# Copyright 2014-2022 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 that when following an exec, we don't try to insert breakpoints # in the new image at the addresses the symbols had before the exec. standard_testfile # Build two copies of the program, each linked at a different address. # The address of "main" in the first binary should end up being an # unmapped address in the second binary. set objfile ${binfile}.o set exec1 ${binfile}1 set exec2 ${binfile}2 if { [gdb_compile [file join $srcdir $subdir $srcfile] $objfile \ object [list debug]] != "" } { untested "failed to compile" return -1 } if { [gdb_compile $objfile $exec1 executable {debug text_segment=0x1000000}] != "" || [gdb_compile $objfile $exec2 executable {debug text_segment=0x2000000}] != ""} { untested "link failed" return -1 } # First check whether the address of "main" in exec1 is readable in # exec2. If it is, then skip the test as unsupported. clean_restart ${exec1} if {![runto_main]} { return -1 } set addr "" set test "main address first" gdb_test_multiple "p/x &main" $test { -re " = (0x\[0-9a-f\]+)\r\n$gdb_prompt $" { set addr $expect_out(1,string) pass $test } } clean_restart ${exec2} if {![runto_main]} { return -1 } set cannot_access 0 set test "probe memory access" gdb_test_multiple "x $addr" $test { -re "Cannot access memory at address .*$gdb_prompt $" { set cannot_access 1 pass $test } -re ".*$gdb_prompt $" { pass $test } } if {!$cannot_access} { unsupported "main address is readable in second binary" return } # The test proper. ALWAYS_INSERTED indicates whether testing in # "breakpoint always-inserted" mode. proc test { always_inserted } { global exec1 global gdb_prompt clean_restart ${exec1} gdb_test_no_output "set breakpoint always-inserted $always_inserted" if {![runto_main]} { return -1 } # Set a second breakpoint (whose original address also ends up # unmmapped after the exec), for PR 19548. gdb_test "break some_function" "Breakpoint .*" # PR17431: with always-inserted on, we'd see: # (gdb) continue # Continuing. # Warning: # Cannot insert breakpoint 1. # Cannot access memory at address 0x10000ff # PR 19548: with more than one breakpoint, we'd see: # (gdb) continue # Continuing. # process (...) is executing new program: (...)/execl-update-breakpoints2 # Error in re-setting breakpoint 1: Warning: # Cannot insert breakpoint 2. # Cannot access memory at address 0x1000764 set not_nl "\[^\r\n\]*" set regex "" append regex \ "^continue\r\n" \ "Continuing\\.\r\n" \ "${not_nl} is executing new program: ${not_nl}\r\n" \ "(Reading ${not_nl} from remote target\\.\\.\\.\r\n)*" \ "(?:.Thread debugging using .*? enabled.\r\nUsing .*? library .*?\\.\r\n)?" \ "\r\n" \ "Breakpoint 1, main.*$gdb_prompt $" set message "continue across exec" gdb_test_multiple "continue" $message { -re $regex { pass $message } } } foreach always_inserted { "off" "on" } { with_test_prefix "always-inserted $always_inserted" { test $always_inserted } }