a shell would interpret it. A few examples that we now handle correctly
INPUT: "Hello "world
OUTPUT: "Hello World"
INPUT: "Hello "' World'
OUTPUT: "Hello World"
INPUT: Hello" World"
OUTPUT: "Hello World"
This broke the setting of dictionary values for the "settings set" command
for things like:
(lldb) settings set target.process.env-vars ["MY_ENV_VAR"]=YES
since we would drop the quotes. I fixed the user settings controller to use
a regular expression so it can accept any of the following inputs for
dictionary setting:
settings set target.process.env-vars ["MY_ENV_VAR"]=YES
settings set target.process.env-vars [MY_ENV_VAR]=YES
settings set target.process.env-vars MY_ENV_VAR=YES
We might want to eventually drop the first two syntaxes, but I won't make
that decision right now.
This allows more natural setting of the envirorment variables:
settings set target.process.env-vars MY_ENV_VAR=YES ABC=DEF CWD=/tmp
llvm-svn: 122166
lldb_private::RegularExpression compiles and matches with:
size_t
RegularExpression::GetErrorAsCString (char *err_str,
size_t err_str_max_len) const;
Added the ability to search a variable list for variables whose names match
a regular expression:
size_t
VariableList::AppendVariablesIfUnique (const RegularExpression& regex,
VariableList &var_list,
size_t& total_matches);
Also added the ability to append a variable to a VariableList only if it is
not already in the list:
bool
VariableList::AddVariableIfUnique (const lldb::VariableSP &var_sp);
Cleaned up the "frame variable" command:
- Removed the "-n NAME" option as this is the default way for the command to
work.
- Enable uniqued regex searches on variable names by fixing the "--regex RE"
command to work correctly. It will match all variables that match any
regular expressions and only print each variable the first time it matches.
- Fixed the option type for the "--regex" command to by eArgTypeRegularExpression
instead of eArgTypeCount
llvm-svn: 116178