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https://opencores.org/ocsvn/openrisc_2011-10-31/openrisc_2011-10-31/trunk
Subversion Repositories openrisc_2011-10-31
[/] [openrisc/] [trunk/] [gnu-src/] [gdb-7.1/] [gdb/] [testsuite/] [gdb.base/] [sepdebug.c] - Rev 252
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/* Copyright 1994, 1995, 1999, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 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/>. */ #ifdef vxworks # include <stdio.h> /* VxWorks does not supply atoi. */ static int atoi (z) char *z; { int i = 0; while (*z >= '0' && *z <= '9') i = i * 10 + (*z++ - '0'); return i; } /* I don't know of any way to pass an array to VxWorks. This function can be called directly from gdb. */ vxmain (arg) char *arg; { char *argv[2]; argv[0] = ""; argv[1] = arg; main (2, argv, (char **) 0); } #else /* ! vxworks */ # include <stdio.h> # include <stdlib.h> #endif /* ! vxworks */ /* * The following functions do nothing useful. They are included simply * as places to try setting breakpoints at. They are explicitly * "one-line functions" to verify that this case works (some versions * of gcc have or have had problems with this). */ #ifdef PROTOTYPES int marker1 (void) { return (0); } int marker2 (int a) { return (1); } /* set breakpoint 8 here */ void marker3 (char *a, char *b) {} void marker4 (long d) {} /* set breakpoint 14 here */ #else int marker1 () { return (0); } int marker2 (a) int a; { return (1); } /* set breakpoint 9 here */ void marker3 (a, b) char *a, *b; {} void marker4 (d) long d; {} /* set breakpoint 13 here */ #endif /* * This simple classical example of recursion is useful for * testing stack backtraces and such. */ #ifdef PROTOTYPES int factorial(int); int main (int argc, char **argv, char **envp) #else int main (argc, argv, envp) int argc; char *argv[], **envp; #endif { #ifdef usestubs set_debug_traps(); /* set breakpoint 5 here */ breakpoint(); #endif if (argc == 12345) { /* an unlikely value < 2^16, in case uninited */ /* set breakpoint 6 here */ fprintf (stderr, "usage: factorial <number>\n"); return 1; } printf ("%d\n", factorial (atoi ("6"))); /* set breakpoint 1 here */ /* set breakpoint 12 here */ marker1 (); /* set breakpoint 11 here */ marker2 (43); marker3 ("stack", "trace"); marker4 (177601976L); argc = (argc == 12345); /* This is silly, but we can step off of it */ /* set breakpoint 2 here */ return argc; /* set breakpoint 10 here */ } #ifdef PROTOTYPES int factorial (int value) #else int factorial (value) int value; #endif { if (value > 1) { /* set breakpoint 7 here */ value *= factorial (value - 1); } return (value); } #ifdef PROTOTYPES int multi_line_if_conditional (int a, int b, int c) #else int multi_line_if_conditional (a, b, c) int a, b, c; #endif { if (a /* set breakpoint 3 here */ && b && c) return 0; else return 1; } #ifdef PROTOTYPES int multi_line_while_conditional (int a, int b, int c) #else int multi_line_while_conditional (a, b, c) int a, b, c; #endif { while (a /* set breakpoint 4 here */ && b && c) { a--, b--, c--; } return 0; }
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