Commit Graph

35 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Greg Clayton c662ec8bd3 Fixed variable parsing to not parse block variables over and over due to an
issue in the way block variables are marked as parsed. In the DWARF parser we
always parse all blocks for a function at once, so we can mark all blocks as
having all variables parsed and avoid recursive function calls to try and
reparse things that have already been handled.

Fixed an issue with how variables get scoped into blocks. The DWARF parser can
now handle abtract class definitions that contain concrete static variables.
When the concrete instance of the class functions get instantiated, they will
track down the concrete block for the abtract block and add the variable to
each block.

llvm-svn: 133302
2011-06-17 22:10:16 +00:00
Greg Clayton 05d2b7f741 Added some functions to our API related to classifying symbols as code, data,
const data, etc, and also for SBAddress objects to classify their type of
section they are in and also getting the module for a section offset address.

    lldb::SymbolType SBSymbol::GetType();
    
    lldb::SectionType SBAddress::GetSectionType ();
    lldb::SBModule SBAddress::GetModule ();

llvm-svn: 128602
2011-03-31 01:08:07 +00:00
Greg Clayton e0d378b334 Fixed the LLDB build so that we can have private types, private enums and
public types and public enums. This was done to keep the SWIG stuff from
parsing all sorts of enums and types that weren't needed, and allows us to
abstract our API better.

llvm-svn: 128239
2011-03-24 21:19:54 +00:00
Greg Clayton e996fd30be LLDB now has "Platform" plug-ins. Platform plug-ins are plug-ins that provide
an interface to a local or remote debugging platform. By default each host OS
that supports LLDB should be registering a "default" platform that will be
used unless a new platform is selected. Platforms are responsible for things
such as:
- getting process information by name or by processs ID
- finding platform files. This is useful for remote debugging where there is 
  an SDK with files that might already or need to be cached for debug access.
- getting a list of platform supported architectures in the exact order they
  should be selected. This helps the native x86 platform on MacOSX select the
  correct x86_64/i386 slice from universal binaries.
- Connect to remote platforms for remote debugging
- Resolving an executable including finding an executable inside platform
  specific bundles (macosx uses .app bundles that contain files) and also
  selecting the appropriate slice of universal files for a given platform.

So by default there is always a local platform, but remote platforms can be
connected to. I will soon be adding a new "platform" command that will support
the following commands:
(lldb) platform connect --name machine1 macosx connect://host:port
Connected to "machine1" platform.
(lldb) platform disconnect macosx

This allows LLDB to be well setup to do remote debugging and also once 
connected process listing and finding for things like:
(lldb) process attach --name x<TAB>

The currently selected platform plug-in can now auto complete any available
processes that start with "x". The responsibilities for the platform plug-in
will soon grow and expand.

llvm-svn: 127286
2011-03-08 22:40:15 +00:00
Greg Clayton e576ab2996 All UnwindPlan objects are now passed around as shared pointers.
ArchDefaultUnwindPlan plug-in interfaces are now cached per architecture 
instead of being leaked for every frame.

Split the ArchDefaultUnwindPlan_x86 into ArchDefaultUnwindPlan_x86_64 and
ArchDefaultUnwindPlan_i386 interfaces.

There were sporadic crashes that were due to something leaking or being 
destroyed when doing stack crawls. This patch should clear up these issues.

llvm-svn: 125541
2011-02-15 00:19:15 +00:00
Greg Clayton 1c9e5acd27 Added the DWARF unique type map such that we only create a type once in the
module's AST context. Prior to this fix, with gcc binaries, we end up with
a full class definition for any used classes in each compile unit due to the
one definition rule. This would result in us making N copies of class T, where
N is the number of compile units that use class T, in the module AST. When
an expression would then try and use any types that were duplicated, it would
quickly confuse clang and make expression evaluation fail due to all of the
duplicate types that got copied over. This is now fixed by making a map of
types in the DWARF that maps type names to a collection of types + declaration
(file + line number) + DIE. Then later when we find a type we look in this
module map and find any already cached types that we can just use.

8935777

llvm-svn: 125207
2011-02-09 19:06:17 +00:00
Greg Clayton 95e314260e Header patch, virtual dtor patch and missed UUID patch from Kirk Beitz.
llvm-svn: 124931
2011-02-05 02:56:16 +00:00
Greg Clayton 4272cc7d4c Modified the PluginManager to be ready for loading plug-ins from a system
LLDB plugin directory and a user LLDB plugin directory. We currently still
need to work out at what layer the plug-ins will be, but at least we are 
prepared for plug-ins. Plug-ins will attempt to be loaded from the 
"/Developer/Library/PrivateFrameworks/LLDB.framework/Resources/Plugins" 
folder, and from the "~/Library/Application Support/LLDB/Plugins" folder on
MacOSX. Each plugin will be scanned for:

extern "C" bool LLDBPluginInitialize(void);
extern "C" void LLDBPluginTerminate(void);

If at least LLDBPluginInitialize is found, the plug-in will be loaded. The
LLDBPluginInitialize function returns a bool that indicates if the plug-in
should stay loaded or not (plug-ins might check the current OS, current
hardware, or anything else and determine they don't want to run on the current
host). The plug-in is uniqued by path and added to a static loaded plug-in
map. The plug-in scanning happens during "lldb_private::Initialize()" which
calls to the PluginManager::Initialize() function. Likewise with termination
lldb_private::Terminate() calls PluginManager::Terminate(). The paths for the
plug-in directories is fetched through new Host calls:

    bool Host::GetLLDBPath (ePathTypeLLDBSystemPlugins, dir_spec);
    bool Host::GetLLDBPath (ePathTypeLLDBUserPlugins, dir_spec);

This way linux and other systems can define their own appropriate locations
for plug-ins to be loaded.

To allow dynamic shared library loading, the Host layer has also been modified
to include shared library open, close and get symbol:

    static void *
    Host::DynamicLibraryOpen (const FileSpec &file_spec, 
                              Error &error);

    static Error
    Host::DynamicLibraryClose (void *dynamic_library_handle);

    static void *
    Host::DynamicLibraryGetSymbol (void *dynamic_library_handle, 
                                  const char *symbol_name, 
                                  Error &error);

lldb_private::FileSpec also has been modified to support directory enumeration
in an attempt to abstract the directory enumeration into one spot in the code.
The directory enumertion function is static and takes a callback:


    typedef enum EnumerateDirectoryResult
    {
        eEnumerateDirectoryResultNext,  // Enumerate next entry in the current directory
        eEnumerateDirectoryResultEnter, // Recurse into the current entry if it is a directory or symlink, or next if not
        eEnumerateDirectoryResultExit,  // Exit from the current directory at the current level.
        eEnumerateDirectoryResultQuit   // Stop directory enumerations at any level
    };

    typedef FileSpec::EnumerateDirectoryResult (*EnumerateDirectoryCallbackType) (void *baton,
                                                                                  FileSpec::FileType file_type,
                                                                                  const FileSpec &spec);

    static FileSpec::EnumerateDirectoryResult
    FileSpec::EnumerateDirectory (const char *dir_path,
                                  bool find_directories,
                                  bool find_files,
                                  bool find_other,
                                  EnumerateDirectoryCallbackType callback,
                                  void *callback_baton);

This allow clients to specify the directory to search, and specifies if only
files, directories or other (pipe, symlink, fifo, etc) files will cause the
callback to be called. The callback also gets to return with the action that
should be performed after this directory entry. eEnumerateDirectoryResultNext
specifies to continue enumerating through a directory with the next entry.
eEnumerateDirectoryResultEnter specifies to recurse down into a directory
entry, or if the file is not a directory or symlink/alias to a directory, then
just iterate to the next entry. eEnumerateDirectoryResultExit specifies to 
exit the current directory and skip any entries that might be remaining, yet
continue enumerating to the next entry in the parent directory. And finally
eEnumerateDirectoryResultQuit means to abort all directory enumerations at 
all levels.

Modified the Declaration class to not include column information currently
since we don't have any compilers that currently support column based 
declaration information. Columns support can be re-enabled with the
additions of a #define.

Added the ability to find an EmulateInstruction plug-in given a target triple
and optional plug-in name in the plug-in manager.

Fixed a few cases where opendir/readdir was being used, but yet not closedir
was being used. Soon these will be deprecated in favor of the new directory
enumeration call that was added to the FileSpec class.

llvm-svn: 124716
2011-02-02 02:24:04 +00:00
Greg Clayton 6beaaa680a A few of the issue I have been trying to track down and fix have been due to
the way LLDB lazily gets complete definitions for types within the debug info.
When we run across a class/struct/union definition in the DWARF, we will only
parse the full definition if we need to. This works fine for top level types
that are assigned directly to variables and arguments, but when we have a 
variable with a class, lets say "A" for this example, that has a member:
"B *m_b". Initially we don't need to hunt down a definition for this class
unless we are ever asked to do something with it ("expr m_b->getDecl()" for
example). With my previous approach to lazy type completion, we would be able
to take a "A *a" and get a complete type for it, but we wouldn't be able to
then do an "a->m_b->getDecl()" unless we always expanded all types within a
class prior to handing out the type. Expanding everything is very costly and
it would be great if there were a better way.

A few months ago I worked with the llvm/clang folks to have the 
ExternalASTSource class be able to complete classes if there weren't completed
yet:

class ExternalASTSource {
....

    virtual void
    CompleteType (clang::TagDecl *Tag);
    
    virtual void 
    CompleteType (clang::ObjCInterfaceDecl *Class);
};

This was great, because we can now have the class that is producing the AST
(SymbolFileDWARF and SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap) sign up as external AST sources
and the object that creates the forward declaration types can now also
complete them anywhere within the clang type system.

This patch makes a few major changes:
- lldb_private::Module classes now own the AST context. Previously the TypeList
  objects did.
- The DWARF parsers now sign up as an external AST sources so they can complete
  types.
- All of the pure clang type system wrapper code we have in LLDB (ClangASTContext,
  ClangASTType, and more) can now be iterating through children of any type,
  and if a class/union/struct type (clang::RecordType or ObjC interface) 
  is found that is incomplete, we can ask the AST to get the definition. 
- The SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap class now will create and use a single AST that
  all child SymbolFileDWARF classes will share (much like what happens when
  we have a complete linked DWARF for an executable).
  
We will need to modify some of the ClangUserExpression code to take more 
advantage of this completion ability in the near future. Meanwhile we should
be better off now that we can be accessing any children of variables through
pointers and always be able to resolve the clang type if needed.

llvm-svn: 123613
2011-01-17 03:46:26 +00:00
Greg Clayton 7fedea2c6f First attempt and getting "const" C++ method function signatures correct.
It currently isn't working, but it should be close. I will work on this more
when I figure out what I am not doing correctly.

llvm-svn: 119324
2010-11-16 02:10:54 +00:00
Greg Clayton 526e5afb2d Modified the lldb_private::Type clang type resolving code to handle three
cases when getting the clang type:
- need only a forward declaration
- need a clang type that can be used for layout (members and args/return types)
- need a full clang type

This allows us to partially parse the clang types and be as lazy as possible.
The first case is when we just need to declare a type and we will complete it
later. The forward declaration happens only for class/union/structs and enums.
The layout type allows us to resolve the full clang type _except_ if we have
any modifiers on a pointer or reference (both R and L value). In this case
when we are adding members or function args or return types, we only need to
know how the type will be laid out and we can defer completing the pointee
type until we later need it. The last type means we need a full definition for
the clang type.

Did some renaming of some enumerations to get rid of the old "DC" prefix (which
stands for DebugCore which is no longer around).

Modified the clang namespace support to be almost ready to be fed to the
expression parser. I made a new ClangNamespaceDecl class that can carry around
the AST and the namespace decl so we can copy it into the expression AST. I
modified the symbol vendor and symbol file plug-ins to use this new class.

llvm-svn: 118976
2010-11-13 03:52:47 +00:00
Greg Clayton 96d7d7453c Added initial support to the lldb_private::SymbolFile for finding
namespaces by name given an optional symbol context. I might end up
dressing up the "clang::NamespaceDecl" into a lldb_private::Namespace
class if we need to do more than is currenlty required of namespaces.
Currently we only need to be able to lookup a namespace by name when
parsing expressions, so I kept it simple for now. The idea here is
even though we are passing around a "clang::NamespaceDecl *", that
we always have it be an opaque pointer (it is forward declared inside
of "lldb/Core/ClangForward.h") and we only use clang::NamespaceDecl
implementations inside of ClangASTContext, or ClangASTType when we need
to extract information from the namespace decl object.

llvm-svn: 118737
2010-11-10 23:42:09 +00:00
Greg Clayton 2d95dc9b22 Modified lldb_private::SymboleFile to be able to override where its TypeList
comes from by using a virtual function to provide it from the Module's
SymbolVendor by default. This allows the DWARF parser, when being used to
parse DWARF in .o files with a parent DWARF + debug map parser, to get its
type list from the DWARF + debug map parser so when we go and find full 
definitions for types (that might come from other .o files), we can use the
type list from the debug map parser. Otherwise we ended up mixing clang types
from one .o file (say a const pointer to a forward declaration "class A") with
the a full type from another .o file. This causes expression parsing, when 
copying the clang types from those parsed by the DWARF parser into the 
expression AST, to fail -- for good reason. Now all types are created in the
same list.

Also added host support for crash description strings that can be set before
doing a piece of work. On MacOSX, this ties in with CrashReporter support
that allows a string to be dispalyed when the app crashes and allows 
LLDB.framework to print a description string in the crash log. Right now this
is hookup up the the CommandInterpreter::HandleCommand() where each command
notes that it is about to be executed, so if we crash while trying to do this
command, we should be able to see the command that caused LLDB to exit. For
all other platforms, this is a nop.

llvm-svn: 118672
2010-11-10 04:57:04 +00:00
Greg Clayton 7a34528d68 Did a lot of code cleanup.
Fixed the DWARF plug-in such that when it gets all attributes for a DIE, that
it omits the DW_AT_sibling and DW_AT_declaration when getting attributes
from a DW_AT_abstract_origin or DW_AT_specification DIE.

llvm-svn: 118654
2010-11-09 23:46:37 +00:00
Greg Clayton 2ccf8cfc4b Modified the DWARF parser for both the single DWARF file and for the case
where the DWARF is in the .o files so they can track down the actual type for
a forward declaration. This was working before for just DWARF files, but not
for DWARF in .o files where the actual definition was in another .o file.

Modified the main thread name in the driver to be more consistent with the
other LLDB thread names.

llvm-svn: 118383
2010-11-07 21:02:03 +00:00
Greg Clayton 69b0488d7a Separated the DWARF index for types from that the index of the namespaces
since we can't parse DW_TAG_namespace DIEs as types. They are only decls in
clang. All of the types we handle right now have both clang "XXXType" classes
to go with the "XXXDecl" classes which means they can be used within the 
lldb_private::Type class. I need to check to see which other decls that don't
have associated type objects need to float around the debugger and possibly
make a lldb_private::Decl class to manage them.

llvm-svn: 116558
2010-10-15 02:03:22 +00:00
Greg Clayton 247399230d Fixed C++ class clang type creation and display by making sure we omit
artifical members (like the vtable pointer member that shows up in the DWARF).
We were adding this to each class which was making all member variables be off
by a pointer size.

Added a test case so we can track this with "test/forward".

Fixed the type name index in DWARF to include all the types after finding
some types were being omitted due to the DW_AT_specification having the
DW_AT_declaration attribute which was being read into the real type instances
when there were forward declarations in the DWARF, causing the type to be
omitted. We now check to make sure any DW_AT_declaration values are only
respected when parsing types if the attribute is from the current DIE.

After fixing the missing types, we ran into some issues with the expression
parser finding duplicate entries for __va_list_tag since they are built in
types and would result in a "duplicate __va_list_tag definition" error. We
are now just ignoring this name during lookup, but we will need to see if
we can get the name lookup function to not get called in these cases.

Fixed an issue that would cause an assertion where DW_TAG_subroutine_types
that had no children, would not properly make a clang function type of:
"void (*) (void)".

llvm-svn: 116392
2010-10-13 03:15:28 +00:00
Greg Clayton 450e3f3c77 Fixed the Objective C method prototypes to be correct (the selectors weren't
being chopped up correctly). The DWARF plug-in also keeps a map of the ObjC
class names to selectors for easy parsing of all class selectors when we parse
the class type.

llvm-svn: 116290
2010-10-12 02:24:53 +00:00
Greg Clayton c93237c991 Fixed an issue where if a method funciton was asked to be parsed before
its containing class was parsed, we would crash.

llvm-svn: 115343
2010-10-01 20:48:32 +00:00
Greg Clayton 1be10fca5f Fixed the forward declaration issue that was present in the DWARF parser after
adding methods to C++ and objective C classes. In order to make methods, we
need the function prototype which means we need the arguments. Parsing these
could cause a circular reference that caused an  assertion.

Added a new typedef for the clang opaque types which are just void pointers:
lldb::clang_type_t. This appears in lldb-types.h.

This was fixed by enabling struct, union, class, and enum types to only get
a forward declaration when we make the clang opaque qual type for these
types. When they need to actually be resolved, lldb_private::Type will call
a new function in the SymbolFile protocol to resolve a clang type when it is
not fully defined (clang::TagDecl::getDefinition() returns NULL). This allows
us to be a lot more lazy when parsing clang types and keeps down the amount
of data that gets parsed into the ASTContext for each module. 

Getting the clang type from a "lldb_private::Type" object now takes a boolean
that indicates if a forward declaration is ok:

    clang_type_t lldb_private::Type::GetClangType (bool forward_decl_is_ok);
    
So function prototypes that define parameters that are "const T&" can now just
parse the forward declaration for type 'T' and we avoid circular references in
the type system.

llvm-svn: 115012
2010-09-29 01:12:09 +00:00
Greg Clayton 6adffa27ba Added a DIE to clang opaque type map.
Removed code that shouldn't have been checked in.

llvm-svn: 114932
2010-09-28 01:04:25 +00:00
Greg Clayton 594e5ed939 Hooked up detach for ProcessGDBRemote.
Remove the GetUserData()/SetUserData() from the DWARFDebugInfoEntry
class. We now track everything with dense maps.

llvm-svn: 114876
2010-09-27 21:07:38 +00:00
Greg Clayton 0fffff5816 Added the ability to create an objective C method for an objective C
interface in ClangASTContext. Also added two bool returning functions that
indicated if an opaque clang qual type is a CXX class type, and if it is an
ObjC class type.

Objective C classes now will get their methods added lazily as they are
encountered. The reason for this is currently, unlike C++, the 
DW_TAG_structure_type and owns the ivars, doesn't not also contain the
member functions. This means when we parse the objective C class interface
we either need to find all functions whose names start with "+[CLASS_NAME"
or "-[CLASS_NAME" and add them all to the class, or when we parse each objective
C function, we slowly add it to the class interface definition. Since objective
C's class doesn't change internal bits according to whether it has certain types
of member functions (like C++ does if it has virtual functions, or if it has
user ctors/dtors), I currently chose to lazily populate the class when each
functions is parsed. Another issue we run into with ObjC method declarations
is the "self" and "_cmd" implicit args are not marked as artificial in the
DWARF (DW_AT_artifical), so we currently have to look for the parameters by
name if we are trying to omit artificial function args if the language of the
compile unit is ObjC or ObjC++.

llvm-svn: 114722
2010-09-24 05:15:53 +00:00
Greg Clayton a51ed9bb49 Added motheds to C++ classes as we parse them to keep clang happy.
llvm-svn: 114616
2010-09-23 01:09:21 +00:00
Greg Clayton c685f8e540 So we can't use .debug_pubtypes as it, as designed, does not tell us about
all types in all compile units. I added a new kind of accelerator table to
the DWARF that allows us to index the DWARF compile units and DIEs in a way
that doesn't require the data to stay loaded. Currently when indexing the
DWARF we check if the compile unit had parsed its DIEs and if it hasn't we
index the data and free all of the DIEs so we can reparse later when we need
to after using one of our complete accelerator tables to determine we need
to reparse some DWARF. If the DIEs had already been parsed we leave them 
loaded. The new accelerator table uses the "const char *" pointers from our
ConstString class as the keys, and NameToDIE::Info as the value. This info
contains the compile unit index and the DIE index which means we are pointed
right to the DIE we need unlike the other DWARF accelerator tables that often
just point us to the compile unit we would find our answer in. 

llvm-svn: 113933
2010-09-15 04:15:46 +00:00
Greg Clayton 016a95eb04 Looking at some of the test suite failures in DWARF in .o files with the
debug map showed that the location lists in the .o files needed some 
refactoring in order to work. The case that was failing was where a function
that was in the "__TEXT.__textcoal_nt" in the .o file, and in the 
"__TEXT.__text" section in the main executable. This made symbol lookup fail
due to the way we were finding a real address in the debug map which was
by finding the section that the function was in in the .o file and trying to
find this in the main executable. Now the section list supports finding a
linked address in a section or any child sections. After fixing this, we ran
into issue that were due to DWARF and how it represents locations lists. 
DWARF makes a list of address ranges and expressions that go along with those
address ranges. The location addresses are expressed in terms of a compile
unit address + offset. This works fine as long as nothing moves around. When
stuff moves around and offsets change between the remapped compile unit base
address and the new function address, then we can run into trouble. To deal
with this, we now store supply a location list slide amount to any location
list expressions that will allow us to make the location list addresses into
zero based offsets from the object that owns the location list (always a
function in our case). 

With these fixes we can now re-link random address ranges inside the debugger
for use with our DWARF + debug map, incremental linking, and more.

Another issue that arose when doing the DWARF in the .o files was that GCC
4.2 emits a ".debug_aranges" that only mentions functions that are externally
visible. This makes .debug_aranges useless to us and we now generate a real
address range lookup table in the DWARF parser at the same time as we index
the name tables (that are needed because .debug_pubnames is just as useless).
llvm-gcc doesn't generate a .debug_aranges section, though this could be 
fixed, we aren't going to rely upon it.

Renamed a bunch of "UINT_MAX" to "UINT32_MAX".

llvm-svn: 113829
2010-09-14 02:20:48 +00:00
Greg Clayton 0b76a2c21f Modified the host process monitor callback function Host::StartMonitoringChildProcess
to spawn a thread for each process that is being monitored. Previously
LLDB would spawn a single thread that would wait for any child process which
isn't ok to do as a shared library (LLDB.framework on Mac OSX, or lldb.so on
linux). The old single thread used to call wait4() with a pid of -1 which 
could cause it to reap child processes that it shouldn't have.

Re-wrote the way Function blocks are handles. Previously I attempted to keep
all blocks in a single memory allocation (in a std::vector). This made the
code somewhat efficient, but hard to work with. I got rid of the old BlockList
class, and went to a straight parent with children relationship. This new 
approach will allow for partial parsing of the blocks within a function.

llvm-svn: 111706
2010-08-21 02:22:51 +00:00
Sean Callanan c7fbf73651 Fixed namespace visibility problems that were
breaking the build for me on a non-internal
SnowLeopard system.

llvm-svn: 110412
2010-08-06 00:32:49 +00:00
Greg Clayton b0b9fe610a Added support for objective C built-in types: id, Class, and SEL. This
involved watching for the objective C built-in types in DWARF and making sure
when we convert the DWARF types into clang types that we use the appropriate
ASTContext types.

Added a way to find and dump types in lldb (something equivalent to gdb's 
"ptype" command):

    image lookup --type <TYPENAME>

This only works for looking up types by name and won't work with variables.
It also currently dumps out verbose internal information. I will modify it
to dump more appropriate user level info in my next submission.

Hookup up the "FindTypes()" functions in the SymbolFile and SymbolVendor so
we can lookup types by name in one or more images.

Fixed "image lookup --address <ADDRESS>" to be able to correctly show all
symbol context information, but it will only show this extra information when
the new "--verbose" flag is used.

Updated to latest LLVM to get a few needed fixes.

llvm-svn: 110089
2010-08-03 00:35:52 +00:00
Greg Clayton 9e40956aea Created lldb::LanguageType by moving an enumeration from the
lldb_private::Language class into the enumerations header so it can be freely
used by other interfaces.

Added correct objective C class support to the DWARF symbol parser. Prior to
this fix we were parsing objective C classes as C++ classes and now that the
expression parser is ready to call functions we need to make sure the objective
C classes have correct AST types.

llvm-svn: 109574
2010-07-28 02:04:09 +00:00
Greg Clayton 8cf0593c87 Added a new enumeration named "ClangASTContext::AccessType" that abstracts the type creation from the various access enumerations in Clang. Currently there are clang::AccessSpecifier and the objective C ivars have their own enumeration. So I added a new enumeration that will allow a consistent interface when creating types through ClangASTContext.
I also added new functions to create an Objective C class, ivar and set an objective C superclass. They aren't hooked up in the DWARF parser yet. That is the next step, though I am unsure if I will do this in the DWARF parser or try and do it generically in the existing Record manipulation functions.

llvm-svn: 109130
2010-07-22 18:30:50 +00:00
Greg Clayton 4ceb9980c8 Modified both the ObjectFileMachO and ObjectFileELF to correctly set the
SectionType for Section objects for DWARF.

Modified the DWARF plug-in to get the DWARF sections by SectionType so we
can safely abstract the LLDB core from section names for the various object
file formats.

Modified the SectionType definitions for .debug_pubnames and .debug_pubtypes
to use the correct case.

llvm-svn: 109054
2010-07-21 22:54:26 +00:00
Jason Molenda ea84e76479 Switch over to using llvm's dwarf constants file.
llvm-svn: 107716
2010-07-06 22:38:03 +00:00
Greg Clayton 0c5cd90d63 Added function name types to allow us to set breakpoints by name more
intelligently. The four name types we currently have are:

eFunctionNameTypeFull       = (1 << 1), // The function name.
                                        // For C this is the same as just the name of the function
                                        // For C++ this is the demangled version of the mangled name.
                                        // For ObjC this is the full function signature with the + or
                                        // - and the square brackets and the class and selector
eFunctionNameTypeBase       = (1 << 2), // The function name only, no namespaces or arguments and no class 
                                        // methods or selectors will be searched.
eFunctionNameTypeMethod     = (1 << 3), // Find function by method name (C++) with no namespace or arguments
eFunctionNameTypeSelector   = (1 << 4)  // Find function by selector name (ObjC) names


this allows much more flexibility when setting breakoints:

(lldb) breakpoint set --name main --basename
(lldb) breakpoint set --name main --fullname
(lldb) breakpoint set --name main --method
(lldb) breakpoint set --name main --selector

The default:

(lldb) breakpoint set --name main

will inspect the name "main" and look for any parens, or if the name starts
with "-[" or "+[" and if any are found then a full name search will happen.
Else a basename search will be the default.

Fixed some command option structures so not all options are required when they
shouldn't be.

Cleaned up the breakpoint output summary.

Made the "image lookup --address <addr>" output much more verbose so it shows
all the important symbol context results. Added a GetDescription method to 
many of the SymbolContext objects for the more verbose output.

llvm-svn: 107075
2010-06-28 21:30:43 +00:00
Chris Lattner 30fdc8d841 Initial checkin of lldb code from internal Apple repo.
llvm-svn: 105619
2010-06-08 16:52:24 +00:00