old-cross-binutils/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/readline.exp
Patrick Palka b58c513b79 Read $GDBHISTSIZE instead of $HISTSIZE
The HISTSIZE environment variable is generally expected to be read by
shells, not by applications.  Some distros for example globally export
HISTSIZE in /etc/profile -- with the intention that it only affects
shells -- and by doing so it renders useless GDB's own mechanism for
setting the history size via .gdbinit.  Also, annoyances may arise when
HISTSIZE is not interpreted the same way by the shell and by GDB, e.g.
PR gdb/16999.  That can always be fixed on a shell-by-shell basis but it
may be impossible to be consistent with the behavior of all shells at
once.  Finally it just makes sense to not confound shell environment
variables with application environment variables.

gdb/ChangeLog:

	* NEWS: Mention that GDBHISTSIZE is read instead of HISTSIZE.
	* top.c (init_history): Read from GDBHISTSIZE instead of
	HISTSIZE.
	(init_main): Refer to GDBHISTSIZE instead of HISTSIZE.

gdb/doc/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.texinfo (Command History): Replace occurrences of HISTSIZE
	with GDBHISTSIZE.

gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:

	* gdb.base/gdbinit-history.exp: Replace occurrences of HISTSIZE
	with GDBHISTSIZE.
	* gdb.base/readline.exp: Likewise.
2015-06-17 14:03:50 -04:00

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# Copyright 2002-2015 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 <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
# This file was written by Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com>
# This file is part of the gdb testsuite.
#
# Tests for readline operations.
#
# This function is used to test operate-and-get-next.
# NAME is the name of the test.
# ARGS is a list of alternating commands and expected results.
proc operate_and_get_next {name args} {
global gdb_prompt
set my_gdb_prompt "($gdb_prompt| >)"
set reverse {}
foreach {item result} $args {
verbose "sending $item"
sleep 1
# We can't use gdb_test here because we might see a " >" prompt.
set status 0
send_gdb "$item\n"
gdb_expect {
-re "$item" {
# Ok
}
timeout {
set status 1
}
}
if {! $status} {
gdb_expect {
-re "$result" {
# Ok.
}
timeout {
set status 1
}
}
}
if {$status} {
fail "$name - send $item"
return 0
}
pass "$name - send $item"
set reverse [linsert $reverse 0 $item $result]
}
# Now use C-p to go back to the start.
foreach {item result} $reverse {
# Actually send C-p followed by C-l. This lets us recognize the
# command when gdb prints it again.
send_gdb "\x10\x0c"
set status 0
gdb_expect {
-re "$item" {
# Ok
}
timeout {
set status 1
}
}
if {$status} {
fail "$name - C-p to $item"
return 0
}
pass "$name - C-p to $item"
}
# Now C-o through the list. Don't send the command, since it is
# already there. Strip off the first command from the list so we
# can see the next command inside the loop.
set count 0
foreach {item result} $args {
set status 0
# If this isn't the first item, make sure we see the command at
# the prompt.
if {$count > 0} {
gdb_expect {
-re ".*$item" {
# Ok
}
timeout {
set status 1
}
}
}
if {! $status} {
# For the last item, send a simple \n instead of C-o.
if {$count == [llength $args] - 2} {
send_gdb "\n"
} else {
# 15 is C-o.
send_gdb [format %c 15]
}
set status 0
gdb_expect {
-re "$result" {
# Ok
}
timeout {
set status 1
}
}
}
if {$status} {
fail "$name - C-o for $item"
return 0
}
pass "$name - C-o for $item"
set count [expr {$count + 2}]
}
# Match the prompt so the next test starts at the right place.
gdb_test "" ".*" "$name - final prompt"
return 1
}
gdb_start
gdb_reinitialize_dir $srcdir/$subdir
if { ![readline_is_used] } {
unsupported "readline isn't used."
return -1
}
set oldtimeout1 $timeout
set timeout 30
# A simple test of operate-and-get-next.
operate_and_get_next "Simple operate-and-get-next" \
"p 1" ".* = 1" \
"p 2" ".* = 2" \
"p 3" ".* = 3"
# Test operate-and-get-next with a secondary prompt.
operate_and_get_next "operate-and-get-next with secondary prompt" \
"if 1 > 0" "" \
"p 5" "" \
"end" ".* = 5"
# Verify that arrow keys work in secondary prompts. The control
# sequence is a hard-coded VT100 up arrow.
gdb_test "print 42" "\\\$\[0-9\]* = 42"
set msg "arrow keys with secondary prompt"
gdb_test_multiple "if 1 > 0\n\033\[A\033\[A\nend" $msg {
-re ".*\\\$\[0-9\]* = 42\r\n$gdb_prompt $" {
pass $msg
}
-re ".*Undefined command:.*$gdb_prompt $" {
fail $msg
}
}
# Now repeat the first test with a history file that fills the entire
# history list.
if [info exists env(GDBHISTFILE)] {
set old_gdbhistfile $env(GDBHISTFILE)
}
if [info exists env(GDBHISTSIZE)] {
set old_gdbhistsize $env(GDBHISTSIZE)
}
set env(GDBHISTFILE) "${srcdir}/${subdir}/gdb_history"
set env(GDBHISTSIZE) "10"
gdb_exit
gdb_start
gdb_reinitialize_dir $srcdir/$subdir
operate_and_get_next "Simple operate-and-get-next" \
"p 7" ".* = 7" \
"p 8" ".* = 8" \
"p 9" ".* = 9"
# Restore globals modified in this test...
if [info exists old_gdbhistfile] {
set env(GDBHISTFILE) $old_gdbhistfile
} else {
unset env(GDBHISTFILE)
}
if [info exists old_gdbhistsize] {
set env(GDBHISTSIZE) $old_gdbhistsize
} else {
unset env(GDBHISTSIZE)
}
set timeout $oldtimeout1
return 0