Summary:
The NativePDB plugin contains code to convert "programs" describing the
layout of function frames into dwarf (for easier interaction with the
rest of lldb). This functionality is useful for the Breakpad plugin too,
as it contains the same kind of expressions (because breakpad info is
generated from pdb files).
In this patch, I move the core classes of this code into a common place,
where it can be used from both files. Previously, these were the details
of the implementation, but here I am exposing them (instead of just a
single "string->string" conversion function), as breakpad will need to
use these in a slightly different way. The reason for that is that
breakpad files generated from dwarf expressions use a slightly different
syntax, although most of the core code can be reused with a bit of
thought.
This is also the reason why I am not moving the parsing or dwarf
generation bits, as they will need to be generalized a bit before
they're usable for both scenarios.
This patch should be NFC, modulo renaming the moved entities to more
neutral names.
The reason I am moving this to the "Symbol" library, is because both
customers will be "Symbol"Files, and also the unwinding code lives in
the Symbol library. From a purely dependency standpoint this code will
probably be standalone, and so it could be moved all the way to Utility,
but that seems too low for this kind of functionality.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, amccarth, clayborg, JDevlieghere, aleksandr.urakov
Subscribers: aprantl, markmentovai, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60599
llvm-svn: 358976
Summary:
This argument was added back in 2010 (r118882) to support the ability to unwind
from functions whose eh_frame entry does not cover the entire range of
the function.
However, due to the caching happening in FuncUnwinders, this solution is
very fragile. FuncUnwinders will cache the plan it got from eh_frame
regardless of the value of the current_offset, so our ability to unwind
from a given function depended what was the value of "current_offset" the
first time that this function was called.
Furthermore, since the "image show-unwind" command did not know what's
the right offset to pass, this created an unfortunate situation where
"image show-unwind" would show no valid plans for a function, even
though they were available and being used.
In this patch I implement the feature slightly differently. Instead of
giving just a base address to the eh_frame unwinder, I give it the
entire range we are interested in. Then, I change the unwinder to return
the first plan that covers (even partially) that range. This way even a
partial plan will be returned, regardless of the address in the function
where we are stopped at.
This solution is still not 100% correct, as it will not handle a
function which is covered by two independent fde entries. However, I
don't expect anybody will write this kind of functions, and this wasn't
handled by the previous implementation either. If this is ever needed in
the future. The eh_frame unwinder can be extended to return "composite"
unwind plans created by merging sevelar fde entries.
I also create a test which triggers this scenario. As doing this is
virtually impossible without hand-written assembly, the test only works
on x86 linux.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60829
llvm-svn: 358964
Summary:
Previously we were printing the dwarf expressions in unwind rules simply
as "dwarf-expr". This patch uses the existing dwarf-printing
capabilities in lldb to enhance this dump output, and print the full
decoded dwarf expression.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, clayborg
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60949
llvm-svn: 358959
Summary:
Instead of checking in raw minidump binaries, check in their yaml form,
and call yaml2obj in the test.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: javed.absar, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60948
llvm-svn: 358957
was still stat'ing the possibly-dSYM FileSpec before I
(more cheaply) checked the filepath for telltale dSYM
components.
<rdar://problem/50086007>
llvm-svn: 358939
which reads the python files in a dSYM bundle, to check that the
SymbolFile is actually a dSYM bundle filepath; delay any fetching
of the ScriptInterpreter until after we've done that check.
When debugging a binary without a dSYM on darwin systems, the
SymbolFile we fetch is actually the ObjectFile -- so we would do
an unnecessary trip into Python land and stat around the filesystem
looking for a python file to read in. There's no reason to do any
of this unless the SymbolFile's file path includes the .dSYM bundle
telltale path components.
<rdar://problem/50065315>
llvm-svn: 358938
In the process of hoisting the LoadScriptingResourceForModule
out of Target::ModuleAdded and into Target::ModulesDidLoad,
I had ModulesDidLoad fetching the Target's entire image list
and look for scripting resources in those -- instead of only
looking for scripting resources in the modules that had
been added to the target's image list.
<rdar://problem/50065315>
llvm-svn: 358929
This moves the links to the C++ and Python API docs up to the main page.
As of now the links are still broken [1], but at least this will prevent
the additional frustration of searching for the links only to find out
they're broken.
[1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2019-April/014992.html
llvm-svn: 358928
Deallocating the data recorder in during the ::Keep() operation causes
problems down the line when exiting the debugger. The command
interpreter still holds a pointer to the now deallocated object and has
no way to know it no longer exists. This is exactly what the m_record
flag was meant for, although it wasn't hooked up properly either.
llvm-svn: 358916
Summary:
This patch adds anonymous namespaces support to the native PDB plugin.
I had to reference from the main function variables of the types that are inside
of the anonymous namespace to include them in debug info. Without the references
they are not included. I think it's because they are static, then are visible
only in the current translation unit, so they are not needed without any
references to them.
There is also the problem case with variables of types that are nested in
template structs. For now I've left FIXME in the test because this case is not
related to the change.
Reviewers: zturner, asmith, labath, stella.stamenova, amccarth
Reviewed By: amccarth
Subscribers: zloyrobot, aprantl, teemperor, lldb-commits, leonid.mashinskiy
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60817
llvm-svn: 358873
The tests reading the untouched module list are now not using any lldb
code (as module list loading lives in llvm now), so they can be removed.
The "filtering" of the module list remains (and probably will remain) an
lldb concept, so I keep those tests, but replace the checked-in binaries
with their yaml equivalents.
The binaries which are no longer referenced by any tests have been
removed.
llvm-svn: 358850
Summary:
The test was failing occasionally (1% of runs or so), because of
unpredictable timings between the two threads spawned by the test. If
the second thread hit the breakpoint right as we were stepping out of
the function on the first thread, we would still be stuck at the inner
frame when the process stopped.
This would cause errors like:
File "/home/worker/lldb-x86_64-debian/lldb-x86_64-debian/llvm/tools/lldb/packages/Python/lldbsuite/test/tools/lldb-vscode/step/TestVSCode_step.py", line 67, in test_step
self.assertEqual(x1, x3, 'verify step out variable')
AssertionError: 2 != 1 : verify step out variable
AFAICT, lldb-vscode is doing the right thing here, and the problem is
that the test is not taking this sequence of events into account. Since
the test is about testing stepping, it does not seem necessary to have
threads in the inferior at all, so I just rewrite the test to execute
the code we're supposed to step through directly on the main thread.
Reviewers: clayborg, jgorbe
Subscribers: jfb, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60608
llvm-svn: 358847
The strings have been already cleaned up in r358683, so this code is not
doing anything anymore.
While comparing the outputs before and after removing the formatting
code, I've found a couple of docstrings that managed to escape my perl
script in r358683, so I format them manually with this patch.
llvm-svn: 358846
As I was waiting for the test suite to complete at 99% I noticed this
test taking quite a bit of time. Since it's easy to split I just went
ahead and did so.
llvm-svn: 358792
This fixes the doxygen configuration to be functional again. I removed
the customer header and footer, as well as the no-longer-existent style
sheet. I also widened the scope of the documentation, from just the
public API to include the private interfaces as well.
llvm-svn: 358773
Generally having spurious `\n` doesn't matter, but here the
returning string is a command which is executed, so we want
to strip it. Pointed out by Jason.
llvm-svn: 358717
Summary:
It's never set to true. Its only effect would be to set stdout to binary mode.
Hopefully we have better ways of doing this by now :-)
Reviewers: hokein
Subscribers: jkorous, arphaman, kadircet, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60871
llvm-svn: 358696
Summary:
Emit framework's dSYM bundle as LLDB.framework.dSYM instead of LLDB.dSYM, because the latter could conflict with the driver's lldb.dSYM when emitted in the same directory on case-insensitive file systems.
Requires https://reviews.llvm.org/D60862
Reviewers: friss, beanz, bogner
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits, #lldb
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60863
llvm-svn: 358686
Summary:
This patch removes the "//----" frames and "///" leading lines from
docstring comments. We already have code doing transformations like this in
modify-python-lldb.py, but that's a script I'd like to remove. Instead
of running these transformations everytime we run swig, we can just
perform equivalent on its input once.
This patch can be reproduced (e.g. for downstream merges) with the
following "sweet" perl command:
perl -i -p -e 'BEGIN{ $/ = undef;} s:(" *\n) *//-----*\n:\1:gs; s:^( *)/// ?:\1:gsm; s:^ *//------*\n( *\n)?( *"):\2:gsm; s: *$::gsm; s:\n *"\):"):gsm' scripts/interface/*.i
This command produces nearly equivalent python files to those produced
by the relevant code in modify-python-lldb.py. The only difference I
noticed is that here I am slightly more agressive in removing trailing
newlines from docstring comments (the python script seems to leave
newlines in class-level docstrings).
Reviewers: amccarth, clayborg, jingham, aprantl
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60498
llvm-svn: 358683
We were using the LLDB-Info.plist as the canonical holder of the
version number, but there is really no good reason to do this. If
anything the plist should be generated using the information provided
to CMake.
For now just remove the logic extracting the version from the plist
and rely on LLDB_VERSION_STRING.
llvm-svn: 358604
LLVM's wchar to UTF8 conversion routine expects an empty string to store the output.
GetHostName() on Windows is sometimes called with a non-empty string which triggers
an assert. The simple fix is to clear the output string before the conversion.
llvm-svn: 358550
This was updated in r356703 to use llvm::sys::RetryAfterSignal, which
comes from llvm/Support/Errno.h. The header wasn't added, so it fails if
you compile for arm64/aarch64.
llvm-svn: 358530
Summary:
Saves some build times, and they're not part of the usual
developer workflow.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, friss
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60780
llvm-svn: 358528
In an effort to help new LLDB developers, we added checks and messaging around
the selection of your codesigning identity on macOS. While helpful, it is not
actually correct. It's perfectly valid to codesign with an identity that is
not named lldb_codesign. Currently this fails the build.
This patch keeps a warning that informs developers how to setup lldb_codesign
and how to pass it to cmake, but it allows the build to proceed with a
different identity.
llvm-svn: 358525
D59433 and D60501 changed the way UUIDs are computed from minidump
files. This was done to synchronize the U(G)UID representation with the
native tools of given platforms, but it created a mismatch between
minidumps and breakpad files.
This updates the breakpad algorithm to match the one found in minidumps,
and also adds a couple of tests which should fail if these two ever get
out of sync. Incidentally, this means that the module id in the breakpad
files is almost identical to our notion of UUIDs, so the computation
algorithm can be somewhat simplified.
llvm-svn: 358500
Summary:
As reported in LLVM bug 41486, the check `(byte1 & 0xf8) == 0xc0` is wrong. We want to check for `11010nnn`,
so the proper value we want to compare against is `0xd0` (`0xc0` would check for the value `11000nnn` which we
already checked for above as described in the bug report).
Reviewers: #lldb, jasonmolenda
Reviewed By: #lldb, jasonmolenda
Subscribers: jasonmolenda, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60655
llvm-svn: 358479
Summary:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D51633 added error handling in the ASTImporter.cpp which uncovered an underlying bug in which we used the wrong name when handling naming conflicts. This could cause a segmentation fault when attempting to cast an int to an enum during expression parsing.
This test should pass once https://reviews.llvm.org/D59665 is committed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59667
llvm-svn: 358462
There is an alternative method to GetConstCStringWithLength that
takes a StringRef. GetConstCStringWithLength also calls this
method in the end, so directly calling the StringRef saves
us from a unnecessary conversion to a C-string.
llvm-svn: 358357
Do not use -nostdlib in target-symbols-add-unwind.test. NetBSD uses
startup files to provide obligatory ELF notes in executables,
and therefore using -nostdlib requires providing specially tailored
input. Otherwise, kernel rejects the result as invalid executable.
The replacement was suggested by Pavel Labath.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60648
llvm-svn: 358329
This test contained an incredibly complicated inferior, but in reality,
all it was testing was that we can backtrace up to main and see main's
arguments.
However, the way this was implemented (setting a breakpoint on a
separate thread) meant that each time the test would run, it would stop
in a different location on the main thread. Most of the time this
location would be deep in some libc function, which meant that the
success of this test depended on our ability to backtrace out of a
random function of the c library that the user happens to have
installed.
This makes the test unpredictable. Backtracing out of a libc function is
an important functionality, but this is not the way to test it. Often it
is not even our fault that we cannot backtrace out because the C library
contains a lot of assembly routines that may not have correct unwind
info associated with them.
For this reason the test has accumulated numerous @expectedFail/Flaky
decorators. In this patch, I replace the inferior with one that does not
depend on libc functions. Instead I create a couple of stack frames of
user code, and have the test verify that. I also simplify the test by
using lldbutil.run_to_source_breakpoint.
llvm-svn: 358266