Provides an easy way of integrating debugger specific tests into a crate.
This crate is responsible for generating the #[debugger_test]
proc macro attribute.
To use, add this crate and the debugger_test_parser
as a dependency in your Cargo.toml
.
This crate uses the debugger_test_parser
to parse the output of the specified debugger
and verify all expected statements were found.
In order to set breakpoints, an __break()
function will need to be defined and called
at each place the debugger should stop.
For example:
#[inline(never)]
fn __break() { }
#[debugger_test(
debugger = "cdb",
commands = r#"
.nvlist
dv
g"#,
expected_statements = r#"
pattern:test\.exe .*\.natvis
a = 0n10
"#)]
fn test() {
let a = 10;
__break();
}
The #[debugger_test]
proc macro attribute has 3 required meta items which all take a string value:
- debugger
- commands
- expected_statements
The debugger
meta item expects the name of a supported debugger. Currently the only supported debugger is cdb
.
This crate will try to find the specified debugger, first by testing if it is on the PATH
. If the debugger is
not found, this crate will search the default installation directory for the debugger. Specifying an exact path
for which debugger to use is not currently supported.
The commands
meta item expects a string of a debugger command to run. To run multiple commands, separate each
command by the new line character (\n
).
The expected_statements
meta item expects a string of output to verify in the debugger output.
Each statement should be separated by a new line character (\n
).
For example:
#[debugger_test(
debugger = "cdb",
commands = "command1\ncommand2\ncommand3",
expected_statements = "statement1\nstatement2\nstatement3")]
Using a multiline string is also supported:
#[debugger_test(
debugger = "cdb",
commands = r#"
command1
command2
command3"#,
expected_statements = r#"
statement1
statement2
statement3"#)]
Pattern matching is also supported for a given expected_statement
. Use the prefix, pattern:
for the
expected statement. This is useful for ignoring debugger output that contain memory address and/or paths:
#[debugger_test(
debugger = "cdb",
commands = "command3",
expected_statements = "pattern:abc.*")]
The #[debugger_test]
proc macro attribute will generate a new test function that will be marked
with the #[test]
attribute. This generated test function will add a suffix to the test name to ensure
the test is unique. In the example above, the proc macro attribute will generate the following function:
#[test]
fn test__cdb() {
.....
test();
.....
}
The proc macro attribute will generate a test function that will do the following:
- Launch the specified debugger
- Attach the debugger to the current test executable process
- Set breakpoints at all call sites of the
__break()
function - Run the debugger to the first breakpoint specified by the debugger
- Run all of the user specified commands and exit the debugger
- Parse the debugger output using the
debugger_test_parser
crate and verify all theexpected_statements
were found
Based on the debugger specified via the #[debugger_test]
attribute, the path used to launch the debugger will
be one of the following:
- If the environment variable, debugger_type _DEBUGGER_DIR is set, i.e.
CDB_DEBUGGER_DIR
, the proc macro attribute will try to launch the debugger from this directory - The default installation directory for the given debugger if it exists at that path
- Invoking the executable directly, i.e.
cdb
orcdb.exe
depending on the OS
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