
expectedFailureWindows is equivalent to using the general expectedFailureAll decorator with oslist="windows". Additionally, by moving towards these common decorators we can solve the issue of having to support decorators that can be called with or without arguments. Once all decorators are always called with arguments, and this is enforced by design (because you can't specify the condition you're decorating for without passing an argument) the implementation of the decorators can become much simpler Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16936 llvm-svn: 260134
66 lines
2.3 KiB
Python
66 lines
2.3 KiB
Python
"""Test that importing modules in C works as expected."""
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from __future__ import print_function
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from distutils.version import StrictVersion
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import os, time
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import platform
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import lldb
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from lldbsuite.test.decorators import *
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from lldbsuite.test.lldbtest import *
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from lldbsuite.test import lldbutil
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class CModulesTestCase(TestBase):
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mydir = TestBase.compute_mydir(__file__)
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@skipIfFreeBSD
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@expectedFailureDarwin('http://llvm.org/pr24302')
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@expectedFailureLinux('http://llvm.org/pr23456') # 'fopen' has unknown return type
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@expectedFailureAll(oslist=["windows"], bugnumber="llvm.org/pr24489: Name lookup not working correctly on Windows")
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def test_expr(self):
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if platform.system() == "Darwin" and platform.release() < StrictVersion('12.0.0'):
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self.skipTest()
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self.build()
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exe = os.path.join(os.getcwd(), "a.out")
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self.runCmd("file " + exe, CURRENT_EXECUTABLE_SET)
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# Break inside the foo function which takes a bar_ptr argument.
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lldbutil.run_break_set_by_file_and_line (self, "main.c", self.line, num_expected_locations=1, loc_exact=True)
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self.runCmd("run", RUN_SUCCEEDED)
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# The stop reason of the thread should be breakpoint.
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self.expect("thread list", STOPPED_DUE_TO_BREAKPOINT,
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substrs = ['stopped',
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'stop reason = breakpoint'])
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# The breakpoint should have a hit count of 1.
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self.expect("breakpoint list -f", BREAKPOINT_HIT_ONCE,
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substrs = [' resolved, hit count = 1'])
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self.expect("expr @import Darwin; 3", VARIABLES_DISPLAYED_CORRECTLY,
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substrs = ["int", "3"])
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self.expect("expr *fopen(\"/dev/zero\", \"w\")", VARIABLES_DISPLAYED_CORRECTLY,
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substrs = ["FILE", "_close", "__sclose"])
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self.expect("expr *myFile", VARIABLES_DISPLAYED_CORRECTLY,
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substrs = ["a", "5", "b", "9"])
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self.expect("expr MIN((uint64_t)2, (uint64_t)3)", VARIABLES_DISPLAYED_CORRECTLY,
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substrs = ["uint64_t", "2"])
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self.expect("expr stdin", VARIABLES_DISPLAYED_CORRECTLY,
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substrs = ["(FILE *)", "0x"])
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def setUp(self):
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# Call super's setUp().
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TestBase.setUp(self)
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# Find the line number to break inside main().
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self.line = line_number('main.c', '// Set breakpoint 0 here.')
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