File: invalid-input-address.test

package info (click to toggle)
llvm-toolchain-19 1%3A19.1.7-3
  • links: PTS, VCS
  • area: main
  • in suites: forky, sid, trixie
  • size: 1,998,520 kB
  • sloc: cpp: 6,951,680; ansic: 1,486,157; asm: 913,598; python: 232,024; f90: 80,126; objc: 75,281; lisp: 37,276; pascal: 16,990; sh: 10,009; ml: 5,058; perl: 4,724; awk: 3,523; makefile: 3,167; javascript: 2,504; xml: 892; fortran: 664; cs: 573
file content (25 lines) | stat: -rw-r--r-- 1,209 bytes parent folder | download | duplicates (8)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
# Use address that can't fit in a 64-bit number. Show that llvm-symbolizer
# simply treats it as an unknown symbol.
RUN: llvm-symbolizer --obj=%p/Inputs/addr.exe 0x10000000000000000 | FileCheck --check-prefix=LARGE-ADDR %s

LARGE-ADDR-NOT:  {{.}}
LARGE-ADDR:      ??
LARGE-ADDR-NEXT: ??:0:0
LARGE-ADDR-EMPTY:
LARGE-ADDR-NOT:  {{.}}

RUN: echo '"some text"' '"some text2"' > %t.rsp
RUN: echo -e 'some text\nsome text2\n' > %t.inp

# Test bad input address values, via stdin, command line and response file.
RUN: llvm-symbolizer --obj=%p/Inputs/addr.exe < %t.inp | FileCheck --check-prefix=BAD-INPUT %s
RUN: llvm-symbolizer --obj=%p/Inputs/addr.exe "some text" "some text2" | FileCheck --check-prefix=BAD-INPUT %s
RUN: llvm-symbolizer --obj=%p/Inputs/addr.exe @%t.rsp | FileCheck --check-prefix=BAD-INPUT %s

# Test bad input address values for the GNU-compatible version.
RUN: llvm-addr2line --obj=%p/Inputs/addr.exe < %t.inp | FileCheck --check-prefix=BAD-INPUT %s
RUN: llvm-addr2line --obj=%p/Inputs/addr.exe "some text" "some text2" | FileCheck --check-prefix=BAD-INPUT %s
RUN: llvm-addr2line --obj=%p/Inputs/addr.exe @%t.rsp | FileCheck --check-prefix=BAD-INPUT %s

BAD-INPUT:      ??
BAD-INPUT-NEXT: ??:0