""" Tests navigating in the multiline expression editor. """ import lldb from lldbsuite.test.decorators import * from lldbsuite.test.lldbtest import * from lldbsuite.test.lldbpexpect import PExpectTest class TestCase(PExpectTest): mydir = TestBase.compute_mydir(__file__) arrow_up = "\033[A" arrow_down = "\033[B" # PExpect uses many timeouts internally and doesn't play well # under ASAN on a loaded machine.. @skipIfAsan @skipIfEditlineSupportMissing def test_nav_arrow_up(self): """Tests that we can navigate back to the previous line with the up arrow""" self.launch() # Start multiline expression mode by just running 'expr' self.child.sendline("expr") self.child.expect_exact("terminate with an empty line to evaluate") # Create a simple integer expression '123' and press enter. self.child.send("123\n") # We should see the prompt for the second line of our expression. self.child.expect_exact("2: ") # Go back to the first line and change 123 to 124. # Then press enter twice to evaluate our expression. self.child.send(self.arrow_up + "\b4\n\n") # The result of our expression should be 124 (our edited expression) # and not 123 (the one we initially typed). self.child.expect_exact("(int) $0 = 124") self.quit() @skipIfAsan @skipIfEditlineSupportMissing def test_nav_arrow_down(self): """Tests that we can navigate to the next line with the down arrow""" self.launch() # Start multiline expression mode by just running 'expr' self.child.sendline("expr") self.child.expect_exact("terminate with an empty line to evaluate") # Create a simple integer expression '111' and press enter. self.child.send("111\n") # We should see the prompt for the second line of our expression. self.child.expect_exact("2: ") # Create another simple integer expression '222'. self.child.send("222") # Go back to the first line and change '111' to '111+' to make # an addition operation that spans two lines. We need to go up to # test that we can go back down again. self.child.send(self.arrow_up + "+") # Go back down to our second line and change '222' to '223' # so that the full expression is now '111+\n223'. # Then press enter twice to evaluate the expression. self.child.send(self.arrow_down + "\b3\n\n") # The result of our expression '111 + 223' should be '334'. # If the expression is '333' then arrow down failed to get # us back to the second line. self.child.expect_exact("(int) $0 = 334") self.quit()