| # This testcase is part of GDB, the GNU debugger. |
| |
| # Copyright 2001, 2004, 2007, 2008 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/>. |
| |
| # Please email any bugs, comments, and/or additions to this file to: |
| # bug-gdb@gnu.org |
| |
| # Test GDB's character set support. |
| |
| if $tracelevel then { |
| strace $tracelevel |
| } |
| |
| set prms_id 0 |
| set bug_id 0 |
| |
| set testfile "charset" |
| set srcfile ${testfile}.c |
| set binfile ${objdir}/${subdir}/${testfile} |
| if { [gdb_compile "${srcdir}/${subdir}/${srcfile}" "${binfile}" executable {debug}] != "" } { |
| untested "couldn't compile ${srcdir}/${subdir}/${srcfile}" |
| return -1 |
| } |
| |
| # Start with a fresh gdb. |
| gdb_exit |
| gdb_start |
| gdb_reinitialize_dir $srcdir/$subdir |
| gdb_load ${binfile} |
| |
| # Parse the output from a `show charset' command. Return the host |
| # and target charset as a two-element list. |
| proc parse_show_charset_output {testname} { |
| global gdb_prompt |
| |
| gdb_expect { |
| -re "The current host and target character set is `(.*)'\\.\[\r\n\]+$gdb_prompt $" { |
| set host_charset $expect_out(1,string) |
| set target_charset $expect_out(1,string) |
| set retlist [list $host_charset $target_charset] |
| pass $testname |
| } |
| -re "The current host character set is `(.*)'\\.\[\r\n\]+The current target character set is `(.*)'\\.\[\r\n\]+$gdb_prompt $" { |
| set host_charset $expect_out(1,string) |
| set target_charset $expect_out(2,string) |
| set retlist [list $host_charset $target_charset] |
| pass $testname |
| } |
| -re "The host character set is \"(.*)\"\\.\[\r\n\]+$gdb_prompt $" { |
| set host_charset $expect_out(1,string) |
| set retlist [list $host_charset] |
| pass $testname |
| } |
| -re "The target character set is \"(.*)\"\\.\[\r\n\]+$gdb_prompt $" { |
| set target_charset $expect_out(1,string) |
| set retlist [list $target_charset] |
| pass $testname |
| } |
| -re ".*$gdb_prompt $" { |
| fail $testname |
| } |
| timeout { |
| fail "$testname (timeout)" |
| } |
| } |
| |
| return $retlist |
| } |
| |
| |
| # Try the various `show charset' commands. These are all aliases of each |
| # other; `show target-charset' and `show host-charset' actually print |
| # both the host and target charsets. |
| |
| send_gdb "show charset\n" |
| set show_charset [parse_show_charset_output "show charset"] |
| |
| send_gdb "show target-charset\n" |
| set show_target_charset [parse_show_charset_output "show target-charset"] |
| |
| if {[lsearch $show_charset $show_target_charset] >= 0} { |
| pass "check `show target-charset' against `show charset'" |
| } else { |
| fail "check `show target-charset' against `show charset'" |
| } |
| |
| send_gdb "show host-charset\n" |
| set show_host_charset [parse_show_charset_output "show host-charset"] |
| |
| if {[lsearch $show_charset $show_host_charset] >= 0} { |
| pass "check `show host-charset' against `show charset'" |
| } else { |
| fail "check `show host-charset' against `show charset'" |
| } |
| |
| |
| # Get the list of supported (host) charsets as possible completions. |
| send_gdb "set charset \t\t" |
| |
| # Check that we can at least use ASCII as a host character set. |
| sleep 1 |
| gdb_expect { |
| -re "^set charset .*\r\nASCII.*\r\n$gdb_prompt set charset " { |
| # We got the output that we wanted, including ASCII as possible |
| # charset. Send a newline to get us back to the prompt. This will |
| # also generate an error message. Let's not check here that the error |
| # message makes sense, we do that below, as a separate testcase. |
| send_gdb "\n" |
| gdb_expect { |
| -re ".*Requires an argument.*$gdb_prompt $" { |
| pass "get valid character sets" |
| } |
| -re ".*$gdb_prompt $" { |
| send_gdb "\n" |
| gdb_expect { |
| -re ".*$gdb_prompt $" { |
| fail "get valid character sets" |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| timeout { |
| fail "(timeout) get valid character sets" |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| -re ".*$gdb_prompt $" { |
| # We got some output that ended with a regular prompt |
| fail "get valid character sets" |
| } |
| -re ".*$gdb_prompt set charset.*$" { |
| # We got some other output, send a cntrl-c to gdb to get us back |
| # to the prompt. |
| send_gdb "\003" |
| fail "get valid character sets" |
| } |
| timeout { |
| fail "get valid character sets (timeout)" |
| } |
| } |
| |
| # Try a malformed `set charset'. |
| gdb_test "set charset" \ |
| "Requires an argument. Valid arguments are.*" \ |
| "try malformed `set charset'" |
| |
| # Try using `set host-charset' on an invalid character set. |
| gdb_test "set host-charset my_grandma_bonnie" \ |
| "Undefined item: \"my_grandma_bonnie\"." \ |
| "try `set host-charset' with invalid charset" |
| |
| # Try using `set target-charset' on an invalid character set. |
| gdb_test "set target-charset my_grandma_bonnie" \ |
| "Undefined item: \"my_grandma_bonnie\"." \ |
| "try `set target-charset' with invalid charset" |
| |
| # A Tcl array mapping the names of all the character sets we've seen |
| # to "1" if the character set can be used as a host character set, or |
| # "0" otherwise. We can use `array names charsets' just to get a list |
| # of all character sets. |
| array set charsets {} |
| |
| proc all_charset_names {} { |
| global charsets |
| return [array names charsets] |
| } |
| |
| proc valid_host_charset {charset} { |
| global charsets |
| return $charsets($charset) |
| } |
| |
| send_gdb "set host-charset\n" |
| gdb_expect { |
| -re "Requires an argument. Valid arguments are (\[^ \t\n\r,.\]*)" { |
| #set host_charset_list $expect_out(1,string) |
| set charsets($expect_out(1,string)) 1 |
| exp_continue |
| #pass "capture valid host charsets" |
| } |
| |
| -re ", (\[^ \t\n\r,.\]*)" { |
| #set host_charset_list $expect_out(1,string) |
| set charsets($expect_out(1,string)) 1 |
| exp_continue |
| #pass "capture valid host charsets" |
| } |
| |
| -re "\\.\r\n$gdb_prompt $" { |
| #set host_charset_list $expect_out(1,string) |
| pass "capture valid host charsets" |
| } |
| |
| -re ".*$gdb_prompt $" { |
| fail "capture valid host charsets" |
| } |
| timeout { |
| fail "(timeout) capture valid host charsets" |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| send_gdb "set target-charset\n" |
| gdb_expect { |
| -re "Requires an argument. Valid arguments are (\[^ \t\n\r,.\]*)" { |
| set target_charset $expect_out(1,string) |
| if {! [info exists charsets($target_charset)]} { |
| set charsets($target_charset) 0 |
| } |
| exp_continue |
| } |
| |
| -re ", (\[^ \t\n\r,.\]*)" { |
| set target_charset $expect_out(1,string) |
| if {! [info exists charsets($target_charset)]} { |
| set charsets($target_charset) 0 |
| } |
| exp_continue |
| } |
| |
| -re "\\.\r\n$gdb_prompt $" { |
| pass "capture valid target charsets" |
| |
| } |
| |
| -re ".*$gdb_prompt $" { |
| fail "capture valid target charsets" |
| } |
| |
| timeout { |
| fail "(timeout) capture valid target charsets" |
| } |
| } |
| |
| # Make sure that GDB supports every host/target charset combination. |
| foreach host_charset [all_charset_names] { |
| if {[valid_host_charset $host_charset]} { |
| |
| set testname "try `set host-charset $host_charset'" |
| send_gdb "set host-charset $host_charset\n" |
| gdb_expect { |
| -re "GDB doesn't know of any character set named.*\[\r\n]+${gdb_prompt} $" { |
| # How did it get into `charsets' then? |
| fail "$testname (didn't recognize name)" |
| } |
| -re "GDB can't use `.*' as its host character set\\.\[\r\n]+${gdb_prompt} $" { |
| # Well, then why does its `charsets' entry say it can? |
| fail $testname |
| } |
| -re "${gdb_prompt} $" { |
| pass $testname |
| } |
| timeout { |
| fail "$testname (timeout)" |
| } |
| } |
| |
| # Check that the command actually had its intended effect: |
| # $host_charset should now be the host character set. |
| send_gdb "show charset\n" |
| set result [parse_show_charset_output "parse `show charset' after `set host-charset $host_charset'"] |
| if {! [string compare [lindex $result 0] $host_charset]} { |
| pass "check effect of `set host-charset $host_charset'" |
| } else { |
| fail "check effect of `set host-charset $host_charset'" |
| } |
| |
| # Now try setting every possible target character set, |
| # given that host charset. |
| foreach target_charset [all_charset_names] { |
| set testname "try `set target-charset $target_charset'" |
| send_gdb "set target-charset $target_charset\n" |
| gdb_expect { |
| -re "GDB doesn't know of any character set named.*\[\r\n]+${gdb_prompt} $" { |
| fail "$testname (didn't recognize name)" |
| } |
| -re "GDB can't convert from the .* character set to .*\\.\[\r\n\]+${gdb_prompt} $" { |
| # This is a serious problem. GDB should be able to convert |
| # between any arbitrary pair of character sets. |
| fail "$testname (can't convert)" |
| } |
| -re "${gdb_prompt} $" { |
| pass $testname |
| } |
| timeout { |
| fail "$testname (timeout)" |
| } |
| } |
| |
| # Check that the command actually had its intended effect: |
| # $target_charset should now be the target charset. |
| send_gdb "show charset\n" |
| set result [parse_show_charset_output "parse `show charset' after `set target-charset $target_charset'"] |
| if {! [string compare $result [list $host_charset $target_charset]]} { |
| pass "check effect of `set target-charset $target_charset'" |
| } else { |
| fail "check effect of `set target-charset $target_charset'" |
| } |
| |
| # Test handling of characters in the host charset which |
| # can't be translated into the target charset. \xA2 is |
| # `cent' in ISO-8859-1, which has no equivalent in ASCII. |
| # |
| # On some systems, the pseudo-tty through which we |
| # communicate with GDB insists on stripping the high bit |
| # from input characters, meaning that `cent' turns into |
| # `"'. Since ISO-8859-1 and ASCII are identical in the |
| # lower 128 characters, it's tough to see how we can test |
| # this behavior on such systems, so we just xfail it. |
| # |
| # Note: the \x16 (Control-V) is an escape to allow \xA2 to |
| # get past readline. |
| if {! [string compare $host_charset iso-8859-1] && ! [string compare $target_charset ascii]} { |
| |
| set testname "untranslatable character in character literal" |
| send_gdb "print '\x16\xA2'\n" |
| gdb_expect { |
| -re "There is no character corresponding to .* in the target character set .*\\.\[\r\n\]+$gdb_prompt $" { |
| pass $testname |
| } |
| -re " = 34 '\"'\[\r\n\]+$gdb_prompt $" { |
| xfail "$testname (DejaGNU's pseudo-tty strips eighth bit)" |
| } |
| -re "$gdb_prompt $" { |
| fail $testname |
| } |
| timeout { |
| fail "$testname (timeout)" |
| } |
| } |
| |
| set testname "untranslatable character in string literal" |
| # If the PTTY zeros bit seven, then this turns into |
| # print """ |
| # which gets us a syntax error. We don't care. |
| send_gdb "print \"\x16\xA2\"\n" |
| gdb_expect { |
| -re "There is no character corresponding to .* in the target character set .*\\.\[\r\n\]+$gdb_prompt $" { |
| pass $testname |
| } |
| -re "Unterminated string in expression.\[\r\n\]+$gdb_prompt $" { |
| xfail "$testname (DejaGNU's pseudo-tty strips eighth bit)" |
| } |
| -re "$gdb_prompt $" { |
| fail $testname |
| } |
| timeout { |
| fail "$testname (timeout)" |
| } |
| } |
| |
| set testname "untranslatable characters in backslash escape" |
| send_gdb "print '\\\x16\xA2'\n" |
| gdb_expect { |
| -re "The escape sequence .* is equivalent to plain .*, which has no equivalent\[\r\n\]+in the .* character set\\.\[\r\n\]+$gdb_prompt $" { |
| pass $testname |
| } |
| -re " = 34 '\"'\[\r\n\]+$gdb_prompt $" { |
| xfail "$testname (DejaGNU's pseudo-tty strips eighth bit)" |
| } |
| -re "$gdb_prompt $" { |
| fail $testname |
| } |
| timeout { |
| fail "$testname (timeout)" |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| # Set the host character set to plain ASCII, and try actually printing |
| # some strings in various target character sets. We need to run the |
| # test program to the point at which the strings have been |
| # initialized. |
| gdb_test "break ${srcfile}:[gdb_get_line_number "all strings initialized"]" \ |
| ".*Breakpoint.* at .*" \ |
| "set breakpoint after all strings have been initialized" |
| gdb_run_cmd |
| gdb_expect { |
| -re "Breakpoint.*all strings initialized.*$gdb_prompt $" { |
| pass "run until all strings have been initialized" |
| } |
| -re "$gdb_prompt $" { |
| fail "run until all strings have been initialized" |
| } |
| timeout { |
| fail "run until all strings have been initialized (timeout)" |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| gdb_test "set host-charset ASCII" "" |
| foreach target_charset [all_charset_names] { |
| send_gdb "set target-charset $target_charset\n" |
| gdb_expect { |
| -re "$gdb_prompt $" { |
| pass "set target-charset $target_charset" |
| } |
| timeout { |
| fail "set target-charset $target_charset (timeout)" |
| } |
| } |
| |
| # Try printing the null character. There seems to be a bug in |
| # gdb_test that requires us to use gdb_expect here. |
| send_gdb "print '\\0'\n" |
| gdb_expect { |
| -re "\\\$${decimal} = 0 '\\\\0'\[\r\n\]+$gdb_prompt $" { |
| pass "print the null character in ${target_charset}" |
| } |
| -re "$gdb_prompt $" { |
| fail "print the null character in ${target_charset}" |
| } |
| timeout { |
| fail "print the null character in ${target_charset} (timeout)" |
| } |
| } |
| |
| # Compute the name of the variable in the test program that holds |
| # a string in $target_charset. The variable's name is the |
| # character set's name, in lower-case, with all non-identifier |
| # characters replaced with '_', with "_string" stuck on the end. |
| set var_name [string tolower "${target_charset}_string"] |
| regsub -all -- "\[^a-z0-9_\]" $var_name "_" var_name |
| |
| # Compute a regexp matching the results we expect. This is static, |
| # but it's easier than writing it out. |
| regsub -all "." "abfnrtv" "(\\\\&|x)" escapes |
| set uppercase "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ" |
| set lowercase "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz" |
| set digits "0123456789" |
| set octal_escape "\\\\\[0-9\]\[0-9\]\[0-9\]" |
| |
| send_gdb "print $var_name\n" |
| # ${escapes}${uppercase}${lowercase}${digits}${octal}${octal} |
| gdb_expect { |
| -re ".* = \"(\\\\a|x)(\\\\b|x)(\\\\f|x)(\\\\n|x)(\\\\r|x)(\\\\t|x)(\\\\v|x)${uppercase}${lowercase}${digits}(\\\\\[0-9\]\[0-9\]\[0-9\]|x)(\\\\\[0-9\]\[0-9\]\[0-9\]|x).*\"\[\r\n\]+$gdb_prompt $" { |
| pass "print string in $target_charset" |
| } |
| -re "$gdb_prompt $" { |
| fail "print string in $target_charset" |
| } |
| timeout { |
| fail "print string in $target_charset (timeout)" |
| } |
| } |
| |
| # Try entering a character literal, and see if it comes back unchanged. |
| gdb_test "print 'A'" \ |
| " = \[0-9-\]+ 'A'" \ |
| "parse character literal in ${target_charset}" |
| |
| # Check that the character literal was encoded correctly. |
| gdb_test "print 'A' == $var_name\[7\]" \ |
| " = 1" \ |
| "check value of parsed character literal in ${target_charset}" |
| |
| # Try entering a string literal, and see if it comes back unchanged. |
| gdb_test "print \"abcdefABCDEF012345\"" \ |
| " = \"abcdefABCDEF012345\"" \ |
| "parse string literal in ${target_charset}" |
| |
| # Check that the string literal was encoded correctly. |
| gdb_test "print \"q\"\[0\] == $var_name\[49\]" \ |
| " = 1" \ |
| "check value of parsed string literal in ${target_charset}" |
| |
| # Test handling of characters in the target charset which |
| # can't be translated into the host charset. |
| if {! [string compare $target_charset iso-8859-1]} { |
| gdb_test "print iso_8859_1_string\[69\]" \ |
| " = \[0-9-\]+ '\\\\242'" \ |
| "print character with no equivalent in host character set" |
| gdb_test "print iso_8859_1_string + 70" \ |
| " = ${hex} \"\\\\242.*\"" \ |
| "print string with no equivalent in host character set" |
| } |
| |
| # Make sure that we don't apply the ISO-8859-1 `print_literally' |
| # function to ASCII. |
| if {! [string compare $target_charset ascii]} { |
| gdb_test "print iso_8859_1_string\[69\]" \ |
| " = \[0-9-\]+ '\\\\242'" \ |
| "print ASCII unprintable character" |
| gdb_test "print iso_8859_1_string + 70" \ |
| " = ${hex} \"\\\\242.*\"" \ |
| "print ASCII unprintable string" |
| } |
| |
| # Try printing characters with backslash escape equivalents. |
| set escapees {a b f n r t v} |
| for {set i 0} {$i < [llength $escapees]} {incr i} { |
| set escape [lindex $escapees $i] |
| send_gdb "print $var_name\[$i\]\n" |
| set have_escape 1 |
| gdb_expect { |
| -re "= \[0-9-\]+ '\\\\${escape}'\[\r\n\]+$gdb_prompt $" { |
| pass "try printing '\\${escape}' in ${target_charset}" |
| } |
| -re "= \[0-9-\]+ 'x'\[\r\n\]+$gdb_prompt $" { |
| xfail "try printing '\\${escape}' in ${target_charset} (no such escape)" |
| set have_escape 0 |
| } |
| -re "$gdb_prompt $" { |
| fail "try printing '\\${escape}' in ${target_charset}" |
| } |
| timeout { |
| fail "try printing '\\${escape}' in ${target_charset} (timeout)" |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if {$have_escape} { |
| |
| # Try parsing a backslash escape in a character literal. |
| gdb_test "print '\\${escape}' == $var_name\[$i\]" \ |
| " = 1" \ |
| "check value of '\\${escape}' in ${target_charset}" |
| |
| # Try parsing a backslash escape in a string literal. |
| gdb_test "print \"\\${escape}\"\[0\] == $var_name\[$i\]" \ |
| " = 1" \ |
| "check value of \"\\${escape}\" in ${target_charset}" |
| } |
| } |
| |
| # Try printing a character escape that doesn't exist. We should |
| # get the unescaped character, in the target character set. |
| gdb_test "print '\\q'" " = \[0-9-\]+ 'q'" \ |
| "print escape that doesn't exist in $target_charset" |
| gdb_test "print '\\q' == $var_name\[49\]" " = 1" \ |
| "check value of escape that doesn't exist in $target_charset" |
| } |
| |
| gdb_exit |