Summary:
This replaces the current use of LLDB's own `StringConvert` with LLVM's
`to_integer` which has a less error-prone API and doesn't use special 'error
values' to designate parsing problems.
Where needed I also added missing error handling code that prints a parsing
error instead of continuing with the error value returned from `StringConvert`
(which either gave a cryptic error message or just took the error value
performed an incorrect action with it. For example, `frame recognizer delete -1`
just deleted the frame recognizer at index 0).
Reviewers: #lldb, labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: labath, abidh, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82297
The formatter was requesting an unsigned integer from the ValueObject,
but CFAbsoluteTime is a signed double, so in the NSDate test the formatter
actually just printed the 'error value' date which is the Cocoa epoch. This
started failing after the recent Scalar changes.
This patch just changes the logic to use a signed value which fits to the data
we try to read and avoids this issue.
Summary:
This patch adds support for evaluation of expressions referring to types
which were compiled in -flimit-debug-info (a.k.a -fno-standalone-debug)
in clang. In this mode it's possible that the debug information needed
to fully describe a c++ type is not present in a single shared library
-- for example debug info for a base class or a member of a type can
only be found in another shared library. This situation is not
currently handled well within lldb as we are limited to searching within
a single shared library (lldb_private::Module) when searching for the
definition of these types.
The way that this patch gets around this limitation is by doing the
search at a later stage -- during the construction of the expression ast
context. This works by having the parser (currently SymbolFileDWARF, but
a similar approach is probably needed for PDBs too) mark a type as
"forcefully completed". What this means is that the parser has marked
the type as "complete" in the module ast context (as this is necessary
to e.g. derive classes from it), but its definition is not really there.
This is done via a new field on the ClangASTMetadata struct.
Later, when we are importing such a type into the expression ast, we
check this flag. If the flag is set, we try to find a better definition
for the type in other shared libraries. We do this by initiating a
new lookup for the "forcefully completed" classes, which then imports the
type from a module with a full definition.
This patch only implements this handling for base classes, but other
cases (members, array element types, etc.). The changes for that should
be fairly simple and mostly revolve around marking these types as
"forcefully completed" at an approriate time -- the importing logic is
generic already.
Another aspect, which is also not handled by this patch is viewing these
types via the "frame variable" command. This does not use the AST
importer and so it will need to handle these types on its own -- that
will be the subject of another patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81561
This patch improves the error reporting for SBBreakpoint::AddName by
adding a new method `SBBreakpoint::AddNameWithErrorHandling` that returns
a SBError instead of a boolean.
This way, if the breakpoint naming failed in the backend, the client
(i.e. Xcode), will be able to report the reason of that failure to the
user.
rdar://64765461
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82879
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
This patch improves the error reporting for SBBreakpoint::AddName by
adding a new method `SBBreakpoint::AddNameWithErrorHandling` that returns
a SBError instead of a boolean.
This way, if the breakpoint naming failed in the backend, the client
(i.e. Xcode), will be able to report the reason of that failure to the
user.
rdar://64765461
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
The refactor in 48ca15592f reintroduced UB when converting out-of-bounds
floating point numbers to integers -- the behavior for ULongLong() was
originally fixed in r341685, but did not survive my refactor because I
based my template code on one of the methods which did not have this
fix.
This time, I apply the fix to all float->int conversions, instead of
just the "double->unsigned long long" case. I also use a slightly
simpler version of the code, with fewer round-trips
(APFloat->APSInt->native_int vs
APFloat->native_float->APInt->native_int).
I also add some unit tests for the conversions.
Condition `omit_empty_base_classes` is checked both in an outer and
in an inner `if` statement in `TypeSystemClang::GetNumBaseClasses()`.
This patch removes the redundant inner check.
The issue was found using `clang-tidy` check under review
`misc-redundant-condition`. See https://reviews.llvm.org/D81272.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82559
Condition `auto_advance_pc` is checked both in an outer and in an
inner `if` statement in `EmulateInstructionARM::EvaluateInstruction()`,
`EmulateInstructionARM64::EvaluateInstruction()` and
`EmulateInstructionPPC64::EvaluateInstruction()`. This patch removes the
redundant inner check.
The issue was found using `clang-tidy` check under review
`misc-redundant-condition`. See https://reviews.llvm.org/D81272.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82558
Fix UBSan error detected in TestDataFormatterObjCCF.py and
TestDataFormatterObjCNSDate.py:
Scalar.cpp:698:27: runtime error: -4.96303e+08 is outside the range of
representable values of type 'unsigned long long'.
debugserver and lldb
This patch improves the heuristics for correctly identifying simulator binaries on Darwin and adds support for simulators running on Apple Silicon.
rdar://problem/64046344
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82616
The `frame recognizer` command only exists when Python scripting is
enabled. Therefore the test should be made conditional on Python.
Without it, the test fails with "'frame recognizer' is not a known
command."
Summary:
A lot of our tests do 'self.assertTrue(error.Success()'. The problem
with that is that when this fails, it produces a completely useless
error message (False is not True) and the most important piece of
information -- the actual error message -- is completely hidden.
Sometimes we mitigate that by including the error message in the "msg"
argument, but this has two additional problems:
- as the msg argument is evaluated unconditionally, one needs to be
careful to not trigger an exception when the operation was actually
successful.
- it requires more typing, which means we often don't do it
assertSuccess solves these problems by taking the entire SBError object
as an argument. If the operation was unsuccessful, it can format a
reasonable error message itself. The function still accepts a "msg"
argument, which can include any additional context, but this context now
does not need to include the error message.
To demonstrate usage, I replace a number of existing assertTrue
assertions with the new function. As this process is not easily
automatable, I have just manually updated a representative sample. In
some cases, I did not update the code to use assertSuccess, but I went
for even higher-level assertion apis (runCmd, expect_expr), as these are
even shorter, and can produce even better failure messages.
Reviewers: teemperor, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: arphaman, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82759
Summary:
The ClangASTSource has a lock that globally disables all lookups into the
external AST source when we explicitly "guarded" copy a type. It's not used for
anything else, so importing declarations or importing types that are
dependencies of a declaration actually won't activate that lock. The lookups it
is supposed to prevent also don't actually happen in our test suite. The check
in `ClangExpressionDeclMap::FindExternalVisibleDecls` is never executed and the
check in the `ClangASTSource::FindExternalVisibleDeclsByName` is only ever
reached by the `Import-std-module` tests (which explicitly do a lookup into the
expression context on purpose).
This lock was added in 6abfabff61 as a replacement
for a list of types we already looked up which appeared to be an optimisation
strategy. I assume back then this lock had a purpose but these days the
ASTImporter and LLDB seem to be smart enough to avoid whatever lookups this
tried to prevent.
I would say we remove it from LLDB. The main reason is that it blocks D81561
(which explicitly does a specific lookup to resolve placeholder types produced
by `-flimit-debug-info`) but it's semantics are also very confusing. The naming
implies it's a flag to indicate when we import something at the moment which is
practically never true as described above. Also the fact that it makes our
ExternalASTSource alternate between doing lookups into the debug info and
pretending it doesn't know any external decls could really break our lookup in
some weird way if Clang decides to cache a fake empty lookup result that was
generated while the lock was active.
Reviewers: labath, shafik, JDevlieghere, aprantl
Reviewed By: labath, JDevlieghere, aprantl
Subscribers: aprantl, abidh
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81749
'InitialLength' is replaced with 'Format' (DWARF32 by default) and 'Length' in this patch.
Besides, test cases for DWARFv4 and DWARFv5, DWARF32 and DWARF64 is
added.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82622
The test fails on Darwin because a different Asynchronous UnwindPlan is
chosen:
Asynchronous (not restricted to call-sites) UnwindPlan is 'assembly
insn profiling'`
instead of what the test expects:
Asynchronous (not restricted to call-sites) UnwindPlan is 'eh_frame
CFI'
Summary:
This fixes a bug in the logic for choosing the unwind plan. Based on the
comment in UnwindAssembly-x86, the intention was that a plan which
describes the function epilogue correctly does not need to be augmented
(and it should be used directly). However, the way this was implemented
(by returning false) meant that the higher level code
(FuncUnwinders::GetEHFrameAugmentedUnwindPlan) interpreted this as a
failure to produce _any_ plan and proceeded with other fallback options.
The fallback usually chosed for "asynchronous" plans was the
"instruction emulation" plan, which tended to fall over on certain
functions with multiple epilogues (that's a separate bug).
This patch simply changes the function to return true, which signals the
caller that the unmodified plan is ready to be used.
The attached test case demonstrates the case where we would previously
fall back to the instruction emulation plan, and unwind incorrectly --
the test asserts that the "augmented" eh_frame plan is used, and that
the unwind is correct.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, jankratochvil
Subscribers: davide, echristo, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82378
This function was implementing c-like promotion rules by switching on
the both types. C promotion rules are complicated, but they are not
*that* complicated -- they basically boil down to:
- wider types trump narrower ones
- unsigned trump signed
- floating point trumps integral
With a couple of helper functions, we can rewrite the function in terms
of these rules and greatly reduce the size and complexity of this
function.
Although this issue is not specific to macOS, Python (in)compatibility
comes up quite often and we've been linking users to this page. This
just adds more details for this particular scenario.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82507
This patch takes the IO redirection logic from ScriptInterpreterPython
and moves it into the interpreter library so that it can be used by
other script interpreters. I've turned it into a RAII object so that we
don't have to worry about cleaning up in the calling code.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82396
This function was modifying and returning pointers to static storage,
which meant that any two accesses to different Scalar objects could
potentially race (depending on which types the objects were storing and
the host endianness).
In the new version the user is responsible for providing a buffer into
which this method will store its binary representation. The main caller
(RegisterValue::GetBytes) already has one such buffer handy, so this did
not require any major rewrites.
To make that work, I've needed to mark the RegisterValue value buffer
mutable -- not an ideal solution, but definitely better than modifying
global storage. This could be further improved by changing
RegisterValue::GetBytes to take a buffer too.
Summary:
When evaluating an expression referencing a constexpr static member variable, an
error is issued because the PDB does not specify a symbol with an address that
can be relocated against.
Rather than attempt to resolve the variable's value within the IR execution, the
values of all constants can be looked up and incorporated into the AST of the
record type as a literal, mirroring the original compiler AST.
This change applies to DIA and native PDB loaders.
Patch By: jackoalan
Reviewers: aleksandr.urakov, jasonmolenda, zturner, jdoerfert, teemperor
Reviewed By: aleksandr.urakov
Subscribers: sstefan1, lldb-commits, llvm-commits, #lldb
Tags: #lldb, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82160