binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/attach-many-short-lived-threads.exp
Joel Brobecker e2882c8578 Update copyright year range in all GDB files
gdb/ChangeLog:

        Update copyright year range in all GDB files
2018-01-02 07:38:06 +04:00

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# Copyright 2008-2018 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 attaching to a program that is constantly spawning short-lived
# threads. The stresses the edge cases of attaching to threads that
# have just been created or are in process of dying. In addition, the
# test attaches, debugs, detaches, reattaches in a loop a few times,
# to stress the behavior of the debug API around detach (some systems
# end up leaving stale state behind that confuse the following
# attach).
# Return true if the running version of DejaGnu is known to not be
# able to run this test.
proc bad_dejagnu {} {
set dj_ver [dejagnu_version]
set dj_ver_major [lindex $dj_ver 0]
set dj_ver_minor [lindex $dj_ver 1]
# DejaGnu versions prior to 1.6 manage to kill the wrong process
# due to PID-reuse races. Since this test spawns many threads, it
# widens the race window a whole lot, enough that the inferior is
# often killed, and thus the test randomly fails. See:
# http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/dejagnu/2015-07/msg00005.html
# The fix added a close_wait_program procedure. If that procedure
# is defined, and DejaGnu is older than 1.6, assume that means the
# fix was backported.
if {$dj_ver_major == 1
&& ($dj_ver_minor < 6 && [info procs close_wait_program] == "")} {
return 1
}
return 0
}
if {[bad_dejagnu]} {
unsupported "broken DejaGnu"
return 0
}
if {![can_spawn_for_attach]} {
return 0
}
standard_testfile
# The test proper. See description above.
proc test {} {
global binfile
global gdb_prompt
global decimal
clean_restart ${binfile}
set test_spawn_id [spawn_wait_for_attach $binfile]
set testpid [spawn_id_get_pid $test_spawn_id]
set attempts 10
for {set attempt 1} { $attempt <= $attempts } { incr attempt } {
with_test_prefix "iter $attempt" {
set attached 0
set eperm 0
set test "attach"
gdb_test_multiple "attach $testpid" $test {
-re "new threads in iteration" {
# Seen when "set debug libthread_db" is on.
exp_continue
}
-re "warning: Cannot attach to lwp $decimal: Operation not permitted" {
# On Linux, PTRACE_ATTACH sometimes fails with
# EPERM, even though /proc/PID/status indicates
# the thread is running.
set eperm 1
exp_continue
}
-re "debugger service failed.*$gdb_prompt $" {
fail $test
}
-re "$gdb_prompt $" {
if {$eperm} {
xfail "$test (EPERM)"
} else {
pass $test
}
}
-re "Attaching to program.*process $testpid.*$gdb_prompt $" {
pass $test
}
}
# Sleep a bit and try updating the thread list. We should
# know about all threads already at this point. If we see
# "New Thread" or similar being output, then "attach" is
# failing to actually attach to all threads in the process,
# which would be a bug.
sleep 1
set test "no new threads"
gdb_test_multiple "info threads" $test {
-re "New .*$gdb_prompt $" {
fail $test
}
-re "$gdb_prompt $" {
pass $test
}
}
# Force breakpoints always inserted, so that threads we might
# have failed to attach to hit them even when threads we do
# know about are stopped.
gdb_test_no_output "set breakpoint always-inserted on"
# Run to a breakpoint a few times. A few threads should spawn
# and die meanwhile. This checks that thread creation/death
# events carry on correctly after attaching. Also, be
# detaching from the program and reattaching, we check that
# the program doesn't die due to gdb leaving a pending
# breakpoint hit on a new thread unprocessed.
gdb_test "break break_fn" "Breakpoint.*" "break break_fn"
# Wait a bit, to give time for most threads to hit the
# breakpoint, including threads we might have failed to
# attach.
sleep 2
set bps 3
for {set bp 1} { $bp <= $bps } { incr bp } {
gdb_test "continue" "Breakpoint.*" "break at break_fn: $bp"
}
if {$attempt < $attempts} {
# Kick the time out timer for another round.
gdb_test "print again = 1" " = 1" "reset timer in the inferior"
# Show the time we had left in the logs, in case
# something goes wrong.
gdb_test "print seconds_left" " = .*"
gdb_test "detach" "Detaching from.*"
} else {
gdb_test "kill" "" "kill process" "Kill the program being debugged.*y or n. $" "y"
}
gdb_test_no_output "set breakpoint always-inserted off"
delete_breakpoints
}
}
kill_wait_spawned_process $test_spawn_id
}
# The test program exits after a while, in case GDB crashes. Make it
# wait at least as long as we may wait before declaring a time out
# failure.
set options { "additional_flags=-DTIMEOUT=$timeout" debug pthreads }
if {[prepare_for_testing "failed to prepare" $testfile $srcfile $options] == -1} {
return -1
}
test