# Copyright 2012-2014 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 . */ if {[skip_shlib_tests]} { return -1 } set executable print-file-var-main set lib1 "print-file-var-lib1" set lib2 "print-file-var-lib2" set libobj1 [standard_output_file ${lib1}.so] set libobj2 [standard_output_file ${lib2}.so] set lib_opts { debug additional_flags=-fPIC } if { [gdb_compile_shlib ${srcdir}/${subdir}/${lib1}.c \ ${libobj1} \ ${lib_opts} ] != "" } { return -1 } if { [gdb_compile_shlib ${srcdir}/${subdir}/${lib2}.c \ ${libobj2} \ ${lib_opts} ] != "" } { return -1 } if { [gdb_compile "${srcdir}/${subdir}/${executable}.c" \ [standard_output_file ${executable}] \ executable \ [list debug shlib=${libobj1} shlib=${libobj2}]] != ""} { return -1 } clean_restart $executable gdb_load_shlibs $libobj1 $libobj2 if ![runto_main] { untested "could not run to main" return -1 } # Try printing "this_version_num" qualified with the name of the file # where the variables are defined. There are two global variables # with that name, and some systems such as GNU/Linux merge them # into one single entity, while some other systems such as Windows # keep them separate. In the first situation, we have to verify # that GDB does not randomly select the wrong instance, even when # a specific filename is used to qualified the lookup. And in the # second case, we have to verify that GDB does select the instance # defined in the given filename. # # To avoid adding target-specific code in this testcase, the program # sets two local variable named 'v1' and 'v2' with the value of # our global variables. This allows us to compare the value that # GDB returns for each query against the actual value seen by # the program itself. # Get past the initialization of variables 'v1' and 'v2'. set bp_location \ [gdb_get_line_number "STOP" "${executable}.c"] gdb_test "break $executable.c:$bp_location" \ "Breakpoint \[0-9\]+ at 0x\[0-9a-fA-F\]+: .*" \ "breapoint past v1 & v2 initialization" gdb_test "continue" \ "Breakpoint \[0-9\]+, main \\(\\) at.*" \ "continue to STOP marker" # Now check the value of this_version_id in both print-file-var-lib1.c # and print-file-var-lib2.c. gdb_test "print 'print-file-var-lib1.c'::this_version_id == v1" \ " = 1" gdb_test "print 'print-file-var-lib2.c'::this_version_id == v2" \ " = 1"