From FEDORA_PATCHES Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Keith Seitz Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2023 16:23:54 -0400 Subject: gdb-rhbz2156888-copy_type-assertion-2of2.patch ;; Backport of "Fix PR20630 regression test in gdb.base/printcmds.exp" ;; (Tom deVries, RHBZ 2156888) On s390x-linux, I run into: ... (gdb) print {unsigned char}{65}^M $749 = 0 '\000'^M (gdb) FAIL: gdb.base/printcmds.exp: print {unsigned char}{65} ... In contrast, on x86_64-linux, we have: ... (gdb) print {unsigned char}{65}^M $749 = 65 'A'^M (gdb) PASS: gdb.base/printcmds.exp: print {unsigned char}{65} ... The first problem here is that the test is supposed to be a regression test for PR20630, which can be reproduced (for an unfixed gdb) like this: ... (gdb) p {unsigned char[]}{0x17} gdbtypes.c:4641: internal-error: copy_type: \ Assertion `TYPE_OBJFILE_OWNED (type)' failed. ... but it's not due to insufficient quoting (note the dropped '[]'). That's easy to fix, but after that we have on s390 (big endian): ... (gdb) print {unsigned char[]}{65}^M $749 = ""^M ... and on x86_64 (little endian): ... (gdb) print {unsigned char[]}{65}^M $749 = "A"^M ... Fix this by using 0xffffffff, such that in both cases we have: ... (gdb) print {unsigned char[]}{0xffffffff}^M $749 = "\377\377\377\377"^M ... Tested on x86_64-linux and s390x-linux. diff --git a/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/printcmds.exp b/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/printcmds.exp --- a/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/printcmds.exp +++ b/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/printcmds.exp @@ -714,6 +714,7 @@ proc test_print_string_constants {} { } proc test_print_array_constants {} { + global hex if [target_info exists gdb,cannot_call_functions] { unsupported "this target can not call functions" @@ -732,7 +733,8 @@ proc test_print_array_constants {} { gdb_test "print *&{4,5,6}\[1\]" "Attempt to take address of value not located in memory." # This used to cause a crash. - gdb_test "print {unsigned char[]}{65}" " = 65 'A'" + set val [string_to_regexp {"\377\377\377\377"}] + gdb_test "print {unsigned char\[\]}{0xffffffff}" " = $val" } proc test_print_enums {} {