old-cross-binutils/gdb/testsuite/boards/native-stdio-gdbserver.exp

123 lines
3.7 KiB
Text

# Copyright 2011-2014 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 <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
# This file is a dejagnu "board file" and is used to run the testsuite
# natively with gdbserver using stdio for comms.
#
# To use this file:
# bash$ cd ${build_dir}/gdb
# bash$ make check RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=native-stdio-gdbserver"
load_generic_config "gdbserver"
load_board_description "gdbserver-base"
# This gdbserver can only run a process once per session.
set_board_info gdb,do_reload_on_run 1
# There's no support for argument-passing (yet).
set_board_info noargs 1
# Hack into sockethost to pass our peculiar remote connection string.
set_board_info sockethost "stdio"
set_board_info gdb,socketport ""
set_board_info gdb,get_remote_address ${board}_get_remote_address
set_board_info use_gdb_stub 1
set_board_info exit_is_reliable 1
# We will be using the standard GDB remote protocol.
set_board_info gdb_protocol "remote"
# The argument to pass to "target remote".
# We build this once we know how the testsuite will start gdbserver.
set stdio_gdbserver_template "| @GDBSERVER_PROG@ @ARGS@ stdio @PROG_AND_ARGS@"
# Used to pass a value between ${board}_spawn and ${board}_get_remote_address.
set stdio_gdbserver_command "--unset--"
proc ${board}_get_remote_address { host port } {
global stdio_gdbserver_command
return $stdio_gdbserver_command
}
proc ${board}_build_remote_cmd { cmd } {
global stdio_gdbserver_template
# First parse $cmd, picking out the various pieces.
set gdbserver_prog [lindex $cmd 0]
set args ""
set len [llength $cmd]
for { set i 1 } { $i < $len } { incr i } {
set elm [lindex $cmd $i]
switch -- $elm {
--multi {
set args "$args $elm"
}
--once {
set args "$args $elm"
}
default {
break
}
}
}
set prog_and_args [lrange $cmd $i end]
set buf $stdio_gdbserver_template
regsub {@GDBSERVER_PROG@} $buf $gdbserver_prog buf
regsub {@ARGS@} $buf $args buf
regsub {@PROG_AND_ARGS@} $buf $prog_and_args buf
return $buf
}
proc ${board}_spawn { board cmd } {
global board_info
verbose -log "${board}_spawn: $board $cmd"
# Convert the command to start gdbserver to something to pass to
# "target remote | ..." and save it for later retrieval by
# ${board}_get_remote_address.
global stdio_gdbserver_command
set stdio_gdbserver_command [${board}_build_remote_cmd $cmd]
verbose -log "gdbserver_command: $stdio_gdbserver_command"
set baseboard [lindex [split $board "/"] 0]
# We don't spawn gdbserver here, that is done by the subsequent
# "target remote | ..." command.
set board_info($baseboard,isremote) 0
# Pretend as if we've started gdbserver, provide the test harness
# with what it's waiting for.
set result [remote_spawn $board "echo Listening on stdio"]
set board_info($baseboard,isremote) 1
return $result
}
proc ${board}_exec { hostname program args } {
global board_info
set baseboard [lindex [split $hostname "/"] 0]
set board_info($baseboard,isremote) 0
set result [remote_exec $hostname $program $args]
set board_info($baseboard,isremote) 1
return $result
}