#!./perl -w # Check that lines from eval are correctly retained by the debugger # Uncomment this for testing, but don't leave it in for "production", as # we've not yet verified that use works. # use strict; print "1..109\n"; my $test = 0; sub failed { my ($got, $expected, $name) = @_; print "not ok $test - $name\n"; my @caller = caller(1); print "# Failed test at $caller[1] line $caller[2]\n"; if (defined $got) { print "# Got '$got'\n"; } else { print "# Got undef\n"; } print "# Expected $expected\n"; return; } sub is($$$) { my ($got, $expect, $name) = @_; $test = $test + 1; if (defined $expect) { if (defined $got && $got eq $expect) { print "ok $test - $name\n"; return 1; } failed($got, "'$expect'", $name); } else { if (!defined $got) { print "ok $test - $name\n"; return 1; } failed($got, 'undef', $name); } } $^P = 0xA; my @before = grep { /eval/ } keys %::; is ((scalar @before), 0, "No evals"); my %seen; sub check_retained_lines { my ($prog, $name) = @_; # Is there a more efficient way to write this? my @expect_lines = (undef, map ({"$_\n"} split "\n", $prog), "\n", ';'); # sort in decreasing number so that $keys[0] is the from the most # recent eval. In theory we should only have one, but if something # breaks we might have more than one, and keys will return them in a # random order, so if we dont do this then failing tests will have # inconsistent results from run to run. my @keys = map { $_->[0] } sort { $b->[1] <=> $a->[1] } map { (!$seen{$_} and /eval (\d+)/) ? [ $_, $1 ] : () } keys %::; is ((scalar @keys), 1, "1 new eval"); my @got_lines = @{$::{$keys[0]}}; is ((scalar @got_lines), (scalar @expect_lines), "Right number of lines for $name"); for (0..$#expect_lines) { is ($got_lines[$_], $expect_lines[$_], "Line $_ is correct"); } # if we are "leaking" evals we only want to fail the current test, # so we need to mark them all seen (older code only marked $keys[0] # seen and this caused tests to fail that actually worked properly.) $seen{$_}++ for @keys; } my $name = 'foo'; for my $sep (' ', "\0") { my $prog = "sub $name { 'Perl${sep}Rules' }; 1; "; eval $prog or die; check_retained_lines($prog, ord $sep); $name++; } { # This contains a syntax error my $prog = "sub $name { 'This is $name' } # 10 errors to triger a croak during compilation. 1 +; 1 +; 1 +; 1 +; 1 +; 1 +; 1 +; 1 +; 1 +; 1 +; 1 +; # and one more for good measure. "; eval $prog and die; is (eval "$name()", "This is $name", "Subroutine was compiled, despite error") or print STDERR "# $@\n"; check_retained_lines($prog, 'eval that defines subroutine but has syntax error'); $name++; } foreach my $flags (0x0, 0x800, 0x1000, 0x1800) { local $^P = $^P | $flags; # This is easier if we accept that the guts eval will add a trailing \n # for us my $prog = "1 + 1 + 1\n"; my $fail = "1 +;\n" x 11; # we need 10 errors to trigger a croak during # compile, we add an extra one just for good # measure. is (eval $prog, 3, 'String eval works'); if ($flags & 0x800) { check_retained_lines($prog, sprintf "%#X", $^P); } else { my @after = grep { /eval/ } keys %::; is (scalar @after, 0 + keys %seen, "evals that don't define subroutines are correctly cleaned up"); } is (eval $fail, undef, 'Failed string eval fails'); if ($flags & 0x1000) { check_retained_lines($fail, sprintf "%#X", $^P); } else { my @after = grep { /eval/ } keys %::; is (scalar @after, 0 + keys %seen, "evals that fail are correctly cleaned up"); } } # BEGIN blocks that die for (0xA, 0) { local $^P = $_; eval (my $prog = "BEGIN{die}\n"); if ($_) { check_retained_lines($prog, 'eval that defines BEGIN that dies'); } else { my @after = grep { /eval/ } keys %::; is (scalar @after, 0 + keys %seen, "evals with BEGIN{die} are correctly cleaned up"); } } for (0xA, 0) { local $^P = $_; eval (my $prog = "UNITCHECK{die}\n"); is (!!$@, 1, "Is \$@ true?"); is ($@=~/UNITCHECK failed--call queue aborted/, 1, "Error is expected value?"); if ($_) { check_retained_lines($prog, 'eval that defines UNITCHECK that dies'); } else { my @after = grep { /eval/ } keys %::; is (scalar @after, 0 + keys %seen, "evals with UNITCHECK{die} are correctly cleaned up"); } } # [perl #79442] A #line "foo" directive in a string eval was not updating # *{"_