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Fix gdb.base/corefile2.exp test case for ppc64le
It turns out that the recently added gdb.base/corefile2.exp test won't run on ppc64le linux. The test case fails the internal checks which ensure that a mmap'd region can be placed within the statically allocated regions buf_rw[] and buf_ro[]. ppc64le linux apparently has 64k pages, which is much larger than the 24k regions originally allocated for buf_rw[] and buf_ro[]. This patch increases the size of each region to 256 KiB. Tested on either rawhide or Fedora 32 for these architectures: x86_64, x86_64/-m32, ppc64le, aarch64, and s390x. gdb/testsuite/ChangeLog: * gdb.base/coremaker2.c (buf_rw): Increase size to 256 KiB. (C5_24k): Delete. (C5_8k, C5_64k, C5_256k): New macros. (buf_ro): Allocate 256 KiB of initialized data.
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@ -1,3 +1,10 @@
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2020-07-31 Kevin Buettner <kevinb@redhat.com>
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* gdb.base/coremaker2.c (buf_rw): Increase size to 256 KiB.
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(C5_24k): Delete.
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(C5_8k, C5_64k, C5_256k): New macros.
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(buf_ro): Allocate 256 KiB of initialized data.
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2020-07-30 Tankut Baris Aktemur <tankut.baris.aktemur@intel.com>
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* gdb.base/condbreak-bad.exp: Extend the test with scenarios
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@ -47,12 +47,8 @@ unsigned long long addr;
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char *mbuf_ro;
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char *mbuf_rw;
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/* 24 KiB buffer. */
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char buf_rw[24 * 1024];
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/* 24 KiB worth of data. For this test case, we can't allocate a
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buffer and then fill it; we want GDB to have to read this data
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from the executable; it should NOT find it in the core file. */
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/* 256 KiB buffer. */
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char buf_rw[256 * 1024];
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#define C5_16 \
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0xc5, 0xc5, 0xc5, 0xc5, \
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@ -69,15 +65,22 @@ char buf_rw[24 * 1024];
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#define C5_1k \
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C5_256, C5_256, C5_256, C5_256
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#define C5_24k \
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C5_1k, C5_1k, C5_1k, C5_1k, \
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C5_1k, C5_1k, C5_1k, C5_1k, \
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C5_1k, C5_1k, C5_1k, C5_1k, \
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C5_1k, C5_1k, C5_1k, C5_1k, \
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#define C5_8k \
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C5_1k, C5_1k, C5_1k, C5_1k, \
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C5_1k, C5_1k, C5_1k, C5_1k
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const char buf_ro[] = { C5_24k };
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#define C5_64k \
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C5_8k, C5_8k, C5_8k, C5_8k, \
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C5_8k, C5_8k, C5_8k, C5_8k
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#define C5_256k \
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C5_64k, C5_64k, C5_64k, C5_64k
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/* 256 KiB worth of data. For this test case, we can't allocate a
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buffer and then fill it; we want GDB to have to read this data
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from the executable; it should NOT find it in the core file. */
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const char buf_ro[] = { C5_256k };
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int
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main (int argc, char **argv)
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