"""
LLDB module which provides the abstract base class of lldb test case.
The concrete subclass can override lldbtest.TesBase in order to inherit the
common behavior for unitest.TestCase.setUp/tearDown implemented in this file.
The subclass should override the attribute mydir in order for the python runtime
to locate the individual test cases when running as part of a large test suite
or when running each test case as a separate python invocation.
./dotest.py provides a test driver which sets up the environment to run the
entire test suite. Users who want to run a test case on its own can specify the
LLDB_TEST and PYTHONPATH environment variables, for example:
$ export LLDB_TEST=$PWD
$ export PYTHONPATH=/Volumes/data/lldb/svn/trunk/build/Debug/LLDB.framework/Resources/Python:$LLDB_TEST:$LLDB_TEST/plugins:$LLDB_TEST/pexpect-2.4
$ echo $LLDB_TEST
/Volumes/data/lldb/svn/trunk/test
$ echo $PYTHONPATH
/Volumes/data/lldb/svn/trunk/build/Debug/LLDB.framework/Resources/Python:/Volumes/data/lldb/svn/trunk/test:/Volumes/data/lldb/svn/trunk/test/plugins
$ python function_types/TestFunctionTypes.py
.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 1 test in 0.363s
OK
$ LLDB_COMMAND_TRACE=YES python array_types/TestArrayTypes.py
...
runCmd: breakpoint set -f main.c -l 42
output: Breakpoint created: 1: file ='main.c', line = 42, locations = 1
runCmd: run
output: Launching '/Volumes/data/lldb/svn/trunk/test/array_types/a.out' (x86_64)
...
runCmd: frame variable strings
output: (char *[4]) strings = {
(char *) strings[0] = 0x0000000100000f0c "Hello",
(char *) strings[1] = 0x0000000100000f12 "Hola",
(char *) strings[2] = 0x0000000100000f17 "Bonjour",
(char *) strings[3] = 0x0000000100000f1f "Guten Tag"
}
runCmd: frame variable char_16
output: (char [16]) char_16 = {
(char) char_16[0] = 'H',
(char) char_16[1] = 'e',
(char) char_16[2] = 'l',
(char) char_16[3] = 'l',
(char) char_16[4] = 'o',
(char) char_16[5] = ' ',
(char) char_16[6] = 'W',
(char) char_16[7] = 'o',
(char) char_16[8] = 'r',
(char) char_16[9] = 'l',
(char) char_16[10] = 'd',
(char) char_16[11] = '\n',
(char) char_16[12] = '\0',
(char) char_16[13] = '\0',
(char) char_16[14] = '\0',
(char) char_16[15] = '\0'
}
runCmd: frame variable ushort_matrix
output: (unsigned short [2][3]) ushort_matrix = {
(unsigned short [3]) ushort_matrix[0] = {
(unsigned short) ushort_matrix[0][0] = 0x0001,
(unsigned short) ushort_matrix[0][1] = 0x0002,
(unsigned short) ushort_matrix[0][2] = 0x0003
},
(unsigned short [3]) ushort_matrix[1] = {
(unsigned short) ushort_matrix[1][0] = 0x000b,
(unsigned short) ushort_matrix[1][1] = 0x0016,
(unsigned short) ushort_matrix[1][2] = 0x0021
}
}
runCmd: frame variable long_6
output: (long [6]) long_6 = {
(long) long_6[0] = 1,
(long) long_6[1] = 2,
(long) long_6[2] = 3,
(long) long_6[3] = 4,
(long) long_6[4] = 5,
(long) long_6[5] = 6
}
.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 1 test in 0.349s
OK
$
"""
import os, sys, traceback
import re
from subprocess import *
import StringIO
import time
import types
import unittest2
import lldb
if "LLDB_COMMAND_TRACE" in os.environ and os.environ["LLDB_COMMAND_TRACE"]=="YES":
traceAlways = True
else:
traceAlways = False
if "LLDB_DO_CLEANUP" in os.environ and os.environ["LLDB_DO_CLEANUP"]=="NO":
doCleanup = False
else:
doCleanup = True
COMMAND_FAILED_AS_EXPECTED = "Command has failed as expected"
CURRENT_EXECUTABLE_SET = "Current executable set successfully"
PROCESS_IS_VALID = "Process is valid"
PROCESS_KILLED = "Process is killed successfully"
PROCESS_EXITED = "Process exited successfully"
PROCESS_STOPPED = "Process status should be stopped"
RUN_SUCCEEDED = "Process is launched successfully"
RUN_COMPLETED = "Process exited successfully"
BACKTRACE_DISPLAYED_CORRECTLY = "Backtrace displayed correctly"
BREAKPOINT_CREATED = "Breakpoint created successfully"
BREAKPOINT_STATE_CORRECT = "Breakpoint state is correct"
BREAKPOINT_PENDING_CREATED = "Pending breakpoint created successfully"
BREAKPOINT_HIT_ONCE = "Breakpoint resolved with hit cout = 1"
BREAKPOINT_HIT_TWICE = "Breakpoint resolved with hit cout = 2"
BREAKPOINT_HIT_THRICE = "Breakpoint resolved with hit cout = 3"
OBJECT_PRINTED_CORRECTLY = "Object printed correctly"
SOURCE_DISPLAYED_CORRECTLY = "Source code displayed correctly"
STEP_OUT_SUCCEEDED = "Thread step-out succeeded"
STOPPED_DUE_TO_EXC_BAD_ACCESS = "Process should be stopped due to bad access exception"
STOPPED_DUE_TO_BREAKPOINT = "Process should be stopped due to breakpoint"
STOPPED_DUE_TO_BREAKPOINT_WITH_STOP_REASON_AS = "%s, %s" % (
STOPPED_DUE_TO_BREAKPOINT, "instead, the actual stop reason is: '%s'")
STOPPED_DUE_TO_BREAKPOINT_CONDITION = "Stopped due to breakpoint condition"
STOPPED_DUE_TO_BREAKPOINT_IGNORE_COUNT = "Stopped due to breakpoint and ignore count"
STOPPED_DUE_TO_SIGNAL = "Process state is stopped due to signal"
STOPPED_DUE_TO_STEP_IN = "Process state is stopped due to step in"
DATA_TYPES_DISPLAYED_CORRECTLY = "Data type(s) displayed correctly"
VALID_BREAKPOINT = "Got a valid breakpoint"
VALID_BREAKPOINT_LOCATION = "Got a valid breakpoint location"
VALID_COMMAND_INTERPRETER = "Got a valid command interpreter"
VALID_FILESPEC = "Got a valid filespec"
VALID_MODULE = "Got a valid module"
VALID_PROCESS = "Got a valid process"
VALID_SYMBOL = "Got a valid symbol"
VALID_TARGET = "Got a valid target"
VARIABLES_DISPLAYED_CORRECTLY = "Variable(s) displayed correctly"
def CMD_MSG(str):
'''A generic "Command '%s' returns successfully" message generator.'''
return "Command '%s' returns successfully" % str
def EXP_MSG(str, exe):
'''A generic "'%s' returns expected result" message generator if exe.
Otherwise, it generates "'%s' matches expected result" message.'''
return "'%s' %s expected result" % (str, 'returns' if exe else 'matches')
def SETTING_MSG(setting):
'''A generic "Value of setting '%s' is correct" message generator.'''
return "Value of setting '%s' is correct" % setting
def EnvArray():
"""Returns an env variable array from the os.environ map object."""
return map(lambda k,v: k+"="+v, os.environ.keys(), os.environ.values())
def line_number(filename, string_to_match):
"""Helper function to return the line number of the first matched string."""
with open(filename, 'r') as f:
for i, line in enumerate(f):
if line.find(string_to_match) != -1:
return i+1
raise Exception("Unable to find '%s' within file %s" % (string_to_match, filename))
def pointer_size():
"""Return the pointer size of the host system."""
import ctypes
a_pointer = ctypes.c_void_p(0xffff)
return 8 * ctypes.sizeof(a_pointer)
from functools import wraps
def python_api_test(func):
"""Decorate the item as a Python API only test."""
if isinstance(func, type) and issubclass(func, unittest2.TestCase):
raise Exception("@python_api_test can only be used to decorate a test method")
@wraps(func)
def wrapper(self, *args, **kwargs):
try:
if lldb.dont_do_python_api_test:
self.skipTest("Skip Python API tests")
except AttributeError:
pass
return func(self, *args, **kwargs)
wrapper.__python_api_test__ = True
return wrapper
class recording(StringIO.StringIO):
"""
A nice little context manager for recording the debugger interactions into
our session object. If trace flag is ON, it also emits the interactions
into the stderr.
"""
def __init__(self, test, trace):
"""Create a StringIO instance; record the session obj and trace flag."""
StringIO.StringIO.__init__(self)
self.session = test.session if test else None
self.trace = trace
def __enter__(self):
"""
Context management protocol on entry to the body of the with statement.
Just return the StringIO object.
"""
return self
def __exit__(self, type, value, tb):
"""
Context management protocol on exit from the body of the with statement.
If trace is ON, it emits the recordings into stderr. Always add the
recordings to our session object. And close the StringIO object, too.
"""
if self.trace:
print >> sys.stderr, self.getvalue()
if self.session:
print >> self.session, self.getvalue()
self.close()
def system(*popenargs, **kwargs):
r"""Run command with arguments and return its output as a byte string.
If the exit code was non-zero it raises a CalledProcessError. The
CalledProcessError object will have the return code in the returncode
attribute and output in the output attribute.
The arguments are the same as for the Popen constructor. Example:
>>> check_output(["ls", "-l", "/dev/null"])
'crw-rw-rw- 1 root root 1, 3 Oct 18 2007 /dev/null\n'
The stdout argument is not allowed as it is used internally.
To capture standard error in the result, use stderr=STDOUT.
>>> check_output(["/bin/sh", "-c",
... "ls -l non_existent_file ; exit 0"],
... stderr=STDOUT)
'ls: non_existent_file: No such file or directory\n'
"""
test = kwargs.pop('sender', None)
if 'stdout' in kwargs:
raise ValueError('stdout argument not allowed, it will be overridden.')
process = Popen(stdout=PIPE, stderr=PIPE, *popenargs, **kwargs)
output, error = process.communicate()
retcode = process.poll()
with recording(test, traceAlways) as sbuf:
if isinstance(popenargs, types.StringTypes):
args = [popenargs]
else:
args = list(popenargs)
print >> sbuf
print >> sbuf, "os command:", args
print >> sbuf, "stdout:", output
print >> sbuf, "stderr:", error
print >> sbuf, "retcode:", retcode
print >> sbuf
if retcode:
cmd = kwargs.get("args")
if cmd is None:
cmd = popenargs[0]
raise CalledProcessError(retcode, cmd)
return (output, error)
def getsource_if_available(obj):
"""
Return the text of the source code for an object if available. Otherwise,
a print representation is returned.
"""
import inspect
try:
return inspect.getsource(obj)
except:
return repr(obj)
def builder_module():
return __import__("builder_" + sys.platform)
class TestBase(unittest2.TestCase):
"""
This abstract base class is meant to be subclassed. It provides default
implementations for setUpClass(), tearDownClass(), setUp(), and tearDown(),
among other things.
Important things for test class writers:
- Overwrite the mydir class attribute, otherwise your test class won't
run. It specifies the relative directory to the top level 'test' so
the test harness can change to the correct working directory before
running your test.
- The setUp method sets up things to facilitate subsequent interactions
with the debugger as part of the test. These include:
- populate the test method name
- create/get a debugger set with synchronous mode (self.dbg)
- get the command interpreter from with the debugger (self.ci)
- create a result object for use with the command interpreter
(self.res)
- plus other stuffs
- The tearDown method tries to perform some necessary cleanup on behalf
of the test to return the debugger to a good state for the next test.
These include:
- execute any tearDown hooks registered by the test method with
TestBase.addTearDownHook(); examples can be found in
settings/TestSettings.py
- kill the inferior process associated with each target, if any,
and, then delete the target from the debugger's target list
- perform build cleanup before running the next test method in the
same test class; examples of registering for this service can be
found in types/TestIntegerTypes.py with the call:
- self.setTearDownCleanup(dictionary=d)
- Similarly setUpClass and tearDownClass perform classwise setup and
teardown fixtures. The tearDownClass method invokes a default build
cleanup for the entire test class; also, subclasses can implement the
classmethod classCleanup(cls) to perform special class cleanup action.
- The instance methods runCmd and expect are used heavily by existing
test cases to send a command to the command interpreter and to perform
string/pattern matching on the output of such command execution. The
expect method also provides a mode to peform string/pattern matching
without running a command.
- The build methods buildDefault, buildDsym, and buildDwarf are used to
build the binaries used during a particular test scenario. A plugin
should be provided for the sys.platform running the test suite. The
Mac OS X implementation is located in plugins/darwin.py.
"""
@classmethod
def skipLongRunningTest(cls):
"""
By default, we skip long running test case.
This can be overridden by passing '-l' to the test driver (dotest.py).
"""
if "LLDB_SKIP_LONG_RUNNING_TEST" in os.environ and "NO" == os.environ["LLDB_SKIP_LONG_RUNNING_TEST"]:
return False
else:
return True
mydir = None
maxLaunchCount = 3;
timeWaitNextLaunch = 1.0;
oldcwd = None
@classmethod
def setUpClass(cls):
"""
Python unittest framework class setup fixture.
Do current directory manipulation.
"""
if not cls.mydir or len(cls.mydir) == 0:
raise Exception("Subclasses must override the 'mydir' attribute.")
cls.oldcwd = os.getcwd()
if ("LLDB_TEST" in os.environ):
if traceAlways:
print >> sys.stderr, "Change dir to:", os.path.join(os.environ["LLDB_TEST"], cls.mydir)
os.chdir(os.path.join(os.environ["LLDB_TEST"], cls.mydir))
@classmethod
def tearDownClass(cls):
"""
Python unittest framework class teardown fixture.
Do class-wide cleanup.
"""
if doCleanup:
module = builder_module()
if not module.cleanup():
raise Exception("Don't know how to do cleanup")
if getattr(cls, "classCleanup", None):
if traceAlways:
print >> sys.stderr, "Call class-specific cleanup function for class:", cls
try:
cls.classCleanup()
except:
exc_type, exc_value, exc_tb = sys.exc_info()
traceback.print_exception(exc_type, exc_value, exc_tb)
if traceAlways:
print >> sys.stderr, "Restore dir to:", cls.oldcwd
os.chdir(cls.oldcwd)
def doDelay(self):
"""See option -w of dotest.py."""
if ("LLDB_WAIT_BETWEEN_TEST_CASES" in os.environ and
os.environ["LLDB_WAIT_BETWEEN_TEST_CASES"] == 'YES'):
waitTime = 1.0
if "LLDB_TIME_WAIT_BETWEEN_TEST_CASES" in os.environ:
waitTime = float(os.environ["LLDB_TIME_WAIT_BETWEEN_TEST_CASES"])
time.sleep(waitTime)
def setUp(self):
self.testMethodName = self._testMethodName
if "LLDB_EXEC" in os.environ:
self.lldbExec = os.environ["LLDB_EXEC"]
try:
if lldb.blacklist:
className = self.__class__.__name__
classAndMethodName = "%s.%s" % (className, self._testMethodName)
if className in lldb.blacklist:
self.skipTest(lldb.blacklist.get(className))
elif classAndMethodName in lldb.blacklist:
self.skipTest(lldb.blacklist.get(classAndMethodName))
except AttributeError:
pass
try:
if lldb.just_do_python_api_test:
testMethod = getattr(self, self._testMethodName)
if getattr(testMethod, "__python_api_test__", False):
pass
else:
self.skipTest("Skip lldb command line test")
except AttributeError:
pass
self.doDelay()
if "LLDB_MAX_LAUNCH_COUNT" in os.environ:
self.maxLaunchCount = int(os.environ["LLDB_MAX_LAUNCH_COUNT"])
if "LLDB_TIME_WAIT_NEXT_LAUNCH" in os.environ:
self.timeWaitNextLaunch = float(os.environ["LLDB_TIME_WAIT_NEXT_LAUNCH"])
try:
self.dbg = lldb.DBG
except AttributeError:
self.dbg = lldb.SBDebugger.Create()
if not self.dbg:
raise Exception('Invalid debugger instance')
self.dbg.SetAsync(False)
self.child = None
self.child_in_script_interpreter = False
self.ci = self.dbg.GetCommandInterpreter()
if not self.ci:
raise Exception('Could not get the command interpreter')
self.res = lldb.SBCommandReturnObject()
self.dict = None
self.doTearDownCleanup = False
self.dicts = []
self.doTearDownCleanups = False
self.session = StringIO.StringIO()
self.__errored__ = False
self.__failed__ = False
self.__expected__ = False
self.__unexpected__ = False
self.hooks = []
self.sys_stdout_hidden = False
def markError(self):
"""Callback invoked when an error (unexpected exception) errored."""
self.__errored__ = True
with recording(self, False) as sbuf:
print >> sbuf, "ERROR"
def markFailure(self):
"""Callback invoked when a failure (test assertion failure) occurred."""
self.__failed__ = True
with recording(self, False) as sbuf:
print >> sbuf, "FAIL"
def markExpectedFailure(self):
"""Callback invoked when an expected failure/error occurred."""
self.__expected__ = True
with recording(self, False) as sbuf:
print >> sbuf, "expected failure"
def markUnexpectedSuccess(self):
"""Callback invoked when an unexpected success occurred."""
self.__unexpected__ = True
with recording(self, False) as sbuf:
print >> sbuf, "unexpected success"
def dumpSessionInfo(self):
"""
Dump the debugger interactions leading to a test error/failure. This
allows for more convenient postmortem analysis.
See also LLDBTestResult (dotest.py) which is a singlton class derived
from TextTestResult and overwrites addError, addFailure, and
addExpectedFailure methods to allow us to to mark the test instance as
such.
"""
if self.__errored__:
pairs = lldb.test_result.errors
prefix = 'Error'
elif self.__failed__:
pairs = lldb.test_result.failures
prefix = 'Failure'
elif self.__expected__:
pairs = lldb.test_result.expectedFailures
prefix = 'ExpectedFailure'
elif self.__unexpected__:
prefix = "UnexpectedSuccess"
else:
return
if not self.__unexpected__:
for test, traceback in pairs:
if test is self:
print >> self.session, traceback
dname = os.path.join(os.environ["LLDB_TEST"],
os.environ["LLDB_SESSION_DIRNAME"])
if not os.path.isdir(dname):
os.mkdir(dname)
fname = os.path.join(dname, "%s-%s.log" % (prefix, self.id()))
with open(fname, "w") as f:
import datetime
print >> f, "Session info generated @", datetime.datetime.now().ctime()
print >> f, self.session.getvalue()
print >> f, "To rerun this test, issue the following command from the 'test' directory:\n"
print >> f, "./dotest.py %s -v -t -f %s.%s" % (self.getRunOptions(),
self.__class__.__name__,
self._testMethodName)
def setTearDownCleanup(self, dictionary=None):
"""Register a cleanup action at tearDown() time with a dictinary"""
self.dict = dictionary
self.doTearDownCleanup = True
def addTearDownCleanup(self, dictionary):
"""Add a cleanup action at tearDown() time with a dictinary"""
self.dicts.append(dictionary)
self.doTearDownCleanups = True
def addTearDownHook(self, hook):
"""
Add a function to be run during tearDown() time.
Hooks are executed in a first come first serve manner.
"""
if callable(hook):
with recording(self, traceAlways) as sbuf:
print >> sbuf, "Adding tearDown hook:", getsource_if_available(hook)
self.hooks.append(hook)
def tearDown(self):
for hook in reversed(self.hooks):
with recording(self, traceAlways) as sbuf:
print >> sbuf, "Executing tearDown hook:", getsource_if_available(hook)
hook()
import pexpect
if self.child and self.child.isalive():
with recording(self, traceAlways) as sbuf:
print >> sbuf, "tearing down the child process...."
if self.child_in_script_interpreter:
self.child.sendline('quit()')
self.child.expect_exact('(lldb) ')
self.child.sendline('quit')
try:
self.child.expect(pexpect.EOF)
except:
pass
targets = []
for target in self.dbg:
if target:
targets.append(target)
process = target.GetProcess()
if process:
rc = self.invoke(process, "Kill")
self.assertTrue(rc.Success(), PROCESS_KILLED)
for target in targets:
self.dbg.DeleteTarget(target)
del self.dbg
del self.hooks
if doCleanup and self.doTearDownCleanup:
module = builder_module()
if not module.cleanup(self, dictionary=self.dict):
raise Exception("Don't know how to do cleanup with dictionary: " + self.dict)
if doCleanup and self.doTearDownCleanups:
module = builder_module()
if self.dicts:
for dict in reversed(self.dicts):
if not module.cleanup(self, dictionary=dict):
raise Exception("Don't know how to do cleanup with dictionary: " + dict)
self.dumpSessionInfo()
def runCmd(self, cmd, msg=None, check=True, trace=False):
"""
Ask the command interpreter to handle the command and then check its
return status.
"""
if not cmd or len(cmd) == 0:
raise Exception("Bad 'cmd' parameter encountered")
trace = (True if traceAlways else trace)
running = (cmd.startswith("run") or cmd.startswith("process launch"))
for i in range(self.maxLaunchCount if running else 1):
self.ci.HandleCommand(cmd, self.res)
with recording(self, trace) as sbuf:
print >> sbuf, "runCmd:", cmd
if not check:
print >> sbuf, "check of return status not required"
if self.res.Succeeded():
print >> sbuf, "output:", self.res.GetOutput()
else:
print >> sbuf, "runCmd failed!"
print >> sbuf, self.res.GetError()
if self.res.Succeeded():
break
elif running:
time.sleep(self.timeWaitNextLaunch)
with recording(self, True) as sbuf:
print >> sbuf, "Command '" + cmd + "' failed!"
if check:
self.assertTrue(self.res.Succeeded(),
msg if msg else CMD_MSG(cmd))
def expect(self, str, msg=None, patterns=None, startstr=None, substrs=None, trace=False, error=False, matching=True, exe=True):
"""
Similar to runCmd; with additional expect style output matching ability.
Ask the command interpreter to handle the command and then check its
return status. The 'msg' parameter specifies an informational assert
message. We expect the output from running the command to start with
'startstr', matches the substrings contained in 'substrs', and regexp
matches the patterns contained in 'patterns'.
If the keyword argument error is set to True, it signifies that the API
client is expecting the command to fail. In this case, the error stream
from running the command is retrieved and compared against the golden
input, instead.
If the keyword argument matching is set to False, it signifies that the API
client is expecting the output of the command not to match the golden
input.
Finally, the required argument 'str' represents the lldb command to be
sent to the command interpreter. In case the keyword argument 'exe' is
set to False, the 'str' is treated as a string to be matched/not-matched
against the golden input.
"""
trace = (True if traceAlways else trace)
if exe:
self.runCmd(str, msg=msg, trace = (True if trace else False), check = not error)
output = self.res.GetError() if error else self.res.GetOutput()
if error:
self.assertFalse(self.res.Succeeded(),
"Command '" + str + "' is expected to fail!")
else:
output = str
with recording(self, trace) as sbuf:
print >> sbuf, "looking at:", output
heading = "Expecting" if matching else "Not expecting"
matched = output.startswith(startstr) if startstr else (True if matching else False)
if startstr:
with recording(self, trace) as sbuf:
print >> sbuf, "%s start string: %s" % (heading, startstr)
print >> sbuf, "Matched" if matched else "Not matched"
keepgoing = matched if matching else not matched
if substrs and keepgoing:
for str in substrs:
matched = output.find(str) != -1
with recording(self, trace) as sbuf:
print >> sbuf, "%s sub string: %s" % (heading, str)
print >> sbuf, "Matched" if matched else "Not matched"
keepgoing = matched if matching else not matched
if not keepgoing:
break
keepgoing = matched if matching else not matched
if patterns and keepgoing:
for pattern in patterns:
matched = bool(re.search(pattern, output))
with recording(self, trace) as sbuf:
print >> sbuf, "%s pattern: %s" % (heading, pattern)
print >> sbuf, "Matched" if matched else "Not matched"
keepgoing = matched if matching else not matched
if not keepgoing:
break
self.assertTrue(matched if matching else not matched,
msg if msg else EXP_MSG(str, exe))
def invoke(self, obj, name, trace=False):
"""Use reflection to call a method dynamically with no argument."""
trace = (True if traceAlways else trace)
method = getattr(obj, name)
import inspect
self.assertTrue(inspect.ismethod(method),
name + "is a method name of object: " + str(obj))
result = method()
with recording(self, trace) as sbuf:
print >> sbuf, str(method) + ":", result
return result
def getArchitecture(self):
"""Returns the architecture in effect the test suite is running with."""
module = builder_module()
return module.getArchitecture()
def getCompiler(self):
"""Returns the compiler in effect the test suite is running with."""
module = builder_module()
return module.getCompiler()
def getRunOptions(self):
"""Command line option for -A and -C to run this test again, called from
self.dumpSessionInfo()."""
arch = self.getArchitecture()
comp = self.getCompiler()
if not arch and not comp:
return ""
else:
return "%s %s" % ("-A "+arch if arch else "",
"-C "+comp if comp else "")
def buildDefault(self, architecture=None, compiler=None, dictionary=None):
"""Platform specific way to build the default binaries."""
module = builder_module()
if not module.buildDefault(self, architecture, compiler, dictionary):
raise Exception("Don't know how to build default binary")
def buildDsym(self, architecture=None, compiler=None, dictionary=None):
"""Platform specific way to build binaries with dsym info."""
module = builder_module()
if not module.buildDsym(self, architecture, compiler, dictionary):
raise Exception("Don't know how to build binary with dsym")
def buildDwarf(self, architecture=None, compiler=None, dictionary=None):
"""Platform specific way to build binaries with dwarf maps."""
module = builder_module()
if not module.buildDwarf(self, architecture, compiler, dictionary):
raise Exception("Don't know how to build binary with dwarf")
def DebugSBValue(self, frame, val):
"""Debug print a SBValue object, if traceAlways is True."""
from lldbutil import value_type_to_str
if not traceAlways:
return
err = sys.stderr
err.write(val.GetName() + ":\n")
err.write('\t' + "TypeName -> " + val.GetTypeName() + '\n')
err.write('\t' + "ByteSize -> " + str(val.GetByteSize()) + '\n')
err.write('\t' + "NumChildren -> " + str(val.GetNumChildren()) + '\n')
err.write('\t' + "Value -> " + str(val.GetValue(frame)) + '\n')
err.write('\t' + "ValueType -> " + value_type_to_str(val.GetValueType()) + '\n')
err.write('\t' + "Summary -> " + str(val.GetSummary(frame)) + '\n')
err.write('\t' + "IsPointerType -> " + str(val.TypeIsPointerType()) + '\n')
err.write('\t' + "Location -> " + val.GetLocation(frame) + '\n')
def DebugPExpect(self, child):
"""Debug the spwaned pexpect object."""
if not traceAlways:
return
print child
def TraceOn(self):
"""Returns True if we are in trace mode (i.e., tracing lldb command execution)."""
return traceAlways
def HideStdout(self):
"""Hide output to stdout from the user.
During test execution, there might be cases where we don't want to show the
standard output to the user. For example,
self.runCmd(r'''sc print "\n\n\tHello!\n"''')
tests whether command abbreviation for 'script' works or not. There is no
need to show the 'Hello' output to the user as long as the 'script' command
succeeds and we are not in TraceOn() mode (see the '-t' option).
In this case, the test method calls self.HideStdout(self) to redirect the
sys.stdout to a null device, and restores the sys.stdout upon teardown.
Note that you should only call this method at most once during a test case
execution. Any subsequent call has no effect at all."""
if self.sys_stdout_hidden:
return
self.sys_stdout_hidden = True
old_stdout = sys.stdout
sys.stdout = open(os.devnull, 'w')
def restore_stdout():
sys.stdout = old_stdout
self.addTearDownHook(restore_stdout)