We should ultimately introduce GetAs...Type
functions in all cases where we have Is...Type
functions that know how to look inside typedefs.
llvm-svn: 148512
be fetched too many times and the DisassemblerLLVM was appending to strings
when the opcode, mnemonic and comment accessors were called multiple times
and if any of the strings were empty.
Also fixed the test suite failures from recent Objective C modifications.
llvm-svn: 148460
for each ObjCInterfaceDecl was imposing performance
penalties for Objective-C apps. Instead, we now use
the normal function query mechanisms, which use the
relevant accelerator tables.
This fix also includes some modifications to the
SymbolFile which allow us to find Objective-C methods
and report their Clang Decls correctly.
llvm-svn: 148457
master AST importer imports types.
- First, before importing the definition of a
Decl from its source, notify the underlying
importer of the source->destination mapping.
Especially for anonymous strucutres that are
otherwise hard to unique in the target AST
context, this hint is very helpful.
- When deporting a type or Decl from one
ASTContext to another (deporting occurs in
the case of moving result types from the
parser's AST context to the result AST
context), don't forget their origin if the
origin is the original debug information.
llvm-svn: 148152
debug info, call it anonymous. This isn't
perfect, because Clang actually considers the
following struct not to be anonymous:
–
struct {
int x;
int y;
} g_foo;
-
but DWARF doesn't make the distinction.
llvm-svn: 148145
are made up from the ObjC runtime symbols. For now the latter contain nothing but the fact that the name
describes an ObjC class, and so are not useful for things like dynamic types.
llvm-svn: 148059
mmap() the entire object file contents into memory with MAP_PRIVATE.
We do this because object file contents can change on us and currently
this helps alleviate this situation. It also make the code for accessing
object file data much easier to manage and we don't end up opening the
file, reading some data and closing the file over and over.
llvm-svn: 148017
so that we don't have "fprintf (stderr, ...)" calls sprinkled everywhere.
Changed all needed locations over to using this.
For non-darwin, we log to stderr only. On darwin, we log to stderr _and_
to ASL (Apple System Log facility). This will allow GUI apps to have a place
for these error and warning messages to go, and also allows the command line
apps to log directly to the terminal.
llvm-svn: 147596
Switch from GetReturnValue, which was hardly ever used, to GetReturnValueObject
which is much more convenient.
Return the "return value object" as a persistent variable if requested.
llvm-svn: 147157
types that have been imported multiple times.
The discussion below uses this diagram:
ASTContext A B C
Decl Da Db Dc
ASTImporter \-Iab-/\-Iac-/
\-----Iac----/
When a Decl D is imported from ASTContext A to
ASTContext B, the ASTImporter Iab records the
pair <Da, Db> in a DenseMap. That way, if Iab
ever encounters Da again (for example, as the
DeclContext for another Decl), it can use the
imported version. This is not an optimization,
it is critical: if I import the field "st_dev"
as part of importing "struct stat," the field
must have DeclContext equal to the parent
structure or we end up with multiple different
Decls containing different parts of "struct
stat." "struct stat" is imported once and
recorded in the DenseMap; then the ASTImporter
finds that same version when looking for the
DeclContext of "st_dev."
The bug arises when Db is imported into another
ASTContext C and ASTContext B goes away. This
often occurs when LLDB produces result variables
for expressions. Ibc is aware of the transport
of Db to Dc, but a brand new ASTImporter, Iac,
is responsible for completing Dc from its source
upon request. That ASTImporter has no mappings,
so it will produce a clone of Dc when attempting
to import its children. That means that type
completion operations on Dc will fail.
The solution is to create Iac as soon as Ibc
imports D from B to C, and inform Iac of the
mapping between Da and Dc. This allows type
completion to happen correctly.
llvm-svn: 147016
we handle Objective-C method calls. Currently,
LLDB treats the result of an Objective-C method
as unknown if the type information doesn't have
the method's signature. Now Clang can cast the
result to id if it isn't explicitly cast.
I also added a test case for this, as well as a
fix for a type import problem that this feature
exposed.
llvm-svn: 146756
in the context in which it was originally found, the
expression parser now goes hunting for it in all modules
(in the appropriate namespace, if applicable). This means
that forward-declared types that exist in another shared
library will now be resolved correctly.
Added a test case to cover this. The test case also tests
"frame variable," which does not have this functionality
yet.
llvm-svn: 146204
take a SymbolFile reference and a lldb::user_id_t and be used in objects
which represent things in debug symbols that have types where we don't need
to know the true type yet, such as in lldb_private::Variable objects. This
allows us to defer resolving the type until something is used. More specifically
this allows us to get 1000 local variables from the current function, and if
the user types "frame variable argc", we end up _only_ resolving the type for
"argc" and not for the 999 other local variables. We can expand the use of this
as needed in the future.
Modified the DWARFMappedHash class to be able to read the HashData that has
more than just the DIE offset. It currently will read the atoms in the header
definition and read the data correctly. Currently only the DIE offset and
type flags are supported. This is needed for adding type flags to the
.apple_types hash accelerator tables.
Fixed a assertion crash that would happen if we have a variable that had a
DW_AT_const_value instead of a location where "location.LocationContains_DW_OP_addr()"
would end up asserting when it tried to parse the variable location as a
DWARF opcode list.
Decreased the amount of memory that LLDB would use when evaluating an expression
by 3x - 4x for clang. There was a place in the namespace lookup code that was
parsing all namespaces with a certain name in a DWARF file instead of stopping
when it found the first match. This was causing all of the compile units with
a matching namespace to get parsed into memory and causing unnecessary memory
bloat.
Improved "Target::EvaluateExpression(...)" to not try and find a variable
when the expression contains characters that would certainly cause an expression
to need to be evaluated by the debugger.
llvm-svn: 146130
from symbols more accessible, I have added a second
map to the ClangASTImporter: the ObjCInterfaceMetaMap.
This map keeps track of all type definitions found for
a particular Objective-C interface, allowing the
ClangASTSource to refer to all possible sources when
looking for method definitions.
There is a bug in lookup that I still need to figure out,
but after that we should be able to report full method
information for Objective-C classes shown in symbols.
Also fixed some errors I ran into when enabling the maps
for the persistent type store. The persistent type store
previously did not use the ClangASTImporter to import
types, instead using ASTImporters that got allocated each
time a type needed copying. To support the requirements
of the persistent type store -- namely, that types must be
copied, completed, and then completely severed from their
origin in the parser's AST context (which will go away) --
I added a new function called DeportType which severs all
these connections.
llvm-svn: 145914
methods. The Clang dump is now much more verbose,
but when somebody types "target modules lookup -t"
that is typically what they're looking for.
llvm-svn: 145892
add them to a fast lookup map. lldb_private::Symtab now export the following
public typedefs:
namespace lldb_private {
class Symtab {
typedef std::vector<uint32_t> IndexCollection;
typedef UniqueCStringMap<uint32_t> NameToIndexMap;
};
}
Clients can then find symbols by name and or type and end up with a
Symtab::IndexCollection that is filled with indexes. These indexes can then
be put into a name to index lookup map and control if the mangled and
demangled names get added to the map:
bool add_demangled = true;
bool add_mangled = true;
Symtab::NameToIndexMap name_to_index;
symtab->AppendSymbolNamesToMap (indexes, add_demangled, add_mangled, name_to_index).
This can be repeated as many times as needed to get a lookup table that
you are happy with, and then this can be sorted:
name_to_index.Sort();
Now name lookups can be done using a subset of the symbols you extracted from
the symbol table. This is currently being used to extract objective C types
from object files when there is no debug info in SymbolFileSymtab.
Cleaned up how the objective C types were being vended to be more efficient
and fixed some errors in the regular expression that was being used.
llvm-svn: 145777
for all our external AST sources that lets us associate
arbitrary flags with the types we put into the AST
contexts. Also added an API on ClangASTContext that
allows access to these flags given only an ASTContext
and a type.
Because we don't have access to RTTI, and because at
some point in the future we might encounter external
AST sources that we didn't make (so they don't subclass
ClangExternalASTSourceCommon) I added a magic number
that we check before doing anything else, so that we
can catch that problem as soon as it appears.
llvm-svn: 145748
object file can correctly make these symbols which will abstract us from the
file format and ABI and we can then ask for the objective C class symbol for
a class and find out which object file it was defined in.
llvm-svn: 145744
Fixed templates with NonTypeTemplateParmDecl objects. For example:
template <unsigned N>
....
This fixes SmallVector and all of the other classes that have template params
that are non types.
llvm-svn: 145667
to find Objective-C class types by looking in the
symbol tables for the individual object files.
I did this as follows:
- I added code to SymbolFileSymtab that vends
Clang types for symbols matching the pattern
"_OBJC_CLASS_$_NSMyClassName," making them
appear as Objective-C classes. This only occurs
in modules that do not have debug information,
since otherwise SymbolFileDWARF would be in
charge of looking up types.
- I made a new SymbolVendor subclass for the
Apple Objective-C runtime that is in charge of
making global lookups of Objective-C types. It
currently just sends out type lookup requests to
the appropriate SymbolFiles, but in the future we
will probably extend it to query the runtime more
completely.
I also modified a testcase whose behavior is changed
by the fact that we now actually return an Objective-C
type for __NSCFString.
llvm-svn: 145526
management of what allocations remain after an
expression finishes executing. This saves around
2.5KiB per expression for simple expressions.
llvm-svn: 145342
to launch a process for debugging. Since this isn't supported on all platforms,
we need to do what we used to do if this isn't supported. I added:
bool
Platform::CanDebugProcess ();
This will get checked before trying to launch a process for debugging and then
fall back to launching the process through the current host debugger. This
should solve the issue for linux and keep the platform code clean.
Centralized logging code for logging errors, warnings and logs when reporting
things for modules or symbol files. Both lldb_private::Module and
lldb_private::SymbolFile now have the following member functions:
void
LogMessage (Log *log, const char *format, ...);
void
ReportWarning (const char *format, ...);
void
ReportError (const char *format, ...);
These will all output the module name and object (if any) such as:
"error: lldb.so ...."
"warning: my_archive.a(foo.o) ...."
This will keep the output consistent and stop a lot of logging calls from
having to try and output all of the information that uniquely identifies
a module or symbol file. Many places in the code were grabbing the path to the
object file manually and if the module represented a .o file in an archive, we
would see log messages like:
error: foo.a - some error happened
llvm-svn: 145219
to allow variables in the persistent variable store to know
how to complete themselves from debug information. That
fixes a variety of bugs during dematerialization of
expression results and also makes persistent variable and
result variables ($foo, $4, ...) more useful.
I have also added logging improvements that make it much
easier to figure out how types are moving from place to
place, and made some checking a little more aggressive.
The commit includes patches to Clang which are currently being
integrated into Clang proper; once these fixes are in Clang
top-of-tree, these patches will be removed. The patches don't
fix API; rather, they fix some internal bugs in Clang's
ASTImporter that were exposed when LLDB was moving types from
place to place multiple times.
llvm-svn: 144969
completion information between different AST
contexts. It works like this:
- If a Decl is imported from a context that
has completion metadata, then that Decl
is associated with the same completion
information (possibly none) as the Decl
it was imported from.
- If a Decl is imported from a context that
does not have completion metadata, then it
is marked as completable by consulting the
Decl and context it was imported from.
llvm-svn: 144838
for each AST context it knows about in a single
object. This makes it faster to look up the
appropriate ASTImpoter for a given ASTContext
pair and also makes it much easier to delete all
metadata for a given AST context.
In the future, this fix will allow the
ClangASTImporter to propagate completion
information between the metadata for different
AST contexts as its minions move AST objects
around.
llvm-svn: 144835
rather than individually on behalf of each
ASTContext. This allows the ASTImporter to know
about all containers of types, which will let it
be smarter about forwarding information about
type origins. That means that the following
sequence of steps will be possible (after a few
more changes):
- Import a type from a Module's ASTContext into
an expression parser ASTContext, tracking its
origin information -- this works now.
- Because the result of the expression uses that
type, import it from the expression parser
ASTContext into the Target's scratch AST
context, forwarding the origin information --
this needs to be added.
- For a later expression that uses the result,
import the type from the Target's scratch AST
context, still forwarding origin information
-- this also needs to be added.
- Use the intact origin information to complete
the type as needed -- this works now if the
origin information is present.
To this end, I made the following changes:
- ASTImporter top-level copy functions now
require both a source and a destination AST
context parameter.
- The ASTImporter now knows how to purge
records related to an ASTContext that is
going away.
- The Target now owns and creates the ASTImporter
whenever the main executable changes or (in the
absence of a main executable) on demand.
llvm-svn: 144802
of problems with Objective-C object completion. To go
along with the LLVM/Clang-side fixes, we have a variety
of Objective-C improvements.
Fixes include:
- It is now possible to run expressions when stopped in
an Objective-C class method and have "self" act just
like "self" would act in the class method itself (i.e.,
[self classMethod] works without casting the return
type if debug info is present). To accomplish this,
the expression masquerades as a class method added by
a category.
- Objective-C objects can now provide methods and
properties and methods to Clang on demand (i.e., the
ASTImporter sets hasExternalVisibleDecls on Objective-C
interface objects).
- Objective-C built-in types, which had long been a bone
of contention (should we be using "id"? "id*"?), are
now fetched correctly using accessor functions on
ClangASTContext. We inhibit searches for them in the
debug information.
There are also a variety of logging fixes, and I made two
changes to the test suite:
- Enabled a test case for Objective-C properties in the
current translation unit.
- Added a test case for calling Objective-C class methods
when stopped in a class method.
llvm-svn: 144607
Fixed an issues with the SBType and SBTypeMember classes:
- Fixed SBType to be able to dump itself from python
- Fixed SBType::GetNumberOfFields() to return the correct value for objective C interfaces
- Fixed SBTypeMember to be able to dump itself from python
- Fixed the SBTypeMember ability to get a field offset in bytes (the value
being returned was wrong)
- Added the SBTypeMember ability to get a field offset in bits
Cleaned up a lot of the Stream usage in the SB API files.
llvm-svn: 144493
This is the actual fix for the above radar where global variables that weren't
initialized were not being shown correctly when leaving the DWARF in the .o
files. Global variables that aren't intialized have symbols in the .o files
that specify they are undefined and external to the .o file, yet document the
size of the variable. This allows the compiler to emit a single copy, but makes
it harder for our DWARF in .o files with the executable having a debug map
because the symbol for the global in the .o file doesn't exist in a section
that we can assign a fixed up linked address to, and also the DWARF contains
an invalid address in the "DW_OP_addr" location (always zero). This means that
the DWARF is incorrect and actually maps all such global varaibles to the
first file address in the .o file which is usually the first function. So we
can fix this in either of two ways: make a new fake section in the .o file
so that we have a file address in the .o file that we can relink, or fix the
the variable as it is created in the .o file DWARF parser and actually give it
the file address from the executable. Each variable contains a
SymbolContextScope, or a single pointer that helps us to recreate where the
variables came from (which module, file, function, etc). This context helps
us to resolve any file addresses that might be in the location description of
the variable by pointing us to which file the file address comes from, so we
can just replace the SymbolContextScope and also fix up the location, which we
would have had to do for the other case as well, and update the file address.
Now globals display correctly.
The above changes made it possible to determine if a variable is a global
or static variable when parsing DWARF. The DWARF emits a DW_TAG_variable tag
for each variable (local, global, or static), yet DWARF provides no way for
us to classify these variables into these categories. We can now detect when
a variable has a simple address expressions as its location and this will help
us classify these correctly.
While making the above changes I also noticed that we had two symbol types:
eSymbolTypeExtern and eSymbolTypeUndefined which mean essentially the same
thing: the symbol is not defined in the current object file. Symbol objects
also have a bit that specifies if a symbol is externally visible, so I got
rid of the eSymbolTypeExtern symbol type and moved all code locations that
used it to use the eSymbolTypeUndefined type.
llvm-svn: 144489
interfaces. This allows us to pull in Objective-C
method types on demand, which is also now implemented.
Also added a minor fix to prevent multiple-definition
errors for "Class" and "id".
llvm-svn: 144405
lookups for Objective-C methods by selector.
Right now all it does is print log information.
Also improved the logging for imported TagDecls
to indicate whether or not the definition for
the imported TagDecl is complete.
llvm-svn: 144203
C++ vtables, fixing a record layout problem in the
expression parser.
Also fixed various problems with the generation
and unpacking of llvm.zip given our new better
handling of multiple architectures in the LLVM
build.
(And added a log message that will hopefully catch
record layout problems in the future.)
llvm-svn: 143741
- If you download and build the sources in the Xcode project, x86_64 builds
by default using the "llvm.zip" checkpointed LLVM.
- If you delete the "lldb/llvm.zip" and the "lldb/llvm" folder, and build the
Xcode project will download the right LLVM sources and build them from
scratch
- If you have a "lldb/llvm" folder already that contains a "lldb/llvm/lib"
directory, we will use the sources you have placed in the LLDB directory.
Python can now be disabled for platforms that don't support it.
Changed the way the libllvmclang.a files get used. They now all get built into
arch specific directories and never get merged into universal binaries as this
was causing issues where you would have to go and delete the file if you wanted
to build an extra architecture slice.
llvm-svn: 143678
allows us to set __attribute__ ((used)) on expressions
that masquerade as methods. When we are stopped in
classes in anonymous namespaces, this fix (and enabling
__attribute__ ((used)) on the method) will allow
expressions to run.
llvm-svn: 143560
Fixed an issue where the DWARF might mention that a class has a constructor
(default, copy or move), destructor, or an assignment operator (copy or move)
and it might not have an actual implementation in your code. Then you try and
use this struct or class in an expression and the JIT would ask for the
address of these methods that were in the declaration, yet there are none.
We now "do the right thing" for trivial ctors, dtors and assignment operators
by telling the methods that they are are defaulted and trivial, and clang will
then just do all of the work with builtins!
llvm-svn: 143528
generated special member functions (constructors,
destructors, etc.) for classes that don't really have
them. We needed to mark these as artificial to reflect
the debug information; this bug does that for
constructors and destructors.
The "etc." case (certain assignment operators, mostly)
remains to be fixed.
llvm-svn: 143526