This patch changes the way the reproducer is initialized. Rather than
making changes at run time we now do everything at initialization time.
To make this happen we had to introduce initializer options and their SB
variant. This allows us to tell the initializer that we're running in
reproducer capture/replay mode.
Because of this change we also had to alter our testing strategy. We
cannot reinitialize LLDB when using the dotest infrastructure. Instead
we use lit and invoke two instances of the driver.
Another consequence is that we can no longer enable capture or replay
through commands. This was bound to go away form the beginning, but I
had something in mind where you could enable/disable specific providers.
However this seems like it adds very little value right now so the
corresponding commands were removed.
Finally this change also means you now have to control this through the
driver, for which I replaced --reproducer with --capture and --replay to
differentiate between the two modes.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55038
llvm-svn: 348152
Summary:
This patch fixes the next situation. On Windows clang-cl makes no stub before
the main function, so the main function is located exactly on module entry
point. May be it is the same on other platforms. So consider the following
sequence:
- set a breakpoint on main and stop there;
- try to evaluate expression, which requires a code execution on the debuggee
side. Such an execution always returns to the module entry, and the plan waits
for it there;
- the plan understands that it is complete now and removes its breakpoint. But
the breakpoint site is still there, because we also have a breakpoint on
entry;
- StopInfo analyzes a situation. It sees that we have stopped on the breakpoint
site, and it sees that the breakpoint site has owners, and no one logical
breakpoint is internal (because the plan is already completed and it have
removed its breakpoint);
- StopInfo thinks that it's a user breakpoint and skips it to avoid recursive
computations;
- the program continues.
So in this situation the program continues without a stop right after
the expression evaluation. To avoid this an additional check that
the plan was completed was added.
Reviewers: jingham, zturner, boris.ulasevich
Reviewed by: jingham
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53761
llvm-svn: 347974
When I landed the initial reproducer framework I knew there were some
things that needed improvement. Rather than bundling it with a patch
that adds more functionality I split it off into this patch. I also
think the API is stable enough to add unit testing, which is included in
this patch as well.
Other improvements include:
- Refactor how we initialize the loader and generator.
- Improve naming consistency: capture and replay seems the least ambiguous.
- Index providers by name and make sure there's only one of each.
- Add convenience methods for creating and accessing providers.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54616
llvm-svn: 347716
When debugging read-only memory we cannot use software breakpoint. We
already have support for hardware breakpoints and users can specify them
with `-H`. However, there's no option to force LLDB to use hardware
breakpoints internally, for example while stepping.
This patch adds a setting target.require-hardware-breakpoint that forces
LLDB to always use hardware breakpoints. Because hardware breakpoints
are a limited resource and can fail to resolve, this patch also extends
error handling in thread plans, where breakpoints are used for stepping.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54221
llvm-svn: 346920
Summary:
There are 2 changes here:
1. Use system sed instead of the sed found in the user's path. This
fixes this script in the case the user has gnu-sed in their $PATH before
bsd sed since `-i ''` isn't compatible and you need `-i` instead.
2. `set -e` in this script so it fails as soon as one of these commands
fail instead of throwing errors for each file if they fail
Since this is only ran on macOS, and we're already using this
absolute path below, this seems like a safe addition
Reviewers: kastiglione, beanz
Reviewed By: kastiglione
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49776
llvm-svn: 346099
This patch introduces a concept of "frame recognizer" and "recognized frame". This should be an extensible mechanism that retrieves information about special frames based on ABI, arguments or other special properties of that frame, even without source code. A few examples where that could be useful could be 1) objc_exception_throw, where we'd like to get the current exception, 2) terminate_with_reason and extracting the current terminate string, 3) recognizing Objective-C frames and automatically extracting the receiver+selector, or perhaps all arguments (based on selector).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44603
llvm-svn: 345693
This patch introduces a concept of "frame recognizer" and "recognized frame". This should be an extensible mechanism that retrieves information about special frames based on ABI, arguments or other special properties of that frame, even without source code. A few examples where that could be useful could be 1) objc_exception_throw, where we'd like to get the current exception, 2) terminate_with_reason and extracting the current terminate string, 3) recognizing Objective-C frames and automatically extracting the receiver+selector, or perhaps all arguments (based on selector).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44603
llvm-svn: 345686
This patch introduces a concept of "frame recognizer" and "recognized frame". This should be an extensible mechanism that retrieves information about special frames based on ABI, arguments or other special properties of that frame, even without source code. A few examples where that could be useful could be 1) objc_exception_throw, where we'd like to get the current exception, 2) terminate_with_reason and extracting the current terminate string, 3) recognizing Objective-C frames and automatically extracting the receiver+selector, or perhaps all arguments (based on selector).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44603
llvm-svn: 345678
Fix llvm.org/pr39054:
- Register _lldb as a built-in module during initialization of script interpreter,
- Reverse the order of imports in __init__.py: first try to import by absolute name, which will find the built-in module in the context of lldb (and other hosts that embed liblldb), then try relative import, in case the module is being imported from Python interpreter.
This works for SWIG>=3.0.11; before that, SWIG did not support custom module import code.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52404
llvm-svn: 344474
LC_BUILD_VERSION load command handling - this
commit is a combination of patches by Adrian
Prantl and myself. llvm::Triple::BridgeOS
isn't defined yet, so all references to that
are currently commented out.
Also update Xcode project file to build the
NativePDB etc plugins.
<rdar://problem/43353615>
llvm-svn: 344209
This patch teaches lldb to detect when there are missing frames in a
backtrace due to a sequence of tail calls, and to fill in the backtrace
with artificial tail call frames when this happens. This is only done
when the execution history can be determined from the call graph and
from the return PC addresses of calls on the stack. Ambiguous sequences
of tail calls (e.g anything involving tail calls and recursion) are
detected and ignored.
Depends on D49887.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50478
llvm-svn: 343900
This change allows you to write a new breakpoint type where the
logic for setting breakpoints is determined by a Python callback
written using the SB API's.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51830
llvm-svn: 342185
Summary:
This patch adds a framework for adding descriptions to the command completions we provide.
It also adds descriptions for completed top-level commands so that we can test this code.
Completions are in general supposed to be displayed alongside the completion itself. The descriptions
can be used to provide additional information about the completion to the user. Examples for descriptions
are function signatures when completing function calls in the expression command or the binary name
when providing completion for a symbol.
There is still some boilerplate code from the old completion API left in LLDB (mostly because the respective
APIs are reused for non-completion related purposes, so the CompletionRequest doesn't make sense to be
used), so that's why I still had to change some function signatures. Also, as the old API only passes around a
list of matches, and the descriptions are for these functions just another list, I had to add some code that
essentially just ensures that both lists are always the same side (e.g. all the manual calls to
`descriptions->AddString(X)` below a `matches->AddString(Y)` call).
The initial command descriptions that come with this patch are just reusing the existing
short help that is already added in LLDB.
An example completion with descriptions looks like this:
```
(lldb) pl
Available completions:
platform -- Commands to manage and create platforms.
plugin -- Commands for managing LLDB plugins.
```
Reviewers: #lldb, jingham
Reviewed By: #lldb, jingham
Subscribers: jingham, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51175
llvm-svn: 342181
Summary:
Swig wraps C++ code into SWIG_PYTHON_THREAD_BEGIN_ALLOW; ... SWIG_PYTHON_THREAD_END_ALLOW;
Thus, LLDB crashes with "Fatal Python error: Python memory allocator called without holding the GIL" when calls an lldb_SB***___str__ function.
Reviewers: clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51569
llvm-svn: 341482
This patch extends the SBAPI to allow for setting a breakpoint not
only at a specific line, but also at a specific (minimum) column. When
a column is specified, it will try to find an exact match or the
closest match on the same line that comes after the specified
location.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51461
llvm-svn: 341078
GNU sed and BSD sed have a different command-line syntax for in-place
editing, and the current form of the script would only work with BSD
sed. The easiest way to get cross-platform behavior is to specify a
backup suffix and then just delete the backup file at the end. (BSD sed
is the default on macOS, but it's possible to acquire GNU coreutils and
have your `sed` be GNU sed even on macOS; I'm aware it's not officially
supported in any capacity, but it's easy enough to support here.)
An alternative would be using `perl -p -i -e` instead of `sed -i`, but I
figured it was best to make the minimal working change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51374
llvm-svn: 340885
Summary:
The new API appends an image search path to the
target's path mapping list.
Reviewers: aprantl, clayborg, labath
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: ki.stfu, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49739
llvm-svn: 339175
This reverts r338154. This change is actually unnecessary, as the CMake
bug I referred to was actually not a bug but a misunderstanding of
CMake.
Original Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49888
llvm-svn: 338178
Summary:
This patch adds the possibility to specify an exit code when calling quit.
We accept any int, even though it depends on the user what happens if the int is
out of the range of what the operating system supports as exit codes.
Fixes rdar://problem/38452312
Reviewers: davide, jingham, clayborg
Reviewed By: jingham
Subscribers: clayborg, jingham, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48659
llvm-svn: 336824
Summary:
This change fixes one issue with `lldb.command`, and also reduces the implementation.
The fix: a command function's docstring was not shown when running `help <command_name>`. This is because the docstring attached the source function is not propagated to the decorated function (`f.__call__`). By returning the original function, the docstring will be properly displayed by `help`.
Also with this change, the command name is assumed to be the function's name, but can still be explicitly defined as previously.
Additionally, the implementation was updated to:
* Remove inner class
* Remove use of `inspect` module
* Remove `*args` and `**kwargs`
Reviewers: clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: keith, xiaobai, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48658
llvm-svn: 336287
Summary: The new API allows to find a list of compile units related to target/module.
Reviewers: aprantl, clayborg
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: jingham, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48801
llvm-svn: 336200
that I used to sort it to scripts/sort-pbxproj.rb. It turns
out that Xcode will perturb the order of the file lists
every time we add a file, following its own logic, and unfortunately
we'll still end up with lots of merge conflicts when that tries
to merge to the github swift repositories. We talked this over
and we're going to keep it in a canonical state by running this
script over it when Xcode tries to reorder it.
llvm-svn: 336158
This provides an efficient (at least on Posix platforms) way to offload to the
target process the search & loading of a library when all we have are the
library name and a set of potential candidate locations.
<rdar://problem/40905971>
llvm-svn: 335912
This change allows to make AddressClass strongly typed enum and not to have issues with old versions of SWIG that don't support enum classes.
llvm-svn: 335710
I've been using this script on a couple machines and it seems to work
so I'm putting it out there, maybe other people will find it useful.
It is strongly inspired from a similar script in the delve project.
llvm-svn: 334743
There was no way to find out what's wrong if SBProcess SBTarget::LoadCore(const char *core_file) failed.
Additionally, the implementation was unconditionally setting sb_process, so it wasn't even possible to check if the return SBProcess is valid.
This change adds a new overload which surfaces the errors and also returns a valid SBProcess only if the core load succeeds:
SBProcess SBTarget::LoadCore(const char *core_file, SBError &error);
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48049
llvm-svn: 334439
Instead of assuming that SWIG generated files (e.g. lldb.py) will live
in scripts, we should set it to $LLDB_PYTHON_TARGET_DIR. This variable is set to
scripts, except when building LLDB.framework when it is set to
LLDB_FRAMEWORK_DIR.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47742
llvm-svn: 333968
Use proper cmake techniques to detect where the libedit package resides.
This allows for the use of libedit from an alternative location which is
needed for supporting cross-compilation.
llvm-svn: 333041
LLDB.framework to point to the build directory where it is expected by
the top-level CMakeLists.txt.
This should be a no-op in any other configurations.
rdar://problem/38005302
llvm-svn: 326743
Summary:
This adds a SBDebugger::GetBuildConfiguration static function, which
returns a SBStructuredData describing the the build parameters of
liblldb. Right now, it just contains one entry: whether we were built
with XML support.
I use the new functionality to skip a test which requires XML support,
but concievably the new function could be useful to other liblldb
clients as well (making sure the library supports the feature they are
about to use).
Reviewers: zturner, jingham, clayborg, davide
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43333
llvm-svn: 325504