Files
Jonas Devlieghere 86aa8e6363 [lldb] Use target.GetLaunchInfo() instead of creating an empty one.
Update tests that were creating an empty LaunchInfo instead of using the
one coming from the target. This ensures target properties are honored.
2020-08-06 11:51:26 -07:00

61 lines
2.0 KiB
Python

"""
Test to ensure SBFrame::Disassemble produces SOME output
"""
import lldb
import lldbsuite.test.lldbutil as lldbutil
from lldbsuite.test.lldbtest import *
class FrameDisassembleTestCase(TestBase):
mydir = TestBase.compute_mydir(__file__)
NO_DEBUG_INFO_TESTCASE = True
def test_frame_disassemble(self):
"""Sample test to ensure SBFrame::Disassemble produces SOME output."""
self.build()
self.frame_disassemble_test()
def frame_disassemble_test(self):
"""Sample test to ensure SBFrame::Disassemble produces SOME output"""
exe = self.getBuildArtifact("a.out")
# Create a target by the debugger.
target = self.dbg.CreateTarget(exe)
self.assertTrue(target, VALID_TARGET)
# Now create a breakpoint in main.c at the source matching
# "Set a breakpoint here"
breakpoint = target.BreakpointCreateBySourceRegex(
"Set a breakpoint here", lldb.SBFileSpec("main.cpp"))
self.assertTrue(breakpoint and
breakpoint.GetNumLocations() >= 1,
VALID_BREAKPOINT)
error = lldb.SBError()
# This is the launch info. If you want to launch with arguments or
# environment variables, add them using SetArguments or
# SetEnvironmentEntries
launch_info = target.GetLaunchInfo()
process = target.Launch(launch_info, error)
self.assertTrue(process, PROCESS_IS_VALID)
# Did we hit our breakpoint?
from lldbsuite.test.lldbutil import get_threads_stopped_at_breakpoint
threads = get_threads_stopped_at_breakpoint(process, breakpoint)
self.assertTrue(
len(threads) == 1,
"There should be a thread stopped at our breakpoint")
# The hit count for the breakpoint should be 1.
self.assertEquals(breakpoint.GetHitCount(), 1)
frame = threads[0].GetFrameAtIndex(0)
disassembly = frame.Disassemble()
self.assertNotEqual(len(disassembly), 0, "Disassembly was empty.")