Revert previous change --- the hour was late, and I was confused about
its status.
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3 changed files with 0 additions and 75 deletions
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@ -1,14 +1,3 @@
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2002-11-22 Jim Blandy <jimb@redhat.com>
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* gdb.base/step-line.exp: Check that GDB can handle filenames that
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appear in the line number info, but not in the preprocessor macro
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info.
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* lib/gdb.exp (gdb_internal_error_regexp): New variable.
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(gdb_internal_error_resync): New procedure.
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(gdb_test): If the command results in an internal error,
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answer GDB's questions until we get back to a prompt.
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2002-11-21 Daniel Jacobowitz <drow@mvista.com>
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* gdb.base/maint.exp (help maint dump-me): Update with typo fix.
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@ -53,15 +53,6 @@ gdb_test "continue" \
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gdb_test "next" \
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".*i = f2 \\(i\\);.*" \
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"next over dummy 1"
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# As of Oct 2002, GCC does record the effect of #line directives in
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# the source line info, but not in macro info. This means that GDB's
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# symtabs (built from the former, among other things) may mention
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# filenames that GDB's macro tables (built from the latter) don't have
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# any record of. Make sure GDB can handle this by trying to evaluate
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# an expression, which will do a macro expansion.
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gdb_test "print i" ".* = 4.*"
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gdb_test "next" \
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".*dummy \\(2, i\\);.*" \
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"next to dummy 2"
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@ -370,56 +370,6 @@ proc gdb_continue_to_breakpoint {name} {
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}
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# A regular expression matching the output GDB produces when it
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# reports an internal error.
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set gdb_internal_error_regexp ".*A problem internal to GDB has been detected"
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# gdb_internal_error_resync TESTNAME
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#
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# Answer the questions GDB asks after it reports an internal error
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# until we get back to a GDB prompt, as part of the test named
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# TESTNAME. Decline to quit the debugging session, and decline to
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# create a core file.
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#
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# This procedure just answers whatever questions come up until it sees
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# a GDB prompt; it doesn't require you to have matched the input up to
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# any specific point. However, it only answers questions it sees in
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# the output itself, so if you've matched a question, you had better
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# answer it yourself before calling this.
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#
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# The variable `gdb_internal_error_regexp' is set up to match the
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# internal error message, but none of the questions that follow it, so
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# you can write code like this:
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#
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# gdb_expect {
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# ...
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# -re $gdb_internal_error_regexp {
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# gdb_internal_error_resync "$message (internal error)"
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# }
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# ...
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# }
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proc gdb_internal_error_resync {testname} {
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global gdb_prompt
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gdb_expect {
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-re "Quit this debugging session\\? \\(y or n\\) $" {
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send_gdb "n\n"
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exp_continue
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}
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-re "Create a core file of GDB\\? \\(y or n\\) $" {
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send_gdb "n\n"
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exp_continue
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}
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-re "$gdb_prompt $" {
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# We're resynchronized.
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}
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timeout {
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fail "$testname (internal error resync timeout)"
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}
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}
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}
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# gdb_test COMMAND PATTERN MESSAGE QUESTION RESPONSE
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# Send a command to gdb; test the result.
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@ -445,7 +395,6 @@ proc gdb_test { args } {
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global verbose
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global gdb_prompt
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global GDB
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global gdb_internal_error_regexp
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upvar timeout timeout
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if [llength $args]>2 then {
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@ -528,10 +477,6 @@ proc gdb_test { args } {
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}
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}
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gdb_expect $tmt {
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-re $gdb_internal_error_regexp {
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fail "$message"
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gdb_internal_error_resync "$message (internal error)"
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}
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-re "\\*\\*\\* DOSEXIT code.*" {
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if { $message != "" } {
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fail "$message";
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