rust/tests/debuginfo/enum-thinlto.rs

44 lines
1.1 KiB
Rust

//@ min-lldb-version: 1800
//@ compile-flags:-g -Z thinlto
// === GDB TESTS ===================================================================================
// gdb-command:run
// gdb-command:print *abc
// gdb-check:$1 = enum_thinlto::ABC::TheA{x: 0, y: 8970181431921507452}
// === LLDB TESTS ==================================================================================
// lldb-command:run
// lldb-command:v *abc
// lldb-check:(enum_thinlto::ABC) *abc = { value = { x = 0 y = 8970181431921507452 } $discr$ = 0 }
#![allow(unused_variables)]
#![feature(omit_gdb_pretty_printer_section)]
#![omit_gdb_pretty_printer_section]
// 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.
#[derive(Debug)]
enum ABC {
TheA { x: i64, y: i64 },
TheB (i64, i32, i32),
}
fn main() {
let abc = ABC::TheA { x: 0, y: 0x7c7c_7c7c_7c7c_7c7c };
f(&abc);
}
fn f(abc: &ABC) {
zzz(); // #break
println!("{:?}", abc);
}
fn zzz() {()}