aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorGabriel F. T. Gomes <gabrielftg@linux.ibm.com>2019-12-03 22:10:50 -0300
committerGabriel F. T. Gomes <gabrielftg@linux.ibm.com>2019-12-04 09:16:42 -0300
commit6ef1bab699eb82ad24d52a4a045bceb4f7533a5b (patch)
tree2b491efa10ce883ee15551c3a300fd263bddc22c
parent8b196ac4b8d1be6021a3974f28bba5e947b37db8 (diff)
downloadglibc-6ef1bab699eb82ad24d52a4a045bceb4f7533a5b.tar
glibc-6ef1bab699eb82ad24d52a4a045bceb4f7533a5b.tar.gz
glibc-6ef1bab699eb82ad24d52a4a045bceb4f7533a5b.tar.bz2
glibc-6ef1bab699eb82ad24d52a4a045bceb4f7533a5b.zip
Attach to test in container from debugglibc.sh
Some test cases are meant to be ran inside the container infrastructure and make check automatically runs them as such. However, running a single test case in a container without make check is useful. This patch adds a new --tool option to testrun.sh that makes this easy, as well as it adds a new option (-c or --in-container) to debugglibc.sh, which causes the program under test to be ran in a container (with WAIT_FOR_DEBUGGER=1), then automatically attaches GDB to it. Automatically detecting if a test case is supposed to be ran inside a container is harder (if not impossible), as Carlos pointed out [1], however, this patch makes it easier to do it manually: Using testrun.sh with containerized test: $ ./testrun.sh --tool=container /absolute/path/to/program Using debugglibc.sh with containerized test: $ ./debugglibc.sh -c /absolute/path/to/program Note: running these commands with relative paths causes error and warning messages to be displayed, although the test case might succeed. For example, with relative path: $ ./testrun.sh --tool=container elf/tst-ldconfig-bad-aux-cache error: subprocess failed: execv error: unexpected error output from subprocess /sbin/ldconfig: Warning: ignoring configuration file that cannot be opened: /etc/ld.so.conf: No such file or directory info: f 0 1064 /var/cache/ldconfig/aux-cache 20 aux-cache [...] Whereas with absolute paths, the errors and warnings are gone: $ ./testrun.sh --tool=container $PWD/elf/tst-ldconfig-bad-aux-cache info: f 0 1064 /var/cache/ldconfig/aux-cache 20 aux-cache [...] [1] https://sourceware.org/ml/libc-alpha/2019-11/msg00873.html Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
-rw-r--r--Makefile20
1 files changed, 20 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Makefile b/Makefile
index fae71aa287..924fdb6c0f 100644
--- a/Makefile
+++ b/Makefile
@@ -181,6 +181,11 @@ case "$$toolname" in
valgrind)
exec env $(run-program-env) valgrind $(test-via-rtld-prefix) $${1+"$$@"}
;;
+ container)
+ exec env $(run-program-env) $(test-via-rtld-prefix) \
+ $(common-objdir)/support/test-container \
+ env $(run-program-env) $(test-via-rtld-prefix) $${1+"$$@"}
+ ;;
*)
usage
;;
@@ -202,6 +207,7 @@ define debugglibc
SOURCE_DIR="$(CURDIR)"
BUILD_DIR="$(common-objpfx)"
CMD_FILE="$(common-objpfx)debugglibc.gdb"
+CONTAINER=false
DIRECT=true
SYMBOLSFILE=true
unset TESTCASE
@@ -235,6 +241,9 @@ Options:
The following options do not take arguments:
+ -c, --in-container
+ Run the test case inside a container and automatically attach
+ GDB to it.
-i, --no-direct
Selects whether to pass the --direct flag to the program.
--direct is useful when debugging glibc test cases. It inhibits the
@@ -263,6 +272,9 @@ do
ENVVARS="$$2 $$ENVVARS"
shift
;;
+ -c|--in-container)
+ CONTAINER=true
+ ;;
-i|--no-direct)
DIRECT=false
;;
@@ -348,6 +360,13 @@ echo "GDB Commands : $$CMD_FILE"
echo "Env vars : $$ENVVARS"
echo
+if [ "$$CONTAINER" == true ]
+then
+# Use testrun.sh to start the test case with WAIT_FOR_DEBUGGER=1, then
+# automatically attach GDB to it.
+WAIT_FOR_DEBUGGER=1 $(common-objpfx)testrun.sh --tool=container $${TESTCASE} &
+gdb -x $${TESTCASE}.gdb
+else
# Start the test case debugging in two steps:
# 1. the following command invokes gdb to run the loader;
# 2. the commands file tells the loader to run the test case.
@@ -355,6 +374,7 @@ gdb -q \
-x $${CMD_FILE} \
-d $${SOURCE_DIR} \
$${BUILD_DIR}/elf/ld.so
+fi
endef
# This is another handy script for debugging dynamically linked program