Commit Graph

39 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Chandler Carruth 2946cd7010 Update the file headers across all of the LLVM projects in the monorepo
to reflect the new license.

We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.

Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.

llvm-svn: 351636
2019-01-19 08:50:56 +00:00
Davide Italiano 45188dd9ae [Interpreter] Simplify else after return. NFCI.
llvm-svn: 312454
2017-09-03 19:27:56 +00:00
Zachary Turner 97206d5727 Rename Error -> Status.
This renames the LLDB error class to Status, as discussed
on the lldb-dev mailing list.

A change of this magnitude cannot easily be done without
find and replace, but that has potential to catch unwanted
occurrences of common strings such as "Error".  Every effort
was made to find all the obvious things such as the word "Error"
appearing in a string, etc, but it's possible there are still
some lingering occurences left around.  Hopefully nothing too
serious.

llvm-svn: 302872
2017-05-12 04:51:55 +00:00
Zachary Turner 573ab909d3 Move StringList from Core -> Utility.
llvm-svn: 298412
2017-03-21 18:25:04 +00:00
Zachary Turner 24ae6294a4 Finish breaking the dependency from Utility.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29964

llvm-svn: 295368
2017-02-16 19:38:21 +00:00
Zachary Turner bf9a77305f Move classes from Core -> Utility.
This moves the following classes from Core -> Utility.

ConstString
Error
RegularExpression
Stream
StreamString

The goal here is to get lldbUtility into a state where it has
no dependendencies except on itself and LLVM, so it can be the
starting point at which to start untangling LLDB's dependencies.
These are all low level and very widely used classes, and
previously lldbUtility had dependencies up to lldbCore in order
to use these classes.  So moving then down to lldbUtility makes
sense from both the short term and long term perspective in
solving this problem.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29427

llvm-svn: 293941
2017-02-02 21:39:50 +00:00
Jim Ingham f7e0725628 Fix serialization of Python breakpoint commands.
CommandData breakpoint commands didn't know whether they were
Python or Command line commands, so they couldn't serialize &
deserialize themselves properly.  Fix that.
I also changed the "breakpoint list" command to note in the output
when the commands are Python commands.  Fortunately only one test
was relying on this explicit bit of text output.

llvm-svn: 282432
2016-09-26 19:47:37 +00:00
Kate Stone b9c1b51e45 *** This commit represents a complete reformatting of the LLDB source code
*** 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
2016-09-06 20:57:50 +00:00
Zachary Turner 1124045ac7 Don't #include "lldb-python.h" from anywhere.
Since interaction with the python interpreter is moving towards
being more isolated, we won't be able to include this header from
normal files anymore, all includes of it should be localized to
the python library which will live under source/bindings/API/Python
after a future patch.

None of the files that were including this header actually depended
on it anyway, so it was just a dead include in every single instance.

llvm-svn: 238581
2015-05-29 17:41:47 +00:00
Zachary Turner 386aafa6e3 Remove unused #includes of ScriptInterpreterPython.h
llvm-svn: 238470
2015-05-28 19:57:03 +00:00
Zachary Turner e6e2bb3842 Rework LLDB system initialization.
In an effort to reduce binary size for components not wishing to
link against all of LLDB, as well as a parallel effort to reduce
link dependencies on Python, this patch splits out the notion of
LLDB initialization into "full" and "common" initialization.

All code related to initializing the full LLDB suite lives directly
in API now.  Previously it was only referenced from API, but because
it was defined in lldbCore, it would get implicitly linked against
by everything including lldb-server, causing a considerable
increase in binary size.

By moving this to the API layer, it also creates a better layering
for the ongoing effort to make the embedded interpreter replacable
with one from a different language (or even be completely removeable).

One semantic change necessary to get this all working was to remove
the notion of a shared debugger refcount.  The debugger is either
initialized or uninitialized now, and calling Initialize() multiple
times will simply have no effect, while the first Terminate() will
now shut it down no matter how many times Initialize() was called.
This behaves nicely with all of our supported usage patterns though,
and allows us to fix a number of nasty hacks from before.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8462

llvm-svn: 233758
2015-03-31 21:03:22 +00:00
Enrico Granata 9fe00e52d3 Bulk of the infrastructure work to allow script commands to be backed by object instances in addition to free functions
This works by creating a command backed by a class whose interface should - at least - include

def __init__(self, debugger, session_dict)
def __call__(self, args, return_obj, exe_ctx)

What works:
- adding a command via command script add --class
- calling a thusly created command

What is missing:
- support for custom help
- test cases

The missing parts will follow over the next couple of days

This is an improvement over the existing system as:
a) it provides an obvious location for commands to provide help strings (i.e. methods)
b) it allows commands to store state in an obvious fashion
c) it allows us to easily add features to script commands over time (option parsing and subcommands registration, I am looking at you :-)

llvm-svn: 232136
2015-03-13 02:20:41 +00:00
Enrico Granata 88282c69f3 Add a feature where a string data formatter can now be partially composed of Python summary functions
This works similarly to the {thread/frame/process/target.script:...} feature - you write a summary string, part of which is

${var.script:someFuncName}
someFuncName is expected to be declared as
def someFuncName(SBValue,otherArgument) - essentially the same as a summary function

Since . -> [] are the only allowed separators, and % is used for custom formatting, .script: would not be a legitimate symbol anyway, which makes this non-ambiguous

llvm-svn: 220821
2014-10-28 21:07:00 +00:00
Enrico Granata d07cfd3ae4 Extend synthetic children to produce synthetic values (as in, those that GetValueAsUnsigned(), GetValueAsCString() would return)
The way to do this is to write a synthetic child provider for your type, and have it vend the (optional) get_value function.
If get_value is defined, and it returns a valid SBValue, that SBValue's value (as in lldb_private::Value) will be used as the synthetic ValueObject's Value

The rationale for doing things this way is twofold:

- there are many possible ways to define a "value" (SBData, a Python number, ...) but SBValue seems general enough as a thing that stores a "value", so we just trade values that way and that keeps our currency trivial
- we could introduce a new level of layering (ValueObjectSyntheticValue), a new kind of formatter (synthetic value producer), but that would complicate the model (can I have a dynamic with no synthetic children but synthetic value? synthetic value with synthetic children but no dynamic?), and I really couldn't see much benefit to be reaped from this added complexity in the matrix
On the other hand, just defining a synthetic child provider with a get_value but returning no actual children is easy enough that it's not a significant road-block to adoption of this feature

Comes with a test case

llvm-svn: 219330
2014-10-08 18:27:36 +00:00
Jim Ingham 2bdbfd50d2 This checkin is the first step in making the lldb thread stepping mechanism more accessible from
the user level.  It adds the ability to invent new stepping modes implemented by python classes,
and to view the current thread plan stack and to some extent alter it.

I haven't gotten to documentation or tests yet.  But this should not cause any behavior changes
if you don't use it, so its safe to check it in now and work on it incrementally.

llvm-svn: 218642
2014-09-29 23:17:18 +00:00
Jim Ingham b5796cb40e Allow "breakpoint command add" to add commands to more than one breakpoint at a time.
<rdar://problem/13314462>

llvm-svn: 216747
2014-08-29 17:34:17 +00:00
Todd Fiala 1b67c66c9c Windows build fixes and removal of endlessly recursive termination function.
This change removes the ScriptInterpreter::TerminateInterpreter() call which
ended up endlessly calling itself as things currently stand.  It also cleans
up some other Windows-related cmake changes.

See http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/lldb-commits/Week-of-Mon-20140630/011544.html
for more details.

Change by Zachary Turner

llvm-svn: 212320
2014-07-04 06:58:01 +00:00
Greg Clayton 8afa543737 Fixed the MacOSX non "Debug" builds so that "lldb-platform" doesn't fail to link.
llvm-svn: 192857
2013-10-17 00:27:14 +00:00
Greg Clayton 7b0992d9cd After discussing with Chris Lattner, we require C++11, so lets get rid of the macros and just use C++11.
llvm-svn: 179805
2013-04-18 22:45:39 +00:00
Greg Clayton e01e07b6e7 Since we use C++11, we should switch over to using std::unique_ptr when C++11 is being used. To do this, we follow what we have done for shared pointers and we define a STD_UNIQUE_PTR macro that can be used and it will "do the right thing". Due to some API differences in std::unique_ptr and due to the fact that we need to be able to compile without C++11, we can't use move semantics so some code needed to change so that it can compile with either C++.
Anyone wanting to use a unique_ptr or auto_ptr should now use the "STD_UNIQUE_PTR(TYPE)" macro.

llvm-svn: 179779
2013-04-18 18:10:51 +00:00
Enrico Granata 360cc3188d Implementing the notion of externally-acquirable ScriptInterpreter lock
With this notion, if parties outside the ScriptInterpreter itself need to acquire a lock on script APIs, they can do so by a pattern like this:

{
auto lock = interpeter->AcquireInterpreterLock();
// do whatever you need to do...
} // lock will automatically be released here

This might be useful for classes that use the Python convenience objects (e.g. PythonDictionary) to ensure they keep the underlying interpreter in a safe and controlled condition while they call through the C API functions
Of course, the ScriptInterpreter still manages its internal locking correctly when necessary :-)

llvm-svn: 178189
2013-03-27 22:38:11 +00:00
Daniel Malea 93a64300f8 Fix Linux build warnings due to redefinition of macros:
- add new header lldb-python.h to be included before other system headers
- short term fix (eventually python dependencies must be cleaned up)

Patch by Matt Kopec!

llvm-svn: 169341
2012-12-05 00:20:57 +00:00
Johnny Chen e9a5627e7a rdar://problem/11457143 [ER] need "watchpoint command ..."
Add 'watchpoint command add/delete/list' to lldb, plus two .py test files.

llvm-svn: 161638
2012-08-09 23:09:42 +00:00
Enrico Granata 7bc0ec3aad This commit:
a) adds a Python summary provider for NSDate
 b) changes the initialization for ScriptInterpreter so that we are not passing a bulk of Python-specific function pointers around
 c) provides a new ScriptInterpreterObject class that allows for ref-count safe wrapping of scripting objects on the C++ side
 d) contains much needed performance improvements:
    1) the pointer to the Python function generating a scripted summary is now cached instead of looked up every time
    2) redundant memory reads in the Python ObjC runtime wrapper are eliminated
    3) summaries now use the m_summary_str in ValueObject to store their data instead of passing around ( == copying) an std::string object
 e) contains other minor fixes, such as adding descriptive error messages for some cases of summary generation failure

llvm-svn: 151703
2012-02-29 03:28:49 +00:00
Greg Clayton 9ea3fcd845 <rdar://problem/10750012>
Remove a pseudo terminal master open and slave file descriptor that was being
used for pythong stdin. It was not hooked up correctly and was causing file
descriptor leaks.

llvm-svn: 149098
2012-01-27 00:13:27 +00:00
Greg Clayton dce502ede0 Fixed the Xcode project building of LLVM to be a bit more user friendly:
- If you download and build the sources in the Xcode project, x86_64 builds
  by default using the "llvm.zip" checkpointed LLVM.
- If you delete the "lldb/llvm.zip" and the "lldb/llvm" folder, and build the
  Xcode project will download the right LLVM sources and build them from 
  scratch
- If you have a "lldb/llvm" folder already that contains a "lldb/llvm/lib"
  directory, we will use the sources you have placed in the LLDB directory.
  
Python can now be disabled for platforms that don't support it. 

Changed the way the libllvmclang.a files get used. They now all get built into
arch specific directories and never get merged into universal binaries as this
was causing issues where you would have to go and delete the file if you wanted
to build an extra architecture slice.

llvm-svn: 143678
2011-11-04 03:34:56 +00:00
Enrico Granata a9dbf4325e this patch introduces a new command script import command which takes as input a filename for a Python script and imports the module contained in that file. the containing directory is added to the Python path such that dependencies are honored. also, the module may contain an __lldb_init_module(debugger,dict) function, which gets called after importing, and which can somehow initialize the module's interaction with lldb
llvm-svn: 142283
2011-10-17 21:45:27 +00:00
Enrico Granata be93a35a8a Python commands:
It is now possible to use 'command alias --python' to define a command name that actually triggers execution of a Python function
 (e.g. command alias --python foo foo_impl makes a command named 'foo' that runs Python function 'foo_impl')
 The Python function foo_impl should have as signature: def foo_impl(debugger, args, stream, dict): where
  debugger is an object wrapping an LLDB SBDebugger
  args is the command line arguments, as an unparsed Python string
  stream is an SBStream that represents the standard output
  dict is an internal utility parameter and should be left untouched
 The function should return None on no error, or an error string to describe any problems

llvm-svn: 137722
2011-08-16 16:49:25 +00:00
Enrico Granata 6f3533fb1d Public API changes:
- Completely new implementation of SBType
 - Various enhancements in several other classes
Python synthetic children providers for std::vector<T>, std::list<T> and std::map<K,V>:
 - these return the actual elements into the container as the children of the container
 - basic template name parsing that works (hopefully) on both Clang and GCC
 - find them in examples/synthetic and in the test suite in functionalities/data-formatter/data-formatter-python-synth
New summary string token ${svar :
 - the syntax is just the same as in ${var but this new token lets you read the values
   coming from the synthetic children provider instead of the actual children
 - Python providers above provide a synthetic child len that returns the number of elements
   into the container
Full bug fix for the issue in which getting byte size for a non-complete type would crash LLDB
Several other fixes, including:
 - inverted the order of arguments in the ClangASTType constructor
 - EvaluationPoint now only returns SharedPointer's to Target and Process
 - the help text for several type subcommands now correctly indicates argument-less options as such

llvm-svn: 136504
2011-07-29 19:53:35 +00:00
Enrico Granata a37a065c33 Python synthetic children:
- you can now define a Python class as a synthetic children producer for a type
   the class must adhere to this "interface":
        def __init__(self, valobj, dict):
     	def get_child_at_index(self, index):
     	def get_child_index(self, name):
   then using type synth add -l className typeName
   (e.g. type synth add -l fooSynthProvider foo)
   (This is still WIP with lots to be added)
   A small test case is available also as reference

llvm-svn: 135865
2011-07-24 00:14:56 +00:00
Enrico Granata f2bbf717f7 Python summary strings:
- you can use a Python script to write a summary string for data-types, in one of
   three ways:
    -P option and typing the script a line at a time
    -s option and passing a one-line Python script
    -F option and passing the name of a Python function
   these options all work for the "type summary add" command
   your Python code (if provided through -P or -s) is wrapped in a function
   that accepts two parameters: valobj (a ValueObject) and dict (an LLDB
   internal dictionary object). if you use -F and give a function name,
   you're expected to define the function on your own and with the right
   prototype. your function, however defined, must return a Python string
 - test case for the Python summary feature
 - a few quirks:
  Python summaries cannot have names, and cannot use regex as type names
  both issues will be fixed ASAP
major redesign of type summary code:
 - type summary working with strings and type summary working with Python code
   are two classes, with a common base class SummaryFormat
 - SummaryFormat classes now are able to actively format objects rather than
   just aggregating data
 - cleaner code to print descriptions for summaries
the public API now exports a method to easily navigate a ValueObject hierarchy
New InputReaderEZ and PriorityPointerPair classes
Several minor fixes and improvements

llvm-svn: 135238
2011-07-15 02:26:42 +00:00
Greg Clayton fc36f79170 Abtracted the innards of lldb-core away from the SB interface. There was some
overlap in the SWIG integration which has now been fixed by introducing
callbacks for initializing SWIG for each language (python only right now).
There was also a breakpoint command callback that called into SWIG which has
been abtracted into a callback to avoid cross over as well.

Added a new binary: lldb-platform

This will be the start of the remote platform that will use as much of the 
Host functionality to do its job so it should just work on all platforms.
It is pretty hollowed out for now, but soon it will implement a platform
using the GDB remote packets as the transport.

llvm-svn: 128053
2011-03-22 01:14:58 +00:00
Greg Clayton 645bf5420d Added support for some new environment variables within LLDB to enable some
extra launch options:

LLDB_LAUNCH_FLAG_DISABLE_ASLR disables ASLR for all launched processes

LLDB_LAUNCH_FLAG_DISABLE_STDIO will disable STDIO (reroute to "/dev/null")
for all launched processes

LLDB_LAUNCH_FLAG_LAUNCH_IN_TTY will force all launched processes to be
launched in new terminal windows.

Also, don't init python if we never create a script interpreter.

llvm-svn: 124341
2011-01-27 01:01:10 +00:00
Caroline Tice 2f88aadff1 Split up the Python script interpreter code to allow multiple script interpreter objects to
exist within the same process (one script interpreter object per debugger object).  The
python script interpreter objects are all using the same global Python script interpreter;
they use separate dictionaries to keep their data separate, and mutex's to prevent any object
attempting to use the global Python interpreter when another object is already using it.

llvm-svn: 123415
2011-01-14 00:29:16 +00:00
Greg Clayton a701509229 Fixed the way set/show variables were being accessed to being natively
accessed by the objects that own the settings. The previous approach wasn't
very usable and made for a lot of unnecessary code just to access variables
that were already owned by the objects.

While I fixed those things, I saw that CommandObject objects should really
have a reference to their command interpreter so they can access the terminal
with if they want to output usaage. Fixed up all CommandObjects to take
an interpreter and cleaned up the API to not need the interpreter to be
passed in.

Fixed the disassemble command to output the usage if no options are passed
down and arguments are passed (all disassebmle variants take options, there
are no "args only").

llvm-svn: 114252
2010-09-18 01:14:36 +00:00
Caroline Tice 3df9a8dfd7 This is a very large commit that completely re-does the way lldb
handles user settable internal variables (the equivalent of set/show
variables in gdb).  In addition to the basic infrastructure (most of
which is defined in UserSettingsController.{h,cpp}, there are examples
of two classes that have been set up to contain user settable
variables (the Debugger and Process classes).  The 'settings' command
has been modified to be a command-subcommand structure, and the 'set',
'show' and 'append' commands have been moved into this sub-commabnd
structure.  The old StateVariable class has been completely replaced
by this, and the state variable dictionary has been removed from the
Command Interpreter.  Places that formerly accessed the state variable
mechanism have been modified to access the variables in this new
structure instead (checking the term-width; getting/checking the
prompt; etc.)

Variables are attached to classes; there are two basic "flavors" of
variables that can be set: "global" variables (static/class-wide), and
"instance" variables (one per instance of the class).  The whole thing
has been set up so that any global or instance variable can be set at
any time (e.g. on start up, in your .lldbinit file), whether or not
any instances actually exist (there's a whole pending and default
values mechanism to help deal with that).

llvm-svn: 113041
2010-09-04 00:03:46 +00:00
Greg Clayton b132097b45 I enabled some extra warnings for hidden local variables and for hidden
virtual functions and caught some things and did some general code cleanup.

llvm-svn: 108299
2010-07-14 00:18:15 +00:00
Jason Molenda a34a0c61ae Move source/Utility/PseudoTerminal.h into include/lldb/Utility.
The top of the header file seems to indicate that this was
intended to be over at include/lldb/Core but we should be in line
with the .cpp file's location so it's include/lldb/Utility for now.

llvm-svn: 105753
2010-06-09 21:28:42 +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