/* This test needs to use setrlimit to set the stack size, so it can only run on Unix. */ /* { dg-do run { target *-*-linux* *-*-gnu* *-*-solaris* *-*-darwin* } } */ /* { dg-require-effective-target split_stack } */ /* { dg-options "-fsplit-stack" } */ #include #include #include #include /* Use a noinline function to ensure that the buffer is not removed from the stack. */ static void use_buffer (char *buf) __attribute__ ((noinline)); static void use_buffer (char *buf) { buf[0] = '\0'; } /* Each recursive call uses 10,000 bytes. We call it 1000 times, using a total of 10,000,000 bytes. If -fsplit-stack is not working, that will overflow our stack limit. */ static void down (int i, ...) { char buf[10000]; va_list ap; va_start (ap, i); if (va_arg (ap, int) != 1 || va_arg (ap, int) != 2 || va_arg (ap, int) != 3 || va_arg (ap, int) != 4 || va_arg (ap, int) != 5 || va_arg (ap, int) != 6 || va_arg (ap, int) != 7 || va_arg (ap, int) != 8 || va_arg (ap, int) != 9 || va_arg (ap, int) != 10) abort (); if (i > 0) { use_buffer (buf); down (i - 1, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10); } } int main (void) { struct rlimit r; /* We set a stack limit because we are usually invoked via make, and make sets the stack limit to be as large as possible. */ r.rlim_cur = 8192 * 1024; r.rlim_max = 8192 * 1024; if (setrlimit (RLIMIT_STACK, &r) != 0) abort (); down (1000, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10); return 0; }