This patch moves the EnumerateDirectory functionality and related enum
and typedef from FileSpec to FileSystem.
This is part of a set of patches that extracts file system related
convenience methods from FileSpec. The long term goal is to remove this
method altogether and use the iterators directly, but for introducing
the VFS into LLDB this change is sufficient.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53785
llvm-svn: 345800
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
Summary:
Previously we SetUseColor(true) wrongly when output was not a terminal so it broken some (not public) bots.
Thanks for issue report, @stella.stamenova
Reviewers: stella.stamenova, zturner
Reviewed By: stella.stamenova
Subscribers: abidh, lldb-commits, stella.stamenova
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51772
llvm-svn: 341746
This patch allows LLDB to print column info in backtraces et al. if
available, which is useful when the backtrace contains a frame like
the following:
f(can_crash(0), can_crash(1));
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51661
llvm-svn: 341506
Summary:
The syntax highlighting feature so far is mutually exclusive with the lldb feature
that marks the current column in the line by underlining it via an ANSI color code.
Meaning that if you enable one, the other is automatically disabled by LLDB.
This was caused by the fact that both features inserted color codes into the the
source code and were likely to interfere with each other (which would result
in a broken source code printout to the user).
This patch moves the cursor code into the highlighting framework, which provides
the same feature to the user in normal non-C source code. For any source code
that is highlighted by Clang, we now also have cursor marking for the whole token
that is under the current source location. E.g., before we underlined only the '!' in the
expression '1 != 2', but now the whole token '!=' is underlined. The same for function
calls and so on. Below you can see two examples where we before only underlined
the first character of the token, but now underline the whole token.
{F7075400}
{F7075414}
It also simplifies the DisplaySourceLines method in the SourceManager as most of
the code in there was essentially just for getting this column marker to work as
a FormatEntity.
Reviewers: aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51466
llvm-svn: 341003
Summary:
D48465 is currently blocked by the fact that tab-completing the first expression is deadlocking LLDB.
The reason for this deadlock is that when we push the ProcessIO handler for reading the Objective-C runtime
information from the executable (which is triggered when we parse the an expression for the first time),
the IOHandler can't be pushed as the Editline::Cancel method is deadlocking.
The deadlock in Editline is coming from the m_output_mutex, which is locked before we go into tab completion.
Even without this lock, calling Cancel on Editline will mean that Editline cleans up behind itself and deletes the
current user-input, which is screws up the console when we are tab-completing at the same time.
I think for now the most reasonable way of fixing this is to just not call Cancel on the current IOHandler when we push
the IOHandler for running an internal utility function.
As we can't really write unit tests for IOHandler itself (due to the hard dependency on an initialized Debugger including
all its global state) and Editline completion is currently also not really testable in an automatic fashion, the test for this has
to be that the expression command completion in D48465 doesn't fail when requesting completion the first time.
A more precise test plan for this is:
1. Apply D48465.
2. Start lldb and break in some function.
3. Type `expr foo` and press tab to request completion.
4. Without this patch, we deadlock and LLDB stops responding.
I'll provide an actual unit test for this once I got around and made the IOHandler code testable,
but for now unblocking D48465 is more critical.
Thanks to Jim for helping me debugging this.
Reviewers: jingham
Reviewed By: jingham
Subscribers: emaste, clayborg, abidh, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50912
llvm-svn: 340988
Summary:
LLDB currently only checks the output terminal for color support by looking
at the `TERM` environment variable and comparing it to `"dumb"`. This causes that
when running LLDB on a CI node, the syntax highlighter will not be deactivated by
LLDB and the output log is filled with color codes (unless the terminal emulator
actually exposes itself as dumb).
This patch now relies on the LLVM code for detecting color support which is more
reliable. We now also correctly actually initialize the `m_supports_colors` variable in `File`.
`m_supports_colors` was so far uninitialized, but the code path that uses `m_supports_colors`
was also dead so the sanitizers didn't sound an alarm.
The old check that compares `TERM` is not removed by this patch as the new LLVM code
doesn't seem to handle this case (and it's a good thing to check for "dumb" terminals).
Reviewers: aprantl, javed.absar
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, abidh, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51243
llvm-svn: 340747
These three classes have no external dependencies, but they are used
from various low-level APIs. Moving them down to Utility improves
overall code layering (although it still does not break any particular
dependency completely).
The XCode project will need to be updated after this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49740
llvm-svn: 339127
Summary:
This patch adds syntax highlighting support to LLDB. When enabled (and lldb is allowed
to use colors), printed source code is annotated with the ANSI color escape sequences.
So far we have only one highlighter which is based on Clang and is responsible for all
languages that are supported by Clang. It essentially just runs the raw lexer over the input
and then surrounds the specific tokens with the configured escape sequences.
Reviewers: zturner, davide
Reviewed By: davide
Subscribers: labath, teemperor, llvm-commits, mgorny, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49334
llvm-svn: 338662
Summary:
Instead of a function taking an enum value determining which path to
return, we now have a suite of functions, each returning a single path
kind. This makes it easy to move the python-path function into a
specific plugin in a follow-up commit.
All the users of GetLLDBPath were converted to call specific functions
instead. Most of them were hard-coding the enum value anyway, so this
conversion was simple. The only exception was SBHostOS, which I've
changed to use a switch on the incoming enum value.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48272
llvm-svn: 335052
With the recent changes in FileSpec to use LLVM's path style, it is
possible to delegate a bunch of common path operations to LLVM's path
helpers. This means we only have to maintain a single implementation and
at the same time can benefit from the efforts made by the rest of the
LLVM community.
This is part one of a set of patches. There was no obvious way to split
this so I just worked from top to bottom.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48084
llvm-svn: 334615
This breaks the OpenFlags enumeration into two separate
enumerations: OpenFlags and CreationDisposition. The first
controls the behavior of the API depending on whether or not
the target file already exists, and is not a flags-based
enum. The second controls more flags-like values.
This yields a more easy to understand API, while also allowing
flags to be passed to the openForRead api, where most of the
values didn't make sense before. This also makes the apis more
testable as it becomes easy to enumerate all the configurations
which make sense, so I've added many new tests to exercise all
the different values.
llvm-svn: 334221
This is intended as a clean up after the big clang-format commit
(r280751), which unfortunately resulted in many of the comment
paragraphs in LLDB being very hard to read.
FYI, the script I used was:
import textwrap
import commands
import os
import sys
import re
tmp = "%s.tmp"%sys.argv[1]
out = open(tmp, "w+")
with open(sys.argv[1], "r") as f:
header = ""
text = ""
comment = re.compile(r'^( *//) ([^ ].*)$')
special = re.compile(r'^((([A-Z]+[: ])|([0-9]+ )).*)|(.*;)$')
for line in f:
match = comment.match(line)
if match and not special.match(match.group(2)):
# skip intentionally short comments.
if not text and len(match.group(2)) < 40:
out.write(line)
continue
if text:
text += " " + match.group(2)
else:
header = match.group(1)
text = match.group(2)
continue
if text:
filled = textwrap.wrap(text, width=(78-len(header)),
break_long_words=False)
for l in filled:
out.write(header+" "+l+'\n')
text = ""
out.write(line)
os.rename(tmp, sys.argv[1])
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46144
llvm-svn: 331197
LLVM_ON_WIN32 is set exactly with MSVC and MinGW (but not Cygwin) in
HandleLLVMOptions.cmake, which is where _WIN32 defined too. Just use the
default macro instead of a reinvented one.
See thread "Replacing LLVM_ON_WIN32 with just _WIN32" on llvm-dev and cfe-dev.
No intended behavior change.
llvm-svn: 329697
I want to extend the properties on ModuleList to also contain other
more general settings and renaming the settings category to symbols
seems to be the least bad of choices.
llvm-svn: 327193
It turns out that setting the clang module cache after LLDB has a
Target can be too late. In particular, the Swift language plugin needs
to know the setting without having access to a Target. This patch
moves the setting into the *LLDB* module cache, where it is a global
setting that is available before any Target is created and more
importantly, is shared between all Targets.
rdar://problem/37944432
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43984
llvm-svn: 326628
SetOututFileHandle to work with IOBase.
I did make one change after checking with Larry --
I renamed SBDebugger::Flush to FlushDebuggerOutputHandles
and added a short docstring to the .i file to make it
a little clearer under which context programs may need
to use this API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39128
<rdar://problem/34870417>
llvm-svn: 317182
SetOututFileHandle to work with IOBase.
I did make one change after checking with Larry --
I renamed SBDebugger::Flush to FlushDebuggerOutputHandles
and added a short docstring to the .i file to make it
a little clearer under which context programs may need
to use this API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38829
llvm-svn: 317180
This patch adds support for passing an arbitrary python stream
(anything inheriting from IOBase) to SetOutputFileHandle or
SetErrorFileHandle.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38829
<rdar://problem/34870417>
llvm-svn: 315966
The core of this change is the new CommandInterpreter::m_command_state,
which models the state transitions for interactive commands, including
an "interrupted" state transition.
In general, command interruption requires cooperation from the code
executing the command, which needs to poll for interruption requests
through CommandInterpreter::WasInterrupted().
CommandInterpreter::PrintCommandOutput() implements an optionally
interruptible printing of the command output, which for large outputs
was likely the longest blocking part.
(ex. target modules dump symtab on a complex binary could take 10+ minutes)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37923
llvm-svn: 315037
The core of this change is the new CommandInterpreter::m_command_state, which
models the state transitions for interactive commands, including an
"interrupted" state transition.
In general, command interruption requires cooperation from the code executing
the command, which needs to poll for interruption requests through
CommandInterpreter::WasInterrupted().
CommandInterpreter::PrintCommandOutput() implements an optionally
interruptible printing of the command output, which for large outputs was
likely the longest blocking part. (ex. target modules dump symtab on a
complex binary could take 10+ minutes)
patch by lemo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37923
llvm-svn: 313904
This patch introduces a new thread backtrace command "unique".
The command is based off of "thread backtrace all" but will instead
find all threads which share matching call stacks and de-duplicate
their output, listing call stack and all the threads which share it.
This is especially useful for apps which use thread/task pools
sitting around waiting for work and cause excessive duplicate output.
I needed this behavior recently when debugging a core with 700+ threads.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33426
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Patch by Brian Gianforcaro <b.gianfo@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 305197
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
This adjusts header file includes for headers and source files
in Core. In doing so, one dependency cycle is eliminated
because all the includes from Core to that project were dead
includes anyway. In places where some files in other projects
were only compiling due to a transitive include from another
header, fixups have been made so that those files also include
the header they need. Tested on Windows and Linux, and plan
to address failures on OSX and FreeBSD after watching the
bots.
llvm-svn: 299714
Summary:
previously we switched to llvm streams for log output, this completes
the switch for the error streams.
I also clean up the includes and remove the unused argument from
DisableAllLogChannels().
This required adding a bit of boiler plate to convert the output in the
command interpreter, but that should go away when we switch command
results to use llvm streams as well.
Reviewers: zturner, eugene
Subscribers: lldb-commits, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30894
llvm-svn: 297812
This was originall reverted due to some test failures in
ModuleCache and TestCompDirSymlink. These issues have all
been resolved and the code now passes all tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30698
llvm-svn: 297300
this reverts r297116 because it breaks the unittests and
TestCompDirSymlink. The ModuleCache unit test is trivially fixable, but
the CompDirSymlink failure is a symptom of a deeper problem: llvm's stat
functionality is not a drop-in replacement for lldb's. The former is
based on stat(2) (which does symlink resolution), while the latter is
based on lstat(2) (which does not).
This also reverts subsequent build fixes (r297128, r297120, 297117) and
r297119 (Remove FileSpec dependency on FileSystem) which builds on top
of this.
llvm-svn: 297139
This deletes LLDB's FileType enumeration and replaces all
users, and all calls to functions that check whether a file
exists etc with corresponding calls to LLVM.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30624
llvm-svn: 297116
Summary:
Use StringRef and ArrayRef where possible. This adds an accessor to the
Args class to get a view of the arguments as ArrayRef<const char *>.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30402
llvm-svn: 296592
Summary:
This converts LLDB's logging to use llvm streams instead of
lldb_private::Stream and friends. The changes are mostly
straight-forward and amount to s/lldb_private::Stream/llvm::raw_ostream.
The part worth calling out is the rewrite of the StreamCallback class.
Previously this class contained a per-thread buffer of data written. I
assume this had something to do with it trying to make sure each log
line is delivered as a single event, instead of multiple (possibly
interleaved) events. However, this is no longer relevant as the Log
class already writes things to a temporary buffer and then delivers the
message as a single "write", so I have just removed the code in
question.
Reviewers: zturner, clayborg
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29615
llvm-svn: 294736
Summary:
The std::call_once implementation in libstdc++ has problems on few systems: NetBSD, OpenBSD and Linux PPC. LLVM ships with a homegrown implementation llvm::call_once to help on these platforms.
This change is required in the NetBSD LLDB port. std::call_once with libstdc++ results with crashing the debugger.
Sponsored by <The NetBSD Foundation>
Reviewers: labath, joerg, emaste, mehdi_amini, clayborg
Reviewed By: labath, clayborg
Subscribers: #lldb
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29288
llvm-svn: 294202
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
header line, backtrace output) was to remove the current pc value
from frames where we have source level information. We've been
discussing this for the past week and based on input from a group
of low level users, I believe this is the wrong default behavior
for the command line lldb tool.
lldb's backtrace will include the pc value for all stack frames
regardless of whether they have source level debug information or
not.
A related part of r286288 removes the byte offset printing for
functions with source level information (e.g. "main + 22 sourcefile.c:10"
is printed as "main sourcefile.c:10"). I don't see a compelling
case for changing this part of 286288 so I'm leaving that as-is
(in addition to the rest of 286288 which is clearly better than
the previous output style).
<rdar://problem/30083904>
llvm-svn: 293366
Summary:
Communication classes use the Timeout<> class to specify the timeout. Listener
class was converted to chrono some time ago, but it used a different meaning for
a timeout of zero (Listener: infinite wait, Communication: no wait). Instead,
Listener provided separate functions which performed a non-blocking event read.
This converts the Listener class to the new Timeout class, to improve
consistency. It also allows us to get merge the different GetNextEvent*** and
WaitForEvent*** functions into one. No functional change intended.
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27136
llvm-svn: 288238
This was a bit tricky, especially for things like
OptionValueArray and OptionValueDictionary since they do some
funky string parsing. Rather than try to re-write line-by-line
I tried to make the StringRef usage idiomatic, even though
it meant often re-writing from scratch large blocks of code
in a different way while keeping true to the original intent.
The finished code is a big improvement though, and often much
shorter than the original code. All tests and unit tests
pass on Windows and Linux.
llvm-svn: 287242
This is a large API change that removes the two functions from
StreamString that return a std::string& and a const std::string&,
and instead provide one function which returns a StringRef.
Direct access to the underlying buffer violates the concept of
a "stream" which is intended to provide forward only access,
and makes porting to llvm::raw_ostream more difficult in the
future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26698
llvm-svn: 287152
I added a "thread-stop-format" to distinguish between the form
that is just the thread info (since the stop printing immediately prints
the frame info) and one with more frame 0 info - which is useful for
"thread list" and the like.
I also added a frame.no-debug boolean to the format entities so you can
print frame information differently between frames with source info and those
without.
This closes https://reviews.llvm.org/D26383.
<rdar://problem/28273697>
llvm-svn: 286288