# Copyright 2003-2020 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 . # This file tests C++-specific maintenance commands and help on those. # Currently, no source file is used. # Test the help messages. proc test_help {} { set first_component_help "Print the first class/namespace component of NAME" set namespace_help "Deprecated placeholder for removed functionality." test_prefix_command_help {"maintenance cplus"} { "C\\+\\+ maintenance commands\.\[\r\n\]+" } test_prefix_command_help {"maint cp" "maintenance cplus"} { "C\\+\\+ maintenance commands.\r\n\r\n" } set multiple_help_body "List of maintenance cplus subcommands:.*Command name abbreviations are allowed if unambiguous." gdb_test "maint cp" $multiple_help_body gdb_test "help maint cp first_component" "${first_component_help}." gdb_test "help maint cp namespace" "${namespace_help}." } # This is used when NAME should contain only a single component. Be # careful to make sure that parentheses get escaped properly. proc test_single_component {name} { set matchname [string_to_regexp "$name"] gdb_test "maint cp first_component $name" "$matchname" } # This is used when NAME is invalid. proc test_invalid_name {name} { set matchname [string_to_regexp "$name"] gdb_test "maint cp first_component $name" \ "During symbol reading: unexpected demangled name '$matchname'\r\n$matchname" } proc test_first_component {} { # The function in question might complain; make sure that we see # all complaints. gdb_test_no_output "set complaints 1000" test_single_component "foo" test_single_component "operator<<" test_single_component "operator>>" test_single_component "operator ->" test_single_component "operator()" test_single_component "operator>" test_single_component "operator<" test_single_component "operator ->" test_single_component "operator ->" test_single_component "foo()" test_single_component "foo(int)" test_single_component "foo(X::Y)" test_single_component "foo(X::Y, A::B)" test_single_component "foo(std::basic_streambuf >)" test_single_component "operator>(X::Y)" # Operator names can show up in weird places. test_single_component "int operator<< ()" test_single_component "T" # NOTE: carlton/2003-04-23: I've only seen the first of these # produced by the demangler, but I'm including two more just to be # on the safe side. test_single_component "int foo<&(operator<<(C, C))>()" test_single_component "int foo<&operator<<(C, C)>()" test_single_component "int foo()" gdb_test "maint cp first_component foo::bar" "foo" gdb_test "maint cp first_component foo::bar::baz" "foo" gdb_test "maint cp first_component C::bar" "C" gdb_test "maint cp first_component C > >::bar" "C > >" # Make sure we behave appropriately on invalid input. # NOTE: carlton/2003-06-25: As of today, the demangler can in fact # produce examples like the third case below: there really should # be a space between the two <'s. See PR gdb/1245. test_invalid_name "foo<" test_invalid_name "foo(" test_invalid_name "bool operator<" } proc test_namespace {} { gdb_test "maint cp namespace" "The `maint namespace' command was removed." } gdb_exit gdb_start test_help test_first_component test_namespace gdb_exit return 0