linenum 0
set ifd [open "$filename" r]
while {[gets $ifd line] >= 0} {
incr linenum
# The tag can only appear as the first line in
# the file. If it is not present then add one to the expected
# output now.
if {$linenum == 1} {
if {![regexp {^<\?xml} $line]} {
set pattern [string_to_regexp $xml_version_line]
set xml_version_line ""
}
}
# If we have not yet seen a DOCTYPE line, then maybe we should
# be adding one? If we find then add a default
# DOCTYPE line, otherwise, if the XML file includes a DOCTYPE
# line, use that.
if {$doc_type_line != "" } {
if {[regexp {^[ \t]*} $line]} {
set pattern [multi_line $pattern \
[string_to_regexp $doc_type_line]]
set doc_type_line ""
} elseif {[regexp {^[ \t]*$} $line \
matches grp1 grp2]} {
set pattern [multi_line \
$pattern \
[string_to_regexp "$grp1$grp2"]]
} else {
set pattern [multi_line \
$pattern \
[string_to_regexp $line]]
}
}
close $ifd
# Due to handling the tags we can end up with a stray
# '\r\n' at the start of the output pattern. Remove it here.
if {[string range $pattern 0 1] == "\r\n"} {
set pattern [string range $pattern 2 end]
}
return $pattern
}
# Run over every test XML file and check the output.
foreach filename [lsort [glob $srcdir/$subdir/maint-xml-dump-*.xml]] {
set pattern [build_pattern $filename]
if {[is_remote host]} {
set test_path [remote_download host $filename]
} else {
set test_path $filename
}
verbose -log "Looking for:\n$pattern"
gdb_test "maint print xml-tdesc $test_path" \
"$pattern" "check [file tail $filename]"
}