From 7a0daa48da726f9c05a752e85fefe128bf848916 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Tom de Vries Date: Sat, 26 Nov 2022 14:29:10 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] [gdb/testsuite] Don't generate core in gdb.base/bt-on-fatal-signal.exp When running test-case gdb.base/bt-on-fatal-signal.exp on powerpc64le-linux I noticed: ... FAIL: gdb.base/bt-on-fatal-signal.exp: SEGV: scan for backtrace (timeout) ... The timeout is 10 seconds, but generating the core file takes more than a minute, probably due to slow NFS. I managed to reproduce this behaviour independently of gdb, by compiling "int main (void) { __builtin_abort (); }" and running it, which took 1.5 seconds for a core file 50 times smaller than the one for gdb. Fix this by preventing the core file from being generated, using a wrapper around gdb that does "ulimit -c 0". Tested on x86_64-linux. --- gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/bt-on-fatal-signal.exp | 5 ++++- gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp | 11 +++++++++++ 2 files changed, 15 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/bt-on-fatal-signal.exp b/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/bt-on-fatal-signal.exp index 8f9d857106d..1af88d50c4c 100644 --- a/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/bt-on-fatal-signal.exp +++ b/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/bt-on-fatal-signal.exp @@ -62,7 +62,10 @@ foreach test_data {{SEGV "Segmentation fault"} \ with_test_prefix ${sig} { # Restart GDB. - clean_restart $binfile + save_vars { GDB } { + set GDB [gdb_no_core] + clean_restart $binfile + } # Capture the pid of GDB. set testpid [spawn_id_get_pid $gdb_spawn_id] diff --git a/gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp b/gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp index 7d05fbe557b..a73437a419f 100644 --- a/gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp +++ b/gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp @@ -6322,6 +6322,17 @@ proc cached_file { filename txt {executable 0}} { return $filename } +# Return a wrapper around gdb that prevents generating a core file. + +proc gdb_no_core { } { + set script \ + [list \ + "ulimit -c 0" \ + [join [list exec $::GDB {"$@"}]]] + set script [join $script "\n"] + return [cached_file gdb-no-core.sh $script 1] +} + # Set 'testfile', 'srcfile', and 'binfile'. # # ARGS is a list of source file specifications. -- 2.30.2