/* This testcase is part of GDB, the GNU debugger. Copyright 1993, 1994, 1995, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2004, 2007 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 2 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, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. Please email any bugs, comments, and/or additions to this file to: bug-gdb@prep.ai.mit.edu */ /* Support program for testing gdb's ability to call functions in the inferior, pass appropriate arguments to those functions, and get the returned result. */ #ifdef NO_PROTOTYPES #define PARAMS(paramlist) () #else #define PARAMS(paramlist) paramlist #endif # include # include char char_val1 = 'a'; char char_val2 = 'b'; short short_val1 = 10; short short_val2 = -23; int int_val1 = 87; int int_val2 = -26; long long_val1 = 789; long long_val2 = -321; float float_val1 = 3.14159; float float_val2 = -2.3765; double double_val1 = 45.654; double double_val2 = -67.66; #define DELTA (0.001) char *string_val1 = (char *)"string 1"; char *string_val2 = (char *)"string 2"; char char_array_val1[] = "carray 1"; char char_array_val2[] = "carray 2"; struct struct1 { char c; short s; int i; long l; float f; double d; char a[4]; } struct_val1 = { 'x', 87, 76, 51, 2.1234, 9.876, "foo" }; /* Some functions that can be passed as arguments to other test functions, or called directly. */ #ifdef PROTOTYPES int add (int a, int b) #else int add (a, b) int a, b; #endif { return (a + b); } #ifdef PROTOTYPES int doubleit (int a) #else int doubleit (a) int a; #endif { return (a + a); } int (*func_val1) PARAMS((int,int)) = add; int (*func_val2) PARAMS((int)) = doubleit; /* An enumeration and functions that test for specific values. */ enum enumtype { enumval1, enumval2, enumval3 }; enum enumtype enum_val1 = enumval1; enum enumtype enum_val2 = enumval2; enum enumtype enum_val3 = enumval3; #ifdef PROTOTYPES int t_enum_value1 (enum enumtype enum_arg) #else int t_enum_value1 (enum_arg) enum enumtype enum_arg; #endif { return (enum_arg == enum_val1); } #ifdef PROTOTYPES int t_enum_value2 (enum enumtype enum_arg) #else int t_enum_value2 (enum_arg) enum enumtype enum_arg; #endif { return (enum_arg == enum_val2); } #ifdef PROTOTYPES int t_enum_value3 (enum enumtype enum_arg) #else int t_enum_value3 (enum_arg) enum enumtype enum_arg; #endif { return (enum_arg == enum_val3); } /* A function that takes a vector of integers (along with an explicit count) and returns their sum. */ #ifdef PROTOTYPES int sum_args (int argc, int argv[]) #else int sum_args (argc, argv) int argc; int argv[]; #endif { int sumval = 0; int idx; for (idx = 0; idx < argc; idx++) { sumval += argv[idx]; } return (sumval); } /* Test that we can call functions that take structs and return members from that struct */ #ifdef PROTOTYPES char t_structs_c (struct struct1 tstruct) { return (tstruct.c); } short t_structs_s (struct struct1 tstruct) { return (tstruct.s); } int t_structs_i (struct struct1 tstruct) { return (tstruct.i); } long t_structs_l (struct struct1 tstruct) { return (tstruct.l); } float t_structs_f (struct struct1 tstruct) { return (tstruct.f); } double t_structs_d (struct struct1 tstruct) { return (tstruct.d); } char *t_structs_a (struct struct1 tstruct) { static char buf[8]; strcpy (buf, tstruct.a); return buf; } #else char t_structs_c (tstruct) struct struct1 tstruct; { return (tstruct.c); } short t_structs_s (tstruct) struct struct1 tstruct; { return (tstruct.s); } int t_structs_i (tstruct) struct struct1 tstruct; { return (tstruct.i); } long t_structs_l (tstruct) struct struct1 tstruct; { return (tstruct.l); } float t_structs_f (tstruct) struct struct1 tstruct; { return (tstruct.f); } double t_structs_d (tstruct) struct struct1 tstruct; { return (tstruct.d); } char *t_structs_a (tstruct) struct struct1 tstruct; { static char buf[8]; strcpy (buf, tstruct.a); return buf; } #endif /* Test that calling functions works if there are a lot of arguments. */ #ifdef PROTOTYPES int sum10 (int i0, int i1, int i2, int i3, int i4, int i5, int i6, int i7, int i8, int i9) #else int sum10 (i0, i1, i2, i3, i4, i5, i6, i7, i8, i9) int i0, i1, i2, i3, i4, i5, i6, i7, i8, i9; #endif { return i0 + i1 + i2 + i3 + i4 + i5 + i6 + i7 + i8 + i9; } /* Test that args are passed in the right order. */ #ifdef PROTOTYPES int cmp10 (int i0, int i1, int i2, int i3, int i4, int i5, int i6, int i7, int i8, int i9) #else int cmp10 (i0, i1, i2, i3, i4, i5, i6, i7, i8, i9) int i0, i1, i2, i3, i4, i5, i6, i7, i8, i9; #endif { return (i0 == 0) && (i1 == 1) && (i2 == 2) && (i3 == 3) && (i4 == 4) && (i5 == 5) && (i6 == 6) && (i7 == 7) && (i8 == 8) && (i9 == 9); } /* Functions that expect specific values to be passed and return either 0 or 1, depending upon whether the values were passed incorrectly or correctly, respectively. */ #ifdef PROTOTYPES int t_char_values (char char_arg1, char char_arg2) #else int t_char_values (char_arg1, char_arg2) char char_arg1, char_arg2; #endif { return ((char_arg1 == char_val1) && (char_arg2 == char_val2)); } int #ifdef PROTOTYPES t_small_values (char arg1, short arg2, int arg3, char arg4, short arg5, char arg6, short arg7, int arg8, short arg9, short arg10) #else t_small_values (arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5, arg6, arg7, arg8, arg9, arg10) char arg1; short arg2; int arg3; char arg4; short arg5; char arg6; short arg7; int arg8; short arg9; short arg10; #endif { return arg1 + arg2 + arg3 + arg4 + arg5 + arg6 + arg7 + arg8 + arg9 + arg10; } #ifdef PROTOTYPES int t_short_values (short short_arg1, short short_arg2) #else int t_short_values (short_arg1, short_arg2) short short_arg1, short_arg2; #endif { return ((short_arg1 == short_val1) && (short_arg2 == short_val2)); } #ifdef PROTOTYPES int t_int_values (int int_arg1, int int_arg2) #else int t_int_values (int_arg1, int_arg2) int int_arg1, int_arg2; #endif { return ((int_arg1 == int_val1) && (int_arg2 == int_val2)); } #ifdef PROTOTYPES int t_long_values (long long_arg1, long long_arg2) #else int t_long_values (long_arg1, long_arg2) long long_arg1, long_arg2; #endif { return ((long_arg1 == long_val1) && (long_arg2 == long_val2)); } /* NOTE: THIS FUNCTION MUST NOT BE PROTOTYPED!!!!! There must be one version of "t_float_values" (this one) that is not prototyped, and one (if supported) that is (following). That way GDB can be tested against both cases. */ int t_float_values (float_arg1, float_arg2) float float_arg1, float_arg2; { return ((float_arg1 - float_val1) < DELTA && (float_arg1 - float_val1) > -DELTA && (float_arg2 - float_val2) < DELTA && (float_arg2 - float_val2) > -DELTA); } int #ifdef NO_PROTOTYPES /* In this case we are just duplicating t_float_values, but that is the easiest way to deal with either ANSI or non-ANSI. */ t_float_values2 (float_arg1, float_arg2) float float_arg1, float_arg2; #else t_float_values2 (float float_arg1, float float_arg2) #endif { return ((float_arg1 - float_val1) < DELTA && (float_arg1 - float_val1) > -DELTA && (float_arg2 - float_val2) < DELTA && (float_arg2 - float_val2) > -DELTA); } #ifdef PROTOTYPES int t_double_values (double double_arg1, double double_arg2) #else int t_double_values (double_arg1, double_arg2) double double_arg1, double_arg2; #endif { return ((double_arg1 - double_val1) < DELTA && (double_arg1 - double_val1) > -DELTA && (double_arg2 - double_val2) < DELTA && (double_arg2 - double_val2) > -DELTA); } #ifdef PROTOTYPES int t_string_values (char *string_arg1, char *string_arg2) #else int t_string_values (string_arg1, string_arg2) char *string_arg1, *string_arg2; #endif { return (!strcmp (string_arg1, string_val1) && !strcmp (string_arg2, string_val2)); } #ifdef PROTOTYPES int t_char_array_values (char char_array_arg1[], char char_array_arg2[]) #else int t_char_array_values (char_array_arg1, char_array_arg2) char char_array_arg1[], char_array_arg2[]; #endif { return (!strcmp (char_array_arg1, char_array_val1) && !strcmp (char_array_arg2, char_array_val2)); } /* This used to simply compare the function pointer arguments with known values for func_val1 and func_val2. Doing so is valid ANSI code, but on some machines (RS6000, HPPA, others?) it may fail when called directly by GDB. In a nutshell, it's not possible for GDB to determine when the address of a function or the address of the function's stub/trampoline should be passed. So, to avoid GDB lossage in the common case, we perform calls through the various function pointers and compare the return values. For the HPPA at least, this allows the common case to work. If one wants to try something more complicated, pass the address of a function accepting a "double" as one of its first 4 arguments. Call that function indirectly through the function pointer. This would fail on the HPPA. */ #ifdef PROTOTYPES int t_func_values (int (*func_arg1)(int, int), int (*func_arg2)(int)) #else int t_func_values (func_arg1, func_arg2) int (*func_arg1) PARAMS ((int, int)); int (*func_arg2) PARAMS ((int)); #endif { return ((*func_arg1) (5,5) == (*func_val1) (5,5) && (*func_arg2) (6) == (*func_val2) (6)); } #ifdef PROTOTYPES int t_call_add (int (*func_arg1)(int, int), int a, int b) #else int t_call_add (func_arg1, a, b) int (*func_arg1) PARAMS ((int, int)); int a, b; #endif { return ((*func_arg1)(a, b)); } /* Gotta have a main to be able to generate a linked, runnable executable, and also provide a useful place to set a breakpoint. */ int main () { #ifdef usestubs set_debug_traps(); breakpoint(); #endif malloc(1); t_double_values(double_val1, double_val2); t_structs_c(struct_val1); return 0 ; }