TestCPP11EnumTypes is one of the most expensive tests on my system and takes
around 35 seconds to run. A relatively large amount of that time is actually
doing CPU intensive work it seems (and not waiting on timeouts like other
slow tests).
The main issue is that this test repeatedly compiles the same source files
with different compiler defines. The test is also including standard library
headers, so it will also build all system modules with the gmodules debug
info variant. This leads to the problem that this test ends up compiling all
system Clang modules 8 times (one for each subtest with a unique define). As
the system modules are quite large, this causes that this test spends most
of its runtime just recompiling all system modules on macOS.
There is also the small issue that this test is starting and start-stopping
the test process a few hundred times.
This rewrites the test to instead just use a macro to instantiate all the
enum types in a single source and uses global variables to test the values
(which means there is no more need to continue/stop or even start a process).
I kept running all the debug info variants (event though it doesn't seem really
relevant) to keep this as NFC as possible.
This reduced the test runtime by around 1.5 seconds on my system (or in relative
numbers, the runtime of this test decreases by 95%).
This is one of the most expensive tests and runs for nearly half a minute on
my machine. Beside this test just doing a lot of work by iterating 15k times on
one ValueObject (which seems to be the point), it also runs this for every
debug info variant which doesn't seem relevant to just iterating ValueObject.
This marks it as no_debug_info_test to only run one debug info variation
and cut down the runtime to around 7 seconds on my machine.
Caused by D86662. The fix is only checking some fields when the expect_debug_info_size flag is true. For some reason this was not failing on a local linux machine.
This updates the errors reported by expect()
to something like:
```
Ran command:
"help"
Got output:
Debugger commands:
<...>
Expecting start string: "Debugger commands:" (was found)
Expecting end string: "foo" (was not found)
```
(see added tests for more examples)
This shows the user exactly what was run,
what checks passed and which failed. Along with
whether that check was supposed to pass.
(including what regex patterns matched)
These lines are also output to the test
trace file, whether the test passes or not.
Note that expect() will still fail at the first failed
check, in line with previous behaviour.
Also I have flipped the wording of the assert
message functions (.*_MSG) to describe failures
not successes. This makes more sense as they are
only shown on assert failures.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86792
`image dump symtab` seems to output the symbols in whatever order they appear in
the DenseMap that is used to filter out symbols with non-unique addresses. As
DenseMap is a hash map this order can change at any time so the output of this
command is pretty unstable. This also causes the `Breakpad/symtab.test` to fail
with enabled reverse iteration (which reverses the DenseMap order to find issues
like this).
This patch makes the DenseMap a std::vector and uses a separate DenseSet to do
the address filtering. The output order is now dependent on the order in which
the symbols are read (which should be deterministic). It might also avoid a bit
of work as all the work for creating the Symbol constructor parameters is only
done when we can actually emplace a new Symbol.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87036
The test only checks the exit code that the debug server sends back, but
not the following explanation which is different for debugserver and lldb-server.
If our process terminates due to an unhandled signal, we are supposed to get the
signal code via WTERMSIG. However, we instead try to get the exit status via
WEXITSTATUS which just ends up always calculating signal code 0 (at least on the
macOS implementation where it just shifts the signal code bits away and we're
left with only 0 bits).
The exit status calculation on the LLDB side also seems a bit off as it claims
an exit status that is just the signal code (instead of for example 128 + signal
code), but that will be another patch.
Reviewed By: jasonmolenda
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86336
Add a reproducer verifier that catches:
- Missing or invalid home directory
- Missing or invalid working directory
- Missing or invalid module/symbol paths
- Missing files from the VFS
The verifier is enabled by default during replay, but can be skipped by
passing --reproducer-no-verify.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86497
This patch adds the ability to use a custom interpreter with the
`platform shell` command. If the user set the `-s|--shell` option
with the path to a binary, lldb passes it down to the platform's
`RunShellProcess` method and set it as the shell to use in
`ProcessLaunchInfo to run commands.
Note that not all the Platforms support running shell commands with
custom interpreters (i.e. RemoteGDBServer is only expected to use the
default shell).
This patch also makes some refactoring and cleanups, like swapping
CString for StringRef when possible and updating `SBPlatformShellCommand`
with new methods and a new constructor.
rdar://67759256
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86667
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
The Symbol Status in modules view is simplified so that only when the module has debug info and its size is non-zero, will the status message be displayed. The symbol status message is renamed to debug info size and flag message like "Symbols not found" and "Symbols loaded" is deleted.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86662
Add a reproducer verifier that catches:
- Missing or invalid home directory
- Missing or invalid working directory
- Missing or invalid module/symbol paths
- Missing files from the VFS
The verifier is enabled by default during replay, but can be skipped by
passing --reproducer-no-verify.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86497
1. Added a dedicated completion to class `CommandObjectTypeFormatterDelete`
which can be used by these commands: `type filter/format/summary/synthetic delete`;
2. Added a related test case.
Reviewed By: teemperor
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84142
TestCompletion is randomly failing on some bots. The error message however states
that the computed completions actually do contain the expected pid we're
looking for, so there shouldn't be any test failure.
The reason for that turns out to be that complete_from_to is actually used
for testing two different features. It can be used for testing what the
common prefix for the list of completions is and *also* for checking all the
possible completions that are returned for a command. Which one of the two
things should be checked can't be defined by a parameter to the function, but
is instead guessed by the test method instead based on the results that were
returned. If there is a common prefix in all completions, then that prefix
is searched and otherwise all completions are searched.
For TestCompletion's pid test this behaviour leads to the strange test failures.
If all the pid's that our test LLDB can see have a common prefix (e.g., it
can only see pids [123, 122, 10004, 10000] -> common prefix '1'), then
complete_from_to check that the common prefix contains our pid, which is
always fails ('1' doesn't contain '123' or any other valid pid). If there
isn't a common prefix (e.g., pids are [123, 122, 10004, 777]) then
complete_from_to will check the list of completions instead which works correctly.
This patch is fixing this by adding a simple check method that doesn't
have this behaviour and is simply searching the returned list of completions.
This should get the bots green while I'm working on a proper fix that fixes
complete_from_to.
The Length, AbbrOffset and Values fields of the debug_info section are
optional. This patch helps remove them and simplify test cases.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86857
LIT uses a model where the test suite is configurable trough a
lit.site.cfg file. Most of the time we use the lit.site.cfg with values
that match the current build configuration, generated by CMake.
Nothing prevents you from running the test suite with a different
configuration, either by overriding some of these values from the
command line, or by passing a different lit.site.cfg.
The latter is currently tedious. Many configuration values are optional
but they still need to be set because lit.cfg.py is accessing them
directly. This patch changes the code to use getattr to return the
attribute if it exists. This makes it possible to specify a minimal
lit.site.cfg with only the mandatory/desired configuration values.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86821
This patch removes the rather confusing LLDB_LIB_DIR and LLDB_IMPLIB_DIR
environment variables. They are confusing because LLDB_LIB_DIR would
point to the bin subdirectory in the build root while LLDB_IMPLIB_DIR
would point to the lib subdirectory. The reason far this was
LLDB.framework, which gets build under bin.
This patch replaces their uses with configuration.lldb_framework_path
and configuration.lldb_libs_dir respectively.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86817
TestStandardUnwind uses the full absolute path to a set of C/C++ files as the test case name, which in turn is used in the name of a log file. When the source file is long, and the directory where log files are stored is also long, this causes an OSError because the log filename is too long.
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86752
The function was returning an incorrect (empty) value on the first
invocation. Given that this only affected the first invocation, this
bug/typo went mostly unaffected. DW_AT_const_value were particularly
badly affected by this as the GetByteSize call is
SymbolFileDWARF::ParseVariableDIE is likely to be the first call of this
function, and its effects cannot be undone by retrying.
Depends on D86348.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86436
Class-level static constexpr variables can have both DW_AT_const_value
(in the "declaration") and a DW_AT_location (in the "definition")
attributes. Our code was trying to handle this, but it was brittle and
hard to follow (and broken) because it was processing the attributes in
the order in which they were found.
Refactor the code to make the intent clearer -- DW_AT_location trumps
DW_AT_const_value, and fix the bug which meant that we were not
displaying these variables properly (the culprit was the delayed parsing
of the const_value attribute due to a need to fetch the variable type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86615
This fixes several issues in handling of DW_AT_const_value attributes:
- the first is that the size of the data given by data forms does not
need to match the size of the underlying variable. We already had the
case to handle this for DW_FORM_(us)data -- this extends the handling
to other data forms. The main reason this was not picked up is because
clang uses leb forms in these cases while gcc prefers the fixed-size
ones.
- The handling of DW_AT_strp form was completely broken -- we would end
up using the pointer value as the result. I've reorganized this code
so that it handles all string forms uniformly.
- In case of a completely bogus form we would crash due to
strlen(nullptr).
Depends on D86311.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86348
This test appears to have never worked on Linux but it seems none of the current
bots ever ran this test as it required enabling compiler-rt (otherwise it
would have just been skipped).
This just copies over the XFAIL decorator that are already on all other sanitizer
tests.
Update the "image show-unwind" command output to show if the function
being shown is listed as a user-setting or platform trap handler.
Update the individual UnwindPlan dumps to show whether the unwind plan
is registered as a trap handler.
TestQueues is curiously failing for me as my queue for QOS_CLASS_UNSPECIFIED
is named "Utility" and not "User Initiated" or "Default". While debugging, this
I noticed that this test isn't actually using this API right from what I understand. The API documentation
for `dispatch_get_global_queue` specifies for the parameter: "You may specify the value
QOS_CLASS_USER_INTERACTIVE, QOS_CLASS_USER_INITIATED, QOS_CLASS_UTILITY, or QOS_CLASS_BACKGROUND."
QOS_CLASS_UNSPECIFIED isn't listed as one of the supported values. swift-corelibs-libdispatch
even checks for this value and returns a DISPATCH_BAD_INPUT. The
libdispatch shipped on macOS seems to also check for QOS_CLASS_UNSPECIFIED and seems to
instead cause a "client crash", but somehow this doesn't trigger in this test and instead we just
get whatever queue
This patch just removes that part of the test as it appears the code is just incorrect.
Reviewed By: jasonmolenda
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86211
psutil isn't reall a dependency of the test suite so this shouldn't be
unconditionally be imported here. Instead just check for the process name
by looking for the "a.out" string to get the bots green again.
In some cases when we have a DW_AT_const_value and the data can be found in the
DWARFExpression then ValueObjectVariable does not handle it properly and we end
up with an extracting data from value failed error.
The test is a very stripped down assembly file since reproducing this relies on the results of compiling with -O1 which may not be stable over time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86311
When replaying a reproducer captured from a core file, we always use
dsymForUUID for the kernel binary. When enabled, we also use it to find
kexts. Since these files are already contained in the reproducer,
there's no reason to call out to an external tool. If the tool returns a
different result, e.g. because the dSYM got garbage collected, it will
break reproducer replay. The SymbolFileProvider solves the issue by
mapping UUIDs to module and symbol paths in the reproducer.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86389
Breakpad will always have a UUID for binaries when it creates minidump files. If an ELF files has a GNU build ID, it will use that. If it doesn't, it will create one by hashing up to the first 4096 bytes of the .text section. LLDB was not able to load these binaries even when we had the right binary because the UUID didn't match. LLDB will use the GNU build ID first as the main UUID for a binary and fallback onto a 8 byte CRC if a binary doesn't have one. With this fix, we will check for the Breakpad hash or the Facebook hash (a modified version of the breakpad hash that collides a bit less) and accept binaries when these hashes match.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86261
1. Added a new common completion TypeCategoryNames to provide a list of category names for completion;
2. Applied the completion to these commands: type category delete/enable/disable/list/define;
3. Added a related test case;
4. Bound the completion to the arguments of the type 'eArgTypeName'.
Reviewed By: teemperor, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84124
1. Extended the gdb-remote communication related classes with disk file/directory
completion functions;
2. Added two common completion functions RemoteDiskFiles and
RemoteDiskDirectories based on the functions above;
3. Added completion for these commands:
A. platform get-file <remote-file> <local-file>;
B. platform put-file <local-file> <remote-file>;
C. platform get-size <remote-file>;
D. platform settings -w <remote-dir>;
E. platform open file <remote-file>.
4. Added related tests for client and server;
5. Updated docs/lldb-platform-packets.txt.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85284
1. Added two common completions: `ProcessIDs` and `ProcessNames`, which are
refactored from their original dedicated option completions;
2. Removed the dedicated option completion functions of `process attach` and
`platform process attach`, so that they can use arg-type-bound common
completions instead;
3. Bound `eArgTypePid` to the pid completion, `eArgTypeProcessName` to the
process name completion in `CommandObject.cpp`;
4. Added a related test case.
Reviewed By: teemperor
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80700
Before e5d08fcbac the Makefile would always compute the min-version,
even if it wasn't set in the triple. This nuance got lost when passing
the ARCH_CFLAGS directly from TestSimulatorPlatform.
Refuse to run the shell tests when %lldb cannot be substituted. This
prevents the test from silently running again the `lldb` in your PATH.
I noticed because when this happens, %lldb-init gets substituted with
lldb-init, which does not exists.
With the log file being a build artifact we don't need to clean it up.
If this happens before the reproducer is captured, the file will be
missing from the reproducer root but being part of the mapping.
1. Complete `process load` with the common disk file completion, so there is not test provided for it;
2. Complete `process unload` with the tokens of valid loaded images.
Thanks for Raphael's help on the test for `process unload`.
Reviewed By: teemperor
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79887
This patch adds support for emitting multiple abbrev tables. Currently,
compilation units will always reference the first abbrev table.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86194
When replaying the reproducer, lldb should source the .lldbinit file
that was captured by the reproducer and not the one in the current home
directory. This requires that we store the home directory as part of the
reproducer. By returning the virtual home directory during replay, we
ensure the correct virtual path gets constructed which the VFS can then
find and remap to the correct file in the reproducer root.
This patch adds a new HomeDirectoryProvider, similar to the existing
WorkingDirectoryProvider. As the home directory is not part of the VFS,
it is stored in LLDB's FileSystem instance.
1. created a common completion for breakpoint names;
2. bound the breakpoint name common completion with eArgTypeBreakpointName;
3. implemented the dedicated completion for breakpoint read -N.
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80693
This is very similar to D85968, only more elusive to since we were not
adding the typedef type to the relevant DeclContext until D86140, which
meant that the DeclContext was populated (and the relevant assertion
hit) only after importing the type into the expression ast in a
particular way.
I haven't checked whether this situation can be hit in the gmodules
case, but my money is on "yes".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86216
I move the triple (de)composition logic into the builder in e5d08fcbac
but this test is relying on Make to construct the set the ARCH,
ARCH_CFLAGS and SDKROOT based on the given TRIPLE. This patch updates
the test to pass these variables directly.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86244