assertEquals is a deprecated alias for assertEqual and has been removed
in Python 3.12. This wasn't an issue previously because we used a
vendored version of the unittest module. Now that we use the built-in
version this gets updated together with the Python version used to run
the test suite.
This is an ongoing series of commits that are reformatting our Python
code. Reformatting is done with `black` (23.1.0).
If you end up having problems merging this commit because you have made
changes to a python file, the best way to handle that is to run `git
checkout --ours <yourfile>` and then reformat it with black.
RFC: https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-document-and-standardize-python-code-style
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D151460
In API tests, replace use of the `p` alias with the `expression` command.
To avoid conflating tests of the alias with tests of the expression command,
this patch canonicalizes to the use `expression`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141539
This commit improves upon cc0b5ebf7fc8, which added support for
specifying which libcxx to use when testing LLDB. That patch honored
requests by tests that had `USE_LIBCPP=1` defined in their makefiles.
Now, we also use a non-default libcxx if all conditions below are true:
1. The test is not explicitly requesting the use of libstdcpp
(USE_LIBSTDCPP=1).
2. The test is not explicitly requesting the use of the system's
library (USE_SYSTEM_STDLIB=1).
3. A path to libcxx was either provided by the user through CMake flags
or libcxx was built together with LLDB.
Condition (2) is new and introduced in this patch in order to support
tests that are either:
* Cross-platform (such as API/macosx/macCatalyst and
API/tools/lldb-server). The just-built libcxx is usually not built for
platforms other than the host's.
* Cross-language (such as API/lang/objc/exceptions). In this case, the
Objective C runtime throws an exceptions that always goes through the
system's libcxx, instead of the just built libcxx. Fixing this would
require either changing the install-name of the just built libcxx in Mac
systems, or tuning the DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH variable at runtime.
Some other tests exposes limitations of LLDB when running with a debug
standard library. TestDbgInfoContentForwardLists had an assertion
removed, as it was checking for buggy LLDB behavior (which now
crashes). TestFixIts had a variable renamed, as the old name clashes
with a standard library name when debug info is present. This is a known
issue: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/34391.
For `TestSBModule`, the way the "main" module is found was changed to
look for the "a.out" module, instead of relying on the index being 0. In
some systems, the index 0 is dyld when a custom standard library is
used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132940
This commit improves upon cc0b5ebf7fc8, which added support for
specifying which libcxx to use when testing LLDB. That patch honored
requests by tests that had `USE_LIBCPP=1` defined in their makefiles.
Now, we also use a non-default libcxx if all conditions below are true:
1. The test is not explicitly requesting the use of libstdcpp
(USE_LIBSTDCPP=1).
2. The test is not explicitly requesting the use of the system's
library (USE_SYSTEM_STDLIB=1).
3. A path to libcxx was either provided by the user through CMake flags
or libcxx was built together with LLDB.
Condition (2) is new and introduced in this patch in order to support
tests that are either:
* Cross-platform (such as API/macosx/macCatalyst and
API/tools/lldb-server). The just-built libcxx is usually not built for
platforms other than the host's.
* Cross-language (such as API/lang/objc/exceptions). In this case, the
Objective C runtime throws an exceptions that always goes through the
system's libcxx, instead of the just built libcxx. Fixing this would
require either changing the install-name of the just built libcxx in Mac
systems, or tuning the DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH variable at runtime.
Some other tests exposes limitations of LLDB when running with a debug
standard library. TestDbgInfoContentForwardLists had an assertion
removed, as it was checking for buggy LLDB behavior (which now
crashes). TestFixIts had a variable renamed, as the old name clashes
with a standard library name when debug info is present. This is a known
issue: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/34391.
For `TestSBModule`, the way the "main" module is found was changed to
look for the "a.out" module, instead of relying on the index being 0. In
some systems, the index 0 is dyld when a custom standard library is
used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132940
Eliminate boilerplate of having each test manually assign to `mydir` by calling
`compute_mydir` in lldbtest.py.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128077
Add preconditions to `TestBase.expect()` that catch semantically invalid calls
that happen to succeed anyway. This also fixes the broken callsites caught by
these checks.
This prevents the following incorrect calls:
1. `self.expect("lldb command", "some substr")`
2. `self.expect("lldb command", "assert message", "some substr")`
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88792
This patch is similar in spirit to https://reviews.llvm.org/D84480,
but does the maccatalyst/macosx disambiguation. I also took the
opportunity to factor out the gdb-remote packet log scanning used by
several testcases into lldbutil functions.
rdar://problem/66059257
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84576