Commit Graph

68 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ilia K 8a00a562c5 Fix broadcasters for interpreter and process:
# Fix CommandInterpreter.Broadcaster name (it should be the same as CommandInterpreter::GetStaticBroadcasterClass())
# Prevent the same error in Process.Broadcaster
# Fix SBCommandInterpreter::GetBroadcasterClass (it should call CommandInterpreter::GetStaticBroadcasterClass(), was Communication::GetStaticBroadcasterClass())

llvm-svn: 232500
2015-03-17 16:54:52 +00:00
Siva Chandra 870602dd3c Handle PyLong return values in LLDBSwigPython_CalculateNumChildren.
Summary:
Also, change its return type to size_t to match the return types of
its callers.

With this change, std::vector and std::list data formatter tests
pass on Linux (when using libstdc++) with clang as well as with gcc.
These tests have also been enabled in this patch.

Test Plan: dotest.py -p <TestDataFormatterStdVector|TestDataFormatterStdList>

Reviewers: vharron, clayborg

Reviewed By: clayborg

Subscribers: zturner, lldb-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8337

llvm-svn: 232399
2015-03-16 19:01:33 +00:00
Enrico Granata cc342da574 Add accessors on SBCommand to get and set the help texts for a command
llvm-svn: 232226
2015-03-13 22:32:11 +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
Zachary Turner 633a29cffb Further reduce header footprint of Debugger.h.
llvm-svn: 231202
2015-03-04 01:58:01 +00:00
Enrico Granata 7e4df56aae Enable Python summaries to use custom SBTypeSummaryOptions if the user is so inclined. Updates to the webdoc will follow
llvm-svn: 222593
2014-11-22 00:02:47 +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
Jim Ingham ffc9f1de34 This adds a "batch mode" to lldb kinda like the gdb batch mode. It will quit the debugger
after all the commands have been executed except if one of the commands was an execution control
command that stopped because of a signal or exception.

Also adds a variant of SBCommandInterpreter::HandleCommand that takes an SBExecutionContext.  That
way you can run an lldb command targeted at a particular target, thread or process w/o having to 
select same before running the command.

Also exposes CommandInterpreter::HandleCommandsFromFile to the SBCommandInterpreter API, since that
seemed generally useful.

llvm-svn: 219654
2014-10-14 01:20:07 +00:00
Jim Ingham 26c7bf9312 Rework the way we pass "run multiple command" options to the various API's that
do that (RunCommandInterpreter, HandleCommands, HandleCommandsFromFile) to gather
the options into an options class.  Also expose that to the SB API's.

Change the way the "-o" options to the lldb driver are processed so:
1) They are run synchronously - didn't really make any sense to run the asynchronously.
2) The stop on error
3) "quit" in one of the -o commands will not quit lldb - not the command interpreter
that was running the -o commands.

I added an entry to the run options to stop-on-crash, but I haven't implemented that yet.

llvm-svn: 219553
2014-10-11 00:38:27 +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
Enrico Granata 06be059ad9 Allow Python commands to optionally take an SBExecutionContext argument in case they need to handle 'where they want to act' separately from the notion of 'currently-selected entity' that is associated to the debugger. Do this in an (hopefully) non-breaking way by running an argcount check before passing in the new argument. Update the test case to also check for this new feature. www update to follow
llvm-svn: 218834
2014-10-01 21:47:29 +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
Greg Clayton 45a44f3c4d Any commands that are executed through the public interface using SBCommandInterpreter::HandleCommand() are assumed to be in non-interactive mode.
Any commands that want interactivity (stdin) will need to be executed through the normal command interpreter using the debugger's in/out/err file handles, or by using "command source".

Individual commands through the API will have their STDIN disabled. The STDOUT and STDERR will be redirected into the SBCommandReturnObject argument to SBCommandInterpreter::HandleCommand() as usual.

This helps with a deadlock situation in an IDE (Xcode) where the IDE was managing the breakpoint actions by setting a breakpoint callback and doing things manually.

<rdar://problem/17386271>

llvm-svn: 213023
2014-07-15 00:25:59 +00:00
Saleem Abdulrasool 324a103619 sweep up -Wformat warnings from gcc
This is a purely mechanical change explicitly casting any parameters for printf
style conversion.  This cleans up the warnings emitted by gcc 4.8 on Linux.

llvm-svn: 205607
2014-04-04 04:06:10 +00:00
Saleem Abdulrasool 3985c8c646 sanitise sign comparisons
This is a mechanical change addressing the various sign comparison warnings that
are identified by both clang and gcc.  This helps cleanup some of the warning
spew that occurs during builds.

llvm-svn: 205390
2014-04-02 03:51:35 +00:00
Greg Clayton 44d937820b Merging the iohandler branch back into main.
The many many benefits include:
1 - Input/Output/Error streams are now handled as real streams not a push style input
2 - auto completion in python embedded interpreter
3 - multi-line input for "script" and "expression" commands now allow you to edit previous/next lines using up and down arrow keys and this makes multi-line input actually a viable thing to use
4 - it is now possible to use curses to drive LLDB (please try the "gui" command)

We will need to deal with and fix any buildbot failures and tests and arise now that input/output and error are correctly hooked up in all cases.

llvm-svn: 200263
2014-01-27 23:43:24 +00:00
Jason Molenda b57e4a1bc6 Roll back the changes I made in r193907 which created a new Frame
pure virtual base class and made StackFrame a subclass of that.  As
I started to build on top of that arrangement today, I found that it
wasn't working out like I intended.  Instead I'll try sticking with
the single StackFrame class -- there's too much code duplication to
make a more complicated class hierarchy sensible I think.

llvm-svn: 193983
2013-11-04 09:33:30 +00:00
Jason Molenda f23bf7432c Add a new base class, Frame. It is a pure virtual function which
defines a protocol that all subclasses will implement.  StackFrame
is currently the only subclass and the methods that Frame vends are
nearly identical to StackFrame's old methods.

Update all callers to use Frame*/Frame& instead of pointers to
StackFrames.

This is almost entirely a mechanical change that touches a lot of
the code base so I'm committing it alone.  No new functionality is
added with this patch, no new subclasses of Frame exist yet.

I'll probably need to tweak some of the separation, possibly moving
some of StackFrame's methods up in to Frame, but this is a good
starting point.

<rdar://problem/15314068>

llvm-svn: 193907
2013-11-02 02:23:02 +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 5160ce5c72 <rdar://problem/13521159>
LLDB is crashing when logging is enabled from lldb-perf-clang. This has to do with the global destructor chain as the process and its threads are being torn down.

All logging channels now make one and only one instance that is kept in a global pointer which is never freed. This guarantees that logging can correctly continue as the process tears itself down.

llvm-svn: 178191
2013-03-27 23:08:40 +00:00
Greg Clayton b65d733f06 <rdar://problem/12586010>
Python OS plug-ins now fetch thread registers lazily.

Also changed SBCommandInterpreter::HandleCommand() to not take the API lock. The logic here is that from the command line you can execute a command that might result in another thread (like the private process thread) to execute python or run any code that can re-enter the public API. When this happens, a deadlock immediately occurs for things like "process launch" and "process attach".

llvm-svn: 171901
2013-01-08 21:56:43 +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
Daniel Malea d01b2953fa Resolve printf formatting warnings on Linux:
- use macros from inttypes.h for format strings instead of OS-specific types

Patch from Matt Kopec!

llvm-svn: 168945
2012-11-29 21:49:15 +00:00
Greg Clayton 3a18e31945 Added a new "module" log channel which covers module creation, deletion, and common module list actions.
Also added a new option for "log enable" which is "--stack" which will print out a stack backtrace for each log line.

This was used to track down the leaking module issue I fixed last week.

llvm-svn: 165438
2012-10-08 22:41:53 +00:00
Enrico Granata 21dfcd9d41 Implementing plugins that provide commands.
This checkin adds the capability for LLDB to load plugins from external dylibs that can provide new commands
It exports an SBCommand class from the public API layer, and a new SBCommandPluginInterface

There is a minimal load-only plugin manager built into the debugger, which can be accessed via Debugger::LoadPlugin.

Plugins are loaded from two locations at debugger startup (LLDB.framework/Resources/PlugIns and ~/Library/Application Support/LLDB/PlugIns) and more can be (re)loaded via the "plugin load" command

For an example of how to make a plugin, refer to the fooplugin.cpp file in examples/plugins/commands

Caveats:
	Currently, the new API objects and features are not exposed via Python.
	The new commands can only be "parsed" (i.e. not raw) and get their command line via a char** parameter (we do not expose our internal Args object)
	There is no unloading feature, which can potentially lead to leaks if you overwrite the commands by reloading the same or different plugins
	There is no API exposed for option parsing, which means you may need to use getopt or roll-your-own

llvm-svn: 164865
2012-09-28 23:57:51 +00:00
Jason Molenda 24a8378c4f Change UnwindAssemblyInstEmulation::GetNonCallSiteUnwindPlanFromAssembly so it records
the state of the unwind instructions once the prologue has finished.  If it hits an
early return epilogue in the middle of the function, re-instate the prologue after that
epilogue has completed so that we can still unwind for cases where the flow of control
goes past that early-return.  <rdar://problem/11775059>

Move the UnwindPlan operator== definition into the .cpp file, expand the definition a bit.

Add some casts to a SBCommandInterpreter::HandleCompletion() log statement so it builds without
warning on 64- and 32-bit systems.

llvm-svn: 160337
2012-07-17 01:57:24 +00:00
Jim Ingham 389512dc5e Add API logging to SBCommandInterpreter::HandleCompletion().
llvm-svn: 159180
2012-06-26 01:21:59 +00:00
Enrico Granata 5f5ab60274 <rdar://problem/11328896> Fixing a bug where regex commands were saved in the history even if they came from a 'command sourced' file - this fix introduces a command sourcing depth and disables history for all levels of depth > 0, which means no commands go into history when being sourced from a file. we need an integer depth because command files might themselves source other command files, ...
llvm-svn: 157727
2012-05-31 01:09:06 +00:00
Greg Clayton af6f2755ab <rdar://problem/10605072>
Fixed the command callback override lookup function so we can now override the "process launch" command  (or any other multi-word commands).

llvm-svn: 156368
2012-05-08 04:29:20 +00:00
Jim Ingham 10ebffa48a Don't expose the pthread_mutex_t underlying the Mutex & Mutex::Locker classes.
No one was using it and Locker(pthread_mutex_t *) immediately asserts for 
pthread_mutex_t's that don't come from a Mutex anyway.  Rather than try to make
that work, we should maintain the Mutex abstraction and not pass around the
platform implementation...

Make Mutex::Locker::Lock take a Mutex & or a Mutex *, and remove the constructor
taking a pthread_mutex_t *.  You no longer need to call Mutex::GetMutex to pass
your mutex to a Locker (you can't in fact, since I made it private.)

llvm-svn: 156221
2012-05-04 23:02:50 +00:00
Greg Clayton 37a0a24a5f No functionality changes, mostly cleanup.
Cleaned up the Mutex::Locker and the ReadWriteLock classes a bit.

Also cleaned up the GDBRemoteCommunication class to not have so many packet functions. Used the "NoLock" versions of send/receive packet functions when possible for a bit of performance.

llvm-svn: 154458
2012-04-11 00:24:49 +00:00
Greg Clayton a9f7b79dfe <rdar://problem/10605072>
Added the ability to override command line commands. In some cases GUI interfaces
might want to intercept commands like "quit" or "process launch" (which might cause
the process to re-run). They can now do so by overriding/intercepting commands
by using functions added to SBCommandInterpreter using a callback function. If the
callback function returns true, the command is assumed to be handled. If false
is returned the command should be evaluated normally.

Adopted this up in the Driver.cpp for intercepting the "quit" command.

llvm-svn: 151708
2012-02-29 04:21:24 +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
Jim Ingham 4bddaeb5ab Add a general mechanism to wait on the debugger for Broadcasters of a given class/event bit set.
Use this to allow the lldb Driver to emit notifications for breakpoint modifications.
<rdar://problem/10619974>

llvm-svn: 150665
2012-02-16 06:50:00 +00:00
Greg Clayton b9556acc9e SBFrame is now threadsafe using some extra tricks. One issue is that stack
frames might go away (the object itself, not the actual logical frame) when
we are single stepping due to the way we currently sometimes end up flushing
frames when stepping in/out/over. They later will come back to life 
represented by another object yet they have the same StackID. Now when you get
a lldb::SBFrame object, it will track the frame it is initialized with until 
the thread goes away or the StackID no longer exists in the stack for the 
thread it was created on. It uses a weak_ptr to both the frame and thread and
also stores the StackID. These three items allow us to determine when the
stack frame object has gone away (the weak_ptr will be NULL) and allows us to
find the correct frame again. In our test suite we had such cases where we
were just getting lucky when something like this happened:

1 - stop at breakpoint
2 - get first frame in thread where we stopped
3 - run an expression that causes the program to JIT and run code
4 - run more expressions on the frame from step 2 which was very very luckily
    still around inside a shared pointer, yet, not part of the current 
    thread (a new stack frame object had appeared with the same stack ID and
    depth). 
    
We now avoid all such issues and properly keep up to date, or we start 
returning errors when the frame doesn't exist and always responds with
invalid answers.

Also fixed the UserSettingsController  (not going to rewrite this just yet)
so that it doesn't crash on shutdown. Using weak_ptr's came in real handy to
track when the master controller has already gone away and this allowed me to
pull out the previous NotifyOwnerIsShuttingDown() patch as it is no longer 
needed.

llvm-svn: 149231
2012-01-30 07:41:31 +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
Johnny Chen 872e062566 Work in progress for:
rdar://problem/10577182
Audit lldb API impl for places where we need to perform a NULL check

Add NULL checks for SBCommandInterpreter APIs.

llvm-svn: 146909
2011-12-19 21:16:29 +00:00
Jim Ingham ac01260545 Sanity check the inputs to SBCommandInterpreter::HandleCompletion
llvm-svn: 145840
2011-12-05 19:24:15 +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
Jim Ingham 969795f14b Add a new breakpoint type "break by source regular expression".
Fix the RegularExpression class so it has a real copy constructor.
Fix the breakpoint setting with multiple shared libraries so it makes
  one breakpoint not one per shared library.
Add SBFileSpecList, to be used to expose the above to the SB interface (not done yet.)

llvm-svn: 140225
2011-09-21 01:17:13 +00:00
Jim Ingham e37d605e7d SBSourceManager now gets the real source manager either from the Debugger or Target. Also, move the SourceManager file cache into the debugger
so it can be shared amongst the targets.

llvm-svn: 139564
2011-09-13 00:29:56 +00:00
Enrico Granata 9128ee2f7a Redesign of the interaction between Python and frozen objects:
- introduced two new classes ValueObjectConstResultChild and ValueObjectConstResultImpl: the first one is a ValueObjectChild obtained from
   a ValueObjectConstResult, the second is a common implementation backend for VOCR and VOCRCh of method calls meant to read through pointers stored
   in frozen objects ; now such reads transparently move from host to target as required
 - as a consequence of the above, removed code that made target-memory copies of expression results in several places throughout LLDB, and also
   removed code that enabled to recognize an expression result VO as such
 - introduced a new GetPointeeData() method in ValueObject that lets you read a given amount of objects of type T from a VO
   representing a T* or T[], and doing dereferences transparently
   in private layer it returns a DataExtractor ; in public layer it returns an instance of a newly created lldb::SBData
 - as GetPointeeData() does the right thing for both frozen and non-frozen ValueObject's, reimplemented ReadPointedString() to use it
   en lieu of doing the raw read itself
 - introduced a new GetData() method in ValueObject that lets you get a copy of the data that backs the ValueObject (for pointers,
   this returns the address without any previous dereferencing steps ; for arrays it actually reads the whole chunk of memory)
   in public layer this returns an SBData, just like GetPointeeData()
 - introduced a new CreateValueFromData() method in SBValue that lets you create a new SBValue from a chunk of data wrapped in an SBData
   the limitation to remember for this kind of SBValue is that they have no address: extracting the address-of for these objects (with any
   of GetAddress(), GetLoadAddress() and AddressOf()) will return invalid values
 - added several tests to check that "p"-ing objects (STL classes, char* and char[]) will do the right thing
Solved a bug where global pointers to global variables were not dereferenced correctly for display
New target setting "max-string-summary-length" gives the maximum number of characters to show in a string when summarizing it, instead of the hardcoded 128
Solved a bug where the summary for char[] and char* would not be shown if the ValueObject's were dumped via the "p" command
Removed m_pointers_point_to_load_addrs from ValueObject. Introduced a new m_address_type_of_children, which each ValueObject can set to tell the address type
 of any pointers and/or references it creates. In the current codebase, this is load address most of the time (the only notable exception being file
 addresses that generate file address children UNLESS we have a live process)
Updated help text for summary-string
Fixed an issue in STL formatters where std::stlcontainer::iterator would match the container's synthetic children providers
Edited the syntax and help for some commands to have proper argument types

llvm-svn: 139160
2011-09-06 19:20:51 +00:00
Enrico Granata 274fd6e965 Fixed some SWIG interoperability issues
llvm-svn: 138154
2011-08-19 23:56:34 +00:00
Enrico Granata 58ad33440a Taking care of an issue with using lldb_private types in SBCommandInterpreter.cpp ; Making NSString test case work on Snow Leopard ; Removing an unused variable warning
llvm-svn: 138105
2011-08-19 21:56:10 +00:00
Enrico Granata 223383ed6c Changes to Python commands:
- They now have an SBCommandReturnObject instead of an SBStream as third argument
 - The class CommandObjectPythonFunction has been merged into CommandObjectCommands.cpp
 - The command to manage them is now:
  command script with subcommands add, list, delete, clear
   command alias is returned to its previous functionality
 - Python commands are now part of an user dictionary, instead of being seen as aliases
 

llvm-svn: 137785
2011-08-16 23:24:13 +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