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Re: [PATCH] Make gdb.base/corefile.exp work on terminals with few rows
- From: Simon Marchi <simon dot marchi at ericsson dot com>
- To: Pedro Alves <palves at redhat dot com>, Simon Marchi <simon dot marchi at polymtl dot ca>, "gdb-patches at sourceware dot org" <gdb-patches at sourceware dot org>
- Cc: "philippe dot waroquiers at skynet dot be" <philippe dot waroquiers at skynet dot be>
- Date: Wed, 6 Feb 2019 23:11:32 +0000
- Subject: Re: [PATCH] Make gdb.base/corefile.exp work on terminals with few rows
- References: <20190206034857.14608-1-simon.marchi@polymtl.ca> <12fe97cd-e3d9-56dd-fd88-f3c0fd7adae1@redhat.com>
On 2019-02-06 1:42 p.m., Pedro Alves wrote:
> On 02/06/2019 03:48 AM, Simon Marchi wrote:
>> When creating a pty to spawn a subprocess (such as gdb), Expect
>> copies the settings of its own controlling terminal, including the
>> number of rows and columns. If you "make check" on a terminal with just
>> a few rows (e.g. 4), GDB will paginate before reaching the initial
>> prompt. In default_gdb_start, used by most tests, this is already
>> handled: if we see the pagination prompt, we sent \n to continue.
>>
>> Philippe reported that gdb.base/corefile.exp didn't work in terminals
>> with just a few rows. This test spawns GDB by hand, because it needs to
>> check things before the initial prompt, which it couldn't do if it used
>> default_gdb_start.
>>
>> In this case I think it's not safe to use the same technique as in
>> default_gdb_start. Even if we could send a \n if we see a pagination
>> prompt, we match some multiline regexes in there. So if a pagination
>> slips in there, it might make the regexes not match and fail the test.
>>
>> It's also not possible to use -ex "set height 0" or -iex "set height 0",
>> it is handled after the introduction text is shown.
>>
>> The simplest way I found to avoid showing the pagination completely is
>> to set stty_init (documented in expect's man page) to initialize gdb's
>> pty with a fixed number of rows.
>
> Hmm, good idea. But, if you have a small terminal with just a few
> columns (as opposed to rows), then the testsuite all breaks, AFAICT.
>
> E.g., I just tried running gdb.base/break.exp with a small window and
> the test hangs starting GDB.
>
> But with:
>
> --- c/gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp
> +++ w/gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp
> @@ -4752,6 +4752,9 @@ proc gdb_init { test_file_name } {
> # tests.
> setenv TERM "dumb"
>
> + global stty_init
> + set stty_init "rows 25 cols 80"
> +
> # Some tests (for example gdb.base/maint.exp) shell out from gdb to use
> # grep. Clear GREP_OPTIONS to make the behavior predictable,
> # especially having color output turned on can cause tests to fail.
>
> ... it passes. And so does gdb.base/corefile.exp.
>
> Is there any reason we'd ever want GDB's terminal size to match
> whatever the user's term size was? I'd think that sanitizing / forcing
> the same sizes everywhere would just lead to more stable testing,
> and thus be a good thing.
Agreed. If we do this, we can remove the part where we match the pagination
prompt during startup, like so:
From 67bb1dde957fcd8a0168fb04afa3f8e3a4ccf9bb Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Simon Marchi <simon.marchi@polymtl.ca>
Date: Tue, 5 Feb 2019 22:48:57 -0500
Subject: [PATCH] Make gdb.base/corefile.exp work on terminals with few rows
When creating a pty to spawn a subprocess (such as gdb), Expect
copies the settings of its own controlling terminal, including the
number of rows and columns. If you "make check" on a terminal with just
a few rows (e.g. 4), GDB will paginate before reaching the initial
prompt. In default_gdb_start, used by most tests, this is already
handled: if we see the pagination prompt, we sent \n to continue.
Philippe reported that gdb.base/corefile.exp didn't work in terminals
with just a few rows. This test spawns GDB by hand, because it needs to
check things before the initial prompt, which it couldn't do if it used
default_gdb_start.
In this case I think it's not safe to use the same technique as in
default_gdb_start. Even if we could send a \n if we see a pagination
prompt, we match some multiline regexes in there. So if a pagination
slips in there, it might make the regexes not match and fail the test.
It's also not possible to use -ex "set height 0" or -iex "set height 0",
it is handled after the introduction text is shown.
The simplest way I found to avoid showing the pagination completely is
to set stty_init (documented in expect's man page) to initialize gdb's
pty with a fixed number of rows.
And actually, if we set stty_init in gdb_init, it works nicely as a
general solution applicable to all tests. We can therefore remove the
solution introduced in e882ef3cfc3 ("testsuite: expect possible
pagination when starting gdb") where we matched the pagination prompt
during startup.
gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog:
* lib/gdb.exp (default_gdb_start): Don't match pagination
prompt.
(gdb_init): Set stty_init.
---
gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp | 44 ++++++++++++++++++---------------------
1 file changed, 20 insertions(+), 24 deletions(-)
diff --git a/gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp b/gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp
index bc7ba12d480..d05854329d8 100644
--- a/gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp
+++ b/gdb/testsuite/lib/gdb.exp
@@ -1638,7 +1638,7 @@ proc default_gdb_spawn { } {
# Default gdb_start procedure.
proc default_gdb_start { } {
- global gdb_prompt pagination_prompt
+ global gdb_prompt
global gdb_spawn_id
global inferior_spawn_id
@@ -1659,29 +1659,20 @@ proc default_gdb_start { } {
# When running over NFS, particularly if running many simultaneous
# tests on different hosts all using the same server, things can
# get really slow. Give gdb at least 3 minutes to start up.
- set loop_again 1
- while { $loop_again } {
- set loop_again 0
- gdb_expect 360 {
- -re "$pagination_prompt" {
- verbose "Hit pagination during startup. Pressing enter to continue."
- send_gdb "\n"
- set loop_again 1
- }
- -re "\[\r\n\]$gdb_prompt $" {
- verbose "GDB initialized."
- }
- -re "$gdb_prompt $" {
- perror "GDB never initialized."
- unset gdb_spawn_id
- return -1
- }
- timeout {
- perror "(timeout) GDB never initialized after 10 seconds."
- remote_close host
- unset gdb_spawn_id
- return -1
- }
+ gdb_expect 360 {
+ -re "\[\r\n\]$gdb_prompt $" {
+ verbose "GDB initialized."
+ }
+ -re "$gdb_prompt $" {
+ perror "GDB never initialized."
+ unset gdb_spawn_id
+ return -1
+ }
+ timeout {
+ perror "(timeout) GDB never initialized after 10 seconds."
+ remote_close host
+ unset gdb_spawn_id
+ return -1
}
}
@@ -4752,6 +4743,11 @@ proc gdb_init { test_file_name } {
# tests.
setenv TERM "dumb"
+ # Initialize GDB's pty with a fixed size, to make sure we avoid pagination
+ # during startup. See "man expect" for details about stty_init.
+ global stty_init
+ set stty_init "rows 25 cols 80"
+
# Some tests (for example gdb.base/maint.exp) shell out from gdb to use
# grep. Clear GREP_OPTIONS to make the behavior predictable,
# especially having color output turned on can cause tests to fail.
--
2.20.1