# Copyright 1999-2020 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 that annotations support doesn't leave GDB's terminal settings # into effect when we run a foreground command. standard_testfile if {[prepare_for_testing "failed to prepare" $testfile $srcfile debug] == -1} { return -1 } # Because runto_main doesn't know how to handle the prompt with annotations, # run to main before we set the annotation level. if ![runto_main] then { fail "can't run to main" return 1 } # NOTE: this prompt is OK only when the annotation level is > 1 # NOTE: When this prompt is in use the gdb_test procedure cannot be # used because it assumes that the last char after the gdb_prompt is a # white space. This is not true with this annotated prompt. So we # must use the gdb_annota_test replacement below, or # gdb_test_multiple. set old_gdb_prompt $gdb_prompt set gdb_prompt "\r\n\032\032pre-prompt\r\n$gdb_prompt \r\n\032\032prompt\r\n" # Like gdb_test, but cope with the annotation prompt. proc gdb_annota_test {command pattern message} { global gdb_prompt gdb_test_multiple $command $message { -re "$pattern$gdb_prompt$" { pass "$message" } -re "$gdb_prompt$" { fail "$message" } } } # Set the annotation level to 2. gdb_annota_test "set annotate 2" ".*" "annotation set at level 2" set test "delete breakpoints" gdb_test_multiple "delete" $test { -re "Delete all breakpoints. .y or n." { send_gdb "y\n" exp_continue } -re "$gdb_prompt$" { pass $test } } # Set the target running, and then type something. GDB used to have a # bug where it'd be accepting input even though the target was # supposedly resumed in the foreground. This ultimately resulted in # readline aborting. set linenum [gdb_get_line_number "set break here"] gdb_annota_test "break $linenum" \ "Breakpoint .*$srcfile, line .*" \ "break after sleep" # Continue, and wait a bit to make sure the inferior really starts # running. Wait less than much the program sleeps, which is 5 # seconds, though. set saw_continuing 0 set test "continue" gdb_test_multiple $test $test { -timeout 2 -re "Continuing\\." { set saw_continuing 1 exp_continue } timeout { gdb_assert $saw_continuing $test } } # Type something. send_gdb "print 1\n" # Poor buggy GDB would crash before the breakpoint was hit. set test "breakpoint hit" gdb_test_multiple "" $test { -re "stopped\r\n$gdb_prompt" { pass $test } } set test "print command result" gdb_test_multiple "" $test { -re "\r\n1\r\n\r\n\032\032value-history-end\r\n$gdb_prompt" { pass $test } } # Restore the original prompt for the rest of the testsuite. set gdb_prompt $old_gdb_prompt