to make the code conform to llvm style better:
- avoid use of auto where the type is not obivous
- avoid StringRef::data where it is not needed
No functional change intended.
This method has been commented as deprecated for a while. Remove
it and replace all uses with the equivalent getCalledOperand().
I also made a few cleanups in here. For example, to removes use
of getElementType on a pointer when we could just use getFunctionType
from the call.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78882
This patch improves data formatting for CoreFoundation containers:
CFDictionary and CFSet.
These data formatters make the containers and their children appear in Xcode's
variables view (and on the command line) without having to expand the
data structure.
Previous implementation only supported showing the container's element count.
```
(lldb) frame var dict
(__NSCFDictionary *) dict = 0x00000001004062b0 2 key/value pairs
(lldb) frame var set
(__NSCFSet *) set = 0x0000000100406330 2 elements
```
Now the variable can be dereferenced to dispaly the container's children:
```
(lldb) frame var *dict
(__NSCFDictionary) *dict = {
[0] = {
key = 0x0000000100004050 @"123"
value = 0x0000000100004090 @"456"
}
[1] = {
key = 0x0000000100004030 @"abc"
value = 0x0000000100004070 @"def"
}
}
(lldb) frame var *set
(__NSCFSet) *set = {
[0] = 0x0000000100004050 @"123"
[1] = 0x0000000100004030 @"abc"
}
```
rdar://39882287
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78396
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
Sadly IPv6 is still not present anywhere. The test was attempting to
detect&skip such hosts, but the way it did that (essentially, by calling
getaddrinfo) meant that it only detected hosts which have IPv6 support
completely compiled out. It did not do anything about hosts which have
it compiled in, but lack runtime configuration even for the ::1 loopback
address.
This patch changes the detection logic to use a new method. It does it
by attempting to bind a socket to the appropriate loopback address. That
should ensure the hosts loopback interface is fully set up. In an effort
to avoid silently skipping the test on too many hosts, the test is
fairly strict about the kind of error it expects in these cases -- it
will only skip the test when receiving EADDRNOTAVAIL. If we find other
error codes that can be reasonably returned in these situations, we can
add more of them.
The (small) change in TCPSocket.cpp is to ensure that the code correctly
propagates the error received from the OS.
this is dead and non-functional code that hasn't been touched (modulo
refactors) since it was checked in (as an "NFC, with no review and
tests) in 2016.
Anyone interested in adding darwin support to lldb-server can look this
up in git history.
Summary:
For some reason the TestExec test on the macOS bots randomly fails with this error:
```
output: * thread #2, stop reason = EXC_BAD_ACCESS (code=1, address=0x108e66000)
* frame #0: 0x0000000108e66000
[...]
File "/Users/buildslave/jenkins/workspace/lldb-cmake/llvm-project/lldb/test/API/functionalities/exec/TestExec.py", line 25, in test_hitting_exec
self.do_test(False)
File "/Users/buildslave/jenkins/workspace/lldb-cmake/llvm-project/lldb/test/API/functionalities/exec/TestExec.py", line 113, in do_test
"Stopped at breakpoint in exec'ed process.")
AssertionError: False is not True : Stopped at breakpoint in exec'ed process.
Config=x86_64-/Users/buildslave/jenkins/workspace/lldb-cmake/lldb-build/bin/clang-11
```
I don't know why the test program is failing and I couldn't reproduce this problem on my own.
This patch is a stab in the dark that just tries to make the test code more similar to code which
we would expect in a user program to make whatever part of macOS happy that is currently
not liking our code.
The actual changes are:
* We pass in argv[0] that is describing otherprog path instead of the current argv[0].
* We pass in a non-null envp (which anyway doesn't seem to be allowed on macOS man page).
Reviewers: labath, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: abidh, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75241
Summary:
Sometimes a result variable of some expression can be presented as an elaborated
type. In this case the methods `IsTypedefType()` and `GetTypedefedType()` of
`SBType` didn't work. This patch fixes that.
I didn't find the test for these API methods, so I added a basic test for this
too.
Reviewers: aprantl, teemperor, labath, leonid.mashinskiy
Reviewed By: teemperor
Subscribers: labath, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78697
Summary:
Currently the breakpoint command is prompting the user to file a bug report if the provided regex is invalid:
```
(lldb) rbreak *foo
error: Function name regular expression could not be compiled: "Inconvertible error value. An error has occurred that could not be converted to a known std::error_code. Please file a bug. repetition-operator operand invalid"
```
The reason is simply that we are using the wrong StringError constructor (the one with the error code as the first parameter
is also printing the string version of the error code, and the inconvertible error code is just an invalid place holder code with
that description). Switching the StringError constructor parameters will only print the error message we get from the regex
engine when we convert the error into a string.
I checked the rest of the code base and I couldn't find the same issue anywhere else.
Fixes rdar://62233561
Reviewers: JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78808
For developing the OS itself there exists an "internal" variant of
each SDK. This patch adds support for these SDK directories to the
XcodeSDK class.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78675
This patch fixes a bug when synthesizing an ObjC property from
-gmodules debug info. Because the method declaration that is injected
via the non-modular property implementation is not added to the
ObjCInterfaceDecl's lookup pointer, a second copy of the accessor
would be generated when processing the ObjCPropertyDecl. This can be
avoided by finding the existing method decl in
ClangExternalASTSourceCallbacks::FindExternalVisibleDeclsByName() and
adding it to the LookupPtr.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78333
This patch ensures we don't crash in GetSoftwareBreakpointTrapOpcode for
not-yet-supported architectures but rather continue with degraded
behavior.
I found the issue in the context of an invalid ArchSpec, which should be
handled further up the chain. In this patch I've also added an assert to
cover that, so we can still catch those issues.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78588
In ImportContext(…) we may call into CompleteDecl(…) which if FromRecrord is not
defined will start the definition of a ToRecord but from what I can tell at least
one of the paths though here don't ensure we complete the definition.
For a RecordDecl this can be problematic since this means we won’t import base
classes and we won’t have any of the methods or types we inherit from these bases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78000
This is a code clean up of the PropertyAttributeKind and
ObjCPropertyAttributeKind enums in ObjCPropertyDecl and ObjCDeclSpec that are
exactly identical. This non-functional change consolidates these enums
into one. The changes are to many files across clang (and comments in LLVM) so
that everything refers to the new consolidated enum in DeclObjCCommon.h.
2nd Landing Attempt...
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77233
Calling Disconnect while the read thread is running is racy because the
thread can also call Disconnect. This is a follow-up to b424b0bf, which
reorders other occurences of Disconnect/StopReadThread I can find, and also
adds an assertion to guard against new occurences being introduced.
Summary:
The code in DWARFCompileUnit::BuildAddressRangeTable tries hard to avoid
relying on DW_AT_low/high_pc for compile unit range information, and
this logic is a big cause of llvm/lldb divergence in the lowest layers
of dwarf parsing code.
The implicit assumption in that code is that this information (as opposed to
DW_AT_ranges) is unreliable. However, I have not been able to verify
that assumption. It is definitely not true for all present-day
compilers (gcc, clang, icc), and it was also not the case for the
historic compilers that I have been able to get a hold of (thanks Matt
Godbolt).
All compiler included in my research either produced correct
DW_AT_ranges or .debug_aranges entries, or they produced no DW_AT_hi/lo
pc at all. The detailed findings are:
- gcc >= 4.4: produces DW_AT_ranges and .debug_aranges
- 4.1 <= gcc < 4.4: no DW_AT_ranges, no DW_AT_high_pc, .debug_aranges
present. The upper version range here is uncertain as godbolt.org does
not have intermediate versions.
- gcc < 4.1: no versions on godbolt.org
- clang >= 3.5: produces DW_AT_ranges, and (optionally) .debug_aranges
- 3.4 <= clang < 3.5: no DW_AT_ranges, no DW_AT_high_pc, .debug_aranges
present.
- clang <= 3.3: no DW_AT_ranges, no DW_AT_high_pc, no .debug_aranges
- icc >= 16.0.1: produces DW_AT_ranges
- icc < 16.0.1: no functional versions on godbolt.org (some are present
but fail to compile)
Based on this analysis, I believe it is safe to start trusting
DW_AT_low/high_pc information in dwarf as well as remove the code for
manually reconstructing range information by traversing the DIE
structure, and just keep the line table fallback. The only compilers
where this will change behavior are pre-3.4 clangs, which are almost 7
years old now. However, the functionality should remain unchanged
because we will be able to reconstruct this information from the line
table, which seems to be needed for some line-tables-only scenarios
anyway (haven't researched this too much, but at least some compilers
seem to emit DW_AT_ranges even in these situations).
In addition, benchmarks showed that for these compilers computing the
ranges via line tables is noticably faster than doing so via the DIE
tree.
Other advantages include simplifying the code base, removing some
untested code (the only test changes are recent tests with overly
reduced synthetic dwarf), and increasing llvm convergence.
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78489
Avoid a race between the Disconnect call in `Communication::ReadThread`
and the one in `Process::ShouldBroadcastEvent` by reordering the calls
to Disconnect and StopReadThread in `Process::ShouldBroadcastEvent`.
In D77295 Pavel suggested that that might explain the broken pipe I was
seeing. Indeed, changing the order resolved the issue.
Pavel Labath wrote in D73206:
The internal representation of DebugNames and Apple indexes is fixed by
the relevant (pseudo-)standards, so we can't really change it. The
question is how to efficiently (and cleanly) convert from the internal
representation to some common thing. The conversion from AppleIndex to
DIERef is trivial (which is not surprising as it was the first and the
overall design was optimized for that). With debug_names, the situation
gets more tricky. The internal representation of debug_names uses
CU-relative DIE offsets, but DIERef wants an absolute offset. That means
the index has to do more work to produce the common representation. And
it needs to do that for all results, even though a lot of the index
users are really interested only in a single entry. With the switch to
user_id_t, _all_ indexes would have to do some extra work to encode it,
only for their users to have to immediately decode it back. Having
a iterator/callback based api would allow us to minimize the impact of
that, as it would only need to happen for the entries that are really
used. And /I think/ we could make it interface returns DWARFDies
directly, and each index converts to that using the most direct approach
available.
Jan Kratochvil:
It also makes all the callers shorter as they no longer need to fetch
DWARFDIE from DIERef (and handling if not found by ReportInvalidDIERef)
but the callers are already served DWARFDIE which they need.
In some cases the DWARFDIE had to be fetched both by callee (DWARFIndex
implementation) and caller.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77970
Summary:
One small step in my long running quest to improve python exception handling in
LLDB. Replace GetInteger() which just returns an int with As<long long> and
friends, which return Expected types that can track python exceptions
Reviewers: labath, jasonmolenda, JDevlieghere, vadimcn
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78462
Add the skipIfReproducer decorator to the remaining tests that fail to
replay because the GDB remote packets diverge during replay. This is
*not* expected and should be fixed, but figuring out exactly what caused
the divergence has proven pretty difficult to track down.
I've marked these tests as skipped for now so we can get clean results
and detect new regressions. I have no evidence to believe that these
failures have the same root cause, so I've not assigned them a PR.
Some tests are not expected to work with reproducers, for example tests
that completely circumvent the reproducers (i.e. using the side_effects
Python module) or that rely on changes to the file system.
Lit's to_string will just return the string when it's a `str` instance,
which in Python 2 can still contain UTF-8 characters.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76955
Several SB API functions return strings using (char*, size_t) output
arguments. During capture, we serialize an empty string for the char*
because the memory can be uninitialized.
During active replay, we have custom replay redirects that ensure that
we don't override the buffer from which we're reading, but rather write
to a buffer on the heap with the given length. This is sufficient for
the active reproducer use case, where we only care about the side
effects of the API calls, not the values actually returned.
This approach does not not work for passive replay because here we
ignore all the incoming arguments, and re-execute the current function
with the arguments deserialized from the reproducer. This means that
these function will update the deserialized copy of the arguments,
rather than whatever was passed in by the SWIG wrapper.
To solve this problem, this patch extends the reproducer instrumentation
to handle this special case for passive replay. We nog ignore the
replayer in the registry and the incoming char pointer, and instead
reinvoke the current method on the deserialized class, and populate the
output argument.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77759
This wasn't a great idea to begin with, as you can't really rely on the
implementation, but since it also doesn't work with MSVC I've just made
the ctors public.
Support passive replay as proposed in the RFC [1] on lldb-dev and
described in more detail on the lldb website [2].
This patch extends the LLDB_RECORD macros to re-invoke the current
function with arguments deserialized from the reproducer. This relies on
the function being called in the exact same order as during replay. It
uses the same mechanism to toggle the API boundary as during recording,
which guarantees that only boundary crossing calls are replayed.
Another major change is that before this patch we could ignore the
result of an API call, because we only cared about the observable
behavior. Now we need to be able to return the replayed result to the
SWIG bindings.
We reuse a lot of the recording infrastructure, which can be a little
confusing. We kept the existing naming to limit the amount of churn, but
might revisit that in a future patch.
[1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2020-April/016100.html
[2] https://lldb.llvm.org/resources/reproducers.html
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77602
Add two modes to the reproducer replay script that make debugging a
little easier. Verbose mode prints stdout and stderr, regardless of
whether replay was successful. When --failure-only is passed, output is
limited to tests that failed to replay.
Summary:
...and replace it with m_last_file_spec instead.
When Source Cache is enabled, the value stored in m_last_file_sp is
already in the Source Cache, and caching it again in SourceManager
brings no extra benefit. All we need is to "remember" the last used
file, and FileSpec can serve the same purpose.
When Source Cache is disabled, the user explicitly requested no caching
of source files, and therefore, m_last_file_sp should NOT be used.
Bug: llvm.org/PR45310
Depends on D76805.
Reviewers: labath, jingham
Reviewed By: jingham
Subscribers: labath, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76806