1 # Copyright
1992-2019 Free Software Foundation
, Inc.
3 # This
program is free software
; you can redistribute it and
/or modify
4 # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
5 # the Free Software Foundation
; either version
3 of the License
, or
6 #
(at your option
) any later version.
8 # This
program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful
,
9 # but WITHOUT
ANY WARRANTY
; without even the implied warranty of
10 # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS
FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
11 # GNU General Public License
for more details.
13 # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
14 # along with this
program.
If not
, see
<http
://www.gnu.org
/licenses
/>.
16 # This file is based
on corefile.exp which was written by Fred
17 # Fish.
(fnf@cygnus.com
)
20 # Are we
on a target board? As of
2004-02-12, GDB didn
't have a
21 # mechanism that would let it efficiently access a remote corefile.
24 untested "remote system"
28 # Can the system run this test (in particular support sparse
29 # corefiles)? On systems that lack sparse corefile support this test
30 # consumes too many resources - gigabytes worth of disk space and
33 if { [istarget "*-*-*bsd*"]
34 || [istarget "*-*-solaris*"]
35 || [istarget "*-*-darwin*"]
36 || [istarget "*-*-cygwin*"] } {
37 untested "kernel lacks sparse corefile support (PR gdb/1551)"
42 set corefile [standard_output_file ${binfile}.corefile]
44 if { [gdb_compile "${srcdir}/${subdir}/${srcfile}" "${binfile}" executable {debug}] != "" } {
45 untested "failed to compile"
49 # Run GDB on the bigcore program up-to where it will dump core.
51 clean_restart ${binfile}
52 gdb_test_no_output "set print sevenbit-strings"
53 gdb_test_no_output "set width 0"
55 # Get the core into the output directory.
56 if {![is_remote host]} {
57 gdb_test "cd [file dirname $corefile]" "Working directory .*" \
58 "cd to test directory"
61 if ![runto_main] then {
62 fail "can't run to main
"
65 set print_core_line
[gdb_get_line_number
"Dump core"]
66 gdb_test
"tbreak $print_core_line"
67 gdb_test
continue ".*print_string.*"
68 gdb_test next
".*0 = 0.*"
70 # Traverse part of bigcore
's linked list of memory chunks (forward or
71 # backward), saving each chunk's address.
73 proc extract_heap
{ dir } {
77 set test
"extract ${dir} heap"
79 gdb_test_multiple
"print heap.${dir}" "$test" {
80 -re
" = \\(struct list \\*\\) 0x0.*$gdb_prompt $" {
83 -re
" = \\(struct list \\*\\) (0x\[0-9a-f\]*).*$gdb_prompt $" {
84 set heap
[concat $heap $expect_out
(1,string
)]
86 pass
"$test (stop at $lim)"
89 send_gdb
"print \$.${dir}\n"
93 -re
".*$gdb_prompt $" {
94 fail
"$test (entry $lim)"
97 fail
"$test (timeout)"
102 set next_heap
[extract_heap next
]
103 set prev_heap
[extract_heap prev
]
105 # Save the
total allocated size within GDB so that we can check
106 # the core size later.
107 gdb_test_no_output
"set \$bytes_allocated = bytes_allocated" "save heap size"
109 # Now create a core dump
111 #
Rename the core file to
"TESTFILE.corefile" rather than just "core",
112 # to avoid problems with sys admin types that like to regularly prune
113 # all files named
"core" from the system.
115 # Some systems append
"core" to the name of the program; others append
116 # the
name of the
program to
"core"; still others (like Linux, as of
117 # May
2003) create cores named
"core.PID".
119 # Save the process ID. Some systems dump the core into core.PID.
121 gdb_test_multiple
"info program" $test {
122 -re
"child process (\[0-9\]+).*$gdb_prompt $" {
123 set inferior_pid $expect_out
(1,string
)
126 -re
"$gdb_prompt $" {
127 set inferior_pid unknown
132 # Dump core using SIGABRT
133 set oldtimeout $timeout
135 gdb_test
"signal SIGABRT" "Program terminated with signal SIGABRT, .*"
136 set timeout $oldtimeout
140 foreach pat
[list core.$
{inferior_pid
} $
{testfile
}.core core
] {
141 set names
[glob
-nocomplain
[standard_output_file $pat
]]
142 if {[llength $names
] == 1} {
143 set file
[lindex $names
0]
144 remote_exec build
"mv $file $corefile"
150 untested
"can't generate a core file"
154 # Check that the corefile is plausibly large enough. We
're trying to
155 # detect the case where the operating system has truncated the file
156 # just before signed wraparound. TCL, unfortunately, has a similar
157 # problem - so use catch. It can handle the "bad" size but not
158 # necessarily the "good" one. And we must use GDB for the comparison,
161 if {[catch {file size $corefile} core_size] == 0} {
163 gdb_test_multiple "print \$bytes_allocated < $core_size" "check core size" {
164 -re " = 1\r\n$gdb_prompt $" {
165 pass "check core size"
168 -re " = 0\r\n$gdb_prompt $" {
169 pass "check core size"
174 # Probably failed due to the TCL build having problems with very
175 # large values. Since GDB uses a 64-bit off_t (when possible) it
176 # shouldn't have this problem. Assume that things are going to
177 # work. Without this assumption the test is skiped
on systems
178 #
(such as i386 GNU
/Linux with patched kernel
) which
do pass.
179 pass
"check core size"
183 untested
"check core size (system does not support large corefiles)"
187 # Now
load up that core file
189 set test
"load corefile"
190 # We use
[file tail
] because gdb is still
"cd"d to the
192 gdb_test_multiple
"core [file tail $corefile]" "$test" {
193 -re
"A program is being debugged already. Kill it. .y or n. " {
197 -re
"Core was generated by.*$gdb_prompt $" {
202 # Finally
, re
-traverse bigcore
's linked list, checking each chunk's
203 # address against the executable. Don
't use gdb_test_multiple as want
204 # only one pass/fail. Don't use exp_continue as the regular
205 # expression involving $heap needs to be re
-evaluated
for each new
208 proc check_heap
{ dir heap
} {
210 set test
"check ${dir} heap"
213 send_gdb
"print heap.${dir}\n"
216 -re
" = \\(struct list \\*\\) [lindex $heap $lim].*$gdb_prompt $" {
217 if { $lim
>= [llength $heap
] } {
222 send_gdb
"print \$.${dir}\n"
225 -re
".*$gdb_prompt $" {
226 fail
"$test (address [lindex $heap $lim])"
230 fail
"$test (timeout)"
237 check_heap next $next_heap
238 check_heap prev $prev_heap