# This testcase is part of GDB, the GNU debugger. # Copyright 2009-2020 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/>. # Test GDB can cope with two watchpoints being hit by different threads at the # same time, GDB reports one of them and after "continue" to report the other # one GDB should not be confused by differently set watchpoints that time. # This is the goal of "reorder1". "reorder0" tests the basic functionality of # two watchpoints being hit at the same time, without reordering them during the # stop. The formerly broken functionality is due to the all-stop mode default # "show breakpoint always-inserted" being "off". Formerly the remembered hit # could be assigned during continuation of a thread with pending SIGTRAP to the # different/new watchpoint, just based on the watchpoint/debug register number. if {[skip_hw_watchpoint_access_tests] || [skip_hw_watchpoint_multi_tests] || ![istarget *-*-linux*]} { return 0 } standard_testfile if {[gdb_compile_pthreads "${srcdir}/${subdir}/${srcfile}" ${binfile} executable [list debug additional_flags=-lrt]] != "" } { return -1 } foreach reorder {0 1} { with_test_prefix "reorder$reorder" { clean_restart $testfile gdb_test "set can-use-hw-watchpoints 1" if ![runto_main] { return -1 } # Use "rwatch" as "watch" would report the watchpoint changed just based on its # read memory value during a stop by unrelated event. We are interested in not # losing the hardware watchpoint trigger. gdb_test "rwatch thread1_rwatch" "Hardware read watchpoint \[0-9\]+: thread1_rwatch" set test "rwatch thread2_rwatch" gdb_test_multiple $test $test { -re "Target does not support this type of hardware watchpoint\\.\r\n$gdb_prompt $" { # ppc64 supports at most 1 hw watchpoints. unsupported $test return } -re "Hardware read watchpoint \[0-9\]+: thread2_rwatch\r\n$gdb_prompt $" { pass $test } } gdb_breakpoint [gdb_get_line_number "break-at-exit"] # The watchpoints can happen in arbitrary order depending on random: # SEL: Found 2 SIGTRAP events, selecting #[01] # As GDB contains no srand() on the specific host/OS it will behave always the # same. Such order cannot be guaranteed for GDB in general. gdb_test "continue" \ "Hardware read watchpoint \[0-9\]+: thread\[12\]_rwatch\r\n\r\nValue = 0\r\n0x\[0-9a-f\]+ in thread\[12\]_func .*" \ "continue a" if $reorder { # GDB orders watchpoints by their addresses so inserting new variables # with lower addresses will shift the former watchpoints to higher # debug registers. gdb_test "rwatch unused1_rwatch" "Hardware read watchpoint \[0-9\]+: unused1_rwatch" gdb_test "rwatch unused2_rwatch" "Hardware read watchpoint \[0-9\]+: unused2_rwatch" } gdb_test "continue" \ "Hardware read watchpoint \[0-9\]+: thread\[12\]_rwatch\r\n\r\nValue = 0\r\n0x\[0-9a-f\]+ in thread\[12\]_func .*" \ "continue b" # While the debug output itself is not checked in this testcase one bug was # found in the DEBUG_INFRUN code path. gdb_test "set debug infrun 1" gdb_continue_to_breakpoint "break-at-exit" ".*break-at-exit.*" }} |