* Re: testsuite/print_long_arg_list
[not found] <199904071649.SAA28333@mail.macqel.be>
@ 1999-04-08 15:41 ` Stan Shebs
1999-04-08 13:44 ` testsuite/print_long_arg_list Stan Shebs
1999-04-08 15:28 ` testsuite/print_long_arg_list J.T. Conklin
0 siblings, 2 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Stan Shebs @ 1999-04-08 15:41 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: phdm; +Cc: gdb-patches, gdb
Date: Wed, 7 Apr 1999 18:49:38 +0200 (CEST)
From: "Philippe De Muyter" <phdm@macqel.be>
Running the testsuite with gdb-4.17.87 on m68k-motorola-sysv, I got
(among others) the following failure :
print_long_arg_list (a=22.219999999999998, b=33.332999999999998, c=0, d=-25, e=1
[...]
Looking at the expected result, I see :
gdb_expect {
-re ".*print_long_arg_list \\(a=22.219999999999999, b=33.332999999999998
[...]
For me, the differences are in the last digits of some float or double numbers.
Isn't the test too strict ?
I'm no floating-point expert, but I do know that you're supposed to be
careful about ignoring the last digit. On the other hand, GDB just
uses a printf %g to display float values, so the output is going to
depend on the system's C library as much as GDB's correctness. In fact,
"a" is actually 22.22 in the sources, so even the expected test result
isn't what it should be.
My inclination is to relax the match here. What does everybody else
think?
Stan
From jtc@redback.com Thu Apr 08 16:07:00 1999
From: jtc@redback.com (J.T. Conklin)
To: gdb-patches@cygnus.com
Cc: phdm@macqel.be, gdb@cygnus.com
Subject: Re: testsuite/print_long_arg_list
Date: Thu, 08 Apr 1999 16:07:00 -0000
Message-id: <5mg16aycjf.fsf@jtc.redbacknetworks.com>
References: <199904082043.NAA29533@andros.cygnus.com>
X-SW-Source: 1999-04/msg00007.html
Content-length: 845
>>>>> "Stan" == Stan Shebs <shebs@cygnus.com> writes:
Stan> I'm no floating-point expert, but I do know that you're supposed
Stan> to be careful about ignoring the last digit. On the other hand,
Stan> GDB just uses a printf %g to display float values, so the output
Stan> is going to depend on the system's C library as much as GDB's
Stan> correctness. In fact, "a" is actually 22.22 in the sources, so
Stan> even the expected test result isn't what it should be.
Stan> My inclination is to relax the match here. What does everybody
Stan> else think?
Isn't the problem that 22.22 cannot be represented exactly in binary
floating point, thus is subject to various rounding issues in the
least significant digits? Perhaps using values like 22.5, 22.25,
22.125, etc. would eliminate these problems.
--jtc
--
J.T. Conklin
RedBack Networks
From shebs@cygnus.com Thu Apr 08 16:31:00 1999
From: Stan Shebs <shebs@cygnus.com>
To: jtc@redback.com
Cc: gdb-patches@cygnus.com, phdm@macqel.be, gdb@cygnus.com
Subject: Re: testsuite/print_long_arg_list
Date: Thu, 08 Apr 1999 16:31:00 -0000
Message-id: <199904082301.QAA29767@andros.cygnus.com>
References: <5mg16aycjf.fsf@jtc.redbacknetworks.com>
X-SW-Source: 1999-04/msg00008.html
Content-length: 537
From: jtc@redback.com (J.T. Conklin)
Date: 08 Apr 1999 15:26:12 -0700
Isn't the problem that 22.22 cannot be represented exactly in binary
floating point, thus is subject to various rounding issues in the
least significant digits? Perhaps using values like 22.5, 22.25,
22.125, etc. would eliminate these problems.
Doh! I should've thought of that! Yes, that does give better
results, and the author of those tests, who is on this list, says
"change 'em however you want". So that's what will happen. Thanks! -s
From sandra18572@mci.net Fri Apr 09 02:39:00 1999
From: "sandra18572@mci.net" <sandra18572@mci.net>
To: egcs@cygnus.com
Subject: Hidden Showercam ;-) (147)
Date: Fri, 09 Apr 1999 02:39:00 -0000
Message-id: <9673.89295@mx10.mindspring.com>
X-SW-Source: 1999-04/msg00009.html
Content-length: 198
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From fortinj@ibm.net Fri Apr 09 09:25:00 1999
From: John Fortin <fortinj@ibm.net>
To: gdb <gdb@cygnus.com>
Subject: Windows threads, gdb, and cygwin
Date: Fri, 09 Apr 1999 09:25:00 -0000
Message-id: <370E16B9.6EBB5294@ibm.net>
X-SW-Source: 1999-04/msg00010.html
Content-length: 545
All,
I compiled the newest snapshot of gdb using cygwin ( after fighting
with the configuration. Doesn't seem to work well recursively. )
Chris Faylor had indicated that win32 threads were now supported. When
I executed gdb with a threaded program, 'info threads' returns
nothing. Documentation I read indicates that this means thread
functions are unavailable.
Is win32 native threads supported?
I am adding pthread functions to cygwin and would like to debug the
resulting thread functions.
Thanks,
John Fortin
fortinj@ibm.net
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