# Copyright 2021-2022 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 . # Test the 'maint set backtrace-on-fatal-signal' behaviour. Start up # GDB, turn on backtrace-on-fatal-signal, then send fatal signals to # GDB and ensure we see the backtrace. standard_testfile # The logic for sending signals to GDB might now work when using a # remote host (will the signal go to GDB, or the program that # established the connection to the remote host?), so just skip this # test for remote host setups. if {[is_remote host]} { untested $testfile return -1 } if {[prepare_for_testing "failed to prepare" $testfile $srcfile]} { return -1 } # Check we can run to main. If this works this time then we just # assume that it will work later on (when we repeatedly restart GDB). if ![runto_main] then { return -1 } # Check that the backtrace-on-fatal-signal feature is supported. If # this target doesn't have the backtrace function available then # trying to turn this on will give an error, in which case we just # skip this test. gdb_test_multiple "maint set backtrace-on-fatal-signal on" "" { -re "support for this feature is not compiled into GDB" { untested $testfile return -1 } -re "$gdb_prompt $" { pass $gdb_test_name } } # Now the actual test loop. foreach test_data {{SEGV "Segmentation fault"} \ {FPE "Floating point exception"} \ {BUS "Bus error"} \ {ABRT "Aborted"}} { set sig [lindex ${test_data} 0] set msg [lindex ${test_data} 1] with_test_prefix ${sig} { # Restart GDB. clean_restart $binfile # Capture the pid of GDB. set testpid [spawn_id_get_pid $gdb_spawn_id] # Start the inferior. runto_main # Turn on the backtrace-on-fatal-signal feature. gdb_test_no_output "maint set backtrace-on-fatal-signal on" # Flags for various bits of the output we expect to see, we # check for these in the gdb_test_multiple below. set saw_fatal_msg false set saw_bt_start false set saw_bt_end false set internal_error_msg_count 0 # Get the GDB core into the output directory, so that it # doesn't count as unexpected core in gdb.sum. gdb_test "cd [file dirname $binfile]" "Working directory .*" \ "cd to test directory" # Send the fatal signal to GDB. remote_exec host "kill -${sig} ${testpid}" # Scan GDB's output for the backtrace. As the output we get # here includes the standard "internal error" message, which # gdb_test_multiple will usually handle, we are forced to make # extensive use of the "-early" flag here so that all our # patterns are applied before gdb_test_multiple can check for # the internal error pattern. gdb_test_multiple "" "scan for backtrace" { -early -re "^\r\n" { exp_continue } -early -re "^Fatal signal: ${msg}\r\n" { set saw_fatal_msg true exp_continue } -early -re "^----- Backtrace -----\r\n" { set saw_bt_start true exp_continue } -early -re ".+\r\n---------------------\r\n" { set saw_bt_end true exp_continue } -early -re "^A fatal error internal to GDB has been detected, further\r\n" { incr internal_error_msg_count exp_continue } -early -re "^debugging is not possible. GDB will now terminate\\.\r\n" { incr internal_error_msg_count exp_continue } eof { # Catch the eof case as this indicates that GDB has # gone away, which in this case, is what we expect to # happen. gdb_assert { $saw_fatal_msg } gdb_assert { $saw_bt_start } gdb_assert { $saw_bt_end } gdb_assert { [expr $internal_error_msg_count == 2] } } -re "$gdb_prompt $" { # GDB should terminate, we should never get back to # the prompt. fail $gdb_test_name } } # GDB should be dead and gone by this point, but just to be # sure, force an exit. gdb_exit } }