26 lines
1.2 KiB
Text
26 lines
1.2 KiB
Text
|
# Use address that can't fit in a 64-bit number. Show that llvm-symbolizer
|
||
|
# simply treats it as an unknown symbol.
|
||
|
RUN: llvm-symbolizer --obj=%p/Inputs/addr.exe 0x10000000000000000 | FileCheck --check-prefix=LARGE-ADDR %s
|
||
|
|
||
|
LARGE-ADDR-NOT: {{.}}
|
||
|
LARGE-ADDR: ??
|
||
|
LARGE-ADDR-NEXT: ??:0:0
|
||
|
LARGE-ADDR-EMPTY:
|
||
|
LARGE-ADDR-NOT: {{.}}
|
||
|
|
||
|
RUN: echo '"some text"' '"some text2"' > %t.rsp
|
||
|
RUN: echo -e 'some text\nsome text2\n' > %t.inp
|
||
|
|
||
|
# Test bad input address values, via stdin, command line and response file.
|
||
|
RUN: llvm-symbolizer --obj=%p/Inputs/addr.exe < %t.inp | FileCheck --check-prefix=BAD-INPUT %s
|
||
|
RUN: llvm-symbolizer --obj=%p/Inputs/addr.exe "some text" "some text2" | FileCheck --check-prefix=BAD-INPUT %s
|
||
|
RUN: llvm-symbolizer --obj=%p/Inputs/addr.exe @%t.rsp | FileCheck --check-prefix=BAD-INPUT %s
|
||
|
|
||
|
# Test bad input address values for the GNU-compatible version.
|
||
|
RUN: llvm-addr2line --obj=%p/Inputs/addr.exe < %t.inp | FileCheck --check-prefix=BAD-INPUT %s
|
||
|
RUN: llvm-addr2line --obj=%p/Inputs/addr.exe "some text" "some text2" | FileCheck --check-prefix=BAD-INPUT %s
|
||
|
RUN: llvm-addr2line --obj=%p/Inputs/addr.exe @%t.rsp | FileCheck --check-prefix=BAD-INPUT %s
|
||
|
|
||
|
BAD-INPUT: ??
|
||
|
BAD-INPUT-NEXT: ??:0
|