# Copyright 2009-2014 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 . load_lib "ada.exp" standard_ada_testfile foo if {[gdb_compile_ada "${srcfile}" "${binfile}" executable [list debug ]] != "" } { return -1 } clean_restart ${testfile} set bp_location [gdb_get_line_number "STOP_HERE" ${testdir}/foo.adb] runto "foo.adb:$bp_location" # Make sure that all tasks appear in the "info tasks" listing, and # that the active task is the environment task. gdb_test "info tasks" \ [join {" +ID +TID P-ID Pri State +Name" \ "\\* +1 .* main_task" \ " +2 .* task_list\\(1\\)" \ " +3 .* task_list\\(2\\)" \ " +4 .* task_list\\(3\\)"} \ "\r\n"] \ "info tasks before inserting breakpoint" # Insert a breakpoint that should stop only if task 1 stops. Since # task 1 never calls break_me, this shouldn't actually ever trigger. # The fact that this breakpoint is created _before_ the next one # matters. GDB used to have a bug where it would report the first # breakpoint in the list that matched the triggered-breakpoint's # address, no matter which task it was specific to. gdb_test "break break_me task 1" "Breakpoint .* at .*" # Now, insert a breakpoint that should stop only if task 3 stops, and # extract its number. set bp_number -1 set test "break break_me task 3" gdb_test_multiple $test $test { -re "Breakpoint (.*) at .*$gdb_prompt $" { set bp_number $expect_out(1,string) pass $test } } if {$bp_number < 0} { return } # Continue to that breakpoint. Task 2 should hit it first, and GDB # is expected to ignore that hit and resume the execution. Only then # task 3 will hit our breakpoint, and GDB is expected to stop at that # point. Also make sure that GDB reports the correct breakpoint number. gdb_test "continue" \ ".*Breakpoint $bp_number, foo.break_me \\(\\).*" \ "continue to breakpoint" # Check that it is indeed task 3 that hit the breakpoint by checking # which is the active task. gdb_test "info tasks" \ [join {" +ID +TID P-ID Pri State +Name" \ " +1 .* main_task" \ " +2 .* task_list\\(1\\)" \ "\\* +3 .* task_list\\(2\\)" \ " +4 .* task_list\\(3\\)"} \ "\r\n"] \ "info tasks after hitting breakpoint" # Now, resume the execution and make sure that GDB does not stop when # task 4 hits the breakpoint. Continuing thus results in our program # running to completion. gdb_continue_to_end "" continue 1