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[/] [openrisc/] [trunk/] [gnu-src/] [gdb-7.2/] [gdb/] [testsuite/] [gdb.cp/] [psmang.exp] - Rev 478
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# Copyright 2002, 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/>.# This file is part of the gdb testsuite# Looking up methods by name, in programs with multiple compilation units.# ====== PLEASE BE VERY CAREFUL WHEN CHANGING THIS TEST. =====## The bug we're testing for (circa October 2002) is very sensitive to# various conditions that are hard to control directly in the test# suite. If you change the test, please revert this change, and make# sure the test still fails:## 2002-08-29 Jim Blandy <jimb@redhat.com>## * symtab.c (lookup_symbol_aux): In the cases where we find a# minimal symbol of an appropriate name and use its address to# select a symtab to read and search, use `name' (as passed to us)# as the demangled name when searching the symtab's global and# static blocks, not the minsym's name.## The original bug was that you'd try to set a breakpoint on a method# (e.g., `break s::method1'), and you'd get an error, but if you# repeated the command, it would work the second time:## (gdb) break s::method1# the class s does not have any method named method1# Hint: try 's::method1<TAB> or 's::method1<ESC-?># (Note leading single quote.)# (gdb) break s::method1# Breakpoint 1 at 0x804841b: file psmang1.cc, line 13.# (gdb)## We observed this bug first using Stabs, and then using Dwarf 2.## The problem was in lookup_symbol_aux: when looking up s::method1, it# would fail to find it in any symtabs, find the minsym with the# corresponding mangled name (say, `_ZN1S7method1Ev'), pass the# minsym's address to find_pc_sect_symtab to look up the symtab# (causing the compilation unit's full symbols to be read in), and# then look up the symbol in that symtab's global block. All that is# correct. However, it would pass the minsym's name as the NAME# argument to lookup_block_symbol; a minsym's name is mangled, whereas# lookup_block_symbol's NAME argument should be demangled.## This is a pretty simple bug, but it turns out to be a bear to# construct a test for. That's why this test case is so delicate. If# you can see how to make it less so, please contribute a patch.## Here are the twists:## The bug only manifests itself when we call lookup_symbol to look up# a method name (like "s::method1" or "s::method2"), and that method's# definition is in a compilation unit for which we have read partial# symbols, but not full symbols. The partial->full conversion must be# caused by that specific lookup. (If we already have full symbols# for the method's compilation unit, we won't need to look up the# minsym, find the symtab for the minsym's address, and then call# lookup_block_symbol; it's that last call where things go awry.)## Now, when asked to set a breakpoint at `s::method1', GDB will first# look up `s' to see if that is, in fact, the name of a class, and# then look up 's::method1'. So we have to make sure that looking up# `s' doesn't cause full symbols to be read for the compilation unit# containing the definition of `s::method1'.## The partial symbol tables for `psmang1.cc' and `psmang2.cc' will# both have entries for `s'; GDB will read full symbols for whichever# compilation unit's partial symbol table appears first in the# objfile's list. The order in which compilation units appear in the# partial symbol table list depends on how the program is linked, and# how the debug info reader does the partial symbol scan. Ideally,# the test shouldn't rely on them appearing in any particular order.## So, since we don't know which compilation unit's full symbols are# going to get read, we simply try looking up one method from each of# the two compilation units. One of them has to come after the other# in the partial symbol table list, so whichever comes later will# still need its partial symbols read by the time we go to look up# 's::methodX'.## Second twist: don't move the common definition of `struct s' into a# header file. If the compiler emits identical stabs for the# #inclusion of that header file into psmang1.cc and into psmang2.cc,# then the linker will do stabs compression, and replace one of the# BINCL/EINCL regions with an EXCL stab, pointing to the other# BINCL/EINCL region. GDB will read this, and record that the# compilation unit that got the EXCL depends on the compilation unit# that kept the BINCL/EINCL. Then, when it decides it needs to read# full symbols for the former, it'll also read full symbols for the# latter. Now, if it just so happens that the compilation unit that# got the EXCL is also the first one with a definition of `s' in the# partial symbol table list, then that first probe for `s' will cause# both compilation units' full symbols to be read --- again defeating# the test.## We could work around this by having three compilation units, or by# ensuring that the header file produces different stabs each time# it's #included, but it seems simplest just to avoid compilation unit# dependencies altogether, drop the header file, and duplicate the# (pretty trivial) struct definition.## Note that #including any header file at all into both compilation# units --- say, <stdio.h> --- could create this sort of dependency.## This is the aspect of the test which the debug format is most likely# to affect, I think. The different formats create different kinds of# inter-CU dependencies, which could mask the bug. It might be# possible for the test to check that at least one of the partial# symtabs remains unread, and fail otherwise --- the failure# indicating that the test itself isn't going to catch the bug it was# meant to, not that GDB is misbehaving.## Third twist: given the way lookup_block_symbol is written, it's# possible to find the symbol even when it gets passed a mangled name# for its NAME parameter. There are three ways lookup_block_symbol# might search a block, depending on how it was constructed:## linear search. In this case, this bug will never manifest itself,# since we check every symbol against NAME using SYMBOL_MATCHES_NAME.# Since that macro checks its second argument (NAME) against both the# mangled and demangled names of the symbol, this will always find the# symbol successfully, so, no bug.## hash table. If both the mangled and demangled names hash to the# same bucket, then you'll again find the symbol "by accident", since# we search the entire bucket using SYMBOL_SOURCE_NAME. Since GDB# chooses the number of buckets based on the number of symbols, small# compilation units may have only one hash bucket; in this case, the# search always succeeds, even though we hashed on the wrong name.# This test works around that by having a lot of dummy variables,# making it less likely that the mangled and demangled names fall in# the same bucket.## binary search. (GDB 5.2 produced these sorts of blocks, and this# test tries to detect the bug there, but subsequent versions of GDB# almost never build them, and they may soon be removed entirely.) In# this case, the symbols in the block are sorted by their# SYMBOL_SOURCE_NAME (whose behavior depends on the current demangling# setting, so that's wrong, but let's try to stay focussed).# lookup_block_symbol does a binary search comparing NAME with# SYMBOL_SOURCE_NAME until the range has been narrowed down to only a# few symbols; then it starts a linear search forward from the lower# end of that range, until it reaches a symbol whose# SYMBOL_SOURCE_NAME follows NAME in lexicographic order. This means# that, if you're doing a binary search for a mangled name in a block# sorted by SYMBOL_SOURCE_NAME, you might find the symbol `by# accident' if the mangled and demangled names happen to fall near# each other in the ordering. The initial version of this patch used# a class called `S'; all the other symbols in the compilation unit# started with lower-case letters, so the demangled name `S::method1'# sorted at the same place as the mangled name `_ZN1S7method1Ev': at# the very beginning. Using a lower-case 's' as the name ensures that# the demangled name falls after all the dummy symbols introduced for# the hash table, as described above.## This is all so tortured, someone will probably come up with still# other ways this test could fail to do its job. If you need to make# revisions, please be very careful.if $tracelevel then {strace $tracelevel}## test running programs#if { [skip_cplus_tests] } { continue }set testfile "psmang"set binfile ${objdir}/${subdir}/${testfile}if [get_compiler_info ${binfile} "c++"] {return -1;}if { [gdb_compile "${srcdir}/${subdir}/${testfile}1.cc" "${testfile}1.o" object {debug c++}] != "" } {untested psmang.expreturn -1}if { [gdb_compile "${srcdir}/${subdir}/${testfile}2.cc" "${testfile}2.o" object {debug c++}] != "" } {untested psmang.expreturn -1}if { [gdb_compile "${testfile}1.o ${testfile}2.o" ${binfile} executable {debug c++}] != "" } {untested psmang.expreturn -1}gdb_exitgdb_startgdb_reinitialize_dir $srcdir/$subdirgdb_load ${binfile}gdb_test "break s::method1" "Breakpoint .* at .*: file .*psmang1.cc.*"# We have to exit and restart GDB here, to make sure that all the# compilation units are psymtabs again.gdb_exitgdb_startgdb_reinitialize_dir $srcdir/$subdirgdb_load ${binfile}gdb_test "break s::method2" "Breakpoint .* at .*: file .*psmang2.cc.*"
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