rust/tests/debuginfo/struct-style-enum.rs

88 lines
3.0 KiB
Rust

//@ min-lldb-version: 1800
//@ compile-flags:-g
// === GDB TESTS ===================================================================================
// gdb-command:set print union on
// gdb-command:run
// gdb-command:print case1
// gdb-check:$1 = struct_style_enum::Regular::Case1{a: 0, b: 31868, c: 31868, d: 31868, e: 31868}
// gdb-command:print case2
// gdb-check:$2 = struct_style_enum::Regular::Case2{a: 0, b: 286331153, c: 286331153}
// gdb-command:print case3
// gdb-check:$3 = struct_style_enum::Regular::Case3{a: 0, b: 6438275382588823897}
// gdb-command:print univariant
// gdb-check:$4 = struct_style_enum::Univariant::TheOnlyCase{a: -1}
// === LLDB TESTS ==================================================================================
// lldb-command:run
// lldb-command:v case1
// lldb-check:(struct_style_enum::Regular) case1 = { value = { a = 0 b = 31868 c = 31868 d = 31868 e = 31868 } $discr$ = 0 }
// lldb-command:v case2
// lldb-check:(struct_style_enum::Regular) case2 = { value = { a = 0 b = 286331153 c = 286331153 } $discr$ = 1 }
// lldb-command:v case3
// lldb-check:(struct_style_enum::Regular) case3 = { value = { a = 0 b = 6438275382588823897 } $discr$ = 2 }
// lldb-command:v univariant
// lldb-check:(struct_style_enum::Univariant) univariant = { value = { a = -1 } }
#![allow(unused_variables)]
#![feature(omit_gdb_pretty_printer_section)]
#![omit_gdb_pretty_printer_section]
use self::Regular::{Case1, Case2, Case3};
use self::Univariant::TheOnlyCase;
// The first element is to ensure proper alignment, irrespective of the machines word size. Since
// the size of the discriminant value is machine dependent, this has be taken into account when
// datatype layout should be predictable as in this case.
enum Regular {
Case1 { a: u64, b: u16, c: u16, d: u16, e: u16},
Case2 { a: u64, b: u32, c: u32},
Case3 { a: u64, b: u64 }
}
enum Univariant {
TheOnlyCase { a: i64 }
}
fn main() {
// In order to avoid endianness trouble all of the following test values consist of a single
// repeated byte. This way each interpretation of the union should look the same, no matter if
// this is a big or little endian machine.
// 0b0111110001111100011111000111110001111100011111000111110001111100 = 8970181431921507452
// 0b01111100011111000111110001111100 = 2088533116
// 0b0111110001111100 = 31868
// 0b01111100 = 124
let case1 = Case1 { a: 0, b: 31868, c: 31868, d: 31868, e: 31868 };
// 0b0001000100010001000100010001000100010001000100010001000100010001 = 1229782938247303441
// 0b00010001000100010001000100010001 = 286331153
// 0b0001000100010001 = 4369
// 0b00010001 = 17
let case2 = Case2 { a: 0, b: 286331153, c: 286331153 };
// 0b0101100101011001010110010101100101011001010110010101100101011001 = 6438275382588823897
// 0b01011001010110010101100101011001 = 1499027801
// 0b0101100101011001 = 22873
// 0b01011001 = 89
let case3 = Case3 { a: 0, b: 6438275382588823897 };
let univariant = TheOnlyCase { a: -1 };
zzz(); // #break
}
fn zzz() {()}