# REQUIRES: lld # RUN: %clang -target x86_64-pc-linux -g -O0 %S/Inputs/subprogram_ranges.s -o %t.o -c # RUN: ld.lld %t.o -o %t # RUN: %lldb -b -s %s %t 2>&1 | FileCheck %s # Test breaking on symbols and printing variables when a DW_TAG_subprogram uses # DW_AT_ranges instead of DW_AT_low_pc/DW_AT_high_pc. While the assembly here # is a bit unrealistic - it's a single-entry range using DWARFv4 which isn't # useful for anything (a single-entry range with DWARFv5 can reduce address # relocations, and multi-entry ranges can be used for function sections), but # it's the simplest thing to test. If anyone's updating this test at some # point, feel free to replace it with another equivalent test if it's # especially useful, but don't dismiss it as pointless just because it's a bit # weird. # * Using volatile writes to create instructions the location may be valid over # * Using two values for the variable so it is described by a location list, # not a single location description # * Not using function calls, so that the function has no frame pointer # initialization/no prologue instructions, so the location of "var" is valid # at the start of the function, so 'image lookup -v -s main' will include it. # # Source: # __attribute__((nodebug)) volatile int i; # int main() { # int var = 3; # i = 1; # var = 5; # i = 2; # } b main # CHECK: (lldb) b main # CHECK-NEXT: Breakpoint 1: where = {{.*}}`main at subprogram_ranges.c:4:5 image lookup -v -s main # CHECK: 1 symbols match 'main' # CHECK: Variable: {{.*}}, name = "var", type = "int", {{.*}}, decl = subprogram_ranges.c:3