Prepare gdb.python/mi-py-events.exp for Python/MI in separate channels
[binutils-gdb.git] / gdb / testsuite / README
1 This is a collection of tests for GDB.
2
3 The file gdb/README contains basic instructions on how to run the
4 testsuite, while this file documents additional options and controls
5 that are available. The GDB wiki may also have some pages with ideas
6 and suggestions.
7
8
9 Running the Testsuite
10 *********************
11
12 There are two ways to run the testsuite and pass additional parameters
13 to DejaGnu. The first is to do `make check' in the main build
14 directory and specifying the makefile variable `RUNTESTFLAGS':
15
16 make check RUNTESTFLAGS='TRANSCRIPT=y gdb.base/a2-run.exp'
17
18 The second is to cd to the testsuite directory and invoke the DejaGnu
19 `runtest' command directly.
20
21 cd testsuite
22 make site.exp
23 runtest TRANSCRIPT=y
24
25 (The `site.exp' file contains a handful of useful variables like host
26 and target triplets, and pathnames.)
27
28 Parallel testing
29 ****************
30
31 If not testing with a remote host (in DejaGnu's sense), you can run
32 the GDB test suite in a fully parallel mode. In this mode, each .exp
33 file runs separately and maybe simultaneously. The test suite ensures
34 that all the temporary files created by the test suite do not clash,
35 by putting them into separate directories. This mode is primarily
36 intended for use by the Makefile.
37
38 For GNU make, the Makefile tries to run the tests in parallel mode if
39 any -j option is given. For a non-GNU make, tests are not
40 parallelized.
41
42 If RUNTESTFLAGS is not empty, then by default the tests are
43 serialized. This can be overridden by either using the
44 `check-parallel' target in the Makefile, or by setting FORCE_PARALLEL
45 to any non-empty value:
46
47 make check-parallel RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=native-gdbserver"
48 make check RUNTESTFLAGS="--target_board=native-gdbserver" FORCE_PARALLEL=1
49
50 If you want to use runtest directly instead of using the Makefile, see
51 the description of GDB_PARALLEL below.
52
53 Racy testcases
54 **************
55
56 Sometimes, new testcases are added to the testsuite that are not
57 entirely deterministic, and can randomly pass or fail. We call them
58 "racy testcases", and they can be bothersome when one is comparing
59 different testsuite runs. In order to help identifying them, it is
60 possible to run the tests several times in a row and ask the testsuite
61 machinery to analyze the results. To do that, you need to specify the
62 RACY_ITER environment variable to make:
63
64 make check RACY_ITER=5 -j4
65
66 The value assigned to RACY_ITER represents the number of times you
67 wish to run the tests in sequence (in the example above, the entire
68 testsuite will be executed 5 times in a row, in parallel). It is also
69 possible to check just a specific test:
70
71 make check TESTS='gdb.base/default.exp' RACY_ITER=3
72
73 One can also decide to call the Makefile rules by hand inside the
74 gdb/testsuite directory, e.g.:
75
76 make check-paralell-racy -j4
77
78 In which case the value of the DEFAULT_RACY_ITER variable (inside
79 gdb/testsuite/Makefile.in) will be used to determine how many
80 iterations will be run.
81
82 After running the tests, you shall see a file name 'racy.sum' in the
83 gdb/testsuite directory. You can also inspect the generated *.log and
84 *.sum files by looking into the gdb/testsuite/racy_ouputs directory.
85
86 If you already have *.sum files generated from previous testsuite runs
87 and you would like to analyze them without having to run the testsuite
88 again, you can also use the 'analyze-racy-logs.py' script directly.
89 It is located in the gdb/testsuite/ directory, and it expects a list
90 of two or more *.sum files to be provided as its argument. For
91 example:
92
93 ./gdb/testsuite/analyze-racy-logs.py testsuite-01/gdb.sum \
94 testsuite-02/gdb.sum testsuite-03/gdb.sum
95
96 The script will output its analysis report to the standard output.
97
98 Running the Performance Tests
99 *****************************
100
101 GDB Testsuite includes performance test cases, which are not run together
102 with other test cases, because performance test cases are slow and need
103 a quiet system. There are two ways to run the performance test cases.
104 The first is to do `make check-perf' in the main build directory:
105
106 make check-perf RUNTESTFLAGS="solib.exp SOLIB_COUNT=8"
107
108 The second is to cd to the testsuite directory and invoke the DejaGnu
109 `runtest' command directly.
110
111 cd testsuite
112 make site.exp
113 runtest GDB_PERFTEST_MODE=both GDB_PERFTEST_TIMEOUT=4000 --directory=gdb.perf solib.exp SOLIB_COUNT=8
114
115 Only "compile", "run" and "both" are valid to GDB_PERFTEST_MODE. They
116 stand for "compile tests only", "run tests only", and "compile and run
117 tests" respectively. "both" is the default. GDB_PERFTEST_TIMEOUT
118 specify the timeout, which is 3000 in default. The result of
119 performance test is appended in `testsuite/perftest.log'.
120
121 Testsuite Parameters
122 ********************
123
124 The following parameters are DejaGNU variables that you can set to
125 affect the testsuite run globally.
126
127 TRANSCRIPT
128
129 You may find it useful to have a transcript of the commands that the
130 testsuite sends to GDB, for instance if GDB crashes during the run,
131 and you want to reconstruct the sequence of commands.
132
133 If the DejaGNU variable TRANSCRIPT is set (to any value), each
134 invocation of GDB during the test run will get a transcript file
135 written into the DejaGNU output directory. The file will have the
136 name transcript.<n>, where <n> is an integer. The first line of the
137 file shows the invocation command with all the options passed to it,
138 while subsequent lines are the GDB commands. A `make check' might
139 look like this:
140
141 make check RUNTESTFLAGS=TRANSCRIPT=y
142
143 The transcript may not be complete, as for instance tests of command
144 completion may show only partial command lines.
145
146 GDB
147
148 By default, the testsuite exercises the GDB in the build directory,
149 but you can set GDB to be a pathname to a different version. For
150 instance,
151
152 make check RUNTESTFLAGS=GDB=/usr/bin/gdb
153
154 runs the testsuite on the GDB in /usr/bin.
155
156 GDBSERVER
157
158 You can set GDBSERVER to be a particular GDBserver of interest, so for
159 instance
160
161 make check RUNTESTFLAGS="GDB=/usr/bin/gdb GDBSERVER=/usr/bin/gdbserver"
162
163 checks both the installed GDB and GDBserver.
164
165 INTERNAL_GDBFLAGS
166
167 Command line options passed to all GDB invocations.
168
169 The default is "-nw -nx".
170
171 `-nw' disables any of the windowed interfaces.
172 `-nx' disables ~/.gdbinit, so that it doesn't interfere with
173 the tests.
174
175 This is actually considered an internal variable, and you
176 won't normally want to change it. However, in some situations,
177 this may be tweaked as a last resort if the testsuite doesn't
178 have direct support for the specifics of your environment.
179 The testsuite does not override a value provided by the user.
180
181 As an example, when testing an installed GDB that has been
182 configured with `--with-system-gdbinit', like by default,
183 you do not want ~/.gdbinit to interfere with tests, but, you
184 may want the system .gdbinit file loaded. As there's no way to
185 ask the testsuite, or GDB, to load the system gdbinit but
186 not ~/.gdbinit, a workaround is then to remove `-nx' from
187 INTERNAL_GDBFLAGS, and point $HOME at a directory without
188 a .gdbinit. For example:
189
190 cd testsuite
191 HOME=`pwd` runtest \
192 GDB=/usr/bin/gdb \
193 GDBSERVER=/usr/bin/gdbserver \
194 INTERNAL_GDBFLAGS=-nw
195
196 GDB_PARALLEL
197
198 To use parallel testing mode without using the the Makefile, set
199 GDB_PARALLEL on the runtest command line to "yes". Before starting
200 the tests, you must ensure that the directories cache, outputs, and
201 temp in the test suite build directory are either empty or have been
202 deleted. cache in particular is used to share data across invocations
203 of runtest, and files there may affect the test results. The Makefile
204 automatically does these deletions.
205
206 FORCE_PARALLEL
207
208 Setting FORCE_PARALLEL to any non-empty value forces parallel testing
209 mode even if RUNTESTFLAGS is not empty.
210
211 GDB_INOTIFY
212
213 For debugging parallel mode, it is handy to be able to see when a test
214 case writes to a file outside of its designated output directory.
215
216 If you have the inotify-tools package installed, you can set the
217 GDB_INOTIFY variable on the runtest command line. This will cause the
218 test suite to watch for parallel-unsafe file creations and report
219 them, both to stdout and in the test suite log file.
220
221 This setting is only meaningful in conjunction with GDB_PARALLEL.
222
223 TESTS
224
225 This variable is used to specify which set of tests to run.
226 It is passed to make (not runtest) and its contents are a space separated
227 list of tests to run.
228
229 If using GNU make then the contents are wildcard-expanded using
230 GNU make's $(wildcard) function. Test paths must be fully specified,
231 relative to the "testsuite" subdirectory. This allows one to run all
232 tests in a subdirectory by passing "gdb.subdir/*.exp", or more simply
233 by using the check-gdb.subdir target in the Makefile.
234
235 If for some strange reason one wanted to run all tests that begin with
236 the letter "d" that is also possible: TESTS="*/d*.exp".
237
238 Do not write */*.exp to specify all tests (assuming all tests are only
239 nested one level deep, which is not necessarily true). This will pick up
240 .exp files in ancillary directories like "lib" and "config".
241 Instead write gdb.*/*.exp.
242
243 Example:
244
245 make -j10 check TESTS="gdb.server/[s-w]*.exp */x*.exp"
246
247 If not using GNU make then the value is passed directly to runtest.
248 If not specified, all tests are run.
249
250 READ1
251
252 This make (not runtest) variable is used to specify whether the
253 testsuite preloads the read1.so library into expect. Any non-empty
254 value means true. See "Race detection" below.
255
256 Race detection
257 **************
258
259 The testsuite includes a mechanism that helps detect test races.
260
261 For example, say the program running under expect outputs "abcd", and
262 a test does something like this:
263
264 expect {
265 "a.*c" {
266 }
267 "b" {
268 }
269 "a" {
270 }
271 }
272
273 Which case happens to match depends on what expect manages to read
274 into its internal buffer in one go. If it manages to read three bytes
275 or more, then the first case matches. If it manages to read two
276 bytes, then the second case matches. If it manages to read only one
277 byte, then the third case matches.
278
279 To help detect these cases, the race detection mechanism preloads a
280 library into expect that forces the `read' system call to always
281 return at most 1 byte.
282
283 To enable this, either pass a non-empty value in the READ1 make
284 variable, or use the check-read1 make target instead of check.
285
286 Examples:
287
288 make -j10 check-read1 TESTS="*/paginate-*.exp"
289 make -j10 check READ1="1"
290
291 Testsuite Configuration
292 ***********************
293
294 It is possible to adjust the behavior of the testsuite by defining
295 the global variables listed below, either in a `site.exp' file,
296 or in a board file.
297
298 gdb_test_timeout
299
300 Defining this variable changes the default timeout duration used
301 during communication with GDB. More specifically, the global variable
302 used during testing is `timeout', but this variable gets reset to
303 `gdb_test_timeout' at the beginning of each testcase, which ensures
304 that any local change to `timeout' in a testcase does not affect
305 subsequent testcases.
306
307 This global variable comes in handy when the debugger is slower than
308 normal due to the testing environment, triggering unexpected `TIMEOUT'
309 test failures. Examples include when testing on a remote machine, or
310 against a system where communications are slow.
311
312 If not specifically defined, this variable gets automatically defined
313 to the same value as `timeout' during the testsuite initialization.
314 The default value of the timeout is defined in the file
315 `testsuite/config/unix.exp' (at least for Unix hosts; board files may
316 have their own values).
317
318 gdb_reverse_timeout
319
320 Defining this variable changes the default timeout duration when tests
321 under gdb.reverse directory are running. Process record and reverse
322 debugging is so slow that its tests have unexpected `TIMEOUT' test
323 failures. This global variable is useful to bump up the value of
324 `timeout' for gdb.reverse tests and doesn't cause any delay where
325 actual failures happen in the rest of the testsuite.
326
327
328 Board Settings
329 **************
330
331 DejaGNU includes the concept of a "board file", which specifies
332 testing details for a particular target (which are often bare circuit
333 boards, thus the name).
334
335 In the GDB testsuite specifically, the board file may include a
336 number of "board settings" that test cases may check before deciding
337 whether to exercise a particular feature. For instance, a board
338 lacking any I/O devices, or perhaps simply having its I/O devices
339 not wired up, should set `noinferiorio'.
340
341 Here are the supported board settings:
342
343 gdb,cannot_call_functions
344
345 The board does not support inferior call, that is, invoking inferior
346 functions in GDB.
347
348 gdb,can_reverse
349
350 The board supports reverse execution.
351
352 gdb,no_hardware_watchpoints
353
354 The board does not support hardware watchpoints.
355
356 gdb,nofileio
357
358 GDB is unable to intercept target file operations in remote and
359 perform them on the host.
360
361 gdb,noinferiorio
362
363 The board is unable to provide I/O capability to the inferior.
364
365 gdb,noresults
366
367 A program will not return an exit code or result code (or the value
368 of the result is undefined, and should not be looked at).
369
370 gdb,nosignals
371
372 The board does not support signals.
373
374 gdb,skip_huge_test
375
376 Skip time-consuming tests on the board with slow connection.
377
378 gdb,skip_float_tests
379
380 Skip tests related to floating point.
381
382 gdb,use_precord
383
384 The board supports process record.
385
386 gdb_init_command
387 gdb_init_commands
388
389 Commands to send to GDB every time a program is about to be run. The
390 first of these settings defines a single command as a string. The
391 second defines a TCL list of commands being a string each. The commands
392 are sent one by one in a sequence, first from `gdb_init_command', if any,
393 followed by individual commands from `gdb_init_command', if any, in this
394 list's order.
395
396 gdb_server_prog
397
398 The location of GDBserver. If GDBserver somewhere other than its
399 default location is used in test, specify the location of GDBserver in
400 this variable. The location is a file name for GDBserver, and may be
401 either absolute or relative to the testsuite subdirectory of the build
402 directory.
403
404 in_proc_agent
405
406 The location of the in-process agent (used for fast tracepoints and
407 other special tests). If the in-process agent of interest is anywhere
408 other than its default location, set this variable. The location is a
409 filename, and may be either absolute or relative to the testsuite
410 subdirectory of the build directory.
411
412 noargs
413
414 GDB does not support argument passing for inferior.
415
416 no_long_long
417
418 The board does not support type long long.
419
420 use_cygmon
421
422 The board is running the monitor Cygmon.
423
424 use_gdb_stub
425
426 The tests are running with a GDB stub.
427
428 exit_is_reliable
429
430 Set to true if GDB can assume that letting the program run to end
431 reliably results in program exits being reported as such, as opposed
432 to, e.g., the program ending in an infinite loop or the board
433 crashing/resetting. If not set, this defaults to $use_gdb_stub. In
434 other words, native targets are assumed reliable by default, and
435 remote stubs assumed unreliable.
436
437 gdb,predefined_tsv
438
439 The predefined trace state variables the board has.
440
441 gdb,no_thread_names
442
443 The target doesn't support thread names.
444
445 Testsuite Organization
446 **********************
447
448 The testsuite is entirely contained in `gdb/testsuite'. The main
449 directory of the testsuite includes some makefiles and configury, but
450 these are minimal, and used for little besides cleaning up, since the
451 tests themselves handle the compilation of the programs that GDB will
452 run.
453
454 The file `testsuite/lib/gdb.exp' contains common utility procs useful
455 for all GDB tests, while the directory testsuite/config contains
456 configuration-specific files, typically used for special-purpose
457 definitions of procs like `gdb_load' and `gdb_start'.
458
459 The tests themselves are to be found in directories named
460 'testsuite/gdb.* and subdirectories of those. The names of the test
461 files must always end with ".exp". DejaGNU collects the test files by
462 wildcarding in the test directories, so both subdirectories and
463 individual files typically get chosen and run in alphabetical order.
464
465 The following lists some notable types of subdirectories and what they
466 are for. Since DejaGNU finds test files no matter where they are
467 located, and since each test file sets up its own compilation and
468 execution environment, this organization is simply for convenience and
469 intelligibility.
470
471 gdb.base
472
473 This is the base testsuite. The tests in it should apply to all
474 configurations of GDB (but generic native-only tests may live here).
475 The test programs should be in the subset of C that is both valid
476 ANSI/ISO C, and C++.
477
478 gdb.<lang>
479
480 Language-specific tests for any language besides C. Examples are
481 gdb.cp for C++ and gdb.java for Java.
482
483 gdb.<platform>
484
485 Non-portable tests. The tests are specific to a specific
486 configuration (host or target), such as eCos.
487
488 gdb.arch
489
490 Architecture-specific tests that are (usually) cross-platform.
491
492 gdb.<subsystem>
493
494 Tests that exercise a specific GDB subsystem in more depth. For
495 instance, gdb.disasm exercises various disassemblers, while
496 gdb.stabs tests pathways through the stabs symbol reader.
497
498 gdb.perf
499
500 GDB performance tests.
501
502 Writing Tests
503 *************
504
505 In many areas, the GDB tests are already quite comprehensive; you
506 should be able to copy existing tests to handle new cases. Be aware
507 that older tests may use obsolete practices but have not yet been
508 updated.
509
510 You should try to use `gdb_test' whenever possible, since it includes
511 cases to handle all the unexpected errors that might happen. However,
512 it doesn't cost anything to add new test procedures; for instance,
513 gdb.base/exprs.exp defines a `test_expr' that calls `gdb_test'
514 multiple times.
515
516 Only use `send_gdb' and `gdb_expect' when absolutely necessary. Even
517 if GDB has several valid responses to a command, you can use
518 `gdb_test_multiple'. Like `gdb_test', `gdb_test_multiple' recognizes
519 internal errors and unexpected prompts.
520
521 Do not write tests which expect a literal tab character from GDB. On
522 some operating systems (e.g. OpenBSD) the TTY layer expands tabs to
523 spaces, so by the time GDB's output reaches `expect' the tab is gone.
524
525 The source language programs do *not* need to be in a consistent
526 style. Since GDB is used to debug programs written in many different
527 styles, it's worth having a mix of styles in the testsuite; for
528 instance, some GDB bugs involving the display of source lines might
529 never manifest themselves if the test programs used GNU coding style
530 uniformly.
531
532 Some testcase results need more detailed explanation:
533
534 KFAIL
535
536 Use KFAIL for known problem of GDB itself. You must specify the GDB
537 bug report number, as in these sample tests:
538
539 kfail "gdb/13392" "continue to marker 2"
540
541 or
542
543 setup_kfail gdb/13392 "*-*-*"
544 kfail "continue to marker 2"
545
546
547 XFAIL
548
549 Short for "expected failure", this indicates a known problem with the
550 environment. This could include limitations of the operating system,
551 compiler version, and other components.
552
553 This example from gdb.base/attach-pie-misread.exp is a sanity check
554 for the target environment:
555
556 # On x86_64 it is commonly about 4MB.
557 if {$stub_size > 25000000} {
558 xfail "stub size $stub_size is too large"
559 return
560 }
561
562 You should provide bug report number for the failing component of the
563 environment, if such bug report is available, as with this example
564 referring to a GCC problem:
565
566 if {[test_compiler_info {gcc-[0-3]-*}]
567 || [test_compiler_info {gcc-4-[0-5]-*}]} {
568 setup_xfail "gcc/46955" *-*-*
569 }
570 gdb_test "python print ttype.template_argument(2)" "&C::c"
571
572 Note that it is also acceptable, and often preferable, to avoid
573 running the test at all. This is the better option if the limitation
574 is intrinsic to the environment, rather than a bug expected to be
575 fixed in the near future.