rust/tests/ui/runtime/backtrace-debuginfo.rs

190 lines
6.7 KiB
Rust

//@ run-pass
// We disable tail merging here because it can't preserve debuginfo and thus
// potentially breaks the backtraces. Also, subtle changes can decide whether
// tail merging succeeds, so the test might work today but fail tomorrow due to a
// seemingly completely unrelated change.
// Unfortunately, LLVM has no "disable" option for this, so we have to set
// "enable" to 0 instead.
//@ compile-flags:-g -Copt-level=0 -Cllvm-args=-enable-tail-merge=0
//@ compile-flags:-Cforce-frame-pointers=yes
//@ compile-flags:-Cstrip=none
//@ ignore-wasm32 spawning processes is not supported
//@ ignore-sgx no processes
//@ ignore-fuchsia Backtrace not symbolized, trace different line alignment
use std::env;
#[path = "backtrace-debuginfo-aux.rs"] mod aux;
macro_rules! pos {
() => ((file!(), line!()))
}
macro_rules! dump_and_die {
($($pos:expr),*) => ({
// FIXME(#18285): we cannot include the current position because
// the macro span takes over the last frame's file/line.
//
// You might also be wondering why a major platform,
// i686-pc-windows-msvc, is located in here. Some of the saga can be
// found on #62897, but the tl;dr; is that it appears that if the
// standard library doesn't have debug information or frame pointers,
// which it doesn't by default on the test builders, then the stack
// walking routines in dbghelp will randomly terminate the stack trace
// in libstd without going further. Presumably the addition of frame
// pointers and/or debuginfo fixes this since tests always work with
// nightly compilers (which have debuginfo). In general though this test
// is replicated in rust-lang/backtrace-rs and has extensive coverage
// there, even on i686-pc-windows-msvc. We do the best we can in
// rust-lang/rust to test it as well, but sometimes we just gotta keep
// landing PRs.
if cfg!(any(target_os = "android",
all(target_os = "linux", target_arch = "arm"),
all(target_env = "msvc", target_arch = "x86"),
target_os = "freebsd",
target_os = "dragonfly",
target_os = "openbsd")) {
// skip these platforms as this support isn't implemented yet.
} else {
dump_filelines(&[$($pos),*]);
panic!();
}
})
}
// we can't use a function as it will alter the backtrace
macro_rules! check {
($counter:expr; $($pos:expr),*) => ({
if *$counter == 0 {
dump_and_die!($($pos),*)
} else {
*$counter -= 1;
}
})
}
type Pos = (&'static str, u32);
// this goes to stdout and each line has to be occurred
// in the following backtrace to stderr with a correct order.
fn dump_filelines(filelines: &[Pos]) {
for &(file, line) in filelines.iter().rev() {
// extract a basename
let basename = file.split(&['/', '\\'][..]).last().unwrap();
println!("{}:{}", basename, line);
}
}
#[inline(never)]
fn inner(counter: &mut i32, main_pos: Pos, outer_pos: Pos) {
check!(counter; main_pos, outer_pos);
check!(counter; main_pos, outer_pos);
let inner_pos = pos!(); aux::callback(|aux_pos| {
check!(counter; main_pos, outer_pos, inner_pos, aux_pos);
});
let inner_pos = pos!(); aux::callback_inlined(|aux_pos| {
check!(counter; main_pos, outer_pos, inner_pos, aux_pos);
});
}
// We emit the wrong location for the caller here when inlined on MSVC
#[cfg_attr(not(target_env = "msvc"), inline(always))]
#[cfg_attr(target_env = "msvc", inline(never))]
fn inner_inlined(counter: &mut i32, main_pos: Pos, outer_pos: Pos) {
check!(counter; main_pos, outer_pos);
check!(counter; main_pos, outer_pos);
// Again, disable inlining for MSVC.
#[cfg_attr(not(target_env = "msvc"), inline(always))]
#[cfg_attr(target_env = "msvc", inline(never))]
fn inner_further_inlined(counter: &mut i32, main_pos: Pos, outer_pos: Pos, inner_pos: Pos) {
check!(counter; main_pos, outer_pos, inner_pos);
}
inner_further_inlined(counter, main_pos, outer_pos, pos!());
let inner_pos = pos!(); aux::callback(|aux_pos| {
check!(counter; main_pos, outer_pos, inner_pos, aux_pos);
});
let inner_pos = pos!(); aux::callback_inlined(|aux_pos| {
check!(counter; main_pos, outer_pos, inner_pos, aux_pos);
});
// this tests a distinction between two independent calls to the inlined function.
// (un)fortunately, LLVM somehow merges two consecutive such calls into one node.
inner_further_inlined(counter, main_pos, outer_pos, pos!());
}
#[inline(never)]
fn outer(mut counter: i32, main_pos: Pos) {
inner(&mut counter, main_pos, pos!());
inner_inlined(&mut counter, main_pos, pos!());
}
fn check_trace(output: &str, error: &str) -> Result<(), String> {
// reverse the position list so we can start with the last item (which was the first line)
let mut remaining: Vec<&str> = output.lines().map(|s| s.trim()).rev().collect();
if !error.contains("stack backtrace") {
return Err(format!("no backtrace found in stderr:\n{}", error))
}
for line in error.lines() {
if !remaining.is_empty() && line.contains(remaining.last().unwrap()) {
remaining.pop();
}
}
if !remaining.is_empty() {
return Err(format!("trace does not match position list\n\
still need to find {:?}\n\n\
--- stdout\n{}\n\
--- stderr\n{}",
remaining, output, error))
}
Ok(())
}
fn run_test(me: &str) {
use std::str;
use std::process::Command;
let mut i = 0;
let mut errors = Vec::new();
loop {
let out = Command::new(me)
.env("RUST_BACKTRACE", "full")
.arg(i.to_string()).output().unwrap();
let output = str::from_utf8(&out.stdout).unwrap();
let error = str::from_utf8(&out.stderr).unwrap();
if out.status.success() {
assert!(output.contains("done."), "bad output for successful run: {}", output);
break;
} else {
if let Err(e) = check_trace(output, error) {
errors.push(e);
}
}
i += 1;
}
if errors.len() > 0 {
for error in errors {
println!("---------------------------------------");
println!("{}", error);
}
panic!("found some errors");
}
}
#[inline(never)]
fn main() {
let args: Vec<String> = env::args().collect();
if args.len() >= 2 {
let case = args[1].parse().unwrap();
eprintln!("test case {}", case);
outer(case, pos!());
println!("done.");
} else {
run_test(&args[0]);
}
}