Value::GetValueByteSize() reports the size of a Value as the size of its
underlying CompilerType. However, a host buffer that backs a Value may
be smaller than GetValueByteSize().
This situation arises when the host is only able to partially evaluate a
Value, e.g. because the expression contains DW_OP_piece.
The cleanest fix I've found to this problem is Greg's suggestion, which
is to resize the Value if (after evaluating an expression) it's found to
be too small. I've tried several alternatives which all (in one way or
the other) tried to teach the Value/ValueObjectChild system not to read
past the end of a host buffer, but this was flaky and impractical as it
isn't easy to figure out the host buffer's size (Value::GetScalar() can
point to somewhere /inside/ a host buffer, but you need to walk up the
ValueObject hierarchy to try and find its size).
This fixes an ASan error in lldb seen when debugging a clang binary.
I've added a regression test in test/functionalities/optimized_code. The
point of that test is not specifically to check that DW_OP_piece is
handled a particular way, but rather to check that lldb doesn't crash on
an input that it used to crash on.
Testing: check-lldb, and running the added tests using a sanitized lldb
--
Thanks to Jim for pointing out that an earlier version of this patch,
which simply changed the definition of Value::GetValueByteSize(), would
interact poorly with the ValueObject machinery.
Thanks also to Pavel who suggested a neat way to test this change
(which, incidentally, caught another ASan issue still present in the
original version of this patch).
rdar://58665925
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73148
The CMakeLists.txt had a typo which meant that check-lldb-repro was
capturing twice instead of capturing and then replaying. This also
uncovered a missing import in lldb-repro.py. This patch fixes both
issues.
This commit adds AVR support to lldb. With this change, it can load a
binary and do basic things like dump a line table.
Not much else has been implemented, that should be done in later
changes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73539
When a thread stops, this checks depending on the platform if the top frame is
an abort stack frame. If so, it looks for an assert stack frame in the upper
frames and set it as the most relavant frame when found.
To do so, the StackFrameRecognizer class holds a "Most Relevant Frame" and a
"cooked" stop reason description. When the thread is about to stop, it checks
if the current frame is recognized, and if so, it fetches the recognized frame's
attributes and applies them.
rdar://58528686
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73303
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
This reverts commit 1b12766883 because of
breaking the mac test suite.
I'm not certain this is the cause because of a concurrent build breakage
which masked this problem, but the failure messages are related to
symbol lookup, which makes this very likely.
Summary:
In the spirit of https://reviews.llvm.org/D70846, we only return functions with matching mangled name from Apple/DebugNamesDWARFIndex::GetFunction if eFunctionNameTypeFull is requested.
This speeds up lookup in the presence of large amount of class methods of the same name (a typical examples would be constructors of templates with many instantiations or overloaded operators).
Reviewers: labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: aprantl, arphaman, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73191
The current lldbtest format has a number of shortcomings, all related to
how we omit information based on why the test fails. For example, a
successful test would print nothing, even when `-a` is passed to lit.
It's not up to the test format to decide whether to print something or
not, that's handled by lit itself. For other test results we would
sometimes print stdout & stderr, but not always, such as when a timeout
was reached or we couldn't parse the dotest output.
This patch changes the lldbtest format and makes it behave more like
lit. We now always print the dotest invocation, the exit code, the
output to stdout & stderr. If you're used to dealing with ShTests in
lit, this will feel all very familiar.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73384
Explicitly disallow using lldb instead of %lldb in the shell tests. This
is a clever trick that is used by Swift to achieve the same results.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73289
We were incorrectly parsing the -C argument to breakpoint set as the
column breakpoint, even though according to the help this should be the
breakpoint command. This fixes that by renaming the option to -u, adding
it to help, and adding a test case.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73284
As explained in Pavel's previous commit message: %lldb is the proper
substitution. Using "lldb" can cause us to execute the system lldb
instead of the one we are testing. This happens at least in standalone
builds.
This causes the toplevel "test-depends" target, which should only build
all the dependencies necessary for running tests, to suddenaly also run
the check-lldb-repro-capture tests.
Instead add check-lldb-repro-capture as a dependency to check-lldb-repro
with a separate explicit add_dependencies call.
This adds a new target check-lldb-repro which runs the shell tests with
the lldb-repo utility. It runs the shell tests twice, once while
capturing a reproducer and then again by replaying that reproducer.
These test are checking for diagnostics printed by the driver. During
replay we only replay the SB API calls made by the driver, so it's
expected that these messages aren't displayed.
The reproducers currently only shadow the command interpreter. It would
be possible to make it work for the Lua interpreter which uses the
IOHandlerEditline under the hood, but the Python one runs a REPL in
Python itself so there's no (straightforward) way to shadow that.
Given that we already capture any API calls, this isn't super high on my
list of priorities.
%lldb is the proper substitution. Using "lldb" can cause us to execute
the system lldb instead of the one we are testing. This happens at least
in standalone builds.
The Xcode generator does not provide the auto-generated targets where
you can append a folder name to check-lldb. Instead add two custom lit
targets to run just the shell and api tests.
This patch introduces a small new utility (lldb-repro) to transparently
capture and replay debugger sessions through the command line driver.
Its used to test the reproducers by running the test suite twice.
During the first run, it captures a reproducer for every lldb invocation
and saves it to a well-know location derived from the arguments and
current working directory. During the second run, the test suite is run
again but this time every invocation of lldb replays the previously
recorded session.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72823
Summary:
Normally, on linux we retrieve the process ID from the LinuxProcStatus
stream (which is just the contents of /proc/%d/status pseudo-file).
However, this stream is not strictly required (it's a breakpad
extension), and we are encountering a fair amount of minidumps which do
not have it present. It's not clear whether this is the case with all
these minidumps, but the two known situations where this stream can be
missing are:
- /proc filesystem not mounted (or something to that effect)
- process crashing after exhausting (almost) all file descriptors (so
the minidump writer may not be able to open the /proc file)
Since this is a corner case which will become less and less relevant
(crashpad-generated minidumps should not suffer from this problem), I
work around this problem by hardcoding the PID to 1 in these cases.
The same thing is done by the gdb plugin when talking to a stub which
does not report a process id (e.g. a hardware probe).
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: markmentovai, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70238
Summary:
The goal of this patch is two-fold. First, it fixes a use-after-free in
the construction of the llvm DWARFContext. This happened because the
construction code was throwing away the lldb DataExtractors it got while
reading the sections (unlike their llvm counterparts, these are also
responsible for memory ownership). In most cases this did not matter,
because the sections are just slices of the mmapped file data. But this
isn't the case for compressed elf sections, in which case the section is
decompressed into a heap buffer. A similar thing also happen with object
files which are loaded from process memory.
The second goal is to make it explicit which sections go into the llvm
DWARFContext -- any access to the sections through both DWARF parsers
carries a risk of parsing things twice, so it's better if this is a
conscious decision. Also, this avoids loading completely irrelevant
sections (e.g. .text). At present, the only section that needs to be
present in the llvm DWARFContext is the debug_line_str. Using it through
both APIs is not a problem, as there is no parsing involved.
The first goal is achieved by loading the sections through the existing
lldb DWARFContext APIs, which already do the caching. The second by
explicitly enumerating the sections we wish to load.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72917
The build configuration wasn't properly substituted for the
config.lldb_executable variable. This broke when the variable was
extracted from config.dotest_args_str which was properly substituted.
LLVMConfig doesn't export LLVM_HOST_TRIPLE, but it sets the
TARGET_TRIPLE based on this variable. So use that again for the compiler
invocations in the shell tests.
These tests used "clang -mllvm -accel-tables=Dwarf" as a way to
guarantee that clang will emit the debug_names table. Unfortunately,
a change it clang made that insufficient (-gpubnames is required now
too), which rendered these tests ineffective. Since lldb automatically
falls back to the manual index, the tests didn't fail and this change
went largely unnoticed.
This patch updates the tests to really use debug_names (-gdwarf-5
-gpubnames) is the combination that works now, and it adds additional
checks to ensure the section is actually emitted.
Fortunately, no regressions crept in while these tests were disabled.
Add a flag which always generates a reproducer when normally it would be
discarded. This is meant for testing purposes to capture a debugger
session without modification the session itself.
Summary:
This is the first in a series of patches to enable LLDB debugging of
WebAssembly targets.
Current versions of Clang emit (partial) DWARF debug information in WebAssembly
modules and we can leverage this debug information to give LLDB the ability to
do source-level debugging of Wasm code that runs in a WebAssembly engine.
A way to do this could be to use the remote debugging functionalities provided
by LLDB via the GDB-remote protocol. Remote debugging can indeed be useful not
only to connect a debugger to a process running on a remote machine, but also to
connect the debugger to a managed VM or script engine that runs locally,
provided that the engine implements a GDB-remote stub that offers the ability to
access the engine runtime internal state.
To make this work, the GDB-remote protocol would need to be extended with a few
Wasm-specific custom query commands, used to access aspects of the Wasm engine
state (like the Wasm memory, Wasm local and global variables, and so on).
Furthermore, the DWARF format would need to be enriched with a few Wasm-specific
extensions, here detailed: https://yurydelendik.github.io/webassembly-dwarf.
This CL introduce classes **ObjectFileWasm**, a file plugin to represent a Wasm
module loaded in a debuggee process. It knows how to parse Wasm modules and
store the Code section and the DWARF-specific sections.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, clayborg, labath
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71575
Instead of passing all the arguments for dotest.py as a single CMake
variable, lit now uses separate variables for the different test
binaries. Before this change they'd all get patched as part of the
LLDB_DOTEST_ARGS. We need to patch the new variables as well.
These are the last sections not managed by the DWARFContext object. I
also introduce separate SectionType enums for dwo section variants, as
this is necessary for proper handling of single-file split dwarf.
Summary:
This change is connected with
https://reviews.llvm.org/D69843
In large codebases, we sometimes see Module::FindFunctions (when called from
ClangExpressionDeclMap::FindExternalVisibleDecls) returning huge amounts of
functions.
In current fix I trying to return only function_fullnames from ManualDWARFIndex::GetFunctions when eFunctionNameTypeFull is passed as argument.
Reviewers: labath, jarin, aprantl
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: shafik, clayborg, teemperor, arphaman, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70846
This fixes a failing testcase on Fedora 30 x86_64 (regression Fedora 29->30):
PASS:
./bin/lldb ./lldb-test-build.noindex/functionalities/unwind/noreturn/TestNoreturnUnwind.test_dwarf/a.out -o 'settings set symbols.enable-external-lookup false' -o r -o bt -o quit
* frame #0: 0x00007ffff7aa6e75 libc.so.6`__GI_raise + 325
frame #1: 0x00007ffff7a91895 libc.so.6`__GI_abort + 295
frame #2: 0x0000000000401140 a.out`func_c at main.c:12:2
frame #3: 0x000000000040113a a.out`func_b at main.c:18:2
frame #4: 0x0000000000401134 a.out`func_a at main.c:26:2
frame #5: 0x000000000040112e a.out`main(argc=<unavailable>, argv=<unavailable>) at main.c:32:2
frame #6: 0x00007ffff7a92f33 libc.so.6`__libc_start_main + 243
frame #7: 0x000000000040106e a.out`_start + 46
vs.
FAIL - unrecognized abort() function:
./bin/lldb ./lldb-test-build.noindex/functionalities/unwind/noreturn/TestNoreturnUnwind.test_dwarf/a.out -o 'settings set symbols.enable-external-lookup false' -o r -o bt -o quit
* frame #0: 0x00007ffff7aa6e75 libc.so.6`.annobin_raise.c + 325
frame #1: 0x00007ffff7a91895 libc.so.6`.annobin_loadmsgcat.c_end.unlikely + 295
frame #2: 0x0000000000401140 a.out`func_c at main.c:12:2
frame #3: 0x000000000040113a a.out`func_b at main.c:18:2
frame #4: 0x0000000000401134 a.out`func_a at main.c:26:2
frame #5: 0x000000000040112e a.out`main(argc=<unavailable>, argv=<unavailable>) at main.c:32:2
frame #6: 0x00007ffff7a92f33 libc.so.6`.annobin_libc_start.c + 243
frame #7: 0x000000000040106e a.out`.annobin_init.c.hot + 46
The extra ELF symbols are there due to Annobin (I did not investigate why this
problem happened specifically since F-30 and not since F-28).
It is due to:
Symbol table '.dynsym' contains 2361 entries:
Valu e Size Type Bind Vis Name
0000000000022769 5 FUNC LOCAL DEFAULT _nl_load_domain.cold
000000000002276e 0 NOTYPE LOCAL HIDDEN .annobin_abort.c.unlikely
...
000000000002276e 0 NOTYPE LOCAL HIDDEN .annobin_loadmsgcat.c_end.unlikely
...
000000000002276e 0 NOTYPE LOCAL HIDDEN .annobin_textdomain.c_end.unlikely
000000000002276e 548 FUNC GLOBAL DEFAULT abort
000000000002276e 548 FUNC GLOBAL DEFAULT abort@@GLIBC_2.2.5
000000000002276e 548 FUNC LOCAL DEFAULT __GI_abort
0000000000022992 0 NOTYPE LOCAL HIDDEN .annobin_abort.c_end.unlikely
GDB has some more complicated preferences between overlapping and/or sharing
address symbols, I have made here so far the most simple fix for this case.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63540
lld in 2bfee35 started emitting relocations for some intra-section jumps
between global symbols. This shifted the code around a bit, invalidating
text expectations.
Change the symbols to local to keep the previous behavior.
This allows an unsanitized test process which loads a sanitized DSO (the
motivating example is a Swift runtime dylib) to launch on Darwin.
rdar://57290132
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71379
Rather than serializing every argument through LLDB_TEST_COMMON_ARGS, we
can pass some of them directly using their CMake variable. Although this
does introduce some code duplication between lit's site config and the
lldb-dotest utility, it also means that it becomes easier to override
these values (WIP).
The Python script interpreter makes the current debugger, target,
process, thread and frame available to interactive scripting sessions
through convenience variables. This patch does the same for Lua.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71801