nanoseconds in 32-bit expression would cause pthread_cond_timedwait
to time out immediately. Add explicit casts to the TimeValue::TimeValue
ctor that takes a struct timeval and change the NanoSecsPerSec etc
constants defined in TimeValue to be uint64_t so any other calculations
involving these should be promoted to 64-bit even when lldb is built
for 32-bit.
<rdar://problem/11204073>, <rdar://problem/11179821>, <rdar://problem/11194705>.
llvm-svn: 154250
spin up a temporary "private state thread" that will respond to events from the lower level process plugins. This check-in should work to do
that, but it is still buggy. However, if you don't call functions on the private state thread, these changes make no difference.
This patch also moves the code in the AppleObjCRuntime step-through-trampoline handler that might call functions (in the case where the debug
server doesn't support the memory allocate/deallocate packet) out to a safe place to do that call.
llvm-svn: 154230
new features:
(1) it outputs the instruction currently being
tested to a log file, if a path is provided
(2) if instructed, it prints the time remaining
in the exhaustive test
llvm-svn: 154205
Also test for the process to be stopped when many SBValue API calls are made to make sure it is safe to evaluate values, children of values and much more.
llvm-svn: 154160
either @dsym_test or @dwarf_test to be executed during the testsuite run. There are still lots of
Test*.py files which have not been decorated with the new decorator.
An example:
# From TestMyFirstWatchpoint.py ->
class HelloWatchpointTestCase(TestBase):
mydir = os.path.join("functionalities", "watchpoint", "hello_watchpoint")
@dsym_test
def test_hello_watchpoint_with_dsym_using_watchpoint_set(self):
"""Test a simple sequence of watchpoint creation and watchpoint hit."""
self.buildDsym(dictionary=self.d)
self.setTearDownCleanup(dictionary=self.d)
self.hello_watchpoint()
@dwarf_test
def test_hello_watchpoint_with_dwarf_using_watchpoint_set(self):
"""Test a simple sequence of watchpoint creation and watchpoint hit."""
self.buildDwarf(dictionary=self.d)
self.setTearDownCleanup(dictionary=self.d)
self.hello_watchpoint()
# Invocation ->
[17:50:14] johnny:/Volumes/data/lldb/svn/ToT/test $ ./dotest.py -N dsym -v -p TestMyFirstWatchpoint.py
LLDB build dir: /Volumes/data/lldb/svn/ToT/build/Debug
LLDB-137
Path: /Volumes/data/lldb/svn/ToT
URL: https://johnny@llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/lldb/trunk
Repository Root: https://johnny@llvm.org/svn/llvm-project
Repository UUID: 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Revision: 154133
Node Kind: directory
Schedule: normal
Last Changed Author: gclayton
Last Changed Rev: 154109
Last Changed Date: 2012-04-05 10:43:02 -0700 (Thu, 05 Apr 2012)
Session logs for test failures/errors/unexpected successes will go into directory '2012-04-05-17_50_49'
Command invoked: python ./dotest.py -N dsym -v -p TestMyFirstWatchpoint.py
compilers=['clang']
Configuration: arch=x86_64 compiler=clang
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Collected 2 tests
1: test_hello_watchpoint_with_dsym_using_watchpoint_set (TestMyFirstWatchpoint.HelloWatchpointTestCase)
Test a simple sequence of watchpoint creation and watchpoint hit. ... skipped 'dsym tests'
2: test_hello_watchpoint_with_dwarf_using_watchpoint_set (TestMyFirstWatchpoint.HelloWatchpointTestCase)
Test a simple sequence of watchpoint creation and watchpoint hit. ... ok
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 2 tests in 1.138s
OK (skipped=1)
Session logs for test failures/errors/unexpected successes can be found in directory '2012-04-05-17_50_49'
[17:50:50] johnny:/Volumes/data/lldb/svn/ToT/test $
llvm-svn: 154154
Right now it only works on Mac OS X, but other
platforms would just need to add their own
implementation of AddLLDBToSysPathOn*().
The stress-tester has two modes:
Used with --bytes N --random, the stress-tester
generates random instructions of length N and
runs them through the disassembler. This is
suitable for architectures like Intel where it
is combinatorially infeasible to run through the
entire space of possible instructions.
Used with --bytes N and no arguments (or --start
S --stride T), the stress-tester tests the
disassembler with a monotonically increasing
sequence of instructions.
The --start and --stride arguments are intended
for use in multiprocessing environments. Give
each core an ID from 0 .. T-1, pass the ID in as
the --start, and use T as the stride, and you
can launch one copy of the stress-tester on each
core you have available.
llvm-svn: 154143
This abstracts read/write locks on the current host system. It is currently backed by pthread_rwlock_t objects so it should work on all unix systems.
We also need a way to control multi-threaded access to the process through the public API when it is running. For example it isn't a good idea to try and get stack frames while the process is running. To implement this, the lldb_private::Process class now contains a ReadWriteLock member variable named m_run_lock which is used to control the public process state. The public process state represents the state of the process as the client knows it. The private is used to control the actual current process state. So the public state of the process can be stopped, yet the private state can be running when evaluating an expression for example.
Adding the read/write lock where readers are clients that want the process to stay stopped, and writers are clients that run the process, allows us to accurately control multi-threaded access to the process.
Switched the SBThread and SBFrame over to us shared pointers to the ExecutionContextRef class instead of making their own class to track this. This fixed an issue with assigning on SBFrame to another and will also centralize the code that tracks weak references to execution context objects into one location.
llvm-svn: 154099
They are truncated when generating the version
numbers seen in the headers, so for example
lldb-100.1 would have #define LLDB_VERSION=100
llvm-svn: 154074
correctly if the setter/getter were not present
in the debug information. The fixes are as follows:
- We not only look for the method by its full name,
but also look for automatically-generated methods
when searching for a selector in an Objective-C
interface. This is necessary to find accessors.
- Extract the getter and setter name from the
DW_TAG_APPLE_Property declaration in the DWARF
if they are present; generate them if not.
llvm-svn: 154067
Found an issue where we might still have shared pointer references to lldb_private::Thread objects where the object itself is not valid and has been removed from the Process. When a thread is removed from a process, it will call Thread::DestroyThread() which well set a boolean member variable which is exposed now via:
bool
Thread::IsValid() const;
We then check the thread validity before handing out a shared pointer.
llvm-svn: 154048