class. If we try to unwind a stack frame to find a caller stack
frame, and we fail to get a valid-looking frame, AND if the UnwindPlan
we used is an assembly-inspection based UnwindPlan, then we should
throw away the assembly-inspection UnwindPlan and try unwinding with
the architectural default UnwindPlan.
This code path won't be taken if eh_frame unwind instructions are available -
lldb will always prefer those once it's off the zeroth frame.
The problem I'm trying to fix here is the class of unwind failures that
happen when we have hand-written assembly on the stack, with no eh_frame,
and lldb's assembly parser fails to understand the assembly. People usually
write their hand-written assembly to follow the frame-pointer-preserving
conventions of the platform so the architectural default UnwindPlan will
often work. We won't have the spill location for most of the non-volatile
registers if we fall back to this, but it's better than stopping the unwind
prematurely.
This is a bit of a tricky change that I believe is correct, but if we get
unwinds that go of into the weeds / unwind bogus frames at the end of the
stack, I'll need to revisit it.
<rdar://problem/16099440>
llvm-svn: 201839
to a variable. This helps people figure out what
happened if they tried to do something to the variable
and it didn't work because we gave it the default type
of void*.
llvm-svn: 201737
Implement x86_64 debug register read/write in support of hardware
watchpoints. Hoist LinuxThread::TraceNotify code back into
POSIXThread::TraceNotify()
Patch by John Wolfe.
We still need to rework this later to avoid the #ifdef FreeBSD.
llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2572
llvm.org/pr16706
llvm-svn: 201706
because there are too many trap handlers that will have an improperly aligned caller sp
and this will cause the unwinder to stop too early.
llvm-svn: 201637
The way in which we were determining whether a python module had already been imported in the current session stopped working due to the IOHandler changes
As a result, importing in a new debug session a module which had been imported in a previous session did not work
This commit restores that functionality by checking for the module's presence in the session dictionary (which should be more correct anyway)
llvm-svn: 201623
Fix a bug where calling SBFrame::FindValue() would cause a copy of all variables in the block to be inserted in the frame's variable list, regardless of whether those same variables were there or not - which means one could end up with a frame with lots of duplicate copies of the same variables
llvm-svn: 201614
pexpect had a hack to work around some old buggy platforms, and as a
result of the hack running the tests on FreeBSD produced a stream of
kernel warnings in the system log:
Feb 5 17:19:11 feynman kernel: WARNING pid 11323 (python2.7):
ioctl sign-extension ioctl ffffffff80087467
The hack has now been removed upstream, so remove it here too.
llvm.org/pr18749
llvm-svn: 201603
This way the same RegisterContext class can support i386 and
amd64/x86_64 core files.
With some further refinement we should be able to merge all of the
processor-specific RegisterContextPOSIX_* classes into a single shared
one.
llvm-svn: 201577
ProcessElfCore::ParseThreadContextsFromNoteSegment was leaking
ThreadData for each ELF note found in core file. We now allocate it
only once and use std::unique_ptr to ensure it is always being freed.
While at it make ParseFreeBSDThrMisc and ParseFreeBSDPrStatus take
ThreadData by reference, rather than pointer, since those arguments are
not optional.
Patch by Piotr Rak.
http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2813
llvm-svn: 201473
This seems like a more straightforward approach for instantiating the
appropriate RegisterContext* class, made possible by Michael Sartain's
cleanup of the POSIX RegisterContext class hierarchy in r190647.
Better (user-facing) error handling is still needed.
llvm-svn: 201457
Revert the spirit of r199857 - a convincing case can be made that overriding a summary's format markers behind its back is not the right thing to do
This commit reverts the behavior of the code to the previous model, and changes the test case to validate the opposite of what it was validating before
llvm-svn: 201455
specify a list of functions which should be treated as trap handlers.
This will be primarily useful to people working in non-user-level
process debugging - kernels and other standalone environments.
For most people, the trap handler functions provided by the Platform
plugin will be sufficient.
<rdar://problem/15835846>, <rdar://problem/15982682>
llvm-svn: 201386
This was primarily working around problems where we weren't able
to identify trap handlers for different environments -- but instead,
I'm working to make it easier to specify those trap handler function
names.
llvm-svn: 201366
add a new pure virtual CalculateTrapHandlerSymbolNames() that Platform
subclasses must implement which fills in the function name list with any
trap handlers that are expected on that platform.
llvm-svn: 201364
Michael Sartain refactored RegisterContextPOSIX_* in r192332, and I must
have missed the now-shadowed variable when I rebased the FreeBSD MIPS64
register context after that.
llvm-svn: 201334
aka asynchronous signal handlers, which subclasses should fill
in as appropriate. For most Unix user process environments,
the one entry in this list is _sigtramp. For bare-board and
kernel environments, there will be different sets of trap
handlers.
The unwinder needs to know when a frame is a trap handler
because the rules it enforces for the frame "above" the
trap handler is different from most middle-of-the-stack frames.
<rdar://problem/15835846>
llvm-svn: 201300
They were enforcing 16-byte alignment on stack frames for Darwin x86 programs.
But we've found that trap handlers typically don't have the stack pointer
aligned correctly when a trap happens and lldb wasn't backtracing all
the way through. This method is only used as a safety guard to prevent
lldb's unwinder from using a bogus address as a stack frame - we'll still
enforce word-size alignment on stack frames so that should be fine.
Also rolled back akaylor's changes from August 2013 in r188952 which changed
the i386 ABI plugin to relax the CallFrameAddressIsValid offsets for non-Darwin
targets where only 4-byte alignment is enforced. Now Darwin is the same as
those environments.
<rdar://problem/15982682>
llvm-svn: 201292
Elf core files were collapsing core segments when the virtual memory
addresses were contiguous without checking if the core-file-backed
memory region was the same size as the segment's VMA region. Without
this extra check, any time regions were collapsed but the core-backed
region was smaller (and thus had a zero-filled hole at the end), the
collapse operation would break VMA to core file lookups for subsequent
collapsed regions.
This change fixes the following bug:
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=18769
llvm-svn: 201214
This test was skipped as it used to segfault on FreeBSD. It seems
the original issue has since been fixed, so have the test run again.
llvm-svn: 201169
use a system-wide unique thread ID instead of a pthread_t to identify
the thread we want debug info for. Also, free some more memory regions
that needed to be freed.
llvm-svn: 201117
Although the interface to el_push should be a constant parameter (as it is on
Darwin), certain Linux distributions currently ship a header which does not
provide proper const correctness. This causes compilation failures on Linux.
Strip the constness on the parameter, which whilst incorrect, is mostly
harmless. The parameter will not be changed by the interface and so it is
acceptable to do this. When distributions have updated to a more correct
declaration, it would be nice to revert this change.
Addresses PR18784.
llvm-svn: 201092
ObjectFile::SetLoadAddress (Target &target,
lldb::addr_t value,
bool value_is_offset);
Now "value" is a slide if "value_is_offset" is true, and "value" is an image base address otherwise. All previous usage of this API was using slides.
Updated the ObjectFileELF and ObjectFileMachO SetLoadAddress methods to do the right thing.
Also updated the ObjectFileMachO::SetLoadAddress() function to not load __LINKEDIT when it isn't needed and to only load sections that belong to the executable object file.
llvm-svn: 201003
What was happening was:
1 - Xcode ran and stopped and was doing work on thread 2
2 - Users would type something in Xcode console on thread 1
3 - thread 3 would be running command interpreter thread and try to execute command but get "failed to get API lock" error for any command that wanted the target API lock (like "expression")
<rdar://problem/15775016>
llvm-svn: 200997
When a user says
type formatter add ... unsigned int
he most probably means to deal with the "unsigned int" type. However, given how the LLDB command parser works, that command will try to add the formatter to the TWO types 'unsigned' AND 'int'
Since this is unlikely to be what the user wants, warn about it, and suggest they can use quotes to override the debugger's understanding
llvm-svn: 200996
Provide a filter for libc++ std::atomic<T>
This just hides some implementation clutter and promotes the actual content to only child status
llvm-svn: 200984
Move some code that was in DynamicLoaderPOSIXDLYD into the
base class DynamicLoader. In the case of UpdateLoadedSections(),
the test to see whether a file is loadable (its address is zero)
is not generally applicable so that test is changed to a more
universally applicable check for the SHF_ALLOC flag on the section.
Also make it explicit that the reading of the module_id in
DynamicLoaderPOSIXDYLD::GetThreadLocalData() is using a hardcoded
size (of module_id) of 4, which might not be appropriate on
big-endian 64-bit systems, leaving a FIXME comment in place.
llvm-svn: 200939
We now properly detect when a result object has an immediate output stream and don't echo the results a second time.
<rdar://problem/15954906>
llvm-svn: 200882
Also emit the "Executing commands" message so it properly only comes out when desired and so it comes out in the right place.
<rdar://problem/15992208>
llvm-svn: 200875
- empty lines in init files would repeat previous command and cause errors to be displayed
- all options to control showing the command, its output, if it should stop on error or continue, weren't being obeyed.
llvm-svn: 200860
libldi library to collect extended backtrace information; switch
to the libBacktraceRecording library and its APIs. Complete the
work of adding QueueItems to Queues and allow for the QueueItems
to be interrogated about their extended backtraces in turn.
There's still cleanup and documentation to do on this code but the
code is functional and I it's a good time to get the work-in-progress
checked in.
<rdar://problem/15314027>
llvm-svn: 200822
ScriptInterpreterPython caches the lldb.embedded_interpreter module, and since it caches it in a refcounting-safe PythonObject, the refcount will appropriately go down 1 every time a ScriptInterpreterPython is deallocated
However, we were only importing the module once - in InitializePrivate(). In a handful of interpreter creations, the refcount on the run_one_line function would end up at 0, causing LLDB to crash
This fixes it by also importing the module for every interpreter, which ensures correct refcounting
llvm-svn: 200816
This could use some refinement still, but the previous behaviour of adding
-stdlib=libstc++ on FreeBSD w/ Clang is the least likely case to work.
llvm.org/pr17910
llvm-svn: 200646
Fixes http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=18656.
Note this exposes a failure on Linux of
TestInferiorAssert.test_inferior_asserting_disassemble, similar to how
it fails on FreeBSD. I'll file a bug for this next. We're now getting
another frame beyond where we used to prior to this fix, so the fix is
exposing failures in previosly not-reachable frames.
Much thanks to Jason Molenda, who had much to do with helping figure
out where unwinding was breaking.
llvm-svn: 200600
This change addresses shutdown crashes in the python lldb module when
the script interpreter was hanging on to saved file references after
leaving a session. It also gets rid of extra references to the
stdin/stdout/stderr python file objects that are created when entering
the session.
This change also moves the bundled pyexpect 2.4 library to the front
of the python library path so that a python distribution default
pyexpect (2.3 in Ubuntu 12.04) is not picked up first.
llvm-svn: 200486
PyTuple_SetItem steals a reference to the item it inserts in the tuple
This, plus the Py_XDECREF of the tuple a few lines below, causes our session dictionary to go away after the first time a SWIG layer function is called - with disastrous effects for the first subsequent attempt to use any functionality in ScriptInterpreterPython
This fixes it
llvm-svn: 200429
GDBProcessCommunicationServer now optionally takes a PlatformSP that
defaults to the default platform for the host.
GDBProcessCommunicationServer::LaunchProcess () now uses the platform
to launch the process.
lldb-gdbserver now takes an optional --platform={platform_plugin_name}
or -p {platform_plugin_name} command line option. If no platform is
specified, the default platform for the host is used; otherwise, if
the platform_plugin_name matches a registered platform plugin or
matches the default platform's name (which is not necessarily
registered by name in the case of 'host'), that platform is used. If
the platform name cannot be resolved, lldb-gdbserver exits after
printing all the available platform plugin names and the default
platform plugin name.
llvm-svn: 200266
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
if the remote stub provided enough information to identify it in the
qProcessInfo packet response. (e.g. for an Apple device where we know
it is Mach-O, the cpu type & cpu sub type).
<rdar://problem/15847901>
llvm-svn: 200253
ValueObjectPrinter could enter an infinite loop while trying to display an aptly formed ValueObject: a reference, with a child of some pointer type, such that the pointees chain ended up pointing back to some part of itself - a pointer to itself being the simplest such case
Fixed here by only setting a pointer depth when needed, and ensuring that we won't overflow and wrap the pointer depth when it's zero.
llvm-svn: 200247
This change modifies the 'A' command handler's launch code to launch
with LaunchProcess (). The net effect is that the default process
monitoring that LaunchProcess () adds will kick in, allowing the
GDBRemoteCommunicationServer to be able to reap processes started with
this facility correctly. Later, in the case of lldb-gdbserver, we'll
also have the proper process monitoring going on to really debug the
inferior process.
llvm-svn: 200246
This patch addresses a bug where in a multi-threaded program a new
signal from the inferior may be received before all group-stop
messages from an earlier signal have been handled.
Patch by Andrew MacPherson
llvm-svn: 200226
There are a couple of pieces:
* some lazy-evaluation members that store info listed in a qSupported response
* new method SendPacketsAndConcatenateResponses which is used for
fetching fixed-size objects from the remote gdbserver by using multiple
packets if necessary (first use will be to fetch shared-library XML files).
llvm-svn: 200072
GetU32 and GetU64, to use memcpy to copy bytes into a local buffer instead
of having a (uint64_t *) etc local variable, pointing to the address, and
dereferencing it. If compiled on a CPU where data alignment is required
(e.g. the LDM instruction on armv7) and we try to GetU64 out of a mmap'ed
DWARF file, that 8 byte quantity may not be world aligned and the program
can get an unaligned memory access fault.
<rdar://problem/15849231>
llvm-svn: 200069
right after the space for it is allocated on the stack, instead of trying
to initialize it in all the different places in this method. It's too easy
for another uninitialized code path to sneak in as it is written right now.
llvm-svn: 200066
GDBRemoteCommunicationServer::LaunchProcess () now uses the built-up
ProcessLaunchArgs rather than clearing and setting items from the
function arguments. I added setters for the arguments and launch
flags, which lldb-gdbserver uses for its specification of the
commandline-specified startup app (if one is specified).
LaunchProcess () also adds a new reaper monitor that it applies to
the launched process if no process monitor has already been applied.
This addresses an issue where the 'k' command would generate (possibly
false) warnings about not being able to positively state whether a
killed process actually terminated. GDBRemoteCommunicationServer now
definitely knows the disposition of its children.
llvm-svn: 199959
lldb-gdbserver was launching the commandline-specified launch process
directly, without GDBRemoteCommunicationServer knowing anything about
it. As GDBRemoteCommunicationServer is the piece that manages and
knows about processes that the gdb remote protocol discusses with
the client end, it is important that it know about launched processes.
This change also implements the k gdb remote protocol message, having it
kill all known spawned processes when it is received.
(Note: in lldb-gdbserver, the spawned processes are not properly
monitored yet. The response to the k packet will complain that
spawned processes do not really appear to be getting killed even if
they are. This will get addressed soon.)
llvm-svn: 199945
SBType SBType::GetTypedefedType();
Also added the ability to get a type by type ID from a SBModule:
SBType SBModule::GetTypeByID (lldb::user_id_t uid);
llvm-svn: 199939
This reverts Host.cpp LaunchProcess spawn behavior on FreeBSD to be
like Linux (and unlike OS X) with regards to how default signal
handlers and setup on the spawned process. FreeBSD does not reset
default signal handlers on the spawned process after this change.
llvm-svn: 199908
This fixes a bug under Linux where spawning a process via
Host::LaunchProcess was disabling all blockable signals on the
launched process. This caused strange behavior when attempting
to kill the lldb-gdbserver process, as the child generally would
not die unless killed with a non-blockable signal (e.g. 'kill -9').
This change moves several functions out of macosx/Host.mm into
common/Host.cpp. In addition, two functions that needed to work
across common/Host.cpp and macosx/Host.mm were moved into the Host.h
header file.
llvm-svn: 199856
lldb-gdbserver now takes zero or more --lldb-command {command} options
that get executed by the command interpreter prior to starting up
a child debuggee process. The short form is -c {command}. This is
similar to how lldb-platform works.
This command can be used to enable logging in more than just the
gdb-remote log channel. Here is an example startup sequence that allows
logging of lldb host and process log categories to one file and
gdb-remote packets to another file:
lldb-gdbserver -c 'log enable -f lgs.log lldb process host' \
-c 'log enable -f lgs_packets.log gdb-remote packets' \
localhost:5432 ./some_exe
llvm-svn: 199761
The alias test "exprf x 1234" expands to "expr -f x 1234" and is
expected to fail: it ends up trying to evaluate the invalid expression
void
$__lldb_expr(void *$__lldb_arg)
{
-f x 1234;
}
On FreeBSD LLDB ends up finding a static function f() in a math library,
and thus the error produced does not include "use of undeclared
identifier 'f'".
We will report failure to parse the expression in any case, so require
only that error message.
llvm-svn: 199623
This change does the following:
* Adds Makefile build scripts to debug server.
* Fixes a few small mistakes in the other makefiles.
* Modifies generate-vers.pl slightly to also work for debugserver.
* Changes the OS X, non-framework python search path from libdir to
libdir/python2.X/site-packages where it is installed by the build
system (also where it is installed on other operating systems).
Patch by Keno Fischer.
llvm-svn: 199543
ArchSpec now contains an optional distribution_id, with getters and
setters. Host::GetArchitecture () sets it on non-Apple platforms using
Host::GetDistributionId (). The distribution_id is ignored during
ArchSpec comparisons.
The gdb remote qHostInfo message transmits it, if set, via the
distribution_id={id-value} key/value pair. Updated gdb remote docs to
reflect this change.
As before, GetDistributionId () returns nothing on non-Linux platforms
at this time. On Linux, it is returned only if the lsb_platform
command is installed (in /bin or /usr/bin), and only if the
distributor id key is returned by 'lsb_platform -i'. This id is
lowercased, and whitespace is replaced with underscores.
llvm-svn: 199539
The Linux distribution will be added to the ArchSpec class in an
upcoming change. This change only undoes the change to the triple. The
distribution retrieval logic and enabling of lldb-gdbserver for linux
x86_64 builds is still in place.
llvm-svn: 199520
xcode project file sets the MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET to 10.7.
llvm/configure (as of r199313) tries to compile a .cpp file which
includes <atomic> with -std=c++0x. If the deployment target is set
to earlier than 10.9 and no C++ library is specified, clang will
error out at this point.
Fixes xcode building of lldb on Mac OS X. If this change causes
problems for any of the other build workflows, please let me know
and I'll fix it.
llvm-svn: 199511
This change does the following:
* enables building lldb-gdbserver on linux_x86-64 platforms.
Note - it builds but it has several run-time issues where many gdb
remote protocol features are not properly implemented yet. I'm
working on these one at a time.
* lldb-gdbserver: does not enable the eLaunchFlagDebug launch flag on
Linux. Currently the POSIX launch routine will assert if that flag
is passed in, presumably because that launch mode is not yet
available. This prevents lldb-gdbserver from asserting the moment
it launches the debuggee process.
* Adds ConstString& Host::GetDistributionId ()
This method is defined to return an empty result on all platforms
except for Linux. On Linux, it makes one attempt to execute
'lsb_release -i' (both /usr/bin/lsb_release, where it appears
on ubuntu, and /bin/lsb_release, where it appears on fedora
if the redhat-lsb package is installed). If lsb_release is not
found in either of those locations, or if 'lsb_release -i' does
not return the first line starting with "Distributor ID:\t",
then the distribution id is empty. The method will lower-case
the id and replace whitespace with underscores.
* Modify Host::GetArchitecture () so that linux replaces an unknown
vendor portion with the results of GetDistributionId () if that
is non-empty. This shows up now in qHostInfo remote packet
responses and on the lldb host side. Tested with ubuntu and
fedora (the latter both with the default of not having lsb_release
installed, and with having lsb_release installed via the redhat-lsb
package).
Examples of triples on Linux after this change:
# x86_64 Unbuntu 12.04 LTS:
x86_64-ubuntu-linux-gnu
# x86_64 Fedora 20 Desktop with redhat-lsb package installed
x86_64-fedora-linux-gnu
# x86_64 Fedora 20 Desktop without redhat-lsb-core installed
# (i.e. no /bin/lsb_release available)
# same as before the change
x86_64--linux-gnu
Note I intend to have Android respond with:
{arch}-android-linux
when I get to implementing Android lldb-gdbserver support.
llvm-svn: 199510
This rename was suggested by gclayton as a way to silence gcc
warnings; the warning is emitted when there is an overloaded function
in a base class (Platform) for which a derived class redefines one of
the overloads but not the other (because doing so hides the other
overload from users of the derived class). By giving the two methods
different names, the situation is avoided.
llvm-svn: 199504
Part 1 changes PlatformLinux::CreateInstance to always create with
is_host=false; that method is only used as the plug-in creator method
associated with the remote-linux platform plugin, and should therefore
always be remote.
Part 1 patch by Steve Pucci.
Part 2: fix a test break on linux.
In test/functionalities/thread/thread_specific_break, when using gcc,
either C99 mode would need to be enabled, or the code would need to
change. I changed a couple loop variable definitions to conform
to pre-C99 to simplify testing the fix. The second issue was
the necessity to include -lpthread as a linker option in the Makefile.
Any issues with that part are due to me (Todd Fiala).
llvm-svn: 199426
control to the user anyway. This was put in to handle monitors that would say there was no
stop reason when you first attached to them. But it broke the case where you hit a thread specific
breakpoint on many threads, but NOT the one specified in the breakpoint. I work around this
by only doing the junky override when the StopID is 0 - i.e. on first attach.
This commit also adds a test for thread specific breakpoints.
llvm-svn: 199290
and re-exported symbols. I don't know if Linux has the latter, if it does, we could
probably make this a generic test. Somebody who knows how to make these gadgets on
Linux can maybe take a look...
llvm-svn: 199134
As done in other DW_OP_* cases, return an error if the stack is empty
rather than eventually crashing elsewhere. Encountered on big-endian
MIPS, where LLVM bugs currently result in invalid .debug_loc data.
llvm-svn: 199110
<rdar://problem/15797390>
This new test case will detect this and make sure we don't regress on global name lookups that search all DWARF for everything when we don't need to.
llvm-svn: 198982
symbols correctly. There were a couple of pieces to this.
1) When a breakpoint location finds itself pointing to an Indirect symbol, when the site for it is created
it needs to resolve the symbol and actually set the site at its target.
2) Not all breakpoints want to do this (i.e. a straight address breakpoint should always set itself on the
specified address, so somem machinery was needed to specify that.
3) I added some info to the break list output for indirect symbols so you could see what was happening.
Also I made it clear when we re-route through re-exported symbols.
4) I moved ResolveIndirectFunction from ProcessPosix to Process since it works the exact same way on Mac OS X
and the other posix systems. If we find a platform that doesn't do it this way, they can override the
call in Process.
5) Fixed one bug in RunThreadPlan, if you were trying to run a thread plan after a "running" event had
been broadcast, the event coalescing would cause you to miss the ThreadPlan running event. So I added
a way to override the coalescing.
6) Made DynamicLoaderMacOSXDYLD::GetStepThroughTrampolinePlan handle Indirect & Re-exported symbols.
<rdar://problem/15280639>
llvm-svn: 198976
I previously fixed a bug in the SocketAddress class where SocketAddress::GetPort() wasn't using ntohs() on the port number in the structures.
After fixing this, it broke places where we weren't using ntohs() and htons() correctly.
<rdar://problem/15767514>
llvm-svn: 198902
"Open LLDB and run:
(lldb) script print lldb.debugger.GetInputFileHandle()
This puts the debugger into a catatonic state and all interactions seem
to enter a black hole. The reason is that executing this commnand
actually *CLOSES* the input file handle and so all input is dropped on
the floor. Oof!
The fix is simple: flush a descriptor, instead of closing it, when
transferring ownership."
llvm-svn: 198835
210: test_with_dsym_and_run_command (Test-rdar-10642615.Radar10642615DataFormatterTestCase)
Test data formatter commands. ... Assertion failed: (isa<X>(Val) && "cast<Ty>() argument of incompatible type!"), function cast, file llvm/include/llvm/Support/Casting.h, line 239.
226: test_with_dsym_and_run_command (Test-rdar-13338477.Radar13338477DataFormatterTestCase)
Test that LLDB handles the clang typeclass Paren correctly. ... Assertion failed: (isa<X>(Val) && "cast<Ty>() argument of incompatible type!"), function cast, file llvm/include/llvm/Support/Casting.h, line 239.
llvm-svn: 198811
it is causing an llvm assert when run against
test/functionalities/data-formatter/rdar-10642615,
Assertion failed: (isa<X>(Val) && "cast<Ty>() argument of incompatible type!"), function cast, file llvm/include/llvm/Support/Casting.h, line 239.
llvm-svn: 198809
This change fixes a bug recently introduced in ProcessGDBRemote that
prevented the Python register definition file from getting loaded when
the qRegisterInfo0 response returned $00#.
Patch by Steve Pucci.
llvm-svn: 198742
When determining the type of array members, do not see-through typedefs
For instance, in BOOL arr[4], we want the elements to be typed as BOOL, not signed char
llvm-svn: 198729
materialize a variable in a register correctly
if the variable is a pointer. This fixes a
regression introduced by my commit of Oct. 22nd
(r193191).
llvm-svn: 198718
- If there is only 1 frame ptr_refs now works (fixed issue with stack detection)
- Fixed test for result now that it isn't a pointer anymore
llvm-svn: 198712
and EmulateInstructionARM::GetFramePointerDWARFRegisterNumber to recognize
the Apple arm convention (of using r7 for the frame pointer, regardless of
thumb or arm) even if the OS does not match Darwin/MacOSX/iOS. Also
corrects the behavior for thumb code on non-Apple platforms.
<rdar://problem/14661537>
llvm-svn: 198648
The former will set the Address object's offset to the load address value if
it is not present in any section; the latter will only set the Address object
if the load addr is contained in one of its sections.
<rdar://problem/15135987>
llvm-svn: 198469
its stack frame is a constructed, fake thing that may not conform
correctly to these rules. This fixes a problem where lldb couldn't
backtrace past an asynchronous signal handler (_sigtramp) frame on
a stack on Mac OS X.
<rdar://problem/15035673>
llvm-svn: 198450
The "type format add" command gets a new flag --type (-t). If you pass -t <sometype>, upon fetching the value for an object of your type,
LLDB will display it as-if it was of enumeration type <sometype>
This is useful in cases of non-contiguous enums where there are empty gaps of unspecified values, and as such one cannot type their variables as the enum type,
but users would still like to see them as-if they were of the enum type (e.g. DWARF field types with their user-reserved ranges)
The SB API has also been improved to handle both types of formats, and a test case is added
llvm-svn: 198105
interpret core files that contain both a user
process dyld and a kernel executable in them.
Fix an additional method that needs to be
adjusted depending on this preference as well.
<rdar://problem/15721409>
llvm-svn: 197931
TypeFormatImpl used to just wrap a Format (and Flags for matching), and then ValueObject itself would do the printing deed
With this checkin, the responsibility of generating a value string is centralized in the data formatter (as it should, and already is for summaries)
This change is good practice per se, and should also enable us to extend the type format mechanism in a cleaner way
llvm-svn: 197874
it needs to fall back to using the HostArchitecture if a valid one is not
returned. When doing low-level system debugging we may not have a process
(or the remote stub may not support the qProcessInfo packet) in which case
we should fall back to the architecture we determined via qHostInfo.
<rdar://problem/15713180>
llvm-svn: 197857
So, rename the class for what it truly is: a FormattersContainer
Also do a bunch of related text substitutions in the interest of overall naming clarity
llvm-svn: 197795
of Objective-C classes are completed, and that
variables of Objective-C types have their types
completed when the variables are reported.
This fixes a long-standing issue where ivars did
not show up correctly on 32-bit OS X.
<rdar://problem/12184093>
llvm-svn: 197775
specify a pointer size until code gen. So we just
make all our pointer-sized integer literals 64-bit.
That doesn't seem to hurt anything.
llvm-svn: 197774
The original code was not completely correct, but a form of
this check is necessary to avoid an infinite recursion on
some unwind cases where a function unwinds to itself with the
same CFA. Ashok thought the recursion would be caught in
RegisterContextLLDB but this one isn't - we still need it here.
<rdar://problem/15664282>
llvm-svn: 197761
In those set of patches, Ashok changed Module::ResolveSymbolContextForAddress
so that if it failed to find a symbol for a pc, it could back up
the pc value by 1 and re-search for a symbol.
His change to RegisterContextLLDB.cpp partially duplicates that
behavior but it also removes the separate case where we find a
Symbol for the pc address but it's the wrong symbol -- we need to
handle this as well as the lookup-by-pc-finds-no-symbol case.
The most obvious fallout from this regression was that lldb on
Mac OS X couldn't backtrace past __assert_rtn() which tail-calls
abort(). e.g.
(lldb) bt
* thread #1: tid = 0x5d6ea1, 0x00007fff8ee80866 libsystem_kernel.dylib`__pthread_kill + 10, queue = 'com.apple.main-thread', stop reason = signal SIGABRT
* frame #0: 0x00007fff8ee80866 libsystem_kernel.dylib`__pthread_kill + 10
frame #1: 0x00007fff8eb5835c libsystem_pthread.dylib`pthread_kill + 92
frame #2: 0x00007fff8852ab1a libsystem_c.dylib`abort + 125
frame #3: 0x00007fff884f49bf libsystem_c.dylib`__assert_rtn + 321
frame #4: 0x0000000100000f2c a.out`main + 124
(lldb) dis -c 3 -s 0x7fff884f49b3
libsystem_c.dylib`__assert_rtn + 309:
0x7fff884f49b3: movq %rax, -0x11b96242(%rip) ; gCRAnnotations + 8
0x7fff884f49ba: callq 0x7fff8854fd2c ; symbol stub for: abort
libsystem_c.dylib`basename:
0x7fff884f49bf: pushq %rbp
(lldb)
in this case, __assert_rtn() is immediately followed by basename() and
the changes in r190812 didn't back up the pc value to get the correct
function name / unwind info.
<rdar://problem/15367233>
llvm-svn: 197655
offsets structure is read & saved in the platform object -- soon
we'll be getting more than the queue name offset out of this
structure so we'll need to reuse the information in other methods.
llvm-svn: 197620
During testing I observed QEMU send "$T02thread:01;#04" upon connection,
before any command from LLDB. This change from gclayton accepts (and
discards) a packet immediately after sending the initial ack, to flush
the GDB remote pipeline.
llvm-svn: 197579
While investigating test suite failures when running the test suite remotely, I noticed we had 3 copies of code that launched a process:
1 - in "process launch" command
2 - SBTarget::Launch() with args
3 - SBTarget::Launch() with SBLaunchInfo
"process launch" was launching through the platform if it was supported (this is needed for remote debugging) and the 2 and 3 were not.
Now all code is in one place.
llvm-svn: 197247
libdispatch aka Grand Central Dispatch (GCD) queues. Still fleshing out the
documentation and testing of these but the overall API is settling down so it's
a good time to check it in.
<rdar://problem/15600370>
llvm-svn: 197190
test_convenience_registers_16bit_with_process_attach fails due to
pr18200. The test has a @expectedFailureFreeBSD decorator, but it
appears this does not catch a RuntimError exception raised in the test
infrastructure, so the test still reports failure. For now just skip
it.
llvm-svn: 197174
<rdar://problem/15594781>
We need to not crash at any cost. We currently detect if any base classes are forward declarations, emit an error string that directs the use to file a compiler bug, and continues by completing the class with no contents. This avoids a clang crash that would usually follow when we call setBase().
llvm-svn: 197108
With this checkin, we use the installed clang compiler to build crashinfo.so from crashinfo.c upon every test suite execution
We also try to cleanup after ourselves, which of course will only work if the test suite does not actually crash
llvm-svn: 197106
Add an hook for the test suite into the OSX-only CrashReporter "App-specific info"
This allows the test suite to set the crash info to the name and file location of every test as the test gets executed
If the test suite crashes, the crash log will then report which test is the culprit, even when not using verbose mode
This only works on OSX, and defaults to not doing anything on other platforms, but OS/platform-specific invocations
can be devised by each individual platform
llvm-svn: 197095
This has led to many test suite failures because of copy and paste where new test cases were based off of other test cases and the "mydir" variable wasn't updated.
Now you can call your superclasses "compute_mydir()" function with "__file__" as the sole argument and the relative path will be computed for you.
llvm-svn: 196985
Previously, an opcode set via SetOpcode32 (for example) was later
extracted via GetData() as a byte sequence in host order rather than
target order.
Review: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1838
llvm-svn: 196808
Summary: Now that Host provide a MakeDirectory function, we can use it instead of relying on command line tool to create a directory.
CC: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2356
llvm-svn: 196801