from __future__ import print_function # # Test some of the system debug features with the multiarch memory # test. It is a port of the original vmlinux focused test case but # using the "memory" test instead. # # This is launched via tests/guest-debug/run-test.py # import gdb from test_gdbstub import main, report def check_interrupt(thread): """ Check that, if thread is resumed, we go back to the same thread when the program gets interrupted. """ # Switch to the thread we're going to be running the test in. print("thread ", thread.num) gdb.execute("thr %d" % thread.num) # Enter the loop() function on this thread. # # While there are cleaner ways to do this, we want to minimize the number of # side effects on the gdbstub's internal state, since those may mask bugs. # Ideally, there should be no difference between what we're doing here and # the program reaching the loop() function on its own. # # For this to be safe, we only need the prologue of loop() to not have # instructions that may have problems with what we're doing here. We don't # have to worry about anything else, as this function never returns. gdb.execute("set $pc = loop") # Continue and then interrupt the task. gdb.post_event(lambda: gdb.execute("interrupt")) gdb.execute("c") # Check whether the thread we're in after the interruption is the same we # ran continue from. return (thread.num == gdb.selected_thread().num) def run_test(): """ Test if interrupting the code always lands us on the same thread when running with scheduler-lock enabled. """ if len(gdb.selected_inferior().threads()) == 1: print("SKIP: set to run on a single thread") exit(0) gdb.execute("set scheduler-locking on") for thread in gdb.selected_inferior().threads(): report(check_interrupt(thread), "thread %d resumes correctly on interrupt" % thread.num) main(run_test)