//@ run-pass // We disable tail merging here because it can't preserve debuginfo and thus // potentially breaks the backtraces. Also, subtle changes can decide whether // tail merging succeeds, so the test might work today but fail tomorrow due to a // seemingly completely unrelated change. // Unfortunately, LLVM has no "disable" option for this, so we have to set // "enable" to 0 instead. //@ compile-flags:-g -Copt-level=0 -Cllvm-args=-enable-tail-merge=0 //@ compile-flags:-Cforce-frame-pointers=yes //@ compile-flags:-Cstrip=none //@ ignore-android FIXME #17520 //@ needs-subprocess //@ ignore-fuchsia Backtrace not symbolized, trace different line alignment //@ ignore-ios needs the `.dSYM` files to be moved to the device //@ ignore-tvos needs the `.dSYM` files to be moved to the device //@ ignore-watchos needs the `.dSYM` files to be moved to the device //@ ignore-visionos needs the `.dSYM` files to be moved to the device // FIXME(#117097): backtrace (possibly unwinding mechanism) seems to be different on at least // `i686-mingw` (32-bit windows-gnu)? cc #128911. //@ ignore-windows-gnu //@ ignore-backends: gcc //@ ignore-msvc see #62897 and `backtrace-debuginfo.rs` test use std::alloc::{Layout, handle_alloc_error}; use std::process::Command; use std::{env, str}; fn main() { if env::args().len() > 1 { handle_alloc_error(Layout::new::<[u8; 42]>()) } let me = env::current_exe().unwrap(); let output = Command::new(&me).env("RUST_BACKTRACE", "1").arg("next").output().unwrap(); assert!(!output.status.success(), "{:?} is a success", output.status); let mut stderr = str::from_utf8(&output.stderr).unwrap(); // When running inside QEMU user-mode emulation, there will be an extra message printed by QEMU // in the stderr whenever a core dump happens. Remove it before the check. stderr = stderr .strip_suffix("qemu: uncaught target signal 6 (Aborted) - core dumped\n") .unwrap_or(stderr); assert!(stderr.contains("memory allocation of 42 bytes failed"), "{}", stderr); assert!(stderr.contains("alloc_error_backtrace::main"), "{}", stderr); }