SBPlatform::GetHostPlatform was missing the reproducer instrumentation
macros. Fixed by running lldb-instr on SBPlatform.cpp:
$ ./bin/lldb-instr ../llvm-project/lldb/source/API/SBPlatform.cpp
This patch fixes a crash that happens on the DWARF expression evaluator
when trying to access the top of the stack while it's empty.
rdar://60512489
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77108
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
This patch fixes a crash that happens on the DWARF expression evaluator
when trying to access the top of the stack while it's empty.
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
Leverage ARM ELF build attribute section to create ELF attribute section
for RISC-V. Extract the common part of parsing logic for this section
into ELFAttributeParser.[cpp|h] and ELFAttributes.[cpp|h].
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74023
The FileCollector in LLDB collects every files that's used during a
debug session when capture is enabled. This ensures that the reproducer
only contains the files necessary to reproduce. This approach is not a
good fit for the dSYM bundle, which is a directory on disk, but should
be treated as a single unit.
On macOS LLDB have automatically find the matching dSYM for a binary by
its UUID. Having a incomplete dSYM in a reproducer can break debugging
even when reproducers are disabled.
This patch adds a was to specify a directory of interest to the
reproducers. It is called from SymbolVendorMacOSX with the path of the
dSYMs used by LLDB.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76672
This reverts commit because of test failures in TestHelloWorld.
It seems that this test (specifically running "ls" as a platform shell
command) depended on the implicit passing of the host environment.
The fix should be fairly simple (inherit the environment explicitly),
but it may take me a while to figure where exactly to do that. Revert
while I am figuring that out.
Summary:
A defensive check in ProcessLauncherWindows meant that we would never
attempt to launch a process with a completely empty environment -- the
host environment would be used instead. Instead, I make the function add
an extra null wchar_t at the end of an empty environment. The
documentation on this is a bit fuzzy, but it seems to be what is needed
to make windows accept these kinds of environments.
Reviewers: amccarth, friss
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76835
Summary:
D73024 seems to have fixed one set crash, but it introduced another.
Namely, if a class contains a covariant method returning itself, the
logic in MaybeCompleteReturnType could cause us to attempt a recursive
import, which would result in an assertion failure in
clang::DeclContext::removeDecl.
For some reason, this only manifested itself if the class contained at
least two member variables, and the class itself was imported as a
result of a recursive covariant import.
This patch fixes the crash by not attempting to import classes which are
already completed in MaybeCompleteReturnType. However, it's not clear to
me if this is the right fix, or if this should be handled automatically
by functions lower in the stack.
Reviewers: teemperor, shafik
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76840
LLDB only automatically applies Fix-Its from errors, but not from warnings.
Currently we only store Fix-Its from errors and then later apply all Fix-Its
we stored. This moves the filter to the application phase, so that we now
store *all* Fix-Its but only apply Fix-Its from errors later on.
This is NFC preparation for an upcoming patch.
Summary:
Currently top-level expressions won't automatically get Fix-Its applied. The reason
for that is that we only set the `m_fixed_text` member if we have a wrapping
source code (I.e. `m_source_code` is not zero and is wrapping some expressions).
This patch just always sets `m_fixed_text` to get this working.
Reviewers: labath, jingham
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77042
In ObjectFileMachO we construct the symbol table from multiple
sources -- primarily the binary's nlist records, but when the nlist
symbols have been stripped, we would augment those with function
start address from the LC_FUNCTION_STARTS or eh_frame. This patch
adds another source of symbols - the exported symbols that the
dynamic linker, dyld, uses at runtime from its trie structure. This
provides us names and addresses for these functions/data.
This patch removes the code from ParseSymtab that would reject an
empty symbol table / nlist source. It adds a new symbols_added
set which tracks the address of every symbol we've added to the
symtab. We add symbols in most-information-ful order, and before
adding a symbol from less-informational-ful source (e.g.
LC_FUNCTION_STARTS with no function name), we check if that symbol
has already been added.
On targets with thumb code generation, instead of using the 0th bit
in these addresses in FunctionStarts (or now the trie entries), we
use the data field of FunctionStarts (formerly used to track if the
func_start should be added) and a flag for the trie entries to
encode this, and only store the actual addresses in the symbols_seen
and these vectors.
<rdar://problem/50791451>
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76758
CPlusPlusNameParser is used in several places on of them is during IR execution and setting breakpoints to pull information C++ like the basename, the context and arguments.
Currently it does not handle templated operator< properly, because of idiosyncrasy is how clang generates debug info for these cases.
It uses clang::Lexer which will tokenize operator<<A::B> into:
tok::kw_operator
tok::lessless
tok::raw_identifier
Later on the parser in ConsumeOperator() does not handle this case properly and we end up failing to parse.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76168
GetDeveloperDirectory returns a const char* which is NULL when we cannot
find the developer directory. This crashes in
PlatformDarwinKernel::CollectKextAndKernelDirectories because we're
unconditionally assigning it to a std::string. Coincidentally I just
refactored a bunch of code in PlatformMacOSX so instead of a ad-hoc fix
I've reimplemented the method based on GetXcodeContentsDirectory.
The change is mostly NFC. Obviously it fixes the crash, but it also
removes support for finding the Xcode directory through he legacy
$XCODE_SELECT_PREFIX_DIR/usr/share/xcode-select/xcode_dir_path.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76938
When parsing DWARF and laying out bit-fields we currently don't take into account whether we have a base class or not.
Currently if the first field is a bit-field but the bit offset is due a field we inherit from a base class we currently
treat it as an unnamed bit-field and therefore add an extra field.
This fix will not check if we have a base class and assume that this offset is due to members we are inheriting from the base.
We are currently seeing asserts during codegen when debugging clang::DiagnosticOptions.
This assumption will fail in the case where the first field in the derived class in an unnamed bit-field. Fixing the first field
being an unnamed bit-field looks like it will require a larger change since we will need a way to track or discover the last field offset of the bases(s).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76808
In breakpad, only x86 (and mips) registers have a leading '$' in their
names. Arm architectures use plain register names.
Previously, lldb was assuming all registers have a '$'. Fix the code to
match the (unfortunately, inconsistent) reality.
Summary:
When using IPv6 host:port pairs, typically the host is put inside
brackets, such as [2601🔢...:0213]:5555, and the UriParser
can handle this format.
However, the Android infrastructure in LLDB assumes an additional
brackets around the host:port pair, such that the entire host:port
string can be treated as the host (which is used as an Android Serial
Number), and UriParser cannot handle multiple brackets. Parsing
inputs with such extra backets requires searching the closing bracket
from the right.
Test: BracketedHostnameWithPortIPv6 covers the case mentioned above
Reviewers: #lldb, labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: kwk, shafik, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76736
lldbassert is the macro that takes care of passing along line/file/function
to the lldb_assert function. Let's call that instead of manually calling the
function.
Reland with changes: the test modified in this change originally failed
on a Debian/x86_64 builder, and I suspect the cause was that lldb looked
up the line location for an artificial frame by subtracting 1 from the
frame's address. For artificial frames, the subtraction must not happen
because the address is already exact.
---
lldb currently guesses the address to use when creating an artificial
frame (i.e., a frame constructed by determining the sequence of (tail)
calls which must have happened).
Guessing the address creates problems -- use the actual address provided
by the DW_AT_call_pc attribute instead.
Depends on D76336.
rdar://60307600
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76337
Summary:
Currently we only log in debug builds but I don't see why we would do this as this is neither
expensive and seems useful.
I looked into the git history of this code and it seems originally there was also an assert here
and the logging here was the #else branch branch for non-Debug builds.
Reviewers: #lldb, labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76698
This reverts commit 6905394d15. The
changed test is failing on Debian/x86_64, possibly because lldb is
subtracting an offset from the DW_AT_call_pc address used for the
artificial frame:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/lldb-x86_64-debian/builds/7171/steps/test/logs/stdio
/home/worker/lldb-x86_64-debian/lldb-x86_64-debian/llvm-project/lldb/test/API/functionalities/tail_call_frames/unambiguous_sequence/main.cpp:6:17: error: CHECK-NEXT: expected string not found in input
// CHECK-NEXT: frame #1: 0x{{[0-9a-f]+}} a.out`func3() at main.cpp:14:3 [opt] [artificial]
^
<stdin>:3:2: note: scanning from here
frame #1: 0x0000000000401127 a.out`func3() at main.cpp:13:4 [opt] [artificial]
Summary:
These two variables are only incremented under LLDB_CONFIGURATION_DEBUG but their
value is always logged when verbose lldb formatter logging is enabled, which causes that our
cache hit/miss log looks like this in non-Debug builds:
```
Cache hits: 0 - Cache Misses: 0
...
Cache hits: 0 - Cache Misses: 0
...
Cache hits: 0 - Cache Misses: 0
```
This just always increments those two counters independent of build mode.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76687
Summary:
Dumping the frame using the user-set format could cause that a debug LLDB doesn't behave as a release LLDB,
which could potentially break replaying a reproducer.
Also it's kinda strange that the frame format set by the user is used in the internal log output.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76685
lldb currently guesses the address to use when creating an artificial
frame (i.e., a frame constructed by determining the sequence of (tail)
calls which must have happened).
Guessing the address creates problems -- use the actual address provided
by the DW_AT_call_pc attribute instead.
Depends on D76336.
rdar://60307600
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76337
Summary:
This seems only useful for debugging and it's just plainly printf'ing to the console instead
of some log, so let's remove this.
Reviewers: #lldb, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76699
Files imported by the script interpreter aren't opened by LLDB so they
don't end up in the reproducer. The solution is to explicitly add them
to the FileCollector.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76626
Summary:
Detection of C strings does not work well for pointers. If the value object holding a (char*) pointer does not have an address (e.g., if it is a temp), the value is not considered a C string and its formatting is left to DumpDataExtractor rather than the special handling in ValueObject::DumpPrintableRepresentation. This leads to inconsistent outputs, e.g., in escaping non-ASCII characters. See the test for an example; the second test expectation is not met (without this patch). With this patch, the C string detection only insists that the pointer value is valid. The patch makes the code consistent with how the pointer is obtained in ValueObject::ReadPointedString.
Reviewers: teemperor
Reviewed By: teemperor
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76650
Summary:
The default behavior of Platform::PutFile is to open the file and
truncate it if it already exists. This works fine and is a sensible
default, but it interacts badly with code-signing on iOS, as doing so
invalidates the signature of the file (even if the new content has a
valid code signature).
We have a couple tests which on purpose reload a different binary with
the same name. Those tests are currently broken because of the above
interaction.
This patch simply makes the Darwin platform unconditionally delete the
destination file before sending the new one to work around this issue.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76450
There an option: EvaluateExpressionOptions::SetResultIsInternal to indicate
whether the result number should be returned to the pool or not. It
got broken when the PersistentExpressionState was refactored.
This fixes the issue and provides a test of the behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76532
This adds a formatter for libc++ std::unique_ptr.
I also refactored GetValueOfCompressedPair(...) out of LibCxxList.cpp since I need the same functionality and it made sense to share it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76476
Summary:
The interactions between the environment settings (`target.env-vars`,
`target.inherit-env`) and the inferior life-cycle are non-obvious
today. For example, if `target.inherit-env` is set, the `target.env-vars`
setting will be augmented with the contents of the host environment
the first time the launch environment is queried (usually at
launch). After that point, toggling `target.inherit-env` will have no
effect as there's no tracking of what comes from the host and what is
a user setting.
This patch computes the environment every time it is queried rather
than updating the contents of the `target.env-vars` property. This
means that toggling the `target.inherit-env` property later will now
have the intended effect.
This patch also adds a `target.unset-env-vars` settings that one can
use to remove variables from the launch environment. Using this, you
can inherit all but a few of the host environment.
The way the launch environment is constructed is:
1/ if `target.inherit-env` is set, then read the host environment
into the launch environment.
2/ Remove for the environment the variables listed in
`target.unset-env`.
3/ Augment the launch environment with the contents of
`target.env-vars`. This overrides any common values with the host
environment.
The one functional difference here that could be seen as a regression
is that `target.env-vars` will not contain the inferior environment
after launch. The patch implements a better alternative in the
`target show-launch-environment` command which will return the
environment computed through the above rules.
Reviewers: labath, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76470
Summary:
When no arguments or environment is provided to SBTarget::LaunchSimple,
make it use the values surrently set in the target properties. You can
get the current behavior back by passing an empty array instead.
It seems like using the target defaults is a much more intuitive
behavior for those APIs. It's unllikely that anyone passed NULL/None to
this API after having set properties in order to explicitely ignore them.
One direct application of this change is within the testsuite. We have
plenty of tests calling LaunchSimple and passing None as environment.
If you passed --inferior-env to dotest.py to, for example, set
(DY)LD_LIBRARY_PATH, it wouldn't be taken into account.
Reviewers: jingham, labath, #libc_abi!
Subscribers: libcxx-commits, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb, #libc_abi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76045
Summary:
The TargetProperties constructor invokes a series of callbacks to
prime the properties from the default ones. The one callback in
charge of updating the inferior environment was commented out
because it crashed.
The reason for the crash is that TargetProperties is a parent class
of Target and the callbacks were invoked using a Target that was
not fully initialized. This patch moves the initial callback
invocations to a separate function that can be called at the end
the Target constructor, thus preventing the crash.
One existing test had to be modified, because the initialization of
the environment properties now take place at the time the target is
created, not at the first use of the environment (usually launch
time).
The added test checks that the LaunchInfo object returned by
the target has been primed with the values from the settings.
Reviewers: jingham, labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76009
Summary:
LLDB keeps statistics of how many expression evaluations are 'successful' and 'failed'
which are updated after each expression evaluation (assuming statistics are enabled).
From what I understand the idea is that this could be used to define how well LLDB's
expression evaluator is working.
Currently all expressions are considered successful unless the user passes an explicit
positive element counting to the expression command (with the `-Z` flag) and then passes
an expression that successfully evaluates to a type that doesn't support element counting.
Expressions that fail to parse, execute or any other outcome are considered successful
at the moment which means we nearly always have a 100% expression evaluation
success rate.
This patch makes that expressions that fail to parse or execute to count as failed
expressions.
We can't know whether the expression failed because of an user error
of because LLDB couldn't correctly parse/compile it, but I would argue that this is
still an improvement. Assuming that the percentage of valid user expressions stays
mostly constant over time (which seems like a reasonable assumption), then this
way we can still see if we are doing relatively better/worse from release to release.
Reviewers: davide, aprantl, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: abidh
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76280