# Copyright 2003-2013 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 . # Find a pathname to a file that we would execute if the shell was asked # to run $arg using the current PATH. proc find_gdb { arg } { # If the arg directly specifies an existing executable file, then # simply use it. if [file executable $arg] then { return $arg } set result [which $arg] if [string match "/" [ string range $result 0 0 ]] then { return $result } # If everything fails, just return the unqualified pathname as default # and hope for best. return $arg } # A helper proc that sets up for self-testing. # EXECUTABLE is the gdb to use. # FUNCTION is the function to break in, either captured_main # or captured_command_loop. proc selftest_setup { executable function } { global gdb_prompt global timeout global INTERNAL_GDBFLAGS # load yourself into the debugger # This can take a relatively long time, particularly for testing where # the executable is being accessed over a network, or where gdb does not # support partial symbols for a particular target and has to load the # entire symbol table. Set the timeout to 10 minutes, which should be # adequate for most environments (it *has* timed out with 5 min on a # SPARCstation SLC under moderate load, so this isn't unreasonable). # After gdb is started, set the timeout to 30 seconds for the duration # of this test, and then back to the original value. set oldtimeout $timeout set timeout 600 verbose "Timeout is now $timeout seconds" 2 global gdb_file_cmd_debug_info set gdb_file_cmd_debug_info "unset" set result [gdb_load $executable] set timeout $oldtimeout verbose "Timeout is now $timeout seconds" 2 if { $result != 0 } then { return -1 } if { $gdb_file_cmd_debug_info != "debug" } then { untested "No debug information, skipping testcase." return -1 } # Set a breakpoint at main gdb_test "break $function" \ "Breakpoint.*at.* file.*, line.*" \ "breakpoint in $function" # run yourself # It may take a very long time for the inferior gdb to start (lynx), # so we bump it back up for the duration of this command. set timeout 600 set description "run until breakpoint at $function" gdb_test_multiple "run $INTERNAL_GDBFLAGS" "$description" { -re "Starting program.*Breakpoint \[0-9\]+,.*$function .data.* at .*main.c:.*$gdb_prompt $" { pass "$description" } -re "Starting program.*Breakpoint \[0-9\]+,.*$function .data.*$gdb_prompt $" { xfail "$description (line numbers scrambled?)" } -re "vfork: No more processes.*$gdb_prompt $" { fail "$description (out of virtual memory)" set timeout $oldtimeout verbose "Timeout is now $timeout seconds" 2 return -1 } -re ".*$gdb_prompt $" { fail "$description" set timeout $oldtimeout verbose "Timeout is now $timeout seconds" 2 return -1 } } set timeout $oldtimeout verbose "Timeout is now $timeout seconds" 2 return 0 } # A simple way to run some self-tests. proc do_self_tests {function body} { global GDB tool # Are we on a target board. if { [is_remote target] || ![isnative] } then { return } # Run the test with self. Copy the file executable file in case # this OS doesn't like to edit its own text space. set GDB_FULLPATH [find_gdb $GDB] # Remove any old copy lying around. remote_file host delete x$tool gdb_start set file [remote_download host $GDB_FULLPATH x$tool] set result [selftest_setup $file $function] if {$result == 0} then { set result [uplevel $body] } gdb_exit catch "remote_file host delete $file" if {$result < 0} then { warning "Couldn't test self" } }