| //@ ignore-lldb |
| //@ ignore-aarch64 |
| |
| //@ compile-flags:-g |
| |
| // gdb-command:run |
| // gdb-command:next |
| // gdb-check:[...]23[...]let s = Some(5).unwrap(); // #break |
| // gdb-command:continue |
| |
| #![feature(omit_gdb_pretty_printer_section)] |
| #![omit_gdb_pretty_printer_section] |
| |
| // IF YOU MODIFY THIS FILE, BE CAREFUL TO ADAPT THE LINE NUMBERS IN THE DEBUGGER COMMANDS |
| |
| // This test makes sure that gdb does not set unwanted breakpoints in inlined functions. If a |
| // breakpoint existed in unwrap(), then calling `next` would (when stopped at `let s = ...`) stop |
| // in unwrap() instead of stepping over the function invocation. By making sure that `s` is |
| // contained in the output, after calling `next` just once, we can be sure that we did not stop in |
| // unwrap(). (The testing framework doesn't allow for checking that some text is *not* contained in |
| // the output, which is why we have to make the test in this kind of roundabout way) |
| fn bar() -> isize { |
| let s = Some(5).unwrap(); // #break |
| s |
| } |
| |
| fn main() { |
| let _ = bar(); |
| } |