Most platforms have "/dev/null". Windows has "nul". Instead of
hardcoding the string /dev/null at various places, make a constant
that contains the correct value depending on the platform, and use
that everywhere instead.
llvm-svn: 250331
* ArchSpec::MergeFrom() would erroneously promote an unspecified
unknown to a specified unknown when both the ArchSpec and the merged
in ArchSpec were both unspecified unknowns. This no longer happens,
which fixes issues with global module cache lookup in some
situations.
* Added ArchSpec::DumpTriple(Stream&) that now properly prints
unspecified unknowns as '*' and specified unknows as 'unknown'.
This makes it trivial to tell the difference between the two.
Converted printing code over ot using DumpTriple() rather than
building from scratch.
* Fixed up a couple places that were not guaranteeing that an
unspecified unknown was recorded as such.
llvm-svn: 250253
set to true, but all plans run by RunThreadPlan need to have this set to false so they will
return control to RunThreadPlan without consulting plans higher on the stack.
Since this seems like a common error, I also modified RunThreadPlan to enforce this behavior.
<rdar://problem/22543166>
llvm-svn: 250084
strictly necessary because RunToAddress is always used as a subsidiary plan, so
it's ShouldStop seldom matters. But get it right anyway.
llvm-svn: 250083
Instead check what languages are supported for expressions; use C if available,
but otherwise pick one of the supported languages.
This can be overridden using the target settings.
<rdar://problem/22290878>
llvm-svn: 249864
This involved changing the TypeSystem::CreateInstance to take a module or a target. This allows type systems to create an AST for modules (no expression support needed) or targets (expression support is needed) and return the correct class instance for both cases.
llvm-svn: 249747
Introduce the notion of Language-based formatter prefix/suffix
This is meant for languages that share certain data types but present them in syntatically different ways, such that LLDB can now have language-based awareness of which of the syntax variations it has to present to the user when formatting those values
This is goodness for new languages and interoperability, but is NFC for existing languages. As such, existing tests cover this
llvm-svn: 249587
Added the ability to specify if an attach by name should be synchronous or not in SBAttachInfo and ProcessAttachInfo.
<rdar://problem/22821480>
llvm-svn: 249361
The ClangExpressionVariable::CreateVariableInList functions looked cute, but
caused more confusion than they solved. I removed them, and instead made sure
that there are adequate facilities for easily adding newly-constructed
ExpressionVariables to lists.
I also made some of the constructors that are common be generic, so that it's
possible to construct expression variables from generic places (like the ABI and
ValueObject) without having to know the specifics about the class.
llvm-svn: 249095
Currently, it only supports Objective-C - C++ types can be looked up through debug info via 'image lookup -t', whereas ObjC types via this command are looked up by runtime introspection
This behavior is in line with type lookup's behavior in Xcode 7, but I am definitely open to feedback as to what makes the most sense here
llvm-svn: 249047
Also added some target-level search functions so that persistent variables and
symbols can be searched for without hand-iterating across the map of
TypeSystems.
llvm-svn: 249027
This is meant to support languages that have a scripting mode with top-level code that acts as global
For now, this flag only controls whether 'frame variable' will attempt to treat globals as locals when within such a function
llvm-svn: 248960
the corresponding TypeSystem. This makes sense because what kind of data there
is -- and how it can be looked up -- depends on the language.
Functionality that is common to all type systems is factored out into
PersistentExpressionState.
llvm-svn: 248934
There are still a bunch of dependencies on the plug-in, but this helps to
identify them.
There are also a few more bits we need to move (and abstract, for example the
ClangPersistentVariables).
llvm-svn: 248612
Summary:
The following situation occured in TestAttachResume:
The inferior was stoped at a breakpoint and we did a continue, immediately followed by a detach.
Since there was a trap instruction under the IP, the continue did a step-over-breakpoint before
resuming the inferior for real. In some cases, the detach command was executed between these two
events (after the step-over stop, but before continue). Here, public state was running, but
private state was stopped. This caused a problem because HaltForDestroyOrDetach was checking the
public state to see whether it needs to stop the process (call Halt()), but Halt() was checking
the private state and concluded that there is nothing for it to do.
Solution: Instead of Halt() call SendAsyncInterrupt(), which will then cause Halt() to be
executed in the context of the private state thread. I also rename HaltForDestroyOrDetach to
reflect it does not call halt directly.
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13056
llvm-svn: 248371
Both GNU AS and LLVM emits language type DW_LANG_Mips_Assembler for
all assembly code.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12962
llvm-svn: 248146
This cleans up type systems to be more pluggable. Prior to this we had issues:
- Module, SymbolFile, and many others has "ClangASTContext &GetClangASTContext()" functions. All have been switched over to use "TypeSystem *GetTypeSystemForLanguage()"
- Cleaned up any places that were using the GetClangASTContext() functions to use TypeSystem
- Cleaned up Module so that it no longer has dedicated type system member variables:
lldb::ClangASTContextUP m_ast; ///< The Clang AST context for this module.
lldb::GoASTContextUP m_go_ast; ///< The Go AST context for this module.
Now we have a type system map:
typedef std::map<lldb::LanguageType, lldb::TypeSystemSP> TypeSystemMap;
TypeSystemMap m_type_system_map; ///< A map of any type systems associated with this module
- Many places in code were using ClangASTContext static functions to place with CompilerType objects and add modifiers (const, volatile, restrict) and to make typedefs, L and R value references and more. These have been made into CompilerType functions that are abstract:
class CompilerType
{
...
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Return a new CompilerType that is a L value reference to this type if
// this type is valid and the type system supports L value references,
// else return an invalid type.
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
CompilerType
GetLValueReferenceType () const;
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Return a new CompilerType that is a R value reference to this type if
// this type is valid and the type system supports R value references,
// else return an invalid type.
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
CompilerType
GetRValueReferenceType () const;
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Return a new CompilerType adds a const modifier to this type if
// this type is valid and the type system supports const modifiers,
// else return an invalid type.
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
CompilerType
AddConstModifier () const;
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Return a new CompilerType adds a volatile modifier to this type if
// this type is valid and the type system supports volatile modifiers,
// else return an invalid type.
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
CompilerType
AddVolatileModifier () const;
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Return a new CompilerType adds a restrict modifier to this type if
// this type is valid and the type system supports restrict modifiers,
// else return an invalid type.
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
CompilerType
AddRestrictModifier () const;
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Create a typedef to this type using "name" as the name of the typedef
// this type is valid and the type system supports typedefs, else return
// an invalid type.
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
CompilerType
CreateTypedef (const char *name, const CompilerDeclContext &decl_ctx) const;
};
Other changes include:
- Removed "CompilerType TypeSystem::GetIntTypeFromBitSize(...)" and CompilerType TypeSystem::GetFloatTypeFromBitSize(...) and replaced it with "CompilerType TypeSystem::GetBuiltinTypeForEncodingAndBitSize(lldb::Encoding encoding, size_t bit_size);"
- Fixed code in Type.h to not request the full type for a type for no good reason, just request the forward type and let the type expand as needed
llvm-svn: 247953
The Go runtime schedules user level threads (goroutines) across real threads.
This adds an OS plugin to create memory threads for goroutines.
It supports the 1.4 and 1.5 go runtime.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5871
llvm-svn: 247852
Before we had:
ClangFunction
ClangUtilityFunction
ClangUserExpression
and code all over in lldb that explicitly made Clang-based expressions. This patch adds an Expression
base class, and three pure virtual implementations for the Expression kinds:
FunctionCaller
UtilityFunction
UserExpression
You can request one of these expression types from the Target using the Get<ExpressionType>ForLanguage.
The Target will then consult all the registered TypeSystem plugins, and if the type system that matches
the language can make an expression of that kind, it will do so and return it.
Because all of the real expression types need to communicate with their ExpressionParser in a uniform way,
I also added a ExpressionTypeSystemHelper class that expressions generically can vend, and a ClangExpressionHelper
that encapsulates the operations that the ClangExpressionParser needs to perform on the ClangExpression types.
Then each of the Clang* expression kinds constructs the appropriate helper to do what it needs.
The patch also fixes a wart in the UtilityFunction that to use it you had to create a parallel FunctionCaller
to actually call the function made by the UtilityFunction. Now the UtilityFunction can be asked to vend a
FunctionCaller that will run its function. This cleaned up a lot of boiler plate code using UtilityFunctions.
Note, in this patch all the expression types explicitly depend on the LLVM JIT and IR, and all the common
JIT running code is in the FunctionCaller etc base classes. At some point we could also abstract that dependency
but I don't see us adding another back end in the near term, so I'll leave that exercise till it is actually necessary.
llvm-svn: 247720
This used to be hardcoded in the FormatManager, but in a pluginized world that is not the right way to go
So, move this step to the Language plugin such that appropriate language plugins for a type get a say about adding candidates to the formatters lookup tables
llvm-svn: 247112
It is required because of the following edge case on arm:
bx <addr> Non-tail call in a no return function
[data-pool] Marked with $d mapping symbol
The return address of the function call will point to the data pool but
we have to treat it as code so the StackFrame can calculate the symbols
correctly.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12556
llvm-svn: 246958
stores information about a variable that different parts of LLDB use, from the
compiler-specific portion that only the expression parser cares about.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D12602
llvm-svn: 246871
* Change Module::MatchesModuleSpec to return true in case the file spec
in the specified module spec matches with the platform file spec, but
not with the local file spec
* Change the module_resolver used when resolving a remote shared module
to always set the platform file spec to the file spec requested
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12601
llvm-svn: 246852
* Use the frame's context (instead of just the target's) when evaluating,
so that the language of the frame's CU can be used to select the
compiler and/or compiler options to use when parsing the expression.
This allows for modules built with mixed languages to be parsed in
the context of their frame.
* Add all C and C++ language variants when determining the language options
to set.
* Enable C++ language options when language is C or ObjC as a workaround since
the expression parser uses features of C++ to capture values.
* Enable ObjC language options when language is C++ as a workaround for ObjC
requirements.
* Disable C++11 language options when language is C++03.
* Add test TestMixedLanguages.py to check that the language being used
for evaluation is that of the frame.
* Fix test TestExprOptions.py to check for C++11 instead of C++ since C++ has
to be enabled for C, and remove redundant expr --language test for ObjC.
* Fix TestPersistentPtrUpdate.py to not require C++11 in C.
Reviewed by: clayborg, spyffe, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11102
llvm-svn: 246829
Summary:
There was a race condition in Process class, where we would not wait for process stdout to
propagate fully before we would shut down the connection (repro case: slow down the stdio thread
by placing a sleep right at the end of the while loop in Communication::ReadThread). The Process
class already tried to solve this problem by synchronizing with the read thread in
Process::ShouldBroadcastEvent, but unfortunately the connection got closed before that in
Process::SetExitStatus. I solve this issue by delaying the connection shutdown until we get a
chance to process the event and synchronize. Alternatively, I could have moved the
synchronization point to an earlier point in SetExitStatus, but it seems safer to delay the
shutdown until other things get a chance to notice the process has exited.
Reviewers: clayborg, ovyalov
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12558
llvm-svn: 246753
Summary:
This doesn't exist in other LLVM projects any longer and doesn't
do anything.
Reviewers: chaoren, labath
Subscribers: emaste, tberghammer, lldb-commits, danalbert
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12586
llvm-svn: 246749
Historically, data formatters all exist in a global repository (the category map)
On top of that, some formatters can be "hardcoded" when the conditions under which they apply are not expressible as a typename (or typename regex)
This change paves the way to move formatters into per-language buckets such that the C++ plugin is responsible for ownership of the C++ formatters, and so on
The advantages of this are:
a) language formatters only get created when they might apply
b) formatters for a language are clearly owned by the matching language plugin
The current model is one of static instantiation, that is a language knows the full set of formatters it vends and that is only asked-for once, and then handed off to the FormatManager
In a future revision it might be interesting to add similar ability to the language runtimes, and monitor for certain shared library events to add even more library-specific formatters
No formatters are moved as part of this change, so practically speaking this is NFC
llvm-svn: 246568
Historically, data formatters all exist in a global repository (the category map)
On top of that, some formatters can be "hardcoded" when the conditions under which they apply are not expressible as a typename (or typename regex)
This change paves the way to move formatters into per-language buckets such that the C++ plugin is responsible for ownership of the C++ formatters, and so on
The advantages of this are:
a) language formatters only get created when they might apply
b) formatters for a language are clearly owned by the matching language plugin
The current model is one of static instantiation, that is a language knows the full set of formatters it vends and that is only asked-for once, and then handed off to the FormatManager
In a future revision it might be interesting to add similar ability to the language runtimes, and monitor for certain shared library events to add even more library-specific formatters
No formatters are moved as part of this change, so practically speaking this is NFC
llvm-svn: 246515
The Language plugin is menat to answer language-specific questions that are not bound to the existence of a process. Those are still the domain of the LanguageRuntime plugin
The Language plugin will, instead, answer questions such as providing language-specific data formatters or expression evaluation
At the moment, the interface is hollowed out, and empty do-nothing plugins have been setup for ObjC, C++ and ObjC++
llvm-svn: 246212
This will do things like,
given mylibrary,
return
libmylibrary.dylib on OSX
mylibrary.dll on Windows
and so on for other platforms
It is currently implemented for Windows, Darwin, and Linux. Other platforms should fill in accordingly
llvm-svn: 246131
Added a new class called DWARFDIE that contains a DWARFCompileUnit and DWARFDebugInfoEntry so that these items always stay together.
There were many places where we just handed out DWARFDebugInfoEntry pointers and then use them with a compile unit that may or may not be the correct one. Clients outside of DWARFCompileUnit and DWARFDebugInfoEntry should all be dealing with DWARFDIE instances instead of playing with DWARFCompileUnit/DWARFDebugInfoEntry pairs manually.
This paves to the way for some modifications that are coming for DWO.
llvm-svn: 246100
SUMMARY:
This patch implements Target::GetBreakableLoadAddress() method that takes an address
and checks for any reason there is a better address than this to put a breakpoint on.
If there is then return that address.
MIPS uses this method to avoid breakpoint in delay slot.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: jingham, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, jaydeep, nitesh.jain, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://http://reviews.llvm.org/D12184
llvm-svn: 246015
Create a new "lldb_private::CompilerDeclContext" class that will replace all direct uses of "clang::DeclContext" when used in compiler agnostic code, yet still allow for conversion to clang::DeclContext subclasses by clang specific code. This completes the abstraction of type parsing by removing all "clang::" references from the SymbolFileDWARF. The new "lldb_private::CompilerDeclContext" class abstracts decl contexts found in compiler type systems so they can be used in internal API calls. The TypeSystem is required to support CompilerDeclContexts with new pure virtual functions that start with "DeclContext" in the member function names. Converted all code that used lldb_private::ClangNamespaceDecl over to use the new CompilerDeclContext class and removed the ClangNamespaceDecl.cpp and ClangNamespaceDecl.h files.
Removed direct use of clang APIs from SBType and now use the abstract type systems to correctly explore types.
Bulk renames for things that used to return a ClangASTType which is now CompilerType:
"Type::GetClangFullType()" to "Type::GetFullCompilerType()"
"Type::GetClangLayoutType()" to "Type::GetLayoutCompilerType()"
"Type::GetClangForwardType()" to "Type::GetForwardCompilerType()"
"Value::GetClangType()" to "Value::GetCompilerType()"
"Value::SetClangType (const CompilerType &)" to "Value::SetCompilerType (const CompilerType &)"
"ValueObject::GetClangType ()" to "ValueObject::GetCompilerType()"
many more renames that are similar.
llvm-svn: 245905
for eh_frame and stabs register numberings. This is not
complete but it's a step in the right direction. It's almost
entirely mechanical.
lldb informally uses "gcc register numbering" to mean eh_frame.
Why? Probably because there's a notorious bug with gcc on i386
darwin where the register numbers in eh_frame were incorrect.
In all other cases, eh_frame register numbering is identical to
dwarf.
lldb informally uses "gdb register numbering" to mean stabs.
There are no official definitions of stabs register numbers
for different architectures, so the implementations of gdb
and gcc are the de facto reference source.
There were some incorrect uses of these register number types
in lldb already. I fixed the ones that I saw as I made
this change.
This commit changes all references to "gcc" and "gdb" register
numbers in lldb to "eh_frame" and "stabs" to make it clear
what is actually being represented.
lldb cannot parse the stabs debug format, and given that no
one is using stabs any more, it is unlikely that it ever will.
A more comprehensive cleanup would remove the stabs register
numbers altogether - it's unnecessary cruft / complication to
all of our register structures.
In ProcessGDBRemote, when we get register definitions from
the gdb-remote stub, we expect to see "gcc:" (qRegisterInfo)
or "gcc_regnum" (qXfer:features:read: packet to get xml payload).
This patch changes ProcessGDBRemote to also accept "ehframe:"
and "ehframe_regnum" from these remotes.
I did not change GDBRemoteCommunicationServerLLGS or debugserver
to send these new packets. I don't know what kind of interoperability
constraints we might be working under. At some point in the future
we should transition to using the more descriptive names.
Throughout lldb we're still using enum names like "gcc_r0" and "gdb_r0",
for eh_frame and stabs register numberings. These should be cleaned
up eventually too.
The sources link cleanly on macosx native with xcode build. I
don't think we'll see problems on other platforms but please let
me know if I broke anyone.
llvm-svn: 245141
SUMMARY:
Last 3bits of the watchpoint address are masked by the kernel. For example, n is
at 0x120010d00 and m is 0x120010d04. When a watchpoint is set at m, then watch
exception is generated even when n is read/written. To handle this case, instruction
at PC is emulated to find the base address of the load/store instruction. This address
is then appended to the description of the stop-info packet. Client then reads this
information to check whether the user has set a watchpoint on this address.
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: nitesh.jain, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, bhushan and lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11672
llvm-svn: 244864
On android .oat files (compiled java code) don't have symbol
information but on SDK 23+ it can be generated by the oatdump tool
(based on the dex information).
This CL adds logic to download this information and store it in the
module cache.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11936
llvm-svn: 244738
This is more preparation for multiple different kinds of types from different compilers (clang, Pascal, Go, RenderScript, Swift, etc).
llvm-svn: 244689
This is the work done by Ryan Brown from http://reviews.llvm.org/D8712 that makes a TypeSystem class and abstracts types to be able to use a type system.
All tests pass on MacOSX and passed on linux the last time this was submitted.
llvm-svn: 244679
contained within Process so that we won't be duplicating the warning
message if other parts of the code want to issue the message. Change
Process::PrintWarning to be a protected method - the public method
will be the PrintWarningOptimization et al. Also, Have
Thread::FunctionOptimizationWarning shortcut out if the warnings
have been disabled so that we don't (potentially) compute parts of
the SymbolContext unnecessarily.
llvm-svn: 244436
per Module instead of once per CompileUnit, and print the
module name. A module may have a mix of compile units built with
optimization and compile units built without optimization -- the
warning won't be printed until the user selects a stack frame of
a function that was built with optimization. And as before, it
will only be printed once per module per debug session.
<rdar://problem/19281172>
llvm-svn: 244281
The first part was in r243508 -- the extent of the UI changes in that
patchset was to add "[opt]" to the frame-format when a stack frame was
built with optimized code.
In this change, when a stack frame built with optimization is selected,
a message will be printed to the async output channel --
opt1.c was compiled with optimization - stepping may behave oddly; variables may not be available.
The warning will be only be printed once per source file in a debug session.
These warnings may be disabled by
settings set target.process.optimization-warnings false
Internally, a new Process::PrintWarning() method has been added for
warnings that we want to print only once to the user. It takes a type
of warning (currently only eWarningsOptimization) and an object
pointer (CompileUnit*) - the warning will only be printed once for a
given object pointer value.
This is a bit of a prototype of this change - I think we will be
tweaking it more in the future. But I wanted to land this and see
how it goes. Advanced users will find these warnings unnecessary
noise and will quickly disable them - but anyone who maintains a
debugger knows that debugging optimized code, without realizing it,
is a constant source of confusion and frustation for more typical
debugger users.
I imagine there will be more of these "warn once per whatever" style
warnings that we will want to add in the future and we'll need to
come up with a better way for enabling/disabling them. But I'm not
srue what form that warning settings should take and I didn't want
to code up something that we regret later, so for now I just added
another process setting for this one warning.
<rdar://problem/19281172>
llvm-svn: 244190
owners list, so the StopInfo machinery can get the list of owners without
some other thread being able to mess up the list by deleting/disabline one of its
locations in the process of doing so.
<rdar://problem/18685197>
llvm-svn: 243541
dSYMs, or reading binaries out of memory to the 'Host' log channel.
There's more to be done here, both for Mac and for other platforms,
but the initial set of new loggings are useful enough to check in
at this point.
llvm-svn: 243200
If the function is a template then the return type is part of the
function name. This CL fixes the parsing of these function names in
the case when the return type contains ':'.
The name of free functions in C++ don't have context part. Fix the
logic geting the function name without arguments out from a full
function name to handle this case.
Change the handling of step-in-avoid-regexp to match the value against
the function name without it's arguments and return value. This is
required because the default regex ("^std::") would match any template
function returning an std object.
Fifferential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11461
llvm-svn: 243099
Summary:
This replaces (void)x; usages where they x was subsequently
involved in an assertion with this macro to make the
intent more clear.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11451
llvm-svn: 243074
but that wasn't added to the list of reasons they don't explain. That
would mean we keep stepping after hitting the AsanDie breakpoint rather
than stopping when the Asan event occurred.
<rdar://problem/21925479>
llvm-svn: 243035
Target and breakpoints options were added:
breakpoint set --language lang --name func
settings set target.language pascal
These specify the Language to use when interpreting the breakpoint's
expression (note: currently only implemented for breakpoints on
identifiers). If the breakpoint language is not set, the target.language
setting is used.
This support is required by Pascal, for example, to set breakpoint at 'ns.foo'
for function 'foo' in namespace 'ns'.
Tests on the language were also added to Module::PrepareForFunctionNameLookup
for efficiency.
Reviewed by: clayborg
Subscribers: jingham, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11119
llvm-svn: 242844
Changed the "jthreads" key/value in the stop reply packets to be "jstopinfo". This JSON only contains threads with valid stop reasons and allows us not to have to ask about other threads via qThreadStopInfo when we are stepping. The "jstopinfo" only gets sent if there are more than one thread since the stop reply packet contains all the info needed for a single thread.
Added a Process::WillPublicStop() in case process subclasses want to do any extra gathering for public stops. For ProcessGDBRemote, we end up sending a jThreadsInfo packet to gather all expedited registers, expedited memory and MacOSX queue information. We only do this for public stops to minimize the packets we send when we have multiple private stops. Multiple private stops happen when a source level single step, step into or step out run the process multiple times while implementing the stepping, and none of these private stops make it out to the UI via notifications because they are private stops.
llvm-svn: 242593
For Hexagon we want to be able to call functions during debugging, however currently lldb only supports this when there is JIT support.
Although emulation using IR interpretation is an alternative, it is currently limited in that it can't make function calls.
In this patch we have extended the IR interpreter so that it can execute a function call on the target using register manipulation.
To do this we need to handle the Call IR instruction, passing arguments to a new thread plan and collecting any return values to pass back into the IR interpreter.
The new thread plan is needed to call an alternative ABI interface of "ABI::PerpareTrivialCall()", allowing more detailed information about arguments and return values.
Reviewers: jingham, spyffe
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits, ted, ADodds, deepak2427
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9404
llvm-svn: 242137
Summary:
- Consolidate Unix signals selection in UnixSignals.
- Make Unix signals available from platform.
- Add jSignalsInfo packet to retrieve Unix signals from remote platform.
- Get a copy of the platform signal for each remote process.
- Update SB API for signals.
- Update signal utility in test suite.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg
Subscribers: chaoren, jingham, labath, emaste, tberghammer, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11094
llvm-svn: 242101
Summary:
This commit avoids the Platform instance when spawning or attaching to a process in lldb-server.
Instead, I have the server call a (static) method of NativeProcessProtocol directly. The reason
for this is that I believe that NativeProcessProtocol should be decoupled from the Platform
(after all, it always knows which platform it is running on, unlike the rest of lldb).
Additionally, the kind of platform actions a NativeProcessProtocol instance is likely to differ
greatly from the platform actions of the lldb client, so I think the separation makes sense.
After this, the only dependency NativeProcessLinux has on PlatformLinux is the ResolveExecutable
method, which needs additional refactoring.
This is a resubmit of r241672, after it was reverted due to build failueres on non-linux
platforms.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10996
llvm-svn: 241796
platform-specific symbols that are not implemented on OS X.
The build error that caused this is
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
"lldb_private::NativeProcessProtocol::Attach(unsigned long long, lldb_private::NativeProcessProtocol::NativeDelegate&, std::__1::shared_ptr<lldb_private::NativeProcessProtocol>&)", referenced from:
lldb_private::process_gdb_remote::GDBRemoteCommunicationServerLLGS::AttachToProcess(unsigned long long) in liblldb-core.a(GDBRemoteCommunicationServerLLGS.o)
"lldb_private::NativeProcessProtocol::Launch(lldb_private::ProcessLaunchInfo&, lldb_private::NativeProcessProtocol::NativeDelegate&, std::__1::shared_ptr<lldb_private::NativeProcessProtocol>&)", referenced from:
lldb_private::process_gdb_remote::GDBRemoteCommunicationServerLLGS::LaunchProcess() in liblldb-core.a(GDBRemoteCommunicationServerLLGS.o)
ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64
clang: error: linker command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see invocation)
llvm-svn: 241688
Summary:
This commit avoids the Platform instance when spawning or attaching to a process in lldb-server.
Instead, I have the server call a (static) method of NativeProcessProtocol directly. The reason
for this is that I believe that NativeProcessProtocol should be decoupled from the Platform
(after all, it always knows which platform it is running on, unlike the rest of lldb).
Additionally, the kind of platform actions a NativeProcessProtocol instance is likely to differ
greatly from the platform actions of the lldb client, so I think the separation makes sense.
After this, the only dependency NativeProcessLinux has on PlatformLinux is the ResolveExecutable
method, which needs additional refactoring.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10996
llvm-svn: 241672
A few extras were fixed
- Symbol::GetAddress() now returns an Address object, not a reference. There were places where people were accessing the address of a symbol when the symbol's value wasn't an address symbol. On MacOSX, undefined symbols have a value zero and some places where using the symbol's address and getting an absolute address of zero (since an Address object with no section and an m_offset whose value isn't LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS is considered an absolute address). So fixing this required some changes to make sure people were getting what they expected.
- Since some places want to access the address as a reference, I added a few new functions to symbol:
Address &Symbol::GetAddressRef();
const Address &Symbol::GetAddressRef() const;
Linux test suite passes just fine now.
<rdar://problem/21494354>
llvm-svn: 240702
a hand-called function from the private state thread. The problem
was that on the way out of the private state thread, we try to drop
the run lock. That is appropriate for the main private state thread,
but not the secondary private state thread. Only the thread that
spawned them can know whether this is an appropriate thing to do or
not.
<rdar://problem/21375352>
llvm-svn: 240461
We have been working on reducing the packet count that is sent between LLDB and the debugserver on MacOSX and iOS. Our approach to this was to reduce the packets required when debugging multiple threads. We currently make one qThreadStopInfoXXXX call (where XXXX is the thread ID in hex) per thread except the thread that stopped with a stop reply packet. In order to implement multiple thread infos in a single reply, we need to use structured data, which means JSON. The new jThreadsInfo packet will attempt to retrieve all thread infos in a single packet. The data is very similar to the stop reply packets, but packaged in JSON and uses JSON arrays where applicable. The JSON output looks like:
[
{ "tid":1580681,
"metype":6,
"medata":[2,0],
"reason":"exception",
"qaddr":140735118423168,
"registers": {
"0":"8000000000000000",
"1":"0000000000000000",
"2":"20fabf5fff7f0000",
"3":"e8f8bf5fff7f0000",
"4":"0100000000000000",
"5":"d8f8bf5fff7f0000",
"6":"b0f8bf5fff7f0000",
"7":"20f4bf5fff7f0000",
"8":"8000000000000000",
"9":"61a8db78a61500db",
"10":"3200000000000000",
"11":"4602000000000000",
"12":"0000000000000000",
"13":"0000000000000000",
"14":"0000000000000000",
"15":"0000000000000000",
"16":"960b000001000000",
"17":"0202000000000000",
"18":"2b00000000000000",
"19":"0000000000000000",
"20":"0000000000000000"},
"memory":[
{"address":140734799804592,"bytes":"c8f8bf5fff7f0000c9a59e8cff7f0000"},
{"address":140734799804616,"bytes":"00000000000000000100000000000000"}
]
}
]
It contains an array of dicitionaries with all of the key value pairs that are normally in the stop reply packet. Including the expedited registers. Notice that is also contains expedited memory in the "memory" key. Any values in this memory will get included in a new L1 cache in lldb_private::Process where if a memory read request is made and that memory request fits into one of the L1 memory cache blocks, it will use that memory data. If a memory request fails in the L1 cache, it will fall back to the L2 cache which is the same block sized caching we were using before these changes. This allows a process to expedite memory that you are likely to use and it reduces packet count. On MacOSX with debugserver, we expedite the frame pointer backchain for a thread (up to 256 entries) by reading 2 pointers worth of bytes at the frame pointer (for the previous FP and PC), and follow the backchain. Most backtraces on MacOSX and iOS now don't require us to read any memory!
We will try these packets out and if successful, we should port these to lldb-server in the near future.
<rdar://problem/21494354>
llvm-svn: 240354
Summary:
* Fix enum LanguageType values so that they can be used as indexes
into array language_names and g_languages as assumed by
LanguageRuntime::GetNameForLanguageType,
Language::SetLanguageFromCString and Language::AsCString.
* Add DWARFCompileUnit::LanguageTypeFromDWARF to convert from DWARF
DW_LANG_* values to enum LanguageType values.
Reviewed By: clayborg, abidh
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10484
llvm-svn: 239963
Summary:
`IsRelativeToCurrentWorkingDirectory` was misleading, because relative paths
are sometimes appended to other directories, not just the cwd. Plus, the new
name is shorter. Also added `IsAbsolute` for completeness.
Reviewers: clayborg, ovyalov
Reviewed By: ovyalov
Subscribers: tberghammer, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10262
llvm-svn: 239419
The problem was the mutex was only protecting the setting of m_exit_string and m_exit_string, but this function relies on the m_private_state being set to eStateExited in order to prevent more than 1 client setting the exit status. We want to only allow the first caller to succeed.
On MacOSX we have a thread that reaps the process we are debugging, and we also have a thread that monitors the debugserver process. When a process exists, the ProcessGDBRemote::AsyncThread() would set the exit status to the correct value and then another thread would reap the debugserver process and they would often both end up in Process::SetExitStatus() at the same time. With the mutex at the top we allow all variables to be set and the m_private_state to be set to eStateExited _before_ the other thread (debugserver reaped) can try to set th exist status to -1 and "lost connection to debugserver" being set as the exit status.
This was probably an issue for lldb-server as well and could very well cleanup some tests that might have been expecting a specific exit status from the process being debugged.
llvm-svn: 238794
When the current address is pointing 1 (unit) over the end of a
section the we have to do a section lookup after making the adjusment
of the current address.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10124
llvm-svn: 238737
Summary:
This should solve the issue of sending denormalized paths over gdb-remote
if we stick to GetPath(false) in GDBRemoteCommunicationClient, and let the
server handle any denormalization.
Reviewers: ovyalov, zturner, vharron, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: tberghammer, emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9728
llvm-svn: 238604
Since interaction with the python interpreter is moving towards
being more isolated, we won't be able to include this header from
normal files anymore, all includes of it should be localized to
the python library which will live under source/bindings/API/Python
after a future patch.
None of the files that were including this header actually depended
on it anyway, so it was just a dead include in every single instance.
llvm-svn: 238581
Summary:
Previously, we reported inferior receiving SIGSEGV (or SIGILL, SIGFPE, SIGBUS) as an "exception"
to LLDB, presumably to match OSX behaviour. Beside the fact that we were basically lying to the
user, this was also causing problems with inferiors which handle SIGSEGV by themselves, since
LLDB was unable to reinject this signal back into the inferior.
This commit changes LLGS to report SIGSEGV as a signal. This has necessitated some changes in the
test-suite, which had previously used eStopReasonException to locate threads that crashed. Now it
uses platform-specific logic, which in the case of linux searches for eStopReasonSignaled with
signal=SIGSEGV.
I have also added the ability to set the description of StopInfoUnixSignal using the description
field of the gdb-remote packet. The linux stub uses this to display additional information about
the segfault (invalid address, address access protected, etc.).
Test Plan: All tests pass on linux and osx.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg, emaste
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10057
llvm-svn: 238549
Summary:
IOHandlerProcessSTDIO::Run() was opening the pipe for interrupt requests lazily. This was racing
with another thread executing IOHandlerProcessSTDIO::Cancel() simultaneously. I fix this by
opening the pipe in the object constructor. The pipe will be automatically closed when the object
is destroyed.
Test Plan: Tests pass on linux.
Reviewers: clayborg, ribrdb
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10060
llvm-svn: 238423
This was the original cause of the file descriptor leaks that would cause the test suite to die after running a few hundred processes since no process would ever get destroyed and the communication channel in ProcessGDBRemote and the ProcessIOHandler would never close their pipes.
This process leak was previously worked around by closing the pipes when the communication channel was disconnected.
This was found by using "ptr_refs" from the heap.py in the lldb.macosx.heap module. It was able to find all strong references to the Process and helped me to figure out who was holding this extra reference.
llvm-svn: 238392
Summary:
There is an issue in lldb where the command prompt can appear at the wrong time. The partial fix
we have in for this is not working all the time and is introducing unnecessary delays. This
change does:
- Change Process:SyncIOHandler to use integer start id's for synchronization to avoid it being
confused by quick start-stop cycles. I picked this up from a suggested patch by Greg to
lldb-dev.
- coordinates printing of asynchronous text with the iohandlers. This is also based on a
(different) Greg's patch, but I have added stronger synchronization to it to avoid races.
Together, these changes solve the prompt problem for me on linux (both with and without libedit).
I think they should behave similarly on Mac and FreeBSD and I think they will not make matters
worse for windows.
Test Plan: Prompt comes out alright. All tests still pass on linux.
Reviewers: clayborg, emaste, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9823
llvm-svn: 238313
The main issue was the Communication::Disconnect() was calling its Connection::Disconnect() but this wouldn't release the pipes that the ConnectionFileDescriptor was using. We also have someone that is holding a strong reference to the Process so that when you re-run, target replaces its m_process_sp, but it doesn't get destructed because someone has a strong reference to it. I need to track that down. But, even if we have a strong reference to the a process that is outstanding, we need to call Process::Finalize() to have it release as much of its resources as possible to avoid memory bloat.
Removed the ProcessGDBRemote::SetExitStatus() override and replaced it with ProcessGDBRemote::DidExit().
Now we aren't leaking file descriptors and the stand alone test suite should run much better.
llvm-svn: 238089
This patch initially was committed in r237460 but later it was reverted (r237479) due to 4 new failures:
* TestExitDuringStep.py
* TestNumThreads.py
* TestThreadExit.py
* TestThreadStates.py
This patch also fixes these tests.
llvm-svn: 237566
Summary:
This option forces to only set a source line breakpoint when there is an exact-match
This patch includes the following commits:
# Add the -m/--exact-match option in "breakpoint set" command
## Add exact_match arg in BreakpointResolverFileLine ctor
## Add m_exact_match field in BreakpointResolverFileLine
## Add exact_match arg in BreakpointResolverFileRegex ctor
## Add m_exact_match field in BreakpointResolverFileRegex
## Add exact_match arg in Target::CreateSourceRegexBreakpoint
## Add exact_match arg in Target::CreateBreakpoint
## Add -m/--exact-match option in "breakpoint set" command
# Add target.exact-match option to skip BP if source line doesn't match
## Add target.exact-match global option
## Add Target::GetExactMatch
## Refactor Target::CreateSourceRegexBreakpoint to accept LazyBool exact_match (was bool)
## Refactor Target::CreateBreakpoint to accept LazyBool exact_match (was bool)
# Add target.exact-match test in SettingsCommandTestCase
# Add BreakpointOptionsTestCase tests to test --skip-prologue/--exact-match options
# Fix a few typos in lldbutil.check_breakpoint_result func
# Rename --exact-match/m_exact_match/exact_match/GetExactMatch to --move-to-nearest-code/m_move_to_nearest_code/move_to_nearest_code/GetMoveToNearestCode
# Add exact_match field in BreakpointResolverFileLine::GetDescription and BreakpointResolverFileRegex::GetDescription, for example:
was:
```
1: file = '/Users/IliaK/p/llvm/tools/lldb/test/functionalities/breakpoint/breakpoint_command/main.c', line = 12, locations = 1, resolved = 1, hit count = 2
1.1: where = a.out`main + 20 at main.c:12, address = 0x0000000100000eb4, resolved, hit count = 2
```
now:
```
1: file = '/Users/IliaK/p/llvm/tools/lldb/test/functionalities/breakpoint/breakpoint_command/main.c', line = 12, exact_match = 0, locations = 1, resolved = 1, hit count = 2
1.1: where = a.out`main + 20 at main.c:12, address = 0x0000000100000eb4, resolved, hit count = 2
```
Test Plan:
./dotest.py -v --executable $BUILDDIR/bin/lldb functionalities/breakpoint/
./dotest.py -v --executable $BUILDDIR/bin/lldb settings/
./dotest.py -v --executable $BUILDDIR/bin/lldb tools/lldb-mi/breakpoint/
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, clayborg, jingham
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9273
llvm-svn: 237460
Summary:
Implementation of assembly profiler for MIPS32 using EmulateInstruction which currently scans only prologue/epilogue assembly instructions. It uses llvm::MCDisassembler to decode assembly instructions.
Reviewers: clayborg, jasonmolenda
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9769
llvm-svn: 237420
Remove the m_description ivar from the StopInfoBreakpoint
and StopInfoWatchpoint subclasses of StopInfo. Also,
initialize the m_description ivar in the StopInfo ctor.
<rdar://problem/20902950>
llvm-svn: 237411
Summary:
This patch is the beginnings of support for Non-stop mode in the remote protocol. Letting a user examine stopped threads, while other threads execute freely.
Non-stop mode is enabled using the setting target.non-stop-mode, which sends a QNonStop packet when establishing the remote connection.
Changes are also made to treat the '?' stop reply packet differently in non-stop mode, according to spec https://sourceware.org/gdb/current/onlinedocs/gdb/Remote-Non_002dStop.html#Remote-Non_002dStop.
A setting for querying the remote for default thread on setup is also included.
Handling of '%' async notification packets will be added next.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, ADodds, ted, deepak2427
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9656
llvm-svn: 237239
A dummy target is used by TargetList::CreateTargetInternal to prime newly
created targets. the first time this is done it creates the dummy target. The
dummy target is created with the host platform (See
TargetList::CreateDummyTarget) which results in switching the selected platform
back to the host platform even when creating a target for a different platform.
This change avoids changing the selected platform while creating the dummy
target to prevent this side effect.
Test Plan:
./dotest.py $DOTEST_OPTS -t -p TestCreateAfterAttach.py
Tests using process attach (e.g. TestCreateAfterAttach.py, TestHelloWorld.py)
now run successfully mac -> linux.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9712
llvm-svn: 237221
Summary:
GetCurrentDirectory() returns the number of characters copied; 0 is a failure, not a success.
Add implementation for chdir().
Reviewers: zturner
Reviewed By: zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9300
llvm-svn: 237162
Summary:
TargetList::CreateTargetInternal() will only select the current Platform. A previous patch always sets platform_sp to the current Platform, so a check later to see if platform_sp was not defined always failed, and the current Platform was used. This patch removes that check, so if the current Platform is not compatible with the target architecture, CreateTargetInternal() will call Platform::GetPlatformForArchitecture() to select a compatible Platform.
Vince, remote linux tests (Ubuntu -> remote Ubuntu) pass the same with and without this patch.
Reviewers: vharron, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: jingham, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8749
llvm-svn: 237053
Summary:
Hexagon is a VLIW processor. It can execute multiple instructions at once, called a packet. Breakpoints need to be alone in a packet. This patch will make sure that temporary breakpoints used for stepping are set at the start of a packet, which will put the breakpoint in a packet by itself.
Patch by Deepak Panickal of CodePlay and Ted Woodward of Qualcomm.
Reviewers: deepak2427, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9437
llvm-svn: 237047
Converts the MAP_PRIVATE and MAP_ANON options to the target platform constants
(on which the call runs) rather than using those of the compiled host.
Test Plan:
Run test suite, the following tests requiring memory allocation / JIT support
begin passing when running mac -> linux:
Test11588.py
TestAnonymous.py
TestBreakpointConditions.py
TestCPPStaticMethods.py
TestCStrings.py
TestCallStdStringFunction.py
TestDataFormatterCpp.py
TestDataFormatterStdList.py
TestExprDoesntBlock.py
TestExprHelpExamples.py
TestFunctionTypes.py
TestPrintfAfterUp.py
TestSBValuePersist.py
TestSetValues.py
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9511
llvm-svn: 236933
Summary: This patch moves synchronization of iohandler to CommandObjectProcessLaunch::DoExecute like it was done in CommandObjectProcessContinue::DoExecute.
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, clayborg, jingham
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9373
llvm-svn: 236699
Patch by Jaydeep Patil
Added MIPS32 and MIPS64 core revisions. This would be followed by register context and emulate-instruction for MIPS32.
DYLDRendezvous.cpp:
On Linux link map struct does not contain extra load offset field.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: bhushan, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, lldb-commits.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9190
llvm-svn: 235574
breakpoints, for instance on the class of the thrown object.
This change doesn't actually make that work, the part where we
extract the thrown object type from the throw site isn't done yet.
This provides a general programmatic "precondition" that you can add
to breakpoints to give them the ability to do filtering on the LLDB
side before we pass the stop on to the user-provided conditions &
callbacks.
llvm-svn: 235538
module-loading support for the expression parser.
- It adds support for auto-loading modules referred
to by a compile unit. These references are
currently in the form of empty translation units.
This functionality is gated by the setting
target.auto-import-clang-modules (boolean) = false
- It improves and corrects support for loading
macros from modules, currently by textually
pasting all #defines into the user's expression.
The improvements center around including only those
modules that are relevant to the current context -
hand-loaded modules and the modules that are imported
from the current compile unit.
- It adds an "opt-in" mechanism for all of this
functionality. Modules have to be explicitly
imported (via @import) or auto-loaded (by enabling
the above setting) to enable any of this
functionality.
It also adds support to the compile unit and symbol
file code to deal with empty translation units that
indicate module imports, and plumbs this through to
the CompileUnit interface.
Finally, it makes the following changes to the test
suite:
- It adds a testcase that verifies that modules are
automatically loaded when the appropriate setting
is enabled (lang/objc/modules-auto-import); and
- It modifies lanb/objc/modules-incomplete to test
the case where a module #undefs something that is
#defined in another module.
<rdar://problem/20299554>
llvm-svn: 235313
the changes in r233255/r233258. Normally if lldb attaches to
a running process, when we call Process::Destroy, we want to detach
from the process. If lldb launched the process itself, ::Destroy
should kill it.
However, if we attach to a process and the driver calls SBProcess::Kill()
(which calls Destroy), we need to kill it even if we didn't launch it
originally.
The force_kill param allows for the SBProcess::Kill method to force the
behavior of Destroy.
<rdar://problem/20424439>
llvm-svn: 235158
virtual void
LanguageRuntime::ModulesDidLoad (const ModuleList &module_list);
Then reorganized how the objective C plug-in is notified so it will work for all LanguageRuntime subclasses.
llvm-svn: 235118
Summary:
E.g., if thread 1 hits a breakpoint, then a `thread info` on thread 2 will cause
a segfault, since thread 2 will have no stop info (intended behavior?).
Reviewers: kubabrecka, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8905
llvm-svn: 234437
The OperatingSystem plug-ins allow code to detect threads in memory and then say "memory thread 0x11111" is backed by the actual thread 1.
You can then single step these virtual threads. A problem arose when thread specific breakpoints were used during thread plans where we would say "set a breakpoint on thread 0x11111" and we would hit the breakpoint on the real thread 1 and the thread IDs wouldn't match and we would get rid of the "stopped at breakpoint" stop info due to this mismatch. Code was added to ensure these events get forwarded and thus allow single stepping a memory thread to work correctly.
Added a test case for this as well.
<rdar://problem/19211770>
llvm-svn: 234364
verifying that the types from that module don't
override types from DWARF. Also added a target setting
to LLDB so we can tell Clang where to look for these
local modules.
<rdar://problem/18805055>
llvm-svn: 234016
There were a couple of real bugs here regarding error checking and
signed/unsigned comparisons, but mostly these were just noise.
There was one class of bugs fixed here which is particularly
annoying, dealing with MSVC's non-standard behavior regarding
the underlying type of enums. See the comment in
lldb-enumerations.h for details. In short, from now on please use
FLAGS_ENUM and FLAGS_ANONYMOUS_ENUM when defining enums which
contain values larger than can fit into a signed integer.
llvm-svn: 233943
Guard against this by setting a new "m_finalizing" flag that lets us know we are in the process of finalizing.
<rdar://problem/20369152>
llvm-svn: 233935
When no hijack listener is set up, the global event listener will
try to pull events off the queue, racing with the event thread.
By always forcing a hijack listener, even when one was not given,
we guarantee that the listener always gets all events.
This was causing problems in synchronous mode with the process
stop event sometimes never being picked up and causing the debugger
to hang while processing a .lldbinit file.
Reviewed by: Jim Ingham
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8562
llvm-svn: 233315
Summary:
This patch fixes -gdb-exit for locally target. It includes the following changes:
# Fix Process::Finalize
# Use SBProcess::Destroy in -gdb-exit
Reviewers: abidh, zturner, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, clayborg, abidh
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8298
llvm-svn: 233255
Summary:
This commit adds this alternate route only when parsing variable dies
corresponding to global or static variables. The motivation for this is that GCC
does not emit linkage names for functions and variables declared/defined in
anonymous namespaces. Having this alternate route fixes one part of
TestNamespace which fails when the test case is compiled with GCC.
An alternate route to get fully qualified names of functions whose linkage names
are missing will be added with a followup change. With that, the other failing
part of TestNamespace will also be fixed.
Test Plan: dotest.py -C gcc -p TestNamespace
Reviewers: clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8569
llvm-svn: 233098
Previously the remote module sepcification was fetched only from the
remote platform. With this CL if we have a remote process then we ask it
if it have any information from a given module. It is required because
on android the dynamic linker only reports the name of the SO file and
the platform can't always find it without a full path (the process can
do it based on /proc/<pid>/maps).
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8547
llvm-svn: 233061
Summary:
Saw this while reading some code in DynamicLoader classes. Looks like this has
been a FIXME since 2011 at least.
Test Plan: Run unit tests.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8558
llvm-svn: 232983
Specifically, there were some functions for converting enums
to strings and a function for matching a string using a specific
matching algorithm. This moves those functions to more appropriate
headers in lldb/Utility and updates references to include the
new headers.
llvm-svn: 232673
So that we don't have to update every single #include in the entire
codebase to #include this new header (which used to get included by
lldb-private-log.h, we automatically #include "Logging.h" from
within "Log.h".
llvm-svn: 232653
This removes ScriptInterpreterObject from the codebase completely.
Places that used to rely on ScriptInterpreterObject now use
StructuredData::Object and its derived classes. To support this,
a new type of StructuredData object is introduced, called
StructuredData::Generic, which stores a void*. Internally within
the python library, StructuredPythonObject subclasses this
StructuredData::Generic class so that it can addref and decref
the python object on construction and destruction.
Additionally, all of the classes in PythonDataObjects.h such
as PythonList, PythonDictionary, etc now provide a method to
create an instance of the corresponding StructuredData type. For
example, there is PythonDictionary::CreateStructuredDictionary.
To eliminate dependencies on PythonDataObjects for external
callers, all ScriptInterpreter methods now return only
StructuredData classes
The rest of the changes in this CL are focused on fixing up
users of PythonDataObjects classes to use the new StructuredData
classes.
llvm-svn: 232534
# Fix CommandInterpreter.Broadcaster name (it should be the same as CommandInterpreter::GetStaticBroadcasterClass())
# Prevent the same error in Process.Broadcaster
# Fix SBCommandInterpreter::GetBroadcasterClass (it should call CommandInterpreter::GetStaticBroadcasterClass(), was Communication::GetStaticBroadcasterClass())
llvm-svn: 232500
Previously it was fetched only if the architecture isn't valid, but the
architecture can be valid without containing all information about the
current target (e.g. missing os).
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8057
llvm-svn: 232153
Summary:
There was a race condition regarding the output of the inferior process. The reading of the
output is performed on a separate thread, and there was no guarantee that the output will get
eventually consumed. Because of that, it was happening that calling Process::GetSTDOUT was not
returning anything even though the process was terminated and would definitely not produce any
further output. This was usually happening only under very heavy system load, but it can be
reproduced by placing an usleep in the stdio thread (Process::STDIOReadThreadBytesReceived).
This patch addresses this by adding synchronization capabilities to the Communication thread.
After calling Communication::SynchronizeWithReadThread one can be sure that all pending input has
been processed by the read thread. This function is then called after every public event which
stops the process to obtain the entire process output.
Test Plan: TestProcessIO.py should now succeed every time instead of flaking in and out.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8246
llvm-svn: 232023
Summary:
starting a debug session on linux with -o "process launch" lldb parameter was failing since
Target::Launch (in sychronous mode) is expecting to be able to receive public process events.
However, PlatformLinux did not set up event hijacking on process launch, which caused these
events to be processed elsewhere and left Target::Launch hanging. This patch enables event
interception in PlatformLinux (which was commented out).
Upon enabling event interception, I noticed an issue, which I traced back to the inconsistent
state of public run lock, which remained false even though public and private process states were
"stopped". I addressed this by making sure the run lock is "stopped" upon exit from
WaitForProcessToStop (which already had similar provisions for other return paths).
Test Plan: This should fix the intermittent TestFormats failure we have been experiencing on Linux.
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg, vharron
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8079
llvm-svn: 231460
Debugger.h is a huge file that gets included everywhere, and
FormatManager.h brings in a ton of unnecessary stuff and doesn't
even use anything from it in the header.
llvm-svn: 231161
This continues the effort to reduce header footprint and improve
build speed by removing clang and other unnecessary headers
from Target.h. In one case, some headers were included solely
for the purpose of declaring a nested class in Target, which was
not needed by anybody outside the class. In this case the
definition and implementation of the nested class were isolated
in the .cpp file so the header could be removed.
llvm-svn: 231107
Summary:
The code for GetSyntheticArrayMemberFromPointer and
GetSyntheticArrayMemberFromArray was identical, so just collapse the
the methods into one.
Reviewers: granata.enrico, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7911
llvm-svn: 230708
Earlier this week I was able to get clang-cl on Windows to be
able to self host. This opened the door to being able to
get a whole new slew of warnings for the Windows build.
This patch fixes all of the warnings, many of which were real
bugs.
llvm-svn: 230522
ExecutionContext::GetAddressByteSize() was calling GettAddressByteSize () on Target and Process class but was ignoring the return type. I have added the missing return.
No regression in the test suite. Committed as obvious.
llvm-svn: 230502
This makes these failures slightly more obvious, avoiding the need to
run LLDB under a debugger or rely on a LLDB core. I encountered these
while bringing up a new OS/arch combination.
llvm-svn: 230236
Process::Launch try to catch a stop signal after launching a process. If
it is unsuccessful it destroy the process but previously still reported
that the process launched successfully. This behavior caused a
deadlock. With thic change the process launch error reported correctly.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7784
llvm-svn: 230212
- Add Host::GlobArguments() to perform local-globbing
I implemented this on OSX and Windows in terms of argdumper (Windows implementation is essentially the same as the OSX version + a change in binary name and some string magic)
Other platforms did not specifically chime in, so I left it unimplemented for them for the time being. Please feel free to fill in the blanks
- Add Platform::GlobArguments() to support remote-globbing
For now, no feature change here - but now we have infrastructure to help GDBRemote targets to support globbing - and patches to that effect will follow
No visible feature change
llvm-svn: 230065
When launching argdumper, there are a few problems with the
current logic. First, on Windows, the file is called
argdumper.exe, not argdumper. Second, Windows paths have
backslashes in them, and JSON treats <backslash><char> as an
escape sequence. To fix the second problem, on Windows we
convert backslashes to forward slashes, since backslash isn't
a valid filename character anyway this shouldn't be a problem.
llvm-svn: 229784
Summary:
This does not fix any outstanding issue that I know of, but there is no reason these files should
_not_ have CloseOnExec.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7694
llvm-svn: 229506