Summary:
When the local lldb doesn't have access to a copy of the modules in the target, e.g. winphone, with this change now we read these modules from memory.
There are mainly 2 changes:
1. create pecoff object files from memory
2. read from memory when the local file is not available
Reviewers: sas, fjricci, zturner
Subscribers: #lldb
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24284
llvm-svn: 284422
*** to conform to clang-format’s LLVM style. This kind of mass change has
*** two obvious implications:
Firstly, merging this particular commit into a downstream fork may be a huge
effort. Alternatively, it may be worth merging all changes up to this commit,
performing the same reformatting operation locally, and then discarding the
merge for this particular commit. The commands used to accomplish this
reformatting were as follows (with current working directory as the root of
the repository):
find . \( -iname "*.c" -or -iname "*.cpp" -or -iname "*.h" -or -iname "*.mm" \) -exec clang-format -i {} +
find . -iname "*.py" -exec autopep8 --in-place --aggressive --aggressive {} + ;
The version of clang-format used was 3.9.0, and autopep8 was 1.2.4.
Secondly, “blame” style tools will generally point to this commit instead of
a meaningful prior commit. There are alternatives available that will attempt
to look through this change and find the appropriate prior commit. YMMV.
llvm-svn: 280751
This is a pretty straightforward first pass over removing a number of uses of
Mutex in favor of std::mutex or std::recursive_mutex. The problem is that there
are interfaces which take Mutex::Locker & to lock internal locks. This patch
cleans up most of the easy cases. The only non-trivial change is in
CommandObjectTarget.cpp where a Mutex::Locker was split into two.
llvm-svn: 269877
This fixes the regression of several tests on Windows after rL258621.
The root problem is that ObjectFilePECOFF was not setting type information for the symbols, and the new CL rejects symbols without type information, breaking functionality like thread step-over.
The fix sets the type information for functions (and creates a TODO for other types).
Along the way, I fixed some typos and formatting that made the code I was debugging harder to understand.
In the long run, we should consider replacing most of ObjectFilePECOFF with the COFF parsing code from LLVM.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16563
llvm-svn: 258758
This fixes the `thread step-over` regression exposed by http://reviews.llvm.org/D16186 , which depends on the symbols having actual sizes. Nine tests on Windows had started failing as a result. They all work again with this fix.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16415
llvm-svn: 258429
The Go runtime schedules user level threads (goroutines) across real threads.
This adds an OS plugin to create memory threads for goroutines.
It supports the 1.4 and 1.5 go runtime.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5871
llvm-svn: 247852
Summary:
This doesn't exist in other LLVM projects any longer and doesn't
do anything.
Reviewers: chaoren, labath
Subscribers: emaste, tberghammer, lldb-commits, danalbert
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12586
llvm-svn: 246749
A few extras were fixed
- Symbol::GetAddress() now returns an Address object, not a reference. There were places where people were accessing the address of a symbol when the symbol's value wasn't an address symbol. On MacOSX, undefined symbols have a value zero and some places where using the symbol's address and getting an absolute address of zero (since an Address object with no section and an m_offset whose value isn't LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS is considered an absolute address). So fixing this required some changes to make sure people were getting what they expected.
- Since some places want to access the address as a reference, I added a few new functions to symbol:
Address &Symbol::GetAddressRef();
const Address &Symbol::GetAddressRef() const;
Linux test suite passes just fine now.
<rdar://problem/21494354>
llvm-svn: 240702
This is implemented by making a new FileSystem function:
bool
FileSystem::IsLocal(const FileSpec &spec)
Then using this in a new function:
DataBufferSP
FileSpec::MemoryMapFileContentsIfLocal(off_t file_offset, size_t file_size) const;
This function only mmaps data if the file is a local file since that means we can reliably page in data. We were experiencing crashes where people would use debug info files on network mounted file systems and that mount would go away and cause the next access to a page that wasn't paged in to crash LLDB.
We now avoid this by just copying the data into a heap buffer and keeping a permanent copy to avoid the crash. Updated all previous users of FileSpec::MemoryMapFileContentsIfLocal() in ObjectFile subclasses over to use the new FileSpec::MemoryMapFileContentsIfLocal() function.
<rdar://problem/19470249>
llvm-svn: 230283
When you create a target, it tries to look for the platform's list
of supported architectures for a match. The match it finds can
contain specific triples, like i386-pc-windows-msvc. Later, we
overwrite this value with the most generic triple that can apply
to any platform with COFF support, causing some of the fields of
the triple to get overwritten.
This patch changes the behavior to only merge in values from the COFF
triple if the fields of the matching triple were unknown/unspecified
to begin with.
This fixes load address resolution on Windows, since it enables the
DynamicLoaderWindows to be used instead of DynamicLoaderStatic.
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7120
llvm-svn: 226849
i386, i486, i486sx, and i686 are all indistinguishable as far as
PE/COFF files are concerned. This patch adds support for all of
these architectures to PlatformWindows.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4658
llvm-svn: 214092
The patch is as is with the functionality left disabled for apple vendors because of performance regressions. If this is enabled it ends up searching for symbols in all shared libraries that are loadeded.
llvm-svn: 211638
This is a purely mechanical change explicitly casting any parameters for printf
style conversion. This cleans up the warnings emitted by gcc 4.8 on Linux.
llvm-svn: 205607
0 as CPU subtype never matches anything (at least, it doesn't match x86_64 windows binaries, of which there are correct arch definitions for). It should be created with LLDB_INVALID_CPUTYPE.
llvm-svn: 195435
Since I renamed most of the LLVM Mach-O enums in r189314, I had to go fix
LLDB to use the new names. While I was here, I decided that a COFF
plugin really shouldn't be using Mach-O enums.
llvm-svn: 189316
- ObjectFile::GetSymtab() and ObjectFile::ClearSymtab() no longer takes any flags
- Module coordinates with the object files and contain a unified section list so that object file and symbol file can share sections when they need to, yet contain their own sections.
Other cleanups:
- Fixed Symbol::GetByteSize() to not have the symbol table compute the byte sizes on the fly
- Modified the ObjectFileMachO class to compute symbol sizes all at once efficiently
- Modified the Symtab class to store a file address lookup table for more efficient lookups
- Removed Section::Finalize() and SectionList::Finalize() as they did nothing
- Improved performance of the detection of symbol files that have debug maps by excluding stripped files and core files, debug files, object files and stubs
- Added the ability to tell if an ObjectFile has been stripped with ObjectFile::IsStripped() (used this for the above performance improvement)
llvm-svn: 185990
3 patches, aiming to improve PE/COFF support:
- First patch fix symbol reading (invalid header size from sizeof() == 20 != 18, and various bugfixes such as invalid skipping of auxiliary symbols, 4 bytes shift from beginning, etc...).
- Second patch add image_base to section vmaddr offset so that VM addr is in image_base space.
- Third patch add support for DWARF section in PECOFF (taken from ELF counterpart), since they are generated by gcc/clang under windows.
llvm-svn: 184153
<rdar://problem/13594769>
Main changes in this patch include:
- cleanup plug-in interface and use ConstStrings for plug-in names
- Modfiied the BSD Archive plug-in to be able to pick out the correct .o file when .a files contain multiple .o files with the same name by using the timestamp
- Modified SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap to properly verify the timestamp on .o files it loads to ensure we don't load updated .o files and cause problems when debugging
The plug-in interface changes:
Modified the lldb_private::PluginInterface class that all plug-ins inherit from:
Changed:
virtual const char * GetPluginName() = 0;
To:
virtual ConstString GetPluginName() = 0;
Removed:
virtual const char * GetShortPluginName() = 0;
- Fixed up all plug-in to adhere to the new interface and to return lldb_private::ConstString values for the plug-in names.
- Fixed all plug-ins to return simple names with no prefixes. Some plug-ins had prefixes and most ones didn't, so now they all don't have prefixed names, just simple names like "linux", "gdb-remote", etc.
llvm-svn: 181631
There is a new static ObjectFile function you can call:
size_t
ObjectFile::GetModuleSpecifications (const FileSpec &file,
lldb::offset_t file_offset,
ModuleSpecList &specs)
This will fill in "specs" which the details of all the module specs (file + arch + UUID (if there is one) + object name (for BSD archive objects eventually) + file offset to the object in question).
This helps us when a user specifies a file that contains a single architecture, and also helps us when we are given a debug symbol file (like a dSYM file on MacOSX) that contains one or more architectures and we need to be able to match it up to an existing Module that has no debug info.
llvm-svn: 180224
DWARF with .o files now uses 40-60% less memory!
Big fixes include:
- Change line table internal representation to contain "file addresses". Since each line table is owned by a compile unit that is owned by a module, it makes address translation into lldb_private::Address easy to do when needed.
- Removed linked address members/methods from lldb_private::Section and lldb_private::Address
- lldb_private::LineTable can now relink itself using a FileRangeMap to make it easier to re-link line tables in the future
- Added ObjectFile::ClearSymtab() so that we can get rid of the object file symbol tables after we parse them once since they are not needed and kept memory allocated for no reason
- Moved the m_sections_ap (std::auto_ptr to section list) and m_symtab_ap (std::auto_ptr to the lldb_private::Symtab) out of each of the ObjectFile subclasses and put it into lldb_private::ObjectFile.
- Changed how the debug map is parsed and stored to be able to:
- Lazily parse the debug map for each object file
- not require the address map for a .o file until debug information is linked for a .o file
llvm-svn: 176454
- generate-vers.pl has to be called by cmake to generate the version number
- parallel builds not yet supported; dependency on clang must be explicitly specified
Tested on Linux.
- Building on Mac will require code-signing logic to be implemented.
- Building on Windows will require OS-detection logic and some selective directory inclusion
Thanks to Carlo Kok (who originally prepared these CMakefiles for Windows) and Ben Langmuir
who ported them to Linux!
llvm-svn: 175795
lldb was mmap'ing archive files once per .o file it loads, now it correctly shares the archive between modules.
LLDB was also always mapping entire contents of universal mach-o files, now it maps just the slice that is required.
Added a new logging channel for "lldb" called "mmap" to help track future regressions.
Modified the ObjectFile and ObjectContainer plugin interfaces to take a data offset along with the file offset and size so we can implement the correct caching and efficient reading of parts of files without mmap'ing the entire file like we used to.
The current implementation still keeps entire .a files mmaped (once) and entire slices from universal files mmaped to ensure that if a client builds their binaries during a debug session we don't lose our data and get corrupt object file info and debug info.
llvm-svn: 174524
Major fixed to allow reading files that are over 4GB. The main problems were that the DataExtractor was using 32 bit offsets as a data cursor, and since we mmap all of our object files we could run into cases where if we had a very large core file that was over 4GB, we were running into the 4GB boundary.
So I defined a new "lldb::offset_t" which should be used for all file offsets.
After making this change, I enabled warnings for data loss and for enexpected implicit conversions temporarily and found a ton of things that I fixed.
Any functions that take an index internally, should use "size_t" for any indexes and also should return "size_t" for any sizes of collections.
llvm-svn: 173463