`terminate` overlaps with a C function on Windows:
```
D:\a\1\s\lldb\tools\lldb-server\lldb-server.cpp(45,13): warning: 'terminate' redeclared without 'dllimport' attribute: 'dllexport' attribute added [-Winconsistent-dllimport]
static void terminate() { g_debugger_lifetime->Terminate(); }
^
C:\Program Files (x86)\Windows Kits\10\include\10.0.17763.0\ucrt\corecrt_terminate.h(29,48): note: previous declaration is here
_ACRTIMP __declspec(noreturn) void __cdecl terminate() throw();
^
D:\a\1\s\lldb\tools\lldb-server\lldb-server.cpp(45,61): warning: function declared 'noreturn' should not return [-Winvalid-noreturn]
static void terminate() { g_debugger_lifetime->Terminate(); }
^
```
Rename the function to `terminate_debugger` to avoid the errant match.
llvm-svn: 360693
apple and manual indexing code were creating a DIERef in a bunch of
places. Though the code itself is not much, it is also easy to simplify
by factoring out the DIERef creation. In HashedNameToDIE I create a
conversion operator from DIEInfo to DIERef, and in ManualDWARFIndex I
just create the DIERef in a global variable up-front.
This also reduces the diff in follow-up patches which change how DIERefs
are constructed.
llvm-svn: 360669
Replace checked-in minidumps with their yaml forms now that yaml2obj
supports the ThreadList stream. I delete the test_modules_in_mini_dump
test altogether as this functionality is covered more systematically in
TestMinidumpUUID.py.
llvm-svn: 360655
r360631 introduced a "syntax error" which meant that cmake was still not
honoring the value of LLDB_CAN_USE_LLDB_SERVER variable. The correct
syntax for seting an internal cache variable is "set(VAR value CACHE
INTERNAL)", but the patch omitted the "CACHE" keyword. The "syntax
error" is in quotes because without the CACHE keyword this is still
valid syntax for setting the value of LLDB_CAN_USE_LLDB_SERVER to "1
INTERNAL".
There doesn't seem to be a need for this to be a cache variable so I'm
reverting this variable to a plain one, as it was before r360621.
This will hopefully fix the windows build.
llvm-svn: 360652
We cannot manipulate the LLDB_TOOL_LLDB_SERVER_BUILD directly from
LLDBConfig.cmake because this would set the variable before the option
is defined in AddLLVM.cmake. Instead, we need to use the
LLDB_CAN_USE_LLDB_SERVER variable to conditionally add the lldb-server
subdirectory. This should ensure the variable doesn't get cleared.
llvm-svn: 360631
The input source file seems to be triggering an error in the Visual
Studio headers.
> xstddef:338:2: error: ''auto' return without trailing return type;
> deduced return types are a C++14 extension
I tried converting the test to use the %build stuff Zachary added, but
that seems to be missing some Darwin support. Disabling the test on
Windows in the meantime.
llvm-svn: 360624
We can piggyback off the existing add_lldb_tool_subdirectory to decide
whether or not lldb-server should be built.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61872
llvm-svn: 360621
Before this change we were overriding the launch info environment with
the target environment. This meant that the environment variables passed
to `process launch --environment <>` were lost. Instead of replacing the
environment, we should merge them.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61864
llvm-svn: 360612
Summary:
This patch implements the GetUnwindPlan interface (added in the previous
patch) for SymbolFileBreakpad, and uses it to generate unwind plans from
STACK CFI records in breakpad files.
We first perform a light-weight parse of the breakpad in order to build
up a map of regions covered by the unwind info so that we can later jump
to the right record when we need to unwind a specific function.
The actual parsing is relatively straight-forward, as the STACK CFI records
are just another (text) form of the eh_frame unwind instructions, and
the same goes for lldb's UnwindPlans. The newly-introduced
PostfixExpression API is used to convert the breakpad postfix
expressions into DWARF. The generated dwarf expressions are stored in a
BumpPtrAllocator, as the UnwindPlan does not take ownership of the
expression data it references (usually this is static data in an object
file, so special ownership is needed).
At this moment the generated unwind plans aren't used in the actual
unwind machinery (only in the image show-unwind command), but that is
coming in a separate patch.
Reviewers: amccarth, clayborg, markmentovai
Subscribers: aprantl, jasonmolenda, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61733
llvm-svn: 360574
Summary:
This patch implements missing case in PdbAstBuilder::CreateType for
LF_MFUNCTION. This is necessary, for example, in stack unwinding of struct
methods.
Reviewers: amccarth, aleksandr.urakov
Reviewed By: amccarth
Subscribers: abidh, teemperor, lldb-commits, leonid.mashinskiy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61128
llvm-svn: 360569
Summary:
Instead of using the offset of the contained compile unit, we use it's
ID. The goal of this change is two-fold:
- free up space in the user_id_t representation to enable storing the
debug-info-carrying section (debug_types/debug_info) without
decreasing the amount of debug info we can address (as would be the
case with D61503).
- be a step towards supporting DWO files containing more than one unit
(important for debug_types+dwo, but can also happen with regular
dwo+lto). For this part to fully work we'd still need to add a way to
lookup the SymbolFileDWO without going through GetCompileUnitAtIndex,
but making sure things don't accidentally work because the SymbolFile
ID is the same as compile unit offset is a step towards that.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg, aprantl
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, dexonsmith, tberghammer, jankratochvil, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61783
llvm-svn: 360565
Summary:
Breakpoint shouldn't need to depend on any specific details from a
programming language. Currently the only language-specific detail it takes
advantage of are the different qualified names an objective-c method name might
have when adding a name lookup. This is reasonably generalizable.
The current method name I introduced is "GetVariantMethodNames", which I'm not
particularly tied to. If you have a better suggestion, please do let me know.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61746
llvm-svn: 360509
logging when the testsuite is run with trace mode enabled are leaving
the logging enabled after the tests have finished. That state
isn't cleared in a --no-multiprocess testsuite run.
llvm-svn: 360480
D42892 changed a lot of code to use superclass DWARFUnit instead of its
subclass DWARFCompileUnit.
Finish this change more thoroughly for any *CompileUnit* -> *Unit* names.
Later patch will introduce DWARFTypeUnit which needs to be sometimes different
from DWARFCompileUnit and it would be confusing without this renaming.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61501
llvm-svn: 360443
This can cause us to return paths to files on the local filesystem even
if we don't end up using that file (for instance because the file is not
a real module).
llvm-svn: 360432
Summary:
some unwind formats are specific to a single symbol file and so it does
not make sense for their parsing code live in the general Symbol library
(as is the case with eh_frame for instance). This is the case for the
unwind information in breakpad files, but the same will probably be true
for PDB unwind info (once we are able to parse that).
This patch adds the ability to fetch an unwind plan provided by a symbol
file plugin, as discussed in the RFC at
<http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2019-February/014703.html>.
I've kept the set of changes to a minimum, as there is no way to test
them until we have a symbol file which implements this API -- that is
comming in a follow-up patch, which will also implicitly test this
change.
The interesting part here is the introduction of the
"RegisterInfoResolver" interface. The reason for this is that breakpad
needs to be able to resolve register names (which are present as strings
in the file) into register enums so that it can construct the unwind
plan. This is normally done via the RegisterContext class, handing this
over to the SymbolFile plugin would mean that it has full access to the
debugged process, which is not something we want it to have. So instead,
I create a facade, which only provides the ability to query register
names, and hide the RegisterContext behind the facade.
Also note that this only adds the ability to dump the unwind plan
created by the symbol file plugin -- the plan is not used for unwinding
yet -- this will be added in a third patch, which will add additional
tests which makes sure the unwinding works as a whole.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, clayborg
Subscribers: markmentovai, amccarth, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61732
llvm-svn: 360409
While this fixed the windows bot failures, it also broke all other bots.
Upon closer inspection, it turns out that the windows bots were "broken"
because two tests were unexpectedly passing -- i.e., the original patch
(r360375) actually improved our stepping support on windows.
So instead, I remove the relevant XFAILs.
This reverts commit r360397.
llvm-svn: 360407
Currently when we single step over a source line, we run and stop at every branch in the source line range. We can reduce the number of times we stop when stepping over by figuring out if any of these branches are function calls, and if so, ignore these branches. Since we are stepping over we can safely ignore these calls since they will return to the next instruction. Currently the step logic would stop at those branches (1st stop), single step into the branch (2nd stop), and then set a breakpoint at the return address (3rd stop), and then continue.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58678
llvm-svn: 360375
The test is failing sometimes because the debugger is failing to attach for lack of permissions. The fix is to call lldb_enable_attach inside the inferior main function
llvm-svn: 360371
All the other paths in the find_toolchain function return a tuple
(detected_toolchain_type, compiler_path), but when the parameter to
--compiler is not one of the predefined names it only returns the
detected toolchain type, which causes an error when trying to unpack the
result.
This patch changes it to return also the compiler path passed as a
parameter.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61713
llvm-svn: 360355
Summary:
First part of a fix for JITed code debugging. This has been a regression from 5.0 to 6.0 and it's is still reproducible on current master: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36209
The address of the breakpoint site is corrupt: the 0x4 value we end up with, looks like an offset on a zero base address. When we parse the ELF section headers from the JIT descriptor, the load address for the text section we find in `header.sh_addr` is correct.
The bug manifests in `VMAddressProvider::GetVMRange(const ELFSectionHeader &)` (follow it from `ObjectFileELF::CreateSections()`). Here we think the object type was `eTypeObjectFile` and unleash some extra logic [1] which essentially overwrites the address with a zero value.
The object type is deduced from the ELF header's `e_type` in `ObjectFileELF::CalculateType()`. It never returns `eTypeJIT`, because the ELF header has no representation for it [2]. Instead the in-memory ELF object states `ET_REL`, which leads to `eTypeObjectFile`. This is what we get from `lli` at least since 3.x. (Might it be better to write `ET_EXEC` on the JIT side instead? In fact, relocations were already applied at this point, so "Relocatable" is not quite exact.)
So, this patch proposes to set `eTypeJIT` explicitly whenever we read from a JIT descriptor. In `ObjectFileELF::CreateSections()` we can then call `GetType()`, which returns the explicit value or otherwise falls back to `CalculateType()`.
LLDB then sets the breakpoint successfully. Next step: debug info.
```
Process 1056 stopped
* thread #1, name = 'lli', stop reason = breakpoint 1.2
frame #0: 0x00007ffff7ff7000 JIT(0x3ba2030)`jitbp()
JIT(0x3ba2030)`jitbp:
-> 0x7ffff7ff7000 <+0>: pushq %rbp
0x7ffff7ff7001 <+1>: movq %rsp, %rbp
0x7ffff7ff7004 <+4>: movabsq $0x7ffff7ff6000, %rdi ; imm = 0x7FFFF7FF6000
0x7ffff7ff700e <+14>: movabsq $0x7ffff6697e80, %rcx ; imm = 0x7FFFF6697E80
```
[1] It was first introduced with https://reviews.llvm.org/D38142#change-lF6csxV8HdlL, which has also been the original breaking change. The code has changed a lot since then.
[2] ELF object types: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/2d2277f5/llvm/include/llvm/BinaryFormat/ELF.h#L110
Reviewers: labath, JDevlieghere, bkoropoff, clayborg, espindola, alexshap, stella.stamenova
Reviewed By: labath, clayborg
Subscribers: probinson, emaste, aprantl, arichardson, MaskRay, AlexDenisov, yurydelendik, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61611
llvm-svn: 360354
The script phase to do Options.td -> Options.inc was
wrong (missing the "include" directory) so the rule didn't
get run when Options.td changed.
llvm-svn: 360304
I think the recent change to flush the SB API recording uncovered a real
issue on the Windows bot. Although I couldn't make much sense of the
error message "unknown file: error: SEH exception with code 0x3221225477
thrown in the test body.", it prompted me to look at the test. In the
unit test we were recording during replay, which is obviously not
correct. I think we didn't see this issue before because we flushed once
after the recording was done. This patch unsets the recording logic
during the replay part of the test.
Hopefully this fixed the Windows bot.
llvm-svn: 360298
Previous ArchSpec tests didn't catch this bug since we never tested just the OS being out of date. Fixed the bug and covered this with a test that would catch this.
This was found when trying to load a core file where the core file was an ELF file with just the e_machine for architeture and where the ELF header had no OS set in the OSABI field of the e_ident. It wasn't merging the architecture with the target architecture correctly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61659
llvm-svn: 360292
The run command is only an abbreviation for the more verbose process
launch -- <args> but it works just as with GDB and therefore should be
mentioned in the GDB to LLDB command map.
For educational purposes I've not listed it as the first option on the
LLDB side so that new LLDB user can, if they want, also know what the
"native" way is for LLDB.
Here's the help documentation for the run command in lldb which gives
proof:
> (lldb) help run
> Launch the executable in the debugger.
>
> Syntax: run [<run-args>]
>
> Command Options Usage:
> run [<run-args>]
>
> 'run' is an abbreviation for 'process launch -c /bin/sh --'
Patch by: Konrad Kleine
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61483
llvm-svn: 360269
Summary:
The logic for translating a user_id into a DWARFDIE was replicated in
several places. This removes that redundancy and settles on a single
implementation in SymbolFileDWARF.
The reason for choosing that instead of DIERef was that we were
always immediately converting the returned DIERef into a DWARFDIE
anyway, which meant that one had to specify the SymbolFileDWARF argument
twice (once to get the DIERef, and once to get the actual DIE). Also,
passing a higher-level object (SymbolFileDWARF) into a lower-level one
(DIERef) seemed like a less intuitive arrangement than doing things the
other way around.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg, aprantl
Subscribers: tberghammer, jankratochvil, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61648
llvm-svn: 360246
This patch fixes two incorrect headings in source.rst which caused it to
show up on the homepage. I also updated the titles to have more sensible
links there.
llvm-svn: 360219
This patch ensures that we propagate errors coming from the lldbinit
file trough the command/script interpreter. Before, if you did something
like command script import syntax_error.py, and the python file
contained a syntax error, lldb wouldn't tell you about it. This changes
with the current patch: errors are now propagated by default.
PS: Jim authored this change and I added testing.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61579
llvm-svn: 360216
lldbExpression was linking against lldbPluginExpressionParserClang, and
lldbPluginExpressionParserClang was linking against lldbExpression.
There's no reason lldbExpression should need anything from
lldbPluginExpressionParserClang, so let's remove that dependency.
llvm-svn: 360208
This patch adds a command line flag that allows lldb to load local
lldbinit files.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61578
llvm-svn: 360172
Remove SymbolVendorMacOSX from the test, as this plugin is not available
on non-mac platforms, and it does not seem to be necessary anyway.
Declare inlined-functions.yaml as an input of the test in cmake.
llvm-svn: 360169
Summary:
This is necessary to support parsing expressions like ".cfa -16 + ^", as
that format is used in breakpad STACK CFI expressions.
Since the PDB expressions use the same parser, this change will affect
them too, but I don't believe that should be a problem in practice. If
PDBs do contain the negative values, it's very likely that they are
intended to be parsed the same way, and if they don't, then it doesn't
matter.
In case that we do ever need to handle this differently, we can always
make the parser behavior customizable, or just use a different parser.
To make sure that the integer size is big enough for everyone, I switch
from using a (unsigned) 32-bit integer to a 64-bit (signed) one.
Reviewers: amccarth, clayborg, aleksandr.urakov
Subscribers: markmentovai, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61311
llvm-svn: 360166
Summary:
This behavior is specified in the Section 6.4.2.3 (Register Rule
instructions) of the DWARF4 spec. We were not doing that, which meant
that any register rule which was relying on the cfa value being there
was not evaluated correctly (it was aborted due to "out of bounds"
access).
I'm not sure how come this wasn't noticed before, but I guess this has
something to do with the fact that dwarf unwind expressions are not used
very often, and when they are, the situation is so complicated that the
CFA is of no use. I noticed this when I started emitting dwarf
expressions for the unwind information present in breakpad symbol files.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, clayborg
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61018
llvm-svn: 360158
Fix Register tests to reference memory access to arrays via %0 and %1,
rather than via referencing %rax and %rbx directly. This fixes test
build failures on 32-bit x86.
llvm-svn: 360148
Summary:
r360109 added a new enum case, causing lldb build to fail with several errors like:
lldb/source/Symbol/ClangASTContext.cpp:4342:11: error: enumeration value 'MacroQualified' not handled in switch [-Werror,-Wswitch]
switch (qual_type->getTypeClass()) {
^
This adds the missing switch cases.
I'm not an lldb maintainer and just used my best judgement that it's probably expected that we break in these cases. Feel free to ping / revert / fix this change if this behavior is not appropriate.
Reviewers: gribozavr
Reviewed By: gribozavr
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61640
llvm-svn: 360146
The CPlusPlus Language plugin is unused in lldbBreakpoint. We should just remove
it.
A great follow up to this change would be to remove the dependency on the ObjC
language plugin, but that is actually used and requires some refactoring.
llvm-svn: 360105
Currently we have special handling for local lldbinit files in the
driver. At the same time, we have an SB API named
`SourceInitFileInCurrentWorkingDirectory` that does the same thing.
This patch removes the special handling from the driver and uses the API
instead. In addition to the obvious advantages of having one canonical
way of doing things and removing code duplication, this change also
means that the code path is the same for global and local lldb init
files.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61577
llvm-svn: 360077
Checking this in for Antonio Afonso:
This diff changes the function LineEntry::GetSameLineContiguousAddressRange so that it also includes function calls that were inlined at the same line of code.
My motivation is to decrease the step over time of lines that heavly rely on inlined functions. I have multiple examples in the code base I work that makes a step over stop 20 or mote times internally. This can easly had up to step overs that take >500ms which I was able to lower to 25ms with this new strategy.
The reason the current code is not extending the address range beyond an inlined function is because when we resolve the symbol at the next address of the line entry we will get the entry line corresponding to where the original code for the inline function lives, making us barely extend the range. This then will end up on a step over having to stop multiple times everytime there's an inlined function.
To check if the range is an inlined function at that line I also get the block associated with the next address and check if there is a parent block with a call site at the line we're trying to extend.
To check this I created a new function in Block called GetContainingInlinedBlockWithCallSite that does exactly that. I also added a new function to Declaration for convinence of checking file/line named CompareFileAndLine.
To avoid potential issues when extending an address range I added an Extend function that extends the range by the AddressRange given as an argument. This function returns true to indicate sucess when the rage was agumented, false otherwise (e.g.: the ranges are not connected). The reason I do is to make sure that we're not just blindly extending complete_line_range by whatever GetByteSize() we got. If for some reason the ranges are not connected or overlap, or even 0, this could be an issue.
I also added a unit tests for this change and include the instructions on the test itself on how to generate the yaml file I use for testing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61292
llvm-svn: 360071
The debug server does not need to use the instruction emulation. This
helps reduce the size of the final lldb-server binary by another ~100K
(~1% savings).
llvm-svn: 360067
Replace the constants used for r8/mm/xmm/ymm/zmm tests with something
more readable to ease debugging in case of failures (0x00 0x01 ...).
While at it, put the constants in array and copy them from memory
to simplify inline asm.
The original constants grew out of necessity. The xmm constants were
'weird' because they were intended to be different from mm constants
(as that was necessary to catch NetBSD implementation bug). The ymm
constants were made even weirded to not even partially collide with
other xmm registers (not saying it made sense, just how it was done).
Then, zmm constants were once again designed to avoid accidental
collisions with xmm and ymm constants, and at the same the 16 extra
registers required even more shuffling.
The new constants are meant to be more user-readable, so that a mistake
could be easily spotted. All of xmm, ymm and zmm tests use a sequence
of {0x00 0x01 0x02 ...}, shifted by 1 for every register. This should
provide enough uniquity, and space for future increase in number of
registers. Since mm and r8..r15 are printed as uint64_t rather than
byte-by-byte, they use 0x000102... As a result, on x86 endianness takes
care of making mm different than xmm.
The use of arrays is something I had to learn for zmm write tests. It
avoids having to specify all the input values separately, and makes
GCC happy about zmm-read test (it was rejected previously because of
hitting a limit of 30 constraints).
llvm-svn: 360041
These two methods are very similar and various refactorizations need to modify
both similar ways.
One could also just remove GetCompileUnitAtOffset and make
GetCompileUnitContainingDIEOffset to also accept offset of the CU itself
(currently it accepts only DIE offsets after the CU header).
But that would be less safe regarding some internal sanity checking.
Further code refactorization has been suggested by Pavel Labath.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61498
llvm-svn: 360038
This caused Clang to start erroring on the following:
struct S {
template <typename = int> explicit S();
};
struct T : S {};
struct U : T {
U();
};
U::U() {}
$ clang -c /tmp/x.cc
/tmp/x.cc:10:4: error: call to implicitly-deleted default constructor of 'T'
U::U() {}
^
/tmp/x.cc:5:12: note: default constructor of 'T' is implicitly deleted
because base class 'S' has no default constructor
struct T : S {};
^
1 error generated.
See discussion on the cfe-commits email thread.
This also reverts the follow-ups r359966 and r359968.
> this patch adds support for the explicit bool specifier.
>
> Changes:
> - The parsing for the explicit(bool) specifier was added in ParseDecl.cpp.
> - The storage of the explicit specifier was changed. the explicit specifier was stored as a boolean value in the FunctionDeclBitfields and in the DeclSpec class. now it is stored as a PointerIntPair<Expr*, 2> with a flag and a potential expression in CXXConstructorDecl, CXXDeductionGuideDecl, CXXConversionDecl and in the DeclSpec class.
> - Following the AST change, Serialization, ASTMatchers, ASTComparator and ASTPrinter were adapted.
> - Template instantiation was adapted to instantiate the potential expressions of the explicit(bool) specifier When instantiating their associated declaration.
> - The Add*Candidate functions were adapted, they now take a Boolean indicating if the context allowing explicit constructor or conversion function and this boolean is used to remove invalid overloads that required template instantiation to be detected.
> - Test for Semantic and Serialization were added.
>
> This patch is not yet complete. I still need to check that interaction with CTAD and deduction guides is correct. and add more tests for AST operations. But I wanted first feedback.
> Perhaps this patch should be spited in smaller patches, but making each patch testable as a standalone may be tricky.
>
> Patch by Tyker
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60934
llvm-svn: 360024
Summary:
The implementation of GetID used a relatively complicated algorithm,
which returned some kind of an offset of the unit in some file
(depending on the debug info flavour). The only thing this ID was used
for was to enable subseqent retrieval of the unit from the SymbolFile.
This can be made simpler if we just make the "ID" of the unit an index
into the list of the units belonging to the symbol file. We already
support indexed access to the units, so each unit already has a well
"index" -- this just makes it accessible from within the unit.
To make the distincion between "id" and "offset" clearer (and help catch
any misuses), I also rename DWARFDebugInfo::GetCompileUnit (which
accesses by offset) into DWARFDebugInfo::GetCompileUnitAtOffset.
On its own, this only brings a minor simplification, but it enables
further simplifications in the DIERef class (coming in a follow-up
patch).
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg, aprantl
Subscribers: arphaman, jdoerfert, lldb-commits, tberghammer, jankratochvil
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61481
llvm-svn: 360014
This particular test fails once every so many runs on GreenDragon. Given
that the randomness in the inferior isn't critical to the test, I
removed it in the hopes that it is the cause of the flakiness.
llvm-svn: 359992
Use output constraints for specific general-purpose registers in order
to simplify the tests. They save us from having to manually put
the values in correct registers, and reduce the number of registers
needed as a result.
llvm-svn: 359978
This was added to support FreeBSD. The inclusion of this header increases the
size of `lldb-server` due to MCJIT being forcefully preserved. Conditionalise
the inclusion to shared builds of LLVM which will allow for MCJIT to be stripped
if unnecessary when performing static linking of tools. This shaves off ~28% of
the binary size for lldb-server when linked with gold using
`-ffunction-sections` and `-fdata-sections`.
llvm-svn: 359944
Ran clang-format on the added test file and use the new StringRef
comparison over the temporary ConstStrings. Also aligned the
end of one of the code string literals.
llvm-svn: 359931
Before this change the test would always pass if the path to the test
contained the number 11 in it. Thanks to Ted for pointing this out.
llvm-svn: 359930
This patch makes `re` an alias for `register`. Currently `re<TAB>` gives
you the choice between `register` and `reproducer`. Given that you use
`register` a lot more often, it should win for the common substring.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61469
llvm-svn: 359927
We don't need the variables in lit, we can use the capabilities to check
if the utility exists.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61533
llvm-svn: 359926
Summary:
In an Objective-C context a local variable and namespace can cause an ambiguous name lookup when used in an expression. The solution involves mimicking the existing C++ solution which is to add local using declarations for local variables. This causes a different type of lookup to be used which eliminates the namespace during acceptable results filtering.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59960
llvm-svn: 359921
Summary:
According to [C128] "Virtual functions should specify exactly one
of `virtual`, `override`, or `final`", I've added override where a
virtual function is overriden but the explicit `override` keyword
was missing. Whenever both `virtual` and `override` were specified,
I removed `virtual`. As C.128 puts it:
> [...] writing more than one of these three is both redundant and
> a potential source of errors.
I anticipate a discussion about whether or not to add `override` to
destructors but I went for it because of an example in [ISOCPP1000].
Let me repeat the comment for you here:
Consider this code:
```
struct Base {
virtual ~Base(){}
};
struct SubClass : Base {
~SubClass() {
std::cout << "It works!\n";
}
};
int main() {
std::unique_ptr<Base> ptr = std::make_unique<SubClass>();
}
```
If for some odd reason somebody removes the `virtual` keyword from the
`Base` struct, the code will no longer print `It works!`. So adding
`override` to destructors actively protects us from accidentally
breaking our code at runtime.
[C128]: https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md#c128-virtual-functions-should-specify-exactly-one-of-virtual-override-or-final
[ISOCPP1000]: https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/issues/1000#issuecomment-476951555
Reviewers: teemperor, JDevlieghere, davide, shafik
Reviewed By: teemperor
Subscribers: kwk, arphaman, kadircet, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61440
llvm-svn: 359868
The part which checks whether vla_expr shows up in the variable list
does not pass on non-darwin platforms. Add the appropriate decorator.
llvm-svn: 359867