Files
binutils-gdb/gdb/testsuite/gdb.base/charset.c
Andrew Burgess 1d506c26d9 Update copyright year range in header of all files managed by GDB
This commit is the result of the following actions:

  - Running gdb/copyright.py to update all of the copyright headers to
    include 2024,

  - Manually updating a few files the copyright.py script told me to
    update, these files had copyright headers embedded within the
    file,

  - Regenerating gdbsupport/Makefile.in to refresh it's copyright
    date,

  - Using grep to find other files that still mentioned 2023.  If
    these files were updated last year from 2022 to 2023 then I've
    updated them this year to 2024.

I'm sure I've probably missed some dates.  Feel free to fix them up as
you spot them.
2024-01-12 15:49:57 +00:00

203 lines
5.7 KiB
C

/* This testcase is part of GDB, the GNU debugger.
Copyright 2001-2024 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Contributed by Red Hat, originally written by Jim Blandy.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
Please email any bugs, comments, and/or additions to this file to:
bug-gdb@gnu.org */
/* X_string is a null-terminated string in the X charset whose
elements are as follows. X should be the name the `set charset'
command uses for the character set, in lower-case, with any
non-identifier characters replaced with underscores. Where a
character set doesn't have the given character, the string should
contain the character 'x'.
[0] --- the `alert' character, '\a'
[1] --- the `backspace' character, '\b'
[2] --- the `form feed' character, '\f'
[3] --- the `line feed' character, '\n'
[4] --- the `carriage return' character, '\r'
[5] --- the `horizontal tab' character, '\t'
[6] --- the `vertical tab' character, '\v'
[7 .. 32] --- the uppercase letters A-Z
[33 .. 58] --- the lowercase letters a-z
[59 .. 68] --- the digits 0-9
[69] --- the `cent' character
[70] --- a control character with no defined backslash escape
Feel free to extend these as you like. */
#define NUM_CHARS (71)
char ascii_string[NUM_CHARS];
char iso_8859_1_string[NUM_CHARS];
char ebcdic_us_string[NUM_CHARS];
char ibm1047_string[NUM_CHARS];
#ifndef __cplusplus
/* We make a phony wchar_t and then pretend that this platform uses
UTF-32 (or UTF-16, depending on the size -- same difference for the
purposes of this test). */
typedef unsigned int wchar_t;
/* We also define a couple phony types for testing the u'' and U''
support. It is ok if these have the wrong size on some platforms
-- the test case will skip the tests in that case. */
typedef unsigned short char16_t;
typedef unsigned int char32_t;
#endif
wchar_t utf_32_string[NUM_CHARS];
/* Make sure to use the typedefs. */
char16_t uvar;
char32_t Uvar;
char16_t *String16;
char32_t *String32;
/* A typedef to a typedef should also work. */
typedef wchar_t my_wchar_t;
my_wchar_t myvar;
/* Some arrays for simple assignment tests. */
short short_array[3];
int int_array[3];
long long_array[3];
/* These are unsigned char so we can pass down characters >127 without
explicit casts or warnings. */
void
init_string (char string[],
unsigned char x,
unsigned char alert,
unsigned char backspace,
unsigned char form_feed,
unsigned char line_feed,
unsigned char carriage_return,
unsigned char horizontal_tab,
unsigned char vertical_tab,
unsigned char cent,
unsigned char misc_ctrl)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < NUM_CHARS; ++i)
string[i] = x;
string[0] = alert;
string[1] = backspace;
string[2] = form_feed;
string[3] = line_feed;
string[4] = carriage_return;
string[5] = horizontal_tab;
string[6] = vertical_tab;
string[69] = cent;
string[70] = misc_ctrl;
}
void
fill_run (char string[], int start, int len, int first)
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < len; i++)
string[start + i] = first + i;
}
void
init_utf32 ()
{
int i;
for (i = 0; i < NUM_CHARS; ++i)
utf_32_string[i] = iso_8859_1_string[i] & 0xff;
}
extern void malloc_stub (void);
int main ()
{
malloc_stub ();
/* Initialize ascii_string. */
init_string (ascii_string,
120,
7, 8, 12,
10, 13, 9,
11, 120, 17);
fill_run (ascii_string, 7, 26, 65);
fill_run (ascii_string, 33, 26, 97);
fill_run (ascii_string, 59, 10, 48);
/* Initialize iso_8859_1_string. */
init_string (iso_8859_1_string,
120,
7, 8, 12,
10, 13, 9,
11, 162, 17);
fill_run (iso_8859_1_string, 7, 26, 65);
fill_run (iso_8859_1_string, 33, 26, 97);
fill_run (iso_8859_1_string, 59, 10, 48);
/* Initialize ebcdic_us_string. */
init_string (ebcdic_us_string,
167,
47, 22, 12,
37, 13, 5,
11, 74, 17);
/* In EBCDIC, the upper-case letters are broken into three separate runs. */
fill_run (ebcdic_us_string, 7, 9, 193);
fill_run (ebcdic_us_string, 16, 9, 209);
fill_run (ebcdic_us_string, 25, 8, 226);
/* The lower-case letters are, too. */
fill_run (ebcdic_us_string, 33, 9, 129);
fill_run (ebcdic_us_string, 42, 9, 145);
fill_run (ebcdic_us_string, 51, 8, 162);
/* The digits, at least, are contiguous. */
fill_run (ebcdic_us_string, 59, 10, 240);
/* Initialize ibm1047_string. */
init_string (ibm1047_string,
167,
47, 22, 12,
37, 13, 5,
11, 74, 17);
/* In IBM1047, the upper-case letters are broken into three separate runs. */
fill_run (ibm1047_string, 7, 9, 193);
fill_run (ibm1047_string, 16, 9, 209);
fill_run (ibm1047_string, 25, 8, 226);
/* The lower-case letters are, too. */
fill_run (ibm1047_string, 33, 9, 129);
fill_run (ibm1047_string, 42, 9, 145);
fill_run (ibm1047_string, 51, 8, 162);
/* The digits, at least, are contiguous. */
fill_run (ibm1047_string, 59, 10, 240);
init_utf32 ();
myvar = utf_32_string[7];
return 0; /* all strings initialized */
}