Null-checking functions which aren't marked weak_import is a no-op
(the compiler rewrites the check to 'true'), regardless of whether a
library providing its definition is weak-linked. If the deployment
target is greater than the minimum requirement, the availability markup
on APIs does not lower to weak_import.
Remove no-op null checks to clean up the code and silence warnings.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40812
llvm-svn: 319936
Turns out WITH_LOCKDOWN define changes the struct layout and constructor implementation for RNBSocket which is used in debugserver.cpp, so we need to make sure this is consistent.
In the future we should change WITH_LOCKDOWN to be configured in a generated header, but for now we can just set it correctly.
<rdar://problem/33900552>
llvm-svn: 312666
to match the changes Saleem Abdulrasool committed in r311579. Fixes
a testsuite failure now that the testsuite expects a 16 bit return
value for thsi reg.
llvm-svn: 311627
When building for iOS we build two variants of debugserver. One which supports UI functionality like Springboard for launching applications, and one which does not.
This patch adds support for building debugserver with and without UI support libraries being available.
llvm-svn: 309026
This refactoring changes two significant things about how the debugserver build system works:
(1) debugserver will include all appropriate architecture support, so we can now build arm or ppc debugservers
(2) debugserver can be built by itself, so you don't have to configure all of LLDB in order to generate debugserver.
llvm-svn: 308377
While adding IPv6 support to debugserver I broke handling wildcard addresses and fully qualified address filtering. This patch resolves that bug and adds a test for matching the address "*".
<rdar://problem/32947613>
llvm-svn: 307957
This renames the LLDB error class to Status, as discussed
on the lldb-dev mailing list.
A change of this magnitude cannot easily be done without
find and replace, but that has potential to catch unwanted
occurrences of common strings such as "Error". Every effort
was made to find all the obvious things such as the word "Error"
appearing in a string, etc, but it's possible there are still
some lingering occurences left around. Hopefully nothing too
serious.
llvm-svn: 302872
This support was landed in r300579, and reverted in r300669 due to failures on the bots.
The failures were caused by sockets not being properly closed, and this updated version of the patches should resolve that.
Summary from the original change:
This patch adds IPv6 support to LLDB/Host's TCP socket implementation. Supporting IPv6 involved a few significant changes to the implementation of the socket layers, and I have performed some significant code cleanup along the way.
This patch changes the Socket constructors for all types of sockets to not create sockets until first use. This is required for IPv6 support because the socket type will vary based on the address you are connecting to. This also has the benefit of removing code that could have errors from the Socket subclass constructors (which seems like a win to me).
The patch also slightly changes the API and behaviors of the Listen/Accept pattern. Previously both Listen and Accept calls took an address specified as a string. Now only listen does. This change was made because the Listen call can result in opening more than one socket. In order to support listening for both IPv4 and IPv6 connections we need to open one AF_INET socket and one AF_INET6 socket. During the listen call we construct a map of file descriptors to addrin structures which represent the allowable incoming connection address. This map removes the need for taking an address into the Accept call.
This does have a change in functionality. Previously you could Listen for connections based on one address, and Accept connections from a different address. This is no longer supported. I could not find anywhere in LLDB where we actually used the APIs in that way. The new API does still support AnyAddr for allowing incoming connections from any address.
The Listen implementation is implemented using kqueue on FreeBSD and Darwin, WSAPoll on Windows and poll(2) everywhere else.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D31823
llvm-svn: 301492
The break the linux bots (and probably any other machine which would
run the test suite in a massively parallel way). The problem is that it
can happen that we only successfully create an IPv6 listening socket
(because the relevant IPv4 port is used by another process) and then the
connecting side attempts to connect to the IPv4 port and fails.
It's not very obvious how to fix this problem, so I am reverting this
until we come up with a solution.
llvm-svn: 300669
Summary: This patch adds IPv6 support to debugserver. It follows a similar pattern to the changes proposed for LLDB/Host except that the listen implementation is only with kqueue(2) because debugserver is only supported on Darwin.
Reviewers: jingham, jasonmolenda, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31824
llvm-svn: 300580
Summary:
This patch refactors the CMake build system's support for building debugserver to allow us to build the majority of debugserver's sources into the debugserverCommon library which can then be reused by unit tests.
The first unit test I've written tests debug server's ability to accept incoming connections from LLDB. The test forks the process, and one side creates a listening socket using debugserver's socket API, the other side creates a transmitting socket using LLDB's TCPSocket class.
I have no clue where to even start getting this connected into the LLDB Xcode project, so for now these tests are CMake-only.
Reviewers: zturner, labath, jasonmolenda
Subscribers: lldb-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31357
llvm-svn: 300111
This patch modifies the Get/Set Register Value/Context functions for Intel to not duplicate code for reading non-AVX registers. This is similar to other transformations I've been making to the AVX register handling code.
llvm-svn: 297787
This patch consolidates the DEBUG_FPU_REGS code for i386 and x86_64 to take advantage of the fact that the non-AVX members of the avx register state structure overlap with the standard fpu register state structure.
This reduces the amount of code required to set debug values into the register state structures because the register state structures are stored in a union.
llvm-svn: 297688
Summary:
The first Sandybridge iMacs with AVX support shipped in Spring 2011 with Snow Leopard as their OS. Unfortunately due to a kernel bug debugging AVX code was not really possible until 10.7.4.
The old code here checked the kernel build number to determine when to support AVX, but that code was incorrect. It verified that the kernel build number was greater than xnu-2020, which is the build of the kernel that had the fix for 10.8. The fix was also back ported to 10.7.4. Which means all publicly available OS builds 10.7.4 and later have working AVX support.
This new patch verifies that the host OS is greater than or equal to 10.7.4 by checking that the build number is greater than or equal to 11Exx.
The patch also removes the HasAVX assembly blob in favor of querying the kernel via sysctl for the hardware features.
Using sysctl is slower, however since the code is executed once and the result cached it is a better approach because it is possible for the kernel to disable AVX support on hardware that supports it, so listening to the kernel is a better approach for the debugger to take.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, spyffe
Subscribers: lldb-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30918
llvm-svn: 297685
Summary:
The std::call_once implementation in libstdc++ has problems on few systems: NetBSD, OpenBSD and Linux PPC. LLVM ships with a homegrown implementation llvm::call_once to help on these platforms.
This change is required in the NetBSD LLDB port. std::call_once with libstdc++ results with crashing the debugger.
Sponsored by <The NetBSD Foundation>
Reviewers: labath, joerg, emaste, mehdi_amini, clayborg
Reviewed By: labath, clayborg
Subscribers: #lldb
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29288
llvm-svn: 294202
Summary:
This patch adds accurate dependency specifications to the mail LLDB libraries and tools.
In all cases except lldb-server, these dependencies are added in addition to existing dependencies (making this low risk), and I performed some code cleanup along the way.
For lldb-server I've cleaned up the LLVM dependencies down to just the minimum actually required. This is more than lldb-server actually directly references, and I've left a todo in the code to clean that up.
Reviewers: labath, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits, danalbert, srhines, ki.stfu, mgorny, jgosnell
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29333
llvm-svn: 293686
requires that this private framework be available - and it is not
available earlier than macOS 10.12 - to build lldb), dlopen the
framework binary on demand in debugserver. We're already using
dlsym() to look up all the symbols so there is no need to use weak
linking here.
<rdar://problem/30158797>
llvm-svn: 293135
which led to
ERROR: test_auxv_chunked_reads_work_debugserver (tools/lldb-server/TestGdbRemoteAuxvSupport.py)
ERROR: test_auxv_data_is_correct_size_debugserver (tools/lldb-server/TestGdbRemoteAuxvSupport.py)
ERROR: test_auxv_keys_look_valid_debugserver (tools/lldb-server/TestGdbRemoteAuxvSupport.py)
ERROR: test_qSupported_returns_known_stub_features_debugserver (tools/lldb-server/TestLldbGdbServer.py)
failures because debugserver was advertising compression being available, e.g.
send packet: $qSupported:xmlRegisters=i386,arm,mips#12
read packet: $qXfer:features:read+;PacketSize=20000;qEcho+;SupportedCompressions=zlib-deflate;DefaultCompressionMinSize=384#00
maybe these tests should be a little more accepting of additional
features. but I didn't mean for this to be enabled on mac native.
llvm-svn: 292890
Wasn't sure I could include ErrorHandling.h here, and evidently I wasn't
building this part (must've made the change using sed after getting
tired of fixing each compilation error individually).
llvm-svn: 291204
Also found/fixed one bug identified by this warning in
RenderScriptx86ABIFixups.cpp where a string literal was being used in an
effort to provide a name for an instruction/register, but was instead
being passed as the bool 'isVolatile' parameter.
llvm-svn: 291198
30 seconds to match the old springboard timeout; the launcher
should time out before that and we will hopefully get back
an informative error message instead of timing out ourselves.
llvm-svn: 290163
In LLVM's CMake we have a convention that components have both a build and an install target. Making LLDB follow this convention will allow LLDB to take advantage of the LLVM_DISTRIBUTION_COMPONENTS build option from LLVM.
llvm-svn: 289879
Summary:
This patch adds a CMake option LLDB_BUILD_FRAMEWORK, which builds libLLDB as a macOS framework instead of as a *nix shared library.
With this patch any LLDB executable that has the INCLUDE_IN_FRAMEWORK option set will be built into the Framework's resources directory, and a symlink to the exeuctable will be placed under the build directory's bin folder. Creating the symlinks allows users to run commands from the build directory without altering the workflow.
The framework generated by this patch passes the LLDB test suite, but has not been tested beyond that. It is not expected to be fully ready to ship, but it is a first step.
With this patch binaries that are placed inside the framework aren't being properly installed. Fixing that would increase the patch size significantly, so I'd like to do that in a follow-up.
Reviewers: zturner, tfiala
Subscribers: beanz, lldb-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24749
llvm-svn: 282110
The class is only used in the debugserver. The rest of lldb has the StringExtractor class.
Xcode project will need to be updated after this.
llvm-svn: 281226
*** to conform to clang-format’s LLVM style. This kind of mass change has
*** two obvious implications:
Firstly, merging this particular commit into a downstream fork may be a huge
effort. Alternatively, it may be worth merging all changes up to this commit,
performing the same reformatting operation locally, and then discarding the
merge for this particular commit. The commands used to accomplish this
reformatting were as follows (with current working directory as the root of
the repository):
find . \( -iname "*.c" -or -iname "*.cpp" -or -iname "*.h" -or -iname "*.mm" \) -exec clang-format -i {} +
find . -iname "*.py" -exec autopep8 --in-place --aggressive --aggressive {} + ;
The version of clang-format used was 3.9.0, and autopep8 was 1.2.4.
Secondly, “blame” style tools will generally point to this commit instead of
a meaningful prior commit. There are alternatives available that will attempt
to look through this change and find the appropriate prior commit. YMMV.
llvm-svn: 280751
I have some improvements to make to StringExtractor that require
using LLVM. debugserver can't take a dependency on LLVM but uses
this file, so I'm forking it off into StdStringExtractor and
StringExtractor, so that StringExtractor can take advantage of
some performance improvements and readability improvements that
LLVM can provide.
llvm-svn: 279997
Summary:
Moving a temporary object prevents copy elision, which is exactly
what clang points out by warning about this pattern.
The fix is simply removal of std::move applied to temporary objects.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23825
Author: Taras Tsugrii <ttsugrii@fb.com>
llvm-svn: 279724
Take 2, with missing cmake line fixed. Build tested on
Ubuntu 14.04 with clang-3.6.
See docs/structured_data/StructuredDataPlugins.md for details.
differential review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22976
reviewers: clayborg, jingham
llvm-svn: 279202
This change opens a socket pair and passes the second socket pair file descriptor down to the debugserver binary using a new option: "--fd=N" where N is the file descriptor. This file descriptor gets passed via posix_spawn() so that there is no need to do any bind/listen or bind/accept calls and eliminates the hanshake unix socket that is used to pass the result of the actual port that ends up being used so it can save time on launch as well as being faster.
This is currently only enabled on __APPLE__ builds. Other OSs should try modifying the #define from ProcessGDBRemote.cpp but the first person will need to port the --fd option over to lldb-server. Any OSs that enable USE_SOCKETPAIR_FOR_LOCAL_CONNECTION in their native builds can use the socket pair stuff. The #define is Apple only right now, but looks like:
#if defined (__APPLE__)
#define USE_SOCKETPAIR_FOR_LOCAL_CONNECTION 1
#endif
<rdar://problem/27814880>
llvm-svn: 278524
It's always hard to remember when to include this file, and
when you do include it it's hard to remember what preprocessor
check it needs to be behind, and then you further have to remember
whether it's windows.h or win32.h which you need to include.
This patch changes the name to PosixApi.h, which is more appropriately
named, and makes it independent of any preprocessor setting.
There's still the issue of people not knowing when to include this,
because there's not a well-defined set of things it exposes other
than "whatever is missing on Windows", but at least this should
make it less painful to fix when problems arise.
This patch depends on LLVM revision r278170.
llvm-svn: 278177
os name and version # from the mach-o binary as it scans the
header/load commands from memory and sends the details back
in the jGetLoadedDynamicLibrariesInfos response. lldb isn't
using these fields yet but I have a suspicion I'm going to
need them soon.
<rdar://problem/25251243>
llvm-svn: 274725
to find the solibs loaded in a process. Support two new ways of
sending the jGetLoadedDynamicLibrariesInfos packet to debugserver
and add a new jGetSharedCacheInfo packet. Update the documentation
for these packets as well. The changes to lldb to use these will
be a separate commit.
<rdar://problem/25251243>
llvm-svn: 274718
which doesn't like against all the extra UI frameworks on ios)
so it now generates a binary called "debugserver-nonui" and puts
it in /usr/local/bin instead of /Developer/usr/bin.
Add some cruft to RNBDefs.h to get the version number (provided
by Xcode at build time) with either the name "debugserver" or
"debugserver_nonui" as appropriate.
Add the "debugserver-mini" target to the top level "ios" target
in lldb xcode project file, so this nonui debugserver will be
built along with the normal lldb / debugserver.
<rdar://problem/24730789>
llvm-svn: 273236
Summary:
This adds the ability to customize the debugserver codesign process via cmake cache variable. The
user can set the codesign indentity (with the default being the customary lldb_codesign), and if
the identity is set to a empty string, the codesign step is skipped completely.
We needed the last feature to enable building lldb on buildservers which do not have the right
certificates installed.
Reviewers: sas, tberghammer
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20623
llvm-svn: 270832
The __ENVIRONMENT_MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED macro is only defined on OS X, so the check as written compiled the code out for iOS
The right thing to do is compile the code out for older OSX versions, but leave iOS alone
rdar://26333564
llvm-svn: 270004
Explicitly provide an initializer for the std::vector in the constructed type.
Addresses -Wmissing-field-initializers warnings from clang. NFC.
llvm-svn: 268758
Remove a couple of `default` cases from switches which are covered. This is
beneficial since it would allow the compiler to indicate when a new enum value
is added and the switch is not updated. Fixes some warnings from clang. NFC.
llvm-svn: 268756
rnb_err_t
RNBRemote::HandlePacket_stop_process (const char *p)
{
if (!DNBProcessInterrupt(m_ctx.ProcessID()))
HandlePacket_last_signal (NULL);
return rnb_success;
}
In the call to DNBProcessInterrupt we did:
nub_bool_t
DNBProcessInterrupt(nub_process_t pid)
{
MachProcessSP procSP;
if (GetProcessSP (pid, procSP))
return procSP->Interrupt();
return false;
}
This would always return false. It would cause HandlePacket_stop_process to always call "HandlePacket_last_signal (NULL);" which would send an extra stop reply packet _if_ the process is stopped. On a machine with enough cores, it would call DNBProcessInterrupt(...) and then HandlePacket_last_signal(NULL) so quickly that it will never send out an extra stop reply packet. But if the machine is slow enough or doesn't have enough cores, it could cause the call to HandlePacket_last_signal() to actually succeed and send an extra stop reply packet. This would cause problems up in GDBRemoteCommunicationClient::SendContinuePacketAndWaitForResponse() where it would get the first stop reply packet and then possibly return or execute an async packet. If it returned, then the next packet that was sent will get the second stop reply as its response. If it executes an async packet, the async packet will get the wrong response.
To fix this I did the following:
1 - in debugserver, I fixed "bool MachProcess::Interrupt()" to return true if it sends the signal so we avoid sending the stop reply twice on slower machines
2 - Added a log line to RNBRemote::HandlePacket_stop_process() to say if we ever send an extra stop reply so we will see this in the darwin console output if this does happen
3 - Added response validators to StringExtractorGDBRemote so that we can verify some responses to some packets.
4 - Added validators to packets that often follow stop reply packets like the "m" packet for memory reads, JSON packets since "jThreadsInfo" is often sent immediately following a stop reply.
5 - Modified GDBRemoteCommunicationClient::SendPacketAndWaitForResponseNoLock() to validate responses. Any "StringExtractorGDBRemote &response" that contains a valid response verifier will verify the response and keep looking for correct responses up to 3 times. This will help us get back on track if we do get extra stop replies. If a StringExtractorGDBRemote does not have a response validator, it will accept any packet in response.
6 - In GDBRemoteCommunicationClient::SendPacketAndWaitForResponse we copy the response validator from the "response" argument over into m_async_response so that if we send the packet by interrupting the running process, we can validate the response we actually get in GDBRemoteCommunicationClient::SendContinuePacketAndWaitForResponse()
7 - Modified GDBRemoteCommunicationClient::SendContinuePacketAndWaitForResponse() to always check for an extra stop reply packet for 100ms when the process is interrupted. We were already doing this because we might interrupt a process with a \x03 packet, yet the process was in the process of stopping due to another reason. This race condition could cause an extra stop reply packet because the GDB remote protocol says if a \x03 packet is sent while the process is stopped, we should send a stop reply packet back. Now we always check for an extra stop reply packet when we manually interrupt a process.
The issue was showing up when our IDE would attempt to set a breakpoint while the process is running and this would happen:
--> \x03
<-- $T<stop reply 1>
--> z0,AAAAA,BB (set breakpoint)
<-- $T<stop reply 1> (incorrect extra stop reply packet)
--> c
<-- OK (response from z0 packet)
Now all packet traffic was off by one response. Since we now have a validator on the response for "z" packets, we do this:
--> \x03
<-- $T<stop reply 1>
--> z0,AAAAA,BB (set breakpoint)
<-- $T<stop reply 1> (Ignore this because this can't be the response to z0 packets)
<-- OK -- (we are back on track as this is a valid response to z0)
...
As time goes on we should add more packet validators.
<rdar://problem/22859505>
llvm-svn: 265086
We had some #ifdefs that were looking for the wrong #defines and as a result
debugserver didn't have support for certain simulators. This patch resolves
the problem.
llvm-svn: 258365
at each public stop to improve performance a bit. Most of the
information lldb needed was already in the jThreadsInfo response;
complete that information and catch a few cases where we could still
fall back to getting the information via discrete memory reads.
debugserver adds 'associated_with_dispatch_queue' and 'dispatch_queue_t
keys to the jThreadsInfo response for all the threads. lldb needs the
dispatch_queue_t value. And associated_with_dispatch_queue helps to
identify which threads definitively don't have any queue information so
lldb doesn't try to do memory reads to get that information just because
it was absent in the jThreadsInfo response.
Remove the queue information from the questionmark (T) packet. We'll
get the information for all threads via the jThreadsInfo response -
sending the information for the stopping thread (on all the private
stops, plus the less frequent public stop) was unnecessary information
being sent over the wire.
SystemRuntimeMacOSX will try to get information about queues by asking
the Threads for them, instead of reading memory.
ProcessGDBRemote changes to recognize the new keys being sent in the
jThreadsInfo response. Changes to ThreadGDBRemote to track the new
information. Also, when a thread is marked as definitively not
associated with a libdispatch queue, don't fall back to the system
runtime to try memory reads to find the queue name / kind / ID etc.
<rdar://problem/23309359>
llvm-svn: 257453
keys before we print the libdispatch queues keys (qname, qkind, qserialnum)
to make it easier to read the packet by hand. No function difference, just
reordering the keys in the output.
llvm-svn: 257229
"qserial" to "qserialnum" because "qserial" looks a lot like the
queue type (either 'serial' or 'concurrent') and can be confusing
to read through. debugserver passes these up either in the questionmark
("T") packet, or in the response to the jThreadsInfo packet.
llvm-svn: 257121
debugserver. thread-pcs has a comma separated list of base 16
addresses - the current pc value for every thread in the process.
It is a partner of the "threads:" key where a list of thread IDs
is given. The pc values in thread-pcs correspond one-to-one with
the thread IDs in the threads list.
This is a part of performance work. When lldb is instruction
stepping / fast stepping over a range of addresses for e.g. a "next"
command, and it steps in to another function, lldb will put a
breakpoint on the return address and continue the process. Before
it calls continue, it calls Thread::SetupForResume on all the
threads, and SetupForResume needs to get the current pc value for
every thread to see if any are at a breakpoint site.
The result is that issuing a "c" continue requires that we send
"read pc register" packets for every thread.
We may do this sequence of step-into-function / continue-to-get-out
many times for a single user-visible "next" or "step" command, and
with highly multithreaded programs, we are sending many extra
packets to get all the thread values.
I looked at including this data in the "jstopinfo" JSON that
we already have in the T packet. But there are three problems that
would make this increase the size of the T packet significantly.
First, numbers in JSON are base 10. Second, a proper JSON would
have something like "thread_pcs": { "34224331112":383772734222, ...}
for thread-id 34224331112 and pc 383772734222 - so we're including
a whole extra copy of the thread id in addition to the pc. Third,
the JSON text is hex-ascii'fied so the size of it is doubled.
In one example,
threads:585db8,585dc7,585dc8,585dc9,585dca,585dce;thread-pcs:100001400,7fff8badc6de,7fff8badcff6,7fff8badc6de,7fff8badc6de,7fff8badc6de;
The "thread-pcs" adds 86 characters - 136 characters for both
threads and thread-pcs. Doing this in JSON would look like
threads={"5791160":4294972416,"5791175":140735536809694,"5791176":140735536812022,"5791177":140735536809694,"5791178":140735536809694,"5791182":140735536809694}
or 160 characters -- or 320 characters once it is hex-asciified.
Given that it's 86 characters vrs 320, I went with the old style
approach. I've seen real world programs that have up to 60 threads
in them, so this could result in vastly larger packets if it
was all done in the JSON with hex-ascii expansion.
If we had an all-JSON T packet, where we didn't need to hex-ascii
encode anything, that would have been the better approach. But
we'd already have a list of threads in JSON at that point so
the additional text wouldn't be too bad.
I'm working on finishing the patches to lldb to use this data;
will commit those once I've had a chance to test them more. But
I wanted to commit the debugserver bits which are more
straightforward.
<rdar://problem/21963031>
llvm-svn: 255711
include two stack frames worth of unwind information instead of
just one -- the unwinder is trying to fetch two stack frames in
more instances now and we're sending extra memory reads resulting
in a performance degredation while stepping.
llvm-svn: 255417
Let the editor also clean up whitespace for that file.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13816
llvm-svn: 251979
This fixes the OSX build for XCode versions older than 7 by skipping
references to LC_VERSION_MIN_TVOS and LC_VERSION_MIN_WATCHOS if
TARGET_OS_TV or TARGET_OS_WATCH aren't defined.
Reviewed by: jasonmolenda
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14036
llvm-svn: 251172
previous release. Most of the diffs are duplication in the xcode
project file caused by adding a "debugserver-mini" target. Jim
Ingham added support for a new SPI needed to request app launches
on iOS. Greg Clayton added code to indicate the platform of the
binary (macosx, ios, watchos, tvos) based on Mach-O load commands.
Jason Molenda added code so debugserver will identify when it is
running on a tvos/watchos device to lldb.
llvm-svn: 251091
Summary:
Add dependencies to the custom commands so that they get
re-executed as needed.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13580
llvm-svn: 249860
debugserver to match. "gcc" is now "ehframe" and "gdb" is now
"debugserver". Because this is debugserver, what we call the Process
Plugin register numbers up in lldb are the debugserver register
numbers down here - they are the register numbers that debugserver
will use to refer to these registers over the gdb-remote protocol.
debugserver was already reporting the registers with the key
"ehframe"; this change is just cleaning up the internal variable
names to match.
llvm-svn: 247751
"gcc" register numbers are now correctly referred to as "ehframe"
register numbers. In almost all cases, ehframe and dwarf register
numbers are identical (the one exception is i386 darwin where ehframe
regnums were incorrect).
The old "gdb" register numbers, which I incorrectly thought were
stabs register numbers, are now referred to as "Process Plugin"
register numbers. This is the register numbering scheme that the
remote process controller stub (lldb-server, gdbserver, core file
support, kdp server, remote jtag devices, etc) uses to refer to the
registers. The process plugin register numbers may not be contiguous
- there are remote jtag devices that have gaps in their register
numbering schemes.
I removed all of the enums for "gdb" register numbers that we had
in lldb - these were meaningless - and I put LLDB_INVALID_REGNUM
in all of the register tables for the Process Plugin regnum slot.
This change is almost entirely mechnical; the one actual change in
here is to ProcessGDBRemote.cpp's ParseRegisters() which parses the
qXfer:features:read:target.xml response. As it parses register
definitions from the xml, it will assign sequential numbers as the
eRegisterKindLLDB numbers (the lldb register numberings must be
sequential, without any gaps) and if the xml file specifies register
numbers, those will be used as the eRegisterKindProcessPlugin
register numbers (and those may have gaps). A J-Link jtag device's
target.xml does contain a gap in register numbers, and it only
specifies the register numbers for the registers after that gap.
The device supports many different ARM boards and probably selects
different part of its register file as appropriate.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D12791
<rdar://problem/22623262>
llvm-svn: 247741
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
Summary:
Comparing m_page_size against kInvalidPageSize was resulting in
a warning about comparing integers with different signs. Since
kInvalidPageSize isn't used anywhere outside of MachVMMemory.cpp,
we can readily transform it into a static const vm_size_t with
the correct value to avoid the sign comparison warnings.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12519
llvm-svn: 246606
Summary:
This was previously only established within debugserver, but
there is a use of the VLA extension in source/Host/macosx/Symbols.cpp,
so ignore this warning globally.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12515
llvm-svn: 246605
Older OSX versions don't define NSOperatingSystemVersion, so building
lldb gets: error: unknown type name 'NSOperatingSystemVersion'
This patch fixes the build by having GetOSVersionNumbers return false if
__ENVIRONMENT_MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED__ < 101000, causing lldb to
behave the same as it did before the commit.
Reviewed by: jasonmolenda
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12396
llvm-svn: 246138
Summary:
This was no longer needed and hasn't been needed since r143244
in 2011. This removes everything associated with generating
or using it.
Reviewers: clayborg, jasonmolenda
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11971
llvm-svn: 244850
major, minor, and patchlevel in the qHostInfo reply.
Document that qHostInfo may report major/minor/patch
separately / in addition to the version: combination.
<rdar://problem/22125465>
llvm-svn: 244716
This patch adds a test for ENVIRONMENT_MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED
around the code which requires 10.10 support to link. Without this, lldb
gets unresolved references to _csr_check and _rootless_allows_task_for_pid.
Reviewed by: jasonmolenda
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11668
llvm-svn: 243715
system, make a couple of additional checks to see if the
attach was denied via the System Integrity Protection that
is new in Mac OS X 10.11. If so, return a special E87
error code to indicate this to lldb.
Up in lldb, if we receive the E87 error code, be specific
about why the attach failed.
Also detect the more common case of general attach failure
and print a better error message than "lost connection".
I believe this code will all build on Mac OS X 10.10 systems.
It may not compile or run on earlier versions of the OS.
None of this should build on other non-darwin systems.
llvm-svn: 243511
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
Summary:
No longer rely on cmake to set DEBUGSERVER_VERSION_STR,
but now generate the _vers.c file like xcode does
and include the generated file into the build on Mac OS X.
This fixes the cmake Mac OS X build after an earlier change
by Jason Molenda.
Reviewers: clayborg, jasonmolenda
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11450
llvm-svn: 243072
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
frame, don't go any further, in RNBRemote::SendStopReplyPacketForThread.
These are the memory pre-fetches in the T05 packet and are
included in every private stop that lldb does. lldb needs, at most,
the caller stack frame so we're sending more data than needed by
including additional stack memory prefetches in this reply packet.
Once we've stopped for a public stop, we're going to do a jThreadsInfo
which will include the stack memory prefetches for all threads,
including the one which had the stop reason.
llvm-svn: 242380
This allows stepping operations that don't ever do a public stop to get all the info they need without having to send a jThreadsInfo packet since those tend to be large.
This patch will be followed by a patch that will detect when we do a public stop, and when that happens we will send a jThreadsInfo packet at that time to get all expedited registers and memory.
llvm-svn: 242352
vm_kernel_page_size appears to not be defined on OSX Mavericks, so the
build fails. This patch fixes the build by calculating the pagesize if
_VM_PAGE_SIZE_H_ is not defined.
llvm-svn: 242114
jGetLoadedDynamicLibrariesInfos. This packet is similar to
qXfer:libraries:read except that lldb supplies the number of solibs
that should be reported about, and the start address for the list
of them. At the initial process launch we'll read the full list
of solibs linked by the process -- at this point we could be using
qXfer:libraries:read -- but on subsequence solib-loaded notifications,
we'll be fetching a smaller number of solibs, often only one or two.
A typical Mac/iOS GUI app may have a couple hundred different
solibs loaded - doing all of the loads via memory reads takes
a couple of megabytes of traffic between lldb and debugserver.
Having debugserver summarize the load addresses of all the solibs
and sending it in JSON requires a couple of hundred kilobytes
of traffic. It's a significant performance improvement when
communicating over a slower channel.
This patch leaves all of the logic for loading the libraries
in DynamicLoaderMacOSXDYLD -- it only call over ot ProcesGDBRemote
to get the JSON result.
If the jGetLoadedDynamicLibrariesInfos packet is not implemented,
the normal technique of using memory read packets to get all of
the details from the target will be used.
<rdar://problem/21007465>
llvm-svn: 241964
proc_set_wakemon_params() to raise the limit on the # of wakeups
per second that are acceptable before the system may send an
EXC_RESOURCE signal to debugserver.
<rdar://problem/19631512>
llvm-svn: 241553
- Avoid sending the qfThreadInfo, qsThreadInfo packets if we have a stop reply packet with the threads already (save 2 round trip packets)
- Include the qname, qserial and qkind in the JSON info
- Report the qname, qserial and qkind to the thread so it can cache it to avoid many packets on MacOSX and iOS
- Don't clear all discoverable settings when we exec, just the ones we need to saves 1-5 packets for each exec.
llvm-svn: 240988
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 "qSymbol::" is sent when shared libraries have been loaded by hooking into the Process::ModulesDidLoad() function from within ProcessGDBRemote. This function was made virtual so that the ProcessGDBRemote version is called, which then first calls the Process::ModulesDidLoad(), and then it queries for any symbol lookups that the remote GDB server might want to do.
This allows debugserver to request the "dispatch_queue_offsets" symbol so that it can read the queue name, queue kind and queue serial number and include this data as part of the stop reply packet. Previously each thread would have to do 3 memory reads in order to read the queue name.
This is part of reducing the number of packets that are sent between LLDB and the remote GDB server.
<rdar://problem/21494354>
llvm-svn: 240466
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
For some communication channels, sending large packets can be very
slow. In those cases, it may be faster to compress the contents of
the packet on the target device and decompress it on the debug host
system. For instance, communicating with a device using something
like Bluetooth may be an environment where this tradeoff is a good one.
This patch adds a new field to the response to the "qSupported" packet
(which returns a "qXfer:features:" response) -- SupportedCompressions
and DefaultCompressionMinSize. These tell you what the remote
stub can support.
lldb, if it wants to enable compression and can handle one of those
algorithms, it can send a QEnableCompression packet specifying the
algorithm and optionally the minimum packet size to use compression
on. lldb may have better knowledge about the best tradeoff for
a given communication channel.
I added support to debugserver an lldb to use the zlib APIs
(if -DHAVE_LIBZ=1 is in CFLAGS and -lz is in LDFLAGS) and the
libcompression APIs on Mac OS X 10.11 and later
(if -DHAVE_LIBCOMPRESSION=1). libz "zlib-deflate" compression.
libcompression can support deflate, lz4, lzma, and a proprietary
lzfse algorithm. libcompression has been hand-tuned for Apple
hardware so it should be preferred if available.
debugserver currently only adds the SupportedCompressions when
it is being run on an Apple watch (TARGET_OS_WATCH). Comment
that #if out from RNBRemote.cpp if you want to enable it to
see how it works. I haven't tested this on a native system
configuration but surely it will be slower to compress & decompress
the packets in a same-system debug session.
I haven't had a chance to add support for this to
GDBRemoteCommunciationServer.cpp yet.
<rdar://problem/21090180>
llvm-svn: 240066
a little more resilient to freely formatted json. Greg's change
in r238279 made the json output from StructuredData unconditionally
pretty-printed and the spaces were confusing debugserver.
llvm-svn: 239013
qEcho:%s
where '%s' is any valid string. The response to this packet is the exact packet itself with no changes, just reply with what you received!
This will help us to recover from packets timing out much more gracefully. Currently if a packet times out, LLDB quickly will hose up the debug session. For example, if we send a "abc" packet and we expect "ABC" back in response, but the "abc" command takes longer than the current timeout value this will happen:
--> "abc"
<-- <<<error: timeout>>>
Now we want to send "def" and get "DEF" back:
--> "def"
<-- "ABC"
We got the wrong response for the "def" packet because we didn't sync up with the server to clear any current responses from previously issues commands.
The fix is to modify GDBRemoteCommunication::WaitForPacketWithTimeoutMicroSecondsNoLock() so that when it gets a timeout, it syncs itself up with the client by sending a "qEcho:%u" where %u is an increasing integer, one for each time we timeout. We then wait for 3 timeout periods to sync back up. So the above "abc" session would look like:
--> "abc"
<-- <<<error: timeout>>> 1 second
--> "qEcho:1"
<-- <<<error: timeout>>> 1 second
<-- <<<error: timeout>>> 1 second
<-- "abc"
<-- "qEcho:1"
The first timeout is from trying to get the response, then we know we timed out and we send the "qEcho:1" packet and wait for 3 timeout periods to get back in sync knowing that we might actually get the response for the "abc" packet in the mean time...
In this case we would actually succeed in getting the response for "abc". But lets say the remote GDB server is deadlocked and will never response, it would look like:
--> "abc"
<-- <<<error: timeout>>> 1 second
--> "qEcho:1"
<-- <<<error: timeout>>> 1 second
<-- <<<error: timeout>>> 1 second
<-- <<<error: timeout>>> 1 second
We then disconnect and say we lost connection.
We might also have a bad GDB server that just dropped the "abc" packet on the floor. We can still recover in this case and it would look like:
--> "abc"
<-- <<<error: timeout>>> 1 second
--> "qEcho:1"
<-- "qEcho:1"
Then we know our remote GDB server is still alive and well, and it just dropped the "abc" response on the floor and we can continue to debug.
<rdar://problem/21082939>
llvm-svn: 238530
We know have on API we should use for all XML within LLDB in XML.h. This API will be easy back the XML parsing by different libraries in case libxml2 doesn't work on all platforms. It also allows the only place for #ifdef ...XML... to be in XML.h and XML.cpp. The API is designed so it will still compile with or without XML support and there is a static function "bool XMLDocument::XMLEnabled()" that can be called to see if XML is currently supported. All APIs will return errors, false, or nothing when XML isn't enabled.
Converted all locations that used XML over to using the host XML implementation.
Added target.xml support to debugserver. Extended the XML register format to work for LLDB by including extra attributes and elements where needed. This allows the target.xml to replace the qRegisterInfo packets and allows us to fetch all register info in a single packet.
<rdar://problem/21090173>
llvm-svn: 238224
It was just detecting the existance of the value. If it gets the value correctly, we need to check that it is non-zero to see if cpu64bit_capable should be true.
<rdar://problem/20857426>
llvm-svn: 236759
the register state when debugging AArch32 programs (armv7
programs running on an armv8 processor). Most notably,
there is no "fpscr" register in the register context -
there is an fpsr and an fpcr.
Also fix a bug where the floating point values could not
be written in armv7 processes.
<rdar://problem/18977767>
llvm-svn: 226244
The issue with Thumb IT (if/then) instructions is the IT instruction preceeds up to four instructions that are made conditional. If a breakpoint is placed on one of the conditional instructions, the instruction either needs to match the thumb opcode size (2 or 4 bytes) or a BKPT instruction needs to be used as these are always unconditional (even in a IT instruction). If BKPT instructions are used, then we might end up stopping on an instruction that won't get executed. So if we do stop at a BKPT instruction, we need to continue if the condition is not true.
When using the BKPT isntructions are easy in that you don't need to detect the size of the breakpoint that needs to be used when setting a breakpoint even in a thumb IT instruction. The bad part is you will now always stop at the opcode location and let LLDB determine if it should auto-continue. If the BKPT instruction is used, the BKPT that is used for ARM code should be something that also triggers the BKPT instruction in Thumb in case you set a breakpoint in the middle of code and the code is actually Thumb code. A value of 0xE120BE70 will work since the lower 16 bits being 0xBE70 happens to be a Thumb BKPT instruction.
The alternative is to use trap or illegal instructions that the kernel will translate into breakpoint hits. On Mac this was 0xE7FFDEFE for ARM and 0xDEFE for Thumb. The darwin kernel currently doesn't recognize any 32 bit Thumb instruction as a instruction that will get turned into a breakpoint exception (EXC_BREAKPOINT), so we had to use the BKPT instruction on Mac. The linux kernel recognizes a 16 and a 32 bit instruction as valid thumb breakpoint opcodes. The benefit of using 16 or 32 bit instructions is you don't stop on opcodes in a IT block when the condition doesn't match.
To further complicate things, single stepping on ARM is often implemented by modifying the BCR/BVR registers and setting the processor to stop when the PC is not equal to the current value. This means single stepping is another way the ARM target can stop on instructions that won't get executed.
This patch does the following:
1 - Fix the internal debugserver for Apple to use the BKPT instruction for ARM and Thumb
2 - Fix LLDB to catch when we stop in the middle of a Thumb IT instruction and continue if we stop at an instruction that won't execute
3 - Fixes this in a way that will work for any target on any platform as long as it is ARM/Thumb
4 - Adds a patch for ignoring conditions that don't match when in ARM mode (see below)
This patch also provides the code that implements the same thing for ARM instructions, though it is disabled for now. The ARM patch will check the condition of the instruction in ARM mode and continue if the condition isn't true (and therefore the instruction would not be executed). Again, this is not enable, but the code for it has been added.
<rdar://problem/19145455>
llvm-svn: 223851