llvm-project/lldb/test/source-manager/TestSourceManager.py
Tamas Berghammer c8fd130a2c Merge dwarf and dsym tests
Currently most of the test files have a separate dwarf and a separate
dsym test with almost identical content (only the build step is
different). With adding dwo symbol file handling to the test suit it
would increase this to a 3-way duplication. The purpose of this change
is to eliminate this redundancy with generating 2 test case (one dwarf
and one dsym) for each test function specified (dwo handling will be
added at a later commit).

Main design goals:
* There should be no boilerplate code in each test file to support the
  multiple debug info in most of the tests (custom scenarios are
  acceptable in special cases) so adding a new test case is easier and
  we can't miss one of the debug info type.
* In case of a test failure, the debug symbols used during the test run
  have to be cleanly visible from the output of dotest.py to make
  debugging easier both from build bot logs and from local test runs
* Each test case should have a unique, fully qualified name so we can
  run exactly 1 test with "-f <test-case>.<test-function>" syntax
* Test output should be grouped based on test files the same way as it
  happens now (displaying dwarf/dsym results separately isn't
  preferable)

Proposed solution (main logic in lldbtest.py, rest of them are test
cases fixed up for the new style):
* Have only 1 test fuction in the test files what will run for all
  debug info separately and this test function should call just
  "self.build(...)" to build an inferior with the right debug info
* When a class is created by python (the class object, not the class
  instance), we will generate a new test method for each debug info
  format in the test class with the name "<test-function>_<debug-info>"
  and remove the original test method. This way unittest2 see multiple
  test methods (1 for each debug info, pretty much as of now) and will
  handle the test selection and the failure reporting correctly (the
  debug info will be visible from the end of the test name)
* Add new annotation @no_debug_info_test to disable the generation of
  multiple tests for each debug info format when the test don't have an
  inferior

Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13028

llvm-svn: 248883
2015-09-30 10:12:40 +00:00

178 lines
6.7 KiB
Python

"""
Test lldb core component: SourceManager.
Test cases:
o test_display_source_python:
Test display of source using the SBSourceManager API.
o test_modify_source_file_while_debugging:
Test the caching mechanism of the source manager.
"""
import unittest2
import lldb
from lldbtest import *
import lldbutil
class SourceManagerTestCase(TestBase):
mydir = TestBase.compute_mydir(__file__)
def setUp(self):
# Call super's setUp().
TestBase.setUp(self)
# Find the line number to break inside main().
self.line = line_number('main.c', '// Set break point at this line.')
lldb.skip_build_and_cleanup = False
@python_api_test
def test_display_source_python(self):
"""Test display of source using the SBSourceManager API."""
self.build()
exe = os.path.join(os.getcwd(), "a.out")
self.runCmd("file " + exe, CURRENT_EXECUTABLE_SET)
target = self.dbg.CreateTarget(exe)
self.assertTrue(target, VALID_TARGET)
# Launch the process, and do not stop at the entry point.
process = target.LaunchSimple (None, None, self.get_process_working_directory())
#
# Exercise Python APIs to display source lines.
#
# Create the filespec for 'main.c'.
filespec = lldb.SBFileSpec('main.c', False)
source_mgr = self.dbg.GetSourceManager()
# Use a string stream as the destination.
stream = lldb.SBStream()
source_mgr.DisplaySourceLinesWithLineNumbers(filespec,
self.line,
2, # context before
2, # context after
"=>", # prefix for current line
stream)
# 2
# 3 int main(int argc, char const *argv[]) {
# => 4 printf("Hello world.\n"); // Set break point at this line.
# 5 return 0;
# 6 }
self.expect(stream.GetData(), "Source code displayed correctly",
exe=False,
patterns = ['=> %d.*Hello world' % self.line])
# Boundary condition testings for SBStream(). LLDB should not crash!
stream.Print(None)
stream.RedirectToFile(None, True)
def test_move_and_then_display_source(self):
"""Test that target.source-map settings work by moving main.c to hidden/main.c."""
self.build()
exe = os.path.join(os.getcwd(), "a.out")
self.runCmd("file " + exe, CURRENT_EXECUTABLE_SET)
# Move main.c to hidden/main.c.
main_c = "main.c"
main_c_hidden = os.path.join("hidden", main_c)
os.rename(main_c, main_c_hidden)
if self.TraceOn():
system([["ls"]])
system([["ls", "hidden"]])
# Restore main.c after the test.
self.addTearDownHook(lambda: os.rename(main_c_hidden, main_c))
# Set target.source-map settings.
self.runCmd("settings set target.source-map %s %s" % (os.getcwd(), os.path.join(os.getcwd(), "hidden")))
# And verify that the settings work.
self.expect("settings show target.source-map",
substrs = [os.getcwd(), os.path.join(os.getcwd(), "hidden")])
# Display main() and verify that the source mapping has been kicked in.
self.expect("source list -n main", SOURCE_DISPLAYED_CORRECTLY,
substrs = ['Hello world'])
def test_modify_source_file_while_debugging(self):
"""Modify a source file while debugging the executable."""
self.build()
exe = os.path.join(os.getcwd(), "a.out")
self.runCmd("file " + exe, CURRENT_EXECUTABLE_SET)
lldbutil.run_break_set_by_file_and_line (self, "main.c", self.line, num_expected_locations=1, loc_exact=True)
self.runCmd("run", RUN_SUCCEEDED)
# The stop reason of the thread should be breakpoint.
self.expect("thread list", STOPPED_DUE_TO_BREAKPOINT,
substrs = ['stopped',
'main.c:%d' % self.line,
'stop reason = breakpoint'])
# Display some source code.
self.expect("source list -f main.c -l %d" % self.line, SOURCE_DISPLAYED_CORRECTLY,
substrs = ['Hello world'])
# The '-b' option shows the line table locations from the debug information
# that indicates valid places to set source level breakpoints.
# The file to display is implicit in this case.
self.runCmd("source list -l %d -c 3 -b" % self.line)
output = self.res.GetOutput().splitlines()[0]
# If the breakpoint set command succeeded, we should expect a positive number
# of breakpoints for the current line, i.e., self.line.
import re
m = re.search('^\[(\d+)\].*// Set break point at this line.', output)
if not m:
self.fail("Fail to display source level breakpoints")
self.assertTrue(int(m.group(1)) > 0)
# Read the main.c file content.
with open('main.c', 'r') as f:
original_content = f.read()
if self.TraceOn():
print "original content:", original_content
# Modify the in-memory copy of the original source code.
new_content = original_content.replace('Hello world', 'Hello lldb', 1)
# This is the function to restore the original content.
def restore_file():
#print "os.path.getmtime() before restore:", os.path.getmtime('main.c')
time.sleep(1)
with open('main.c', 'wb') as f:
f.write(original_content)
if self.TraceOn():
with open('main.c', 'r') as f:
print "content restored to:", f.read()
# Touch the file just to be sure.
os.utime('main.c', None)
if self.TraceOn():
print "os.path.getmtime() after restore:", os.path.getmtime('main.c')
# Modify the source code file.
with open('main.c', 'wb') as f:
time.sleep(1)
f.write(new_content)
if self.TraceOn():
print "new content:", new_content
print "os.path.getmtime() after writing new content:", os.path.getmtime('main.c')
# Add teardown hook to restore the file to the original content.
self.addTearDownHook(restore_file)
# Display the source code again. We should see the updated line.
self.expect("source list -f main.c -l %d" % self.line, SOURCE_DISPLAYED_CORRECTLY,
substrs = ['Hello lldb'])
if __name__ == '__main__':
import atexit
lldb.SBDebugger.Initialize()
atexit.register(lambda: lldb.SBDebugger.Terminate())
unittest2.main()