A failure that seems to cause a long/infinite time is the following:
For a not clear reason, tid-reuse.c spawner thread sometimes gets an error:
tid-reuse: /bd/home/philippe/gdb/git/build_moreaa/gdb/testsuite/../../../moreaa/gdb/testsuite/gdb.threads/tid-reuse.c:58: spawner_thread_func: Assertion `rc == 0' failed.
which causes a SIGABRT to be trapped by gdb, and tid-reuse does not reach the
after_count breakpoint:
Thread 2 "tid-reuse" received signal SIGABRT, Aborted.
[Switching to Thread 0x7ffff7518700 (LWP 10368)]
__GI_raise (sig=sig@entry=6) at ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/raise.c:51
51 ../sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/raise.c: No such file or directory.
(gdb) FAIL: gdb.threads/tid-reuse.exp: continue to breakpoint: after_count
After that, tid-reuse.exp gets the value of reuse_time, but this one kept its
initial value of -1 (as unsigned) :
print reuse_time
$1 =
4294967295
(gdb) PASS: gdb.threads/tid-reuse.exp: get reuse_time
tid-reuse then dies, and the .exp script continues (with some FAIL)
till it executes:
set timeout [expr $reuse_time * 2]
leading to the error:
(gdb) ERROR: integer value too large to represent as non-long integer
while executing
"expect {
-i exp8 -timeout
8589934590
-re ".*A problem internal to GDB has been detected" {
fail "$message (GDB internal error)"
gdb_intern..."
("uplevel" body line 1)
invoked from within
"uplevel $body" ARITH IOVERFLOW {integer value too large to represent as non-long integer} integer value too large to represent as non-long integer
ERROR: GDB process no longer exists
and then everything blocks.
This last 'GDB process no longer exists' is strange, as I still see the gdb
when this all blocks, e.g.
philippe 16058 31085 0 20:30 pts/15 00:00:00 /bin/bash -c rootme=`pwd`; export rootme; srcdir=../../../binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite ; export srcdir ; EXPECT=`if [
philippe 16386 16058 0 20:30 pts/15 00:00:00 expect -- /usr/share/dejagnu/runtest.exp --status GDB_PARALLEL=yes --outdir=outputs/gdb.threads/tid-reuse gdb.thre
philippe 24848 16386 0 20:30 pts/20 00:00:00 /bd/home/philippe/gdb/git/build_binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/../../gdb/gdb -nw -nx -data-directory /bd/home/philip
This patch gives a default value of 60, so that if ever something wrong happens
in tid-reuse, then the value retrieved by the .exp script stays in a reasonable
range.
Simon verified the patch by:
"I replaced the pthread_create call with the value 1 to simulate a
failure, and the test succeeds to fail quickly with your patch applied.
Without your patch, I get the infinite hang that you describe."
Compared to V1:
As suggested by Pedro, this version checks the pthread calls return
code (in particular of pthread_create) and reports the failure reason,
instead of just aborting.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog
2018-12-09 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be>
* gdb.threads/tid-reuse.c (REUSE_TIME_CAP): Declare as 60.
(reuse_time): Initialize to REUSE_TIME_CAP.
(check_rc): New function.
(main): Use REUSE_TIME_CAP instead of hardcoded 60.
Check pthread_create rc.
(spawner_thread_func): Check pthread_create and pthread_join rc.
+2018-12-09 Philippe Waroquiers <philippe.waroquiers@skynet.be>
+
+ * gdb.threads/tid-reuse.c (REUSE_TIME_CAP): Declare as 60.
+ (reuse_time): Initialize to REUSE_TIME_CAP.
+ (check_rc): New function.
+ (main): Use REUSE_TIME_CAP instead of hardcoded 60.
+ Check pthread_create rc.
+ (spawner_thread_func): Check pthread_create and pthread_join rc.
+
2018-12-08 Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com>
* gdb.base/list.exp (test_forward_search): Rename to ...
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdio.h>
+#include <string.h>
#include <limits.h>
/* How many threads fit in the target's thread number space. */
incremented, this is enough for the tid numbers to wrap around. On
targets that randomize thread IDs, this is enough time to give each
number in the thread number space some chance of reuse. It'll be
- capped to a lower value if we can't compute it. */
-unsigned int reuse_time = -1;
+ capped to a lower value if we can't compute it. REUSE_TIME_CAP
+ is the max value, and the default value if ever the program
+ has problem to compute it. */
+#define REUSE_TIME_CAP 60
+unsigned int reuse_time = REUSE_TIME_CAP;
void *
do_nothing_thread_func (void *arg)
return NULL;
}
+static void
+check_rc (int rc, const char *what)
+{
+ if (rc != 0)
+ {
+ fprintf (stderr, "unexpected error from %s: %s (%d)\n",
+ what, strerror (rc), rc);
+ assert (0);
+ }
+}
+
void *
spawner_thread_func (void *arg)
{
thread_counter++;
rc = pthread_create (&child, NULL, do_nothing_thread_func, NULL);
- assert (rc == 0);
+ check_rc (rc, "pthread_create");
rc = pthread_join (child, NULL);
- assert (rc == 0);
+ check_rc (rc, "pthread_join");
}
return NULL;
unsigned int reuse_time_raw = 0;
rc = pthread_create (&child, NULL, spawner_thread_func, NULL);
- assert (rc == 0);
+ check_rc (rc, "pthread_create spawner_thread");
#define COUNT_TIME 2
sleep (COUNT_TIME);
pid_max=32768. Going forward, as machines get faster, this will
need less time, unless pid_max is set to a very high number. To
avoid unreasonably long test time, cap to an upper bound. */
- if (reuse_time > 60)
- reuse_time = 60;
+ if (reuse_time > REUSE_TIME_CAP)
+ reuse_time = REUSE_TIME_CAP;
printf ("thread_counter=%lu, tid_max = %ld, reuse_time_raw=%u, reuse_time=%u\n",
thread_counter, tid_max, reuse_time_raw, reuse_time);
after_count ();