Now that llgs supports communicating the 0-port choose-a-port
mechanism and can communicate that back to a caller via the
--named-pipe option (at parity with debugserver), we use this
mechanism to always start llgs and debugserver gdb-remote
protocol tests without needing to use some port arbitration
mechanism. This eliminates some potential intermittent failures vs. the
previous random port and collision-avoidance strategy used.
llvm-svn: 212923
The fix adds a std::weak_ptr<Module> into the TypeImpl and fills in the weak pointer when possible. It also checks to make sure the module is still alive prior to using it which should make our API safer to use.
<rdar://problem/15455145>
llvm-svn: 212853
If we have any section headers in the collection, we already parsed them.
Therefore, don't reparse the section headers when the section_headers collection
is not empty.
See this thread for more details:
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/lldb-commits/Week-of-Mon-20140707/011721.html
Change by Matthew Gardiner
llvm-svn: 212822
This patch fixes a number of issues with embedded Python on
Windows. In particular:
1) The script that builds the python modules was normalizing the
case of python filenames during copies. The module name is
the filename, and is case-sensitive, so this was breaking code.
2) Changes the build to not attempt to link against python27.lib
(e.g. the release library) when linking against msvcrt debug
library. Doing a debug build of LLDB with embedded python
support now requires you to provide your own self-compiled
debug version of python.
3) Don't import termios when initializing the interpreter. This
is part of a larger effort to remove the dependency on termios
since it is not available on Windows. This particular instance
was unnecessary and unused.
Reviewed by: Todd Fiala
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4441
llvm-svn: 212785
Fixes include:
- Don't say that "<arch>-apple-ios" is compatible with "<arch>-apple-macosx"
- Fixed DynamicLoaderMacOSXDYLD so specify an architecture that was converted solely from a cputype and subtype, just specify the file + UUID.
- Fixed PlatformiOSSimulator::GetSupportedArchitectureAtIndex() so it returns the correct archs
- Fixed SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap to load .o files correctly by just specifying the architecture without the vendor and OS now that "<arch>-apple-ios" is not compatible with "<arch>-apple-macosx" so we can load .o files correctly for DWARF with debug map
- Fixed the coded in TargetList::CreateTarget() so it does the right thing with an underspecified triple where just the arch is specified.
llvm-svn: 212783
Being in lldb\source, ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR} would resolve to
the build\tools\lldb\source directory. For correct operation, and
parity with the shell script, it needs to resolve to the
build\tools\lldb\scripts directory.
llvm-svn: 212760
These fix the broken debian lldb build, which is using g++ 4.7.2.
TypeFormat changes:
1. stopped using the C++11 "dtor = default;" construct.
The generated default destructor in the two derived classes wanted
them to have a different throws() semantic that was causing 4.7 to
fail to generate it. I switched these to empty destructors defined
in the .cpp file.
2. Switched the m_types map from an ordered map to an unordered_map.
g++ 4.7's c++ library supports the C++11 emplace() used by TypeFormat
but the same c++ library's map impl does not. Since TypeFormat didn't
look like it depended on ordering in the map, I just switched it to
a std::unordered_map.
NativeProcessLinux - g++ 4.7 chokes on lexing the "<::" in
static_cast<::pid_t>(wpid). g++ 4.8+ and clang are fine with it.
I just put a space in between the "<" and the "::" and that cleared
it up.
llvm-svn: 212681
The current strategy for host allocation is to choose a random
address and attempt to allocate there, eventually failing if the
allocation cannot be satisfied.
The C standard only guarantees that RAND_MAX >= 32767, so for
platforms that use a very small RAND_MAX allocations will fail
with very high probability. On such platforms (Windows is one),
you can reproduce this trivially by running lldb, typing "expr (3)"
and then hitting enter you see a failure. Failures generally
happen with a frequency of about 1 failure every 5 evaluations.
There is no good reason that allocations need to look like "real"
pointers, so this patch changes the allocation scheme to simply
jump straight to the end and grab a free chunk of memory.
Reviewed By: Sean Callanan
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4300
llvm-svn: 212630
The getopt library has a structure called option (lowercase). We
have a structure called Option (uppercase). previously the two
structures had exactly the same definitions, and we were doing a
C-style cast of an Option* to an option*. C-style casts don't
bother to warn you when you cast to unrelated types, but in the
original OptionValidator patch I modified the definition of Option.
This patch fixes the errors by building an array of option
structures and filling it out the correct way before passing it to
the getopt library.
This also fixes one other source of test failures: an uninitialized
read that occurs due to not initializing a field of the
OptionDefinition.
Reviewed By: Todd Fiala
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4425
llvm-svn: 212628
This reverses out the options validators changes. We'll get these
back in once the changes to the output can be resolved.
Restores broken tests on FreeBSD, Linux, MacOSX.
Changes reverted: r212500, r212317, r212290.
llvm-svn: 212543
This patch implements basic functionality of the "platform process
list" command for Windows. Currently this has the following
limitations.
* Certain types of filtering are not enabled (e.g. filtering by
architecture with -a), although most filters work.
* The username of the process is not yet obtained.
* Using -v to list verbose information generates an error.
* The architecture column displays the entire triple, leading to
misaligned formatting of the printed table.
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4413
llvm-svn: 212510
Windows uses a different process security model and does not have
a concept of process UID or GID. This patch makes these options
invalid on Windows. Attempting to specify these options when the
current platform is Windows will generate an error.
Reviewed by: Jim Ingham
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4373
llvm-svn: 212500
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
The purpose of the OptionValidator is to determine, based on some
arbitrary set of conditions, whether or not a command option is
valid for a given debugger state. An example of this might be
to selectively disable or enable certain command options that
don't apply to a particular platform.
This patch contains no functional change, and does not actually
make use of an OptionValidator for any purpose yet. A follow-up
patch will begin to add the logic and users of OptionValidator.
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton, Jim Ingham
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4369
llvm-svn: 212290
See http://reviews.llvm.org/D4366 for details.
Change by Paul Paul Osmialowski
Today this is the only problem that I'm facing trying to cross-compile lldb for AArch64 using Linaro's toolchain.
PTRACE_GETREGS, PTRACE_SETREGS, PTRACE_GETFPREGS, PTRACE_SETFPREGS are not defined for AArch64
These things can be defined different ways for other architectures, e.g. for x86_64 Linux, asm/ptrace-abi.h defines them as preprocessor constants while sys/ptrace.h defines them in enum along with corresponding PT_* preprocessor constants
NativeProcessLinux.cpp includes sys/ptrace.h
To avoid accidental redefinition of enums with preprocessor constants, I'm proposing this patch which first checks for PT_* preprocessor constants then checks for PTRACE_* constants then when it still can not find them, it defines preprocessor constants.
Similar approach was already used for PTRACE_GETREGSET and PTRACE_SETREGSET constants; in this case however it was easier, since enum values in sys/ptrace.h and preprocessor constants shared all exactly the same names (e.g. there's no additional PT_GETREGSET name defined).
llvm-svn: 212225
Windows does support pipes, but they do so in a slightly different way. Added a Host layer which abstracts the use of pipes into a new Pipe class that everyone can use.
Windows benefits include:
- Being able to interrupt running processes when IO is directly hooked up
- being able to interrupt long running python scripts
- being able to interrupt anything based on ConnectionFileDescriptor
llvm-svn: 212220
The only part using Carbon is a function in Host.mm used to open a file in Xcode.
That code is broken and it is no longer useful as Xcode supports LLDB natively.
llvm-svn: 212208
off_t is a type which is used for file offsets. Even more
specifically, it is only used by a limited number of C APIs that
deal with files. Any usage of off_t where the variable is not
intended to be used with one of these APIs is a bug, by definition.
This patch corrects some easy mis-uses of off_t, generally by
converting them to lldb::offset_t, but sometimes by using other
types such as size_t, when appropriate.
The use of off_t to represent these offsets has worked fine in
practice on linux-y platforms, since we used _FILE_OFFSET_64 to
guarantee that off_t was a uint64. On Windows, however,
_FILE_OFFSET_64 is unrecognized, and off_t will always be 32-bit.
So the usage of off_t on Windows actually leads to legitimate bugs.
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4358
llvm-svn: 212192