mirror of
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust.git
synced 2025-09-27 12:48:20 +00:00

Disabling loading of pretty printers in the debugger itself is more reliable. Before this commit the .gdb_debug_scripts section couldn't be included in dylibs or rlibs as otherwise there is no way to disable the section anymore without recompiling the entire standard library.
29 lines
977 B
Rust
29 lines
977 B
Rust
//@ ignore-lldb
|
|
//@ ignore-aarch64
|
|
|
|
//@ compile-flags:-g
|
|
//@ disable-gdb-pretty-printers
|
|
|
|
// gdb-command:run
|
|
// gdb-command:next
|
|
// gdb-check:[...]22[...]let s = Some(5).unwrap(); // #break
|
|
// gdb-command:continue
|
|
|
|
|
|
// IF YOU MODIFY THIS FILE, BE CAREFUL TO ADAPT THE LINE NUMBERS IN THE DEBUGGER COMMANDS
|
|
|
|
// This test makes sure that gdb does not set unwanted breakpoints in inlined functions. If a
|
|
// breakpoint existed in unwrap(), then calling `next` would (when stopped at `let s = ...`) stop
|
|
// in unwrap() instead of stepping over the function invocation. By making sure that `s` is
|
|
// contained in the output, after calling `next` just once, we can be sure that we did not stop in
|
|
// unwrap(). (The testing framework doesn't allow for checking that some text is *not* contained in
|
|
// the output, which is why we have to make the test in this kind of roundabout way)
|
|
fn bar() -> isize {
|
|
let s = Some(5).unwrap(); // #break
|
|
s
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
fn main() {
|
|
let _ = bar();
|
|
}
|