When Python does not exist on the system path, LLDB will be unable
to load it. Fix this by copying the dll to the output folder so
it will be side-by-side with lldb.exe.
llvm-svn: 225218
variable (now provided both by the normal parent LLVM CMake files and by
the LLVMConfig.cmake file used by the standalone build).
This allows LLDB to build into and install into correctly suffixed
libdirs. This is especially significant for LLDB because the python
extension building done by CMake directly uses multilib suffixes when
the host OS does, and the host OS will not always look back and forth
between them. As a consequence, before LLVM, Clang, and LLDB (and every
other subproject) had support for using LLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX, you couldn't
build or install LLDB on a multilib system with its python extensions
enabled. With this patch (on top of all the others I have submitted
throughout the project), I'm finally able to build and install LLDB on
my system with Python support enabled. I'm also able to actually run the
LLDB test suite, etc. Now, a *huge* number of the tests still fail on my
Linux system, but hey, actually running them and them testing the
debugger is a huge step forward. =D
llvm-svn: 224930
names can then be used in place of breakpoint id's or breakpoint id
ranges in all the commands that operate on breakpoints.
<rdar://problem/10103959>
llvm-svn: 224392
Our actual view of registers is a set of register sets, each one of which contains a subset of the actual registers
This makes trivial scripting operations tedious ("I just want to read r7!")
This helper allows things like: print lldb.frame.reg["r7"]
Fixes rdar://19185662
llvm-svn: 224275
Such a persisted version is equivalent to evaluating the value via the expression evaluator, and holding on to the $n result of the expression, except this API can be used on SBValues that do not obviously come from an expression (e.g. are the result of a memory lookup)
Expose this via SBValue::Persist() in our public API layer, and ValueObject::Persist() in the lldb_private layer
Includes testcase
Fixes rdar://19136664
llvm-svn: 223711
like tgmath.h and stdarg.h into the LLDB installation,
and then finding them through the Host infrastructure.
Also add a script to actually do this on Mac OS X.
llvm-svn: 223430
SWIG is searched under certain paths within python script. CMake can
detect SWIG with find_package(SWIG). This is used iff user checks
LLDB_ENABLE_PYTHON_SCRIPTS_SWIG_API_GENERATION. If
buildSwigWrapperClasses.py does not receive swigExecutable argument,
then the script will use its current search implementation.
llvm-svn: 222262
Fixed include:
- Change Platform::ResolveExecutable(...) to take a ModuleSpec instead of a FileSpec + ArchSpec to help resolve executables correctly when we have just a path + UUID (no arch).
- Add the ability to set the listener in SBLaunchInfo and SBAttachInfo in case you don't want to use the debugger as the default listener.
- Modified all places that use the SBLaunchInfo/SBAttachInfo and the internal ProcessLaunchInfo/ProcessAttachInfo to not take a listener as a parameter since it is in the launch/attach info now
- Load a module's sections by default when removing a module from a target. Since we create JIT modules for expressions and helper functions, we could end up with stale data in the section load list if a module was removed from the target as the section load list would still have entries for the unloaded module. Target now has the following functions to help unload all sections a single or multiple modules:
size_t
Target::UnloadModuleSections (const ModuleList &module_list);
size_t
Target::UnloadModuleSections (const lldb::ModuleSP &module_sp);
llvm-svn: 222167
Two flags are introduced:
- preferred display language (as in, ObjC vs. C++)
- summary capping (as in, should a limit be put to the amount of data retrieved)
The meaning - if any - of these options is for individual formatters to establish
The topic of a subsequent commit will be to actually wire these through to individual data formatters
llvm-svn: 221482
This works similarly to the {thread/frame/process/target.script:...} feature - you write a summary string, part of which is
${var.script:someFuncName}
someFuncName is expected to be declared as
def someFuncName(SBValue,otherArgument) - essentially the same as a summary function
Since . -> [] are the only allowed separators, and % is used for custom formatting, .script: would not be a legitimate symbol anyway, which makes this non-ambiguous
llvm-svn: 220821
New functions to give client applications to tools to discover target byte sizes
for addresses prior to ReadMemory. Also added GetPlatform and ReadMemory to the
SBTarget class, since they seemed to be useful utilities to have.
Each new API has had a test case added.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D5867
llvm-svn: 220372
after all the commands have been executed except if one of the commands was an execution control
command that stopped because of a signal or exception.
Also adds a variant of SBCommandInterpreter::HandleCommand that takes an SBExecutionContext. That
way you can run an lldb command targeted at a particular target, thread or process w/o having to
select same before running the command.
Also exposes CommandInterpreter::HandleCommandsFromFile to the SBCommandInterpreter API, since that
seemed generally useful.
llvm-svn: 219654
Reviewed at http://reviews.llvm.org/D5738
This adds an SB API into SBProcess:
bool SBProcess::IsInstrumentationRuntimePresent(InstrumentationRuntimeType type);
which simply tells whether a particular InstrumentationRuntime (read "ASan") plugin is present and active.
llvm-svn: 219560
Reviewed at http://reviews.llvm.org/D5736
The new test cases for ASan fail if the llvm build that is used with LLDB doesn't have compiler-rt (because the resulting compiler then cannot build with -fsanitize=address). Let's include compiler-rt in build-llvm.pl script and make sure we actually *build* it by removing the NO_RUNTIME_LIBS=1 argument used in the make line. After this, the ASan tests pass on a fresh svn checkout.
llvm-svn: 219555
do that (RunCommandInterpreter, HandleCommands, HandleCommandsFromFile) to gather
the options into an options class. Also expose that to the SB API's.
Change the way the "-o" options to the lldb driver are processed so:
1) They are run synchronously - didn't really make any sense to run the asynchronously.
2) The stop on error
3) "quit" in one of the -o commands will not quit lldb - not the command interpreter
that was running the -o commands.
I added an entry to the run options to stop-on-crash, but I haven't implemented that yet.
llvm-svn: 219553
Reviewed at http://reviews.llvm.org/D5592
This patch gives LLDB some ability to interact with AddressSanitizer runtime library, on top of what we already have (historical memory stack traces provided by ASan). Namely, that's the ability to stop on an error caught by ASan, and access the report information that are associated with it. The report information is also exposed into SB API.
More precisely this patch...
adds a new plugin type, InstrumentationRuntime, which should serve as a generic superclass for other instrumentation runtime libraries, these plugins get notified when modules are loaded, so they get a chance to "activate" when a specific dynamic library is loaded
an instance of this plugin type, AddressSanitizerRuntime, which activates itself when it sees the ASan dynamic library or founds ASan statically linked in the executable
adds a collection of these plugins into the Process class
AddressSanitizerRuntime sets an internal breakpoint on __asan::AsanDie(), and when this breakpoint gets hit, it retrieves the report information from ASan
this breakpoint is then exposed as a new StopReason, eStopReasonInstrumentation, with a new StopInfo subclass, InstrumentationRuntimeStopInfo
the StopInfo superclass is extended with a m_extended_info field (it's a StructuredData::ObjectSP), that can hold arbitrary JSON-like data, which is the way the new plugin provides the report data
the "thread info" command now accepts a "-s" flag that prints out the JSON data of a stop reason (same way the "-j" flag works now)
SBThread has a new API, GetStopReasonExtendedInfoAsJSON, which dumps the JSON string into a SBStream
adds a test case for all of this
I plan to also get rid of the original ASan plugin (memory history stack traces) and use an instance of AddressSanitizerRuntime for that purpose.
Kuba
llvm-svn: 219546
On a suggestion from Jim Ingham, this class allows you to very easily define synthetic child providers that return a synthetic value (in the sense of r219330), but no children
Also, document this new feature in our www docs
llvm-svn: 219337
The way to do this is to write a synthetic child provider for your type, and have it vend the (optional) get_value function.
If get_value is defined, and it returns a valid SBValue, that SBValue's value (as in lldb_private::Value) will be used as the synthetic ValueObject's Value
The rationale for doing things this way is twofold:
- there are many possible ways to define a "value" (SBData, a Python number, ...) but SBValue seems general enough as a thing that stores a "value", so we just trade values that way and that keeps our currency trivial
- we could introduce a new level of layering (ValueObjectSyntheticValue), a new kind of formatter (synthetic value producer), but that would complicate the model (can I have a dynamic with no synthetic children but synthetic value? synthetic value with synthetic children but no dynamic?), and I really couldn't see much benefit to be reaped from this added complexity in the matrix
On the other hand, just defining a synthetic child provider with a get_value but returning no actual children is easy enough that it's not a significant road-block to adoption of this feature
Comes with a test case
llvm-svn: 219330
the user level. It adds the ability to invent new stepping modes implemented by python classes,
and to view the current thread plan stack and to some extent alter it.
I haven't gotten to documentation or tests yet. But this should not cause any behavior changes
if you don't use it, so its safe to check it in now and work on it incrementally.
llvm-svn: 218642
This script supports displaying developer-focused backtraces when working
with mixed Java and C/C++ stack frames within lldb. On Android, this represents
just about every app, since all apps start in Java code.
The script currently supports the Art JVM when run on host-side x86_64 and x86,
but does require a patch not yet accepted in AOSP:
AOSP patch: https://android-review.googlesource.com/#/c/106523/
The backtraces will hide Art VM machinery for interpreted and AOT code
and display the Java file/line numbers for Java code, while displaying
native backtrace info for native frames. Effectively the developer will
get an app-centric view of the call stack.
This script is not yet tested on device-side Art nor is it tested on
any architecture other than x86_64 or x86 32-bit. Several changes were
needed on the AOSP side to enable it to work properly for x86_64 and x86,
so it is quite likely we'll need to do something similar for other cpu
architectures as well.
Change by Tong Shen
llvm-svn: 218315
For the Objective-C case, we do not have a "function type" notion, so we actually end up wrapping the clang ObjCMethodDecl in the Impl object, and ask function-y questions of it
In general, you can always ask for return type, number of arguments, and type of each argument using the TypeMemberFunction layer - but in the C++ case, you can also acquire a Type object for the function itself, which instead you can't do in the Objective-C case
llvm-svn: 218132
This makes sure that nothing that requires Python is being built
when the LLDB_DISABLE_PYTHON flag is being passed in.
It also changes a use of CPPFLAGS to CPP.Flags since the former is overridden
when external flags are passed in while the later is not. I'm not sure exactly
why LLDB_DISABLE_PYTHON is in CXXFLAGS rather than CPPFLAGS,
but cleaning that up is for another commit.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4918
llvm-svn: 217414