Summary:
getcwd() is not available (well.. um.. deprecated?) on windows, and the way
PosixApi.h is providing it causes strange compile errors when it's included in
the wrong order. The best way to avoid that is to just not use chdir.
This replaces all uses of getcwd in generic code. There are still a couple of
more uses, but these are in platform-specific code.
chdir() is causing a similar problem, but for that there is no llvm equivalent
for that (yet).
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28858
llvm-svn: 292795
Summary:
The server was no longer sending the thread PCs the way the client
expected them.
I changed the server to send them back as a threadstop info field,
similar to the Apple version of the server.
I also changed the client to look for them there, before querying the
server.
I added a test to ensure the server doesn't stop sending them.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28880
Author: Jason Majors
llvm-svn: 292611
For bare-metal targets, lldb was missing a command like 'load' in gdb
which can be used to create executable image on the target. This was
discussed in
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2016-December/011752.html
This commits adds an option to "target module load" command to provide
that functionality. It does not set the PC to entry address which will
be done separately.
Reviewed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D28804
llvm-svn: 292499
Use the LLDB_LOG macro instead of the more verbose if(log) ... syntax.
I have also consolidated the log channels (everything now goes to the posix
channel, instead of a mixture of posix and lldb), and cleaned up some of the
more convoluted log statements.
llvm-svn: 292489
starts up, we need to clear the target's image list and only add
the binaries into the target that are actually present in this
process run.
<rdar://problem/29857613>
llvm-svn: 292454
This adds the LLDB_LOG macro, which enables one to write more succinct log
statements.
if (log)
log->Printf("log something: %d", var);
becomes
LLDB_LOG(log, "log something: {0}, var);
The macro still internally does the "if(log)" dance, so the arguments are only
evaluated if logging is enabled, meaning it has the same overhead as the
previous syntax.
Additionally, the log statements will be automatically prefixed with the file
and function generating the log (if the corresponding new argument to the "log
enable" command is enabled), so one does not need to manually specify this in
the log statement.
It also uses the new llvm formatv syntax, which means we don't have to worry
about PRIx64 macros and similar, and we can log complex object (llvm::StringRef,
lldb_private::Error, ...) more easily.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27459
llvm-svn: 292360
Summary:
The NDK cmake toolchain file defines CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME=Android, so switch the
build to use that. I have also updated the in-tree toolchain file to do that
(instead of defining __ANDROID_NDK__), so it can still be used to build.
After migrating the last bits of non-toolchainy bits out of the in-tree
toolchain, I intend to delete it.
Reviewers: tberghammer, danalbert
Subscribers: srhines, mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28775
llvm-svn: 292212
The unit test I added in the previous commit discovered a bug in
PrependPathComponent on windows -- it was calling SetFile with the host native
path syntax, whereas it should be explicitly specifying the path syntax (as
AppendPathComponent does). This fixes it.
llvm-svn: 292106
Summary:
PrependPathComponent was unconditionally inserting path separators between the
path components. This is not correct if the prepended path is "/", which caused
problems down the line. Fix the function to use the same algorithm as
AppendPathComponent and add a test. This fixes one part of llvm.org/pr31611.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28677
llvm-svn: 292100
We are going to turn off buffer overflow introduced by gcc by turning off
FORTIFY_SOURCE.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28666
llvm-svn: 291949
Summary:
I came across this while trying to understand what Log::Debug does. It turns out
it does not do anything, as there is no instance of someone setting a debug flag
on a stream. The same is true for the Verbose and AddPrefix flags. Removing
these will enable some cleanups in the Logging class, and it brings us closer
towards the long term goal of standardizing on llvm stream classes.
I have removed these flags and all code the code which tested for their
presence -- there wasn't much of it, mostly in SymbolFileDWARF, which is
probably going away at some point anyway.
The eBinary flag still has some users, so I am letting it life for the time
being.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: aprantl, beanz, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28616
llvm-svn: 291895
Summary:
The formatter supports the same options as the string-like classes, i.e. the
ability to truncate the displayed string. I don't anticipate it would be much
used, but it seems consistent.
Reviewers: zturner, clayborg
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28519
llvm-svn: 291759
Previously it failed to handle nested types inside templated classes
making it impossible to look up these types using the fully qualified
name.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28466
llvm-svn: 291559
The llvm_config hack for lldb-server is only necessary for !DYLIB builds, as
otherwise we would get unresolved symbols from lldb libraries which do not track
their dependencies correctly (all of them). In a DYLIB build, the so will
already be added to the link dependencies and we can use that to resolve all
missing symbols.
The proper fix for this would be to have each lldb library track its
dependencies correctly.
llvm-svn: 291555
We currently limit the length of TSan returned backtraces to 8, which is not necessary (and a bug, most likely). Let's remove this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28035
llvm-svn: 291522
Aleksey Shlyapnikov found the memory leak I introduced, recommitted the
Clang change with a fix for this.
This reapplies r291200 reverted in r291250
llvm-svn: 291271
Older clangs (<=3.6) complain about a redefinition when we try to specialize a
templace function declared with = delete. Instead, I just don't define the
function body, which will trigger a linker error if someone tries to use an
unknown function.
llvm-svn: 291226
Summary:
To implement wide character reading, editline was mixing FILE*-based access with
a Connection-based one (plus it did some selects on the raw FD), which is very
fragile. Here, I replace it with one which uses only a Connection-based reads.
The code is somewhat longer as I had to read characters one by one to detect the
end of the multibyte sequence.
I've verified that international characters still work in lldb command line on
OSX.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28356
llvm-svn: 291220
Wasn't sure I could include ErrorHandling.h here, and evidently I wasn't
building this part (must've made the change using sed after getting
tired of fixing each compilation error individually).
llvm-svn: 291204
Also found/fixed one bug identified by this warning in
RenderScriptx86ABIFixups.cpp where a string literal was being used in an
effort to provide a name for an instruction/register, but was instead
being passed as the bool 'isVolatile' parameter.
llvm-svn: 291198
Summary:
Some of the mi commands implemented in lldb-mi are incomplete/not confirming to the spec.
- `gdb-show` and `gdb-set` doesn't support getting/setting `disassembly-flavor`
- `environment-cd` should also change the working directory for inferior
- debugger CLI output should be printed as console-stream-output record, rather than being dumped directly
to stdout
- `target-select` should provide inner error message in mi response
Related bug report:
- https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=28026
- https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=28718
- https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=30265
Reviewers: ki.stfu, abidh
Subscribers: abidh, ki.stfu, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24711
llvm-svn: 291104
Added an extra field parser to the `RSModuleDescriptor` class enabling us to
check whether the versions of LLVM used to generated the debug symbols match
across the RenderScript compiler frontend (llvm-rs-cc) and backend (bcc); if
they do not, we warn the user that the debugging experience may be suboptimal
as LLVM IR debug information has no compatibility guarantees.
llvm-svn: 290957
lldb-gtest binary that xcode builds for -scheme lldb-gtest; these tests
won't run on macosx systems. Fixes testsuite failures we started
seeing after 290819.
<rdar://problem/29853778>
llvm-svn: 290917
Previously it parsed /proc/<pid>/maps for every module separately
resulting in a very slow response time. This CL add some caching and
optimizes the implementation to improve the code from O(n*m) to O(n+m)
where n is the number of modules requested and m is the number of
files mapped into memory.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28233
llvm-svn: 290895
r290874 enabled the s390x test, which caused the rest of the tests to start
misbehaving. This is because this test switches the selected platform and the
change persists.
This fixes it by explicitly resetting the platform in a similar way to the gcore
tests do. Potentially we should consider re-setting the platform globally
between each test run to better protect tests from each other.
llvm-svn: 290890
Summary:
This patch changes and simplifies the way notes are read from Linux Elf cores.
The current implementation copies the bytes from the notes directly over the lldb structure for 64 bit cores and reads field by field for 32 bit cores. Reading the bytes directly only works if the endianess of the core dump and the platform that lldb are running on matches. The case statements for s390x and x86_64 would would only work on big endian systems and little endian systems respectively. That meant that x86_64 generally worked but s390x didn't unless you were on s390x or another big endian platform.
This patch just reads field by field on all platform and updates the field by field version to allow for those fields which are word size instead of fixed size. It should also slightly simplify adding support for a new Linux platform.
This patch also re-enables the s390x test case in TestLinuxCore.py on all non-s390x platforms as it now passes.
Reviewers: uweigand, clayborg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27571
llvm-svn: 290874
Split the PDB tests into DWARF test and actual PDB tests, the latter
requiring DIA SDK. Use the new LLVMConfig.cmake LLVM_ENABLE_DIA_SDK
symbol to enable the PDB tests rather than relying on
llvm/Config/config.h private include file that is not available when
building standalone.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26249
llvm-svn: 290819
This patch fixes use of incorrect `%zi` to format a plain `int`, and using
`%llu` to format a `uint64_t`. The fix is to use the new typesafe
`llvm::Formatv` based API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28028
Subscribers: lldb-commits
llvm-svn: 290359
This patch adds the last bit of support to get LLVM_DISTRIBUTION_COMPONENTS working with libLLDB when built as a framework.
This patch adds dummy install targets for binaries built into the framework's Resources directory, and makes the framework's install target depend on all the binaries that get installed with the framework.
llvm-svn: 290273
We're seeing some very occasional failures in these tests where the
mini-driver dies with a SIGPIPE. We don't use SIGPIPE for anything, and
the main lldb driver program already ignores SIGPIPE, so ignoring it in
the mini-driver is a good way to remove these spurious failures.
<rdar://problem/29740488>
llvm-svn: 290216
Fixed by additional completed plans detection, and applying them on breakpoint condition fail.
Thread::GetStopInfo reworked. New test added.
Review https://reviews.llvm.org/D26497
Many thanks to Jim
llvm-svn: 290168
30 seconds to match the old springboard timeout; the launcher
should time out before that and we will hopefully get back
an informative error message instead of timing out ourselves.
llvm-svn: 290163
This is a redux of [Ewan's patch](https://reviews.llvm.org/D17957) , refactored
to properly substitute primitive types using a hook in the itanium demangler,
and updated after the previous patch went stale
The new `SubsPrimitiveParmItanium` function takes a symbol name and replacement
primitive type parameter as before but parses it using the FastDemangler, which
has been modified to be able to notify clients of parse events (primitive types
at this point).
Additionally, we now use a `set` of `ConstStrings` instead of a `vector` so
that we don't try and resolve the same invalid candidate multiple times.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27223
Subscribers: lldb-commits
llvm-svn: 290117
A combination of broken escaping in CMake and in the python swig
generation scripts meant that the swig generation step would fail
whenever there were spaces or special characters in parameters passed to
swig.
The fix for this in CMakeLists is to use the VERBATIM option on all
COMMAND-based custom builders relying on CMake to properly escape each
argument in the generated file.
Within the python swig scripts, the fix is to call subprocess.Popen with
a list of raw argument strings rather than ones that are incorrectly
manually escaped, then passed to a shell subprocess via
subprocess.Popen(' '.join(params)). This also prevents nasty things
happening such as accidental command-injection.
This allows us to have the swig / python executables in paths containing
special chars and spaces, (or on shared storage on Win32, e.g
\\some\path or C:\Program Files\swig\swig.exe).
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26757
llvm-svn: 289956
This adds formatv-backed formatting functions in various
places in LLDB such as StreamString, logging, constructing
error messages, etc. A couple of callsites are changed
from Printf style syntax to formatv style syntax to
illustrate its usage. Additionally, a FileSpec formatter
is introduced so that FileSpecs can be formatted natively.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27632
llvm-svn: 289922
where we would insert a breakpoint into a system library
but never remove it, so the second time we ran the binary
there would be two breakpoints and the debugger would
stop there.
<rdar://problem/29654974>
llvm-svn: 289913
In LLVM's CMake we have a convention that components have both a build and an install target. Making LLDB follow this convention will allow LLDB to take advantage of the LLVM_DISTRIBUTION_COMPONENTS build option from LLVM.
llvm-svn: 289879
When building the LLDB Framework we need to ensure that the Python files get put into the Framework before the Framework's install target can be invoked.
All files inside the Framework's Resources bundle will get copied over during the install action.
llvm-svn: 289842
CMake's framework target generation was unable to generate POST_BUILD steps (see: https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/cmake/issues/16363).
It turns out working around this is really not reasonable. The more reasonable solution to me is just to not support LLDB.framework unless you are on CMake 3.7 or newer.
Since CMake 3.7.1 is released that's how I'm going to handle this.
llvm-svn: 289841
Summary: I was building lldb using cross mingw-w64 toolchain on Linux and observed some issues. This is first patch in the series to fix that build. It mostly corrects the case of include files and adjusts some #ifdefs from _MSC_VER to _WIN32 and vice versa. I built lldb on windows with VS after applying this patch to make sure it does not break the build there.
Reviewers: zturner, labath, abidh
Subscribers: ki.stfu, mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27759
llvm-svn: 289821
This code is currently unused.
Removing it should make porting of the linux plugin to NetBSD easier, and we can
always add it later if needed.
llvm-svn: 289801
LLDB needs some minor changes to adopt PrettyStackTrace after https://reviews.llvm.org/D27683.
We remove our own SetCrashDescription() function and use LLVM-provided RAII objects instead.
We also make sure LLDB doesn't define __crashtracer_info__ which would collide with LLVM's definition.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27735
llvm-svn: 289711
At least the plugin used by the LibreOffice build
(<https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Development/Clang_plugins>) indirectly
uses those members (through inline functions in LLVM/Clang include files in turn
using them), but they are not exported by utils/extract_symbols.py on Windows,
and accessing data across DLL/EXE boundaries on Windows is generally
problematic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26671
llvm-svn: 289647
Summary: This code was probably needed to support VS2013 and is not needed now. I have built it with VS and mingw. Ok to remove it?
Reviewers: zturner, abidh
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27707
llvm-svn: 289644
I'm transitioning away from my current employer, and I do not foresee myself
spending much time on LLDB in the near future. Ideally somebody on the Google
Android team takes over the gdb-remote protocol tests, and somebody with decent
familiarity with the test suite infrastructure takes over the parallel test
runner and test event stream portions of the Python test suite.
llvm-svn: 289479
We don't parse ObjC v1 types from the runtime metadata like we do for ObjC v2, but doing so by creating empty types was ruining the i386 v1 debugging experience.
<rdar://problem/24093343>
llvm-svn: 289233
This test links against liblldb, so it can only run when the target arch is the
same arch as liblldb. We already have a decorator for that, so apply it.
While I'm in there, also mark the test as debug-info independent.
llvm-svn: 289199
I found the race condition in:
ScriptInterpreter *CommandInterpreter::GetScriptInterpreter(bool can_create);
More than one "ScriptInterpreter *" was being returned due to the race which caused any clients with the first one to now be pointing to freed memory and we would quickly crash.
Added a test to catch this so we don't regress.
<rdar://problem/28356584>
llvm-svn: 289169
ThreadList had an assignment operator that didn't lock the "rhs" thread list object. This means a thread list can be mutated while it is being copied.
The copy constructor calls the assignment operator as well. So this fixes the unsafe threaded access to ThreadList which we believe is responsible for a lot of crashes.
<rdar://problem/28075793>
llvm-svn: 289100
to not be set by Process::WillPublicStop() so the driver won't get
access to them. The fix is straightforward, moving the call to
WillPublicStop above the early return for the interrupt case. (the
interrupt case does an early return because the rest of the function
is concerned with running stop hooks etc and those are not applicable
when we've interrupted the process).
Also added a test case for it. The test case is a little complicated
because I needed to drive lldb asynchronously to give the program
a chance to get up and running before I interrupt it. Running to
a breakpoint was not sufficient to catch this bug.
<rdar://problem/22693778>
llvm-svn: 289026
In the process, discovered a bug related to the use of an
uninitialized-pointer, and fixed as suggested by Enrico
in an lldb-dev mailing list thread.
llvm-svn: 289015
LLVM build trees export the gtest library through a special export set. If you're building against a build tree you shouldn't need to re-add gtest, but if you're building against an installed LLVM you do.
llvm-svn: 288691
This diff
1. Adds a comment to ObjectFileELF.cpp about the current
approach to determining the OS.
2. Replaces the check in SymbolFileDWARF.cpp with a more robust one.
Test plan:
Built (on Linux) a test binary linked to a c++ shared library
which contains just an implementation of a function TestFunction,
the library (the binary itself) doesn't contain ELF notes
and EI_OSABI is set to System V.
Checked in lldb that now "p TestFunction()" works fine
(and doesn't work without this patch).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27380
llvm-svn: 288687
Rationale:
scripts/Python/modules: android is excluded at a higher level, so no point in
checking here
tools/lldb-mi: lldb-mi builds fine (with some cosmetic tweaks) on android, and
there is no reason it shouldn't.
tools/lldb-server: LLDB_DISABLE_LIBEDIT/CURSES already take the platform into
account, so there is no point in checking again.
I am reasonably confident this should not break the build on any platform, but
I'll keep an eye out on the bots.
llvm-svn: 288661
In r288065, we added more report types into ASan that will be reported via the debugging API. This patch in LLDB provides human-friendly bug descriptions. This also improves wording on existing bug descriptions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27017
llvm-svn: 288535
Summary:
This replaces all the uses of the __ANDROID_NDK__ define with __ANDROID__. This
is a preparatory step to remove our custom android toolchain file and rely on
the standard android NDK one instead, which does not provide this define.
Instead I rely, on __ANDROID__, which is set by the compiler.
I haven't yet removed the cmake variable with the same name, as we will need to
do something completely different there -- NDK toolchain defines
CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME to Android, while our current one pretends it's linux.
Reviewers: tberghammer, zturner
Subscribers: danalbert, srhines, mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27305
llvm-svn: 288494
We have a longstanding issue where the expression parser does not handle wide CFStrings (e.g., @"凸凹") correctly, producing the useless error message
Internal error [IRForTarget]: An Objective-C constant string's string initializer is not an array
error: warning: expression result unused
error: The expression could not be prepared to run in the target
This is just a side effect of the fact that we don't handle wide string constants when converting these to CFStringCreateWithBytes. That function takes the string's encoding as an argument, so I made it work and added a testcase.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D27291
<rdar://problem/13190557>
llvm-svn: 288386
Summary:
The fix is to make sure llvm does not pull in dlopen() in configurations where it
is not available.
Reviewers: tberghammer, beanz
Subscribers: danalbert, srhines, lldb-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26505
llvm-svn: 288331
Summary:
Since the function is way too big already, I tried at least to factor out the
timeout computation stuff into a separate function. I've tried to make the new
code semantically equivalent, and it also makes sense when I look at it as a done
deal.
Reviewers: jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27258
llvm-svn: 288326
The core of the function was actually handling them correctly. However, the
early exit was being too optimistic and did not give the function a chance to
fire if the path did not contain dots as well.
Fix that and add a couple of unit tests.
llvm-svn: 288247
This changes most of the class to use the new Timeout class. The one function
left is RunThreadPlan, which I left for a separate change as the function is
massive. A couple of things to call out:
- I've renamed the affected functions to match the listener interface names. This
should also help catch any places I did not convert at compile time.
- I've deleted the WaitForState function as it was unused.
llvm-svn: 288241
Summary:
Communication classes use the Timeout<> class to specify the timeout. Listener
class was converted to chrono some time ago, but it used a different meaning for
a timeout of zero (Listener: infinite wait, Communication: no wait). Instead,
Listener provided separate functions which performed a non-blocking event read.
This converts the Listener class to the new Timeout class, to improve
consistency. It also allows us to get merge the different GetNextEvent*** and
WaitForEvent*** functions into one. No functional change intended.
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27136
llvm-svn: 288238
We were referencing a the process class from a register context, which seems
intuitively wrong. Also, the comment above that code is now definitely incorrect,
as ProcessElfCore now does support floating point registers. Also, the code
wasn't really doing anything, as it was just skipping a zero-initialization of a
field that was most likely zero-initialized anyway. Linux elf core FPR test still
passes after this.
llvm-svn: 288237
Summary:
While adding FPR support to x86 elf core files (D26300), we ended up adding a
very x86-specific function to the general RegisterInfoInterface class, which I
didn't catch in review. This removes that function. The only reason we needed
it was to find the offset of the FXSAVE area. This is the same as the offset of
the first register within that area, so we might as well use that.
Reviewers: clayborg, dvlahovski
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27222
llvm-svn: 288236
It seems a debug build of lldb-server will not complete without these, as the
linker is not able to strip out code that aggressively. Add those back until I
can figure out how to break the dependency chains.
llvm-svn: 288181
I don't believe the code in those plugins could be in any way useful for
lldb-server, but I can't be sure if this will break some transitive dependencies.
Builtbots should be able to tell us that.
llvm-svn: 288169
Summary:
This basically just inlines the LLDBDependencies.cmake file into lldb-server
CMakeLists.txt. The reason is that most of these dependencies are not actually
necessary for lldb-server (some of them can't be removed because of
cross-dependencies, but most of the plugins can). I intend to start cleaning
these up in follow-up commits, but I want to do this first, so the subsequent
ones can be easily reverted if they don't build in some configurations.
When I cleaned these up locally, I was able to get a 30%--50% improvement in
lldb-server size.
Reviewers: zturner, beanz, tfiala
Subscribers: danalbert, srhines, lldb-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26975
llvm-svn: 288159
Summary:
This class is unused, and since the StringRef refactor, it does not even
implement the Connection interface.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27134
llvm-svn: 288117
The current implementation of the decorator does not skip if the android target
arch is the same as host arch (as in both cases the platform comes out as linux).
Nonetheless android x86_64 binaries are not compatible with linux ones.
Technically this should be "skip if target is android and host is *not* android",
but currently nobody runs lldb test suite on an android host, so we don't even
have a way of specifying that the host is android.
llvm-svn: 288027
Switch various bits of platform-specific code to chrono that I did not notice
when doing a linux build. This exposed a bug that ConnectionGenericFileWindows
did not handle the magic UINT32_MAX timeout value (instead it waited for about an
hour, which is close enough I guess). Fix that as well.
llvm-svn: 287927
The conditional expression is ambiguous there, so help it by explicitly casting.
This will go away once we use chrono all the way down.
llvm-svn: 287921
This replaces the raw integer timeout parameters in the class with their
chrono-based equivalents. To achieve this, I have moved the Timeout class to a
more generic place and added a quick unit test for it.
llvm-svn: 287920
Summary:
This is a test-the-water change about possibilities of reducing duplication in
the register context definitions.
I've named the new class RegisterInfoPOSIX, as RegisterContextPOSIX was already
taken :(. The two files were identical except for a fix by Tamas in D12636,
which was applied to the Linux version only, which fixed a discrepancy between
the definitions of fpsr and fpcr on one hand, and all other floating point
register definitions on the other.
Linux test suite still passes after this change. For freebsd, make the floating
point register behavior consistent, but I don't know whether it will be
consistently fixed, or consistently broken. By eyeballing the code, I have a
feeling that a similar fix to D12636 will be required in
RegisterContextPOSIXProcessMonitor_arm64::ReadRegister, but I can't be sure as I
have no way to test it (the assert in that function should fire upon accessing
the registers if it is wrong though).
Reviewers: emaste, clayborg
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, beanz, mgorny, modocache, dmikulin, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25947
llvm-svn: 287916
The line numbers come out slightly differently when the test is run with gcc-4.9
as a compiler. The test probably should not depend on that, but that is a
different story.
llvm-svn: 287893
This test passes consistently on linux, so I am removing the overall XFAIL. If it
fails on your configuration, please put a targeted xfail instead (i'll add them
my self if I get any breakage emails).
llvm-svn: 287881
the chrono library there uses long long as the underlying chrono type, but
defines int64_t as long (or the other way around, I am not sure). In any case,
this caused the implicit conversion to not trigger. This should address that.
Also fix up the relevant unit test.
llvm-svn: 287867
Summary:
This replaces the usage of raw integers with duration classes in the gdb-remote
packet management functions. The values are still converted back to integers once
they go into the generic Communication class -- that I am leaving to a separate
change.
The changes are mostly straight-forward (*), the only tricky part was
representation of infinite timeouts.
Currently, we use UINT32_MAX to denote infinite timeout. This is not well suited
for duration classes, as they tend to do arithmetic on the values, and the
identity of the MAX value can easily get lost (e.g.
microseconds(seconds(UINT32_MAX)).count() != UINT32_MAX). We cannot use zero to
represent infinity (as Listener classes do) because we already use it to do
non-blocking polling reads. For this reason, I chose to have an explicit value
for infinity.
The way I achieved that is via llvm::Optional, and I think it reads quite
natural. Passing llvm::None as "timeout" means "no timeout", while passing zero
means "poll". The only tricky part is this breaks implicit conversions (seconds
are implicitly convertible to microseconds, but Optional<seconds> cannot be
easily converted into Optional<microseconds>). For this reason I added a special
class Timeout, inheriting from Optional, and enabling the necessary conversions
one would normally expect.
(*) The other tricky part was GDBRemoteCommunication::PopPacketFromQueue, which
was needlessly complicated. I've simplified it, but that one is only used in
non-stop mode, and so is untested.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26971
llvm-svn: 287864
r287386 added a \x13 character inside a string literal. Most likely this
was by mistake, so remove it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26973
llvm-svn: 287862
Summary:
This patch changes the way ProcessElfCore.cpp handles signal information.
The patch changes ProcessElfCore.cpp to use the signal from si_signo in SIGINFO notes in preference to the value of cursig in PRSTATUS notes. The value from SIGINFO seems to be more thread specific. The value from PRSTATUS is usually the same for all threads even if only one thread received a signal.
If it cannot find any SIGINFO blocks it reverts to the old behaviour and uses the value from cursig in PRSTATUS. If after that no thread appears to have been stopped it forces the status of the first thread to be SIGSTOP to prevent lldb hanging waiting for any thread from the core file to change state.
The order is:
- If one or more threads have a non-zero si_signo in SIGINFO that will be used.
- If no threads had a SIGINFO block with a non-zero si_signo set all threads signals to the value in cursig in their PRSTATUS notes.
- If no thread has a signal set to a non-zero value set the signal for only the first thread to SIGSTOP.
This resolves two issues. The first was identified in bug 26322, the second became apparent while investigating this problem and looking at the signal values reported for each thread via “thread list”.
Firstly lldb is able to load core dumps generated by gcore where each thread has a SIGINFO note containing a signal number but cursig in the PRSTATUS block for each thread is 0.
Secondly if a SIGINFO note was found the “thread list” command will no longer show the same signal number for all threads. At the moment if a process crashes, for example with SIGILL, all threads will show “stop reason = signal SIGILL”. With this patch only the thread that executed the illegal instruction shows that stop reason. The other threads show “stop reason = signal 0”.
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: sas, labath, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26676
llvm-svn: 287858
source/Plugins/DynamicLoader/Darwin-Kernel/DynamicLoaderDarwinKernel.cpp:403:21: warning: comparison of integers of different signs: 'int' and 'size_t' (aka 'unsigned long') [-Wsign-compare]
for (int i = 0; i < llvm::array_lengthof (magicks); i++)
~ ^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27081
llvm-svn: 287848
The Windows process plugin was broken up into multiple pieces a while back in
order to share code between debugging live processes and minidumps
(postmortem) debugging. The minidump portion was replaced by a cross-platform
solution. This left the plugin split into a formerly "common" base classes and
the derived classes for live debugging. This extra layer made the code harder
to understand and work with.
This patch simplifies these class hierarchies by rolling the live debugging
concrete classes up to the base classes. Last week I posted my intent to make
this change to lldb-dev, and I didn't hear any objections.
This involved moving code and changing references to classes like
ProcessWindowsLive to ProcessWindows. It still builds for both 32- and 64-bit,
and the tests still pass on 32-bit. (Tests on 64-bit weren't passing before
this refactor for unrelated reasons.)
llvm-svn: 287770
Summary:
Improve detection of global vs local variables.
Currently when a global variable is optimized out or otherwise has an unknown
location (DW_AT_location is empty) it gets reported as local.
I added two new heuristics:
- if a mangled name is present, the variable is global (or static)
- if DW_AT_location is present but invalid, the variable is global (or static)
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26908
llvm-svn: 287636
The long-term goal here is to get rid of the functions
GetArgumentAtIndex() and GetQuoteCharAtIndex(), instead
replacing them with operator based access and range-based for
enumeration. There are a lot of callsites, though, so the
changes will be done incrementally, starting with this one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26883
llvm-svn: 287597
This is to fix a regression in remote-linux lldb-server connections.
We were wrongly passing a copy of uri and expecting a stringRef back.
llvm-svn: 287542
Summary:
The floating-point and SSE registers could be present in the elf-core
file in the note NT_FPREGSET for 64 bit ones, and in the note
NT_PRXFPREG for 32 bit ones.
The entire note is a binary blob matching the layout of the x87 save
area that gets generated by the FXSAVE instruction (see Intel developers
manual for more information).
This CL mainly modifies the RegisterRead function in
RegisterContextPOSIXCore_x86_64 for it to return the correct data both
for GPR and FPR/SSE registers, and return false (meaning "this register
is not available") for other registers.
I added a test to TestElfCore.py that tests reading FPR/SSE registers
both from a 32 and 64 bit elf-core file and I have inluded the source
which I used to generate the core files.
I tried to also add support for the AVX registers, because this info could
also be present in the elf-core file (note NT_X86_XSTATE - that is the result of
the newer XSAVE instruction). Parsing the contents from the file is
easy. The problem is that the ymm registers are split into two halves
and they are in different places in the note. For making this work one
would either make a "hacky" approach, because there won't be
any other way with the current state of the register contexts - they
assume that "this register is of size N and at offset M" and
don't have the notion of discontinuos registers.
Reviewers: labath
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26300
llvm-svn: 287506
This patch updates a bunch of places where add_dependencies was being explicitly called to add dependencies on intrinsics_gen to instead use the DEPENDS named parameter. This cleanup is needed for a patch I'm working on to add a dependency debugging mode to the build system.
llvm-svn: 287408
This concludes the changes I originally tried to make and then
had to back out. This way if anything is still broken, it
should be easier to bisect it back to a more specific changeset.
llvm-svn: 287367
The scanning algorithm had a few little subtleties that I
overlooked, but this patch should fix everything.
I still haven't changed the function to take a StringRef since
that has some trickle down effect and is mostly mechanical,
I just wanted to get the tricky part as isolated as possible.
llvm-svn: 287354
This argument was only used in one place in the codebase, and
it was in a non-critical log statement and can be easily
substituted for an equally meaningful field instead. The
payoff of computing this value is not worth the added
complexity.
llvm-svn: 287315
Apparently these two enormous functions were dead. Which is
good, since one was largely a copy of another function with
only a few minor tweaks.
llvm-svn: 287308
Originally I converted this entire function and all dependents
to use StringRef, but there were some test failures that
were tricky to track down, as this is a complicated function.
So I'm starting over, this time in smaller increments.
llvm-svn: 287307
In the process, found some functions that were duplicates of
existing StringRef member functions. So deleted those functions
and used the StringRef functions instead.
llvm-svn: 287279
Summary:
Fix step-over when SymbolContext.function is missing and symbol is present.
With targets from our build configuration,
ThreadPlanStepOverRange::IsEquivalentContext fails to fire for relevant frames,
leading to ShouldStop() returning true prematurely.
The frame's SymbolContext, and m_addr_context have:
- comp_unit set and matching
- function = nullptr
- symbol set and matching (but this is never checked)
My naive guess is that the context should be equivalent in this case :-)
Reviewers: jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26804
llvm-svn: 287274