variables in the ValueObject code:
- Report an error if the variable does not have
a valid address.
- Return the contents of the data to GetData(),
even if the value is constant.
<rdar://problem/13690855>
llvm-svn: 179876
lets a ValueObject's contents be set from raw
data. This has certain limitations (notably,
registers can only be set to data that is as
large as the register) but will be useful for
the new Materializer.
I also exposed this interface through SBValue.
I have added a testcase that exercises various
special cases of SBValue::SetData().
llvm-svn: 179437
This patch fixes the issue that we were using the C stack as a measure of depth of ValueObject hierarchies, in the sense that we were assuming that recursive ValueObject operations would never be deeper than the stack allows.
This assumption is easy to prove wrong, however.
For instance, after ~10k runs through this loop:
struct node
{
int value;
node* child;
node (int x)
{
value = x;
child = nullptr;
}
};
int main ()
{
node root(1);
node* ptr = &root;
int j = 2;
while (1)
{
ptr->child = new node(j++);
ptr = ptr->child;
}
return 0;
}
the deepmost child object will be deeper than the stack on most architectures, and we would be unable to display it
This checkin fixes the issue by introducing a notion of root of ValueObject hierarchies.
In a couple cases, we have to use an iterative algorithm instead of going to the root because we want to allow deeper customizations (e.g. formats, dynamic values).
While the patch passes our test suite without regressions, it is a good idea to keep eyes open for any unexpected behavior (recursion can be subtle..)
Also, I am hesitant to introduce a test case since failing at this will not just be marked as an "F", but most definitely crash LLDB.
llvm-svn: 179330
platform.plugin.darwin-kernel.kext-directories
platform.plugin.darwin-kernel.search-locally-for-kexts
and fix a few FileSpec handling issues for the kext-directories setting.
llvm-svn: 178920
Add two initial settings for the PlatformDarwinKernel plugin,
plugin.platform.darwin-kernel.search-locally-for-kexts [true|false]
plugin.platform.darwin-kernel.kext-directories [directory list]
llvm-svn: 178846
Make lldb_private::RegularExpression thread safe everywhere. This was done by removing the m_matches array from the lldb_private::RegularExpression class and putting it into the new lldb_private::RegularExpression::Match class. When executing a regular expression you now have the option to create a lldb_private::RegularExpression::Match object and pass a pointer in if you want to get parenthesized matching. If you don't want any matching, you pass in NULL. The lldb_private::RegularExpression::Match object is initialized with the number of matches you desire. Any matching strings are now extracted from the lldb_private::RegularExpression::Match objects. This makes the regular expression objects thread safe and as a result many more regex objects were turned into static objects that end up using a local lldb_private::RegularExpression::Match object when executing.
llvm-svn: 178702
Symbol table function names should support lookups like symbols with debug info.
To fix this I:
- Gutted the way FindFunctions is used, there used to be way too much smarts only in the DWARF plug-in
- Made it more efficient by chopping the name up once and using simpler queries so that SymbolFile and Symtab plug-ins don't need to do as much
- Filter the results at a higher level
- Make the lldb_private::Symtab able to chop up C++ mangled names and make as much sense out of them as possible and also be able to search by basename, fullname, method name, and selector name.
llvm-svn: 178608
PC relative loads are missing disassembly comments when disassembled in a live process.
This issue was because some sections, like __TEXT and __DATA in libobjc.A.dylib, were being moved when they were put into the dyld shared cache. This could also affect any other system that slides sections individually.
The solution is to keep track of wether the bytes we will disassemble are from an executable file (file address), or from a live process (load address). We now do the right thing based off of this input in all cases.
llvm-svn: 178315
- Includes a stub for AVX support in the x86-64 register context and a failing test for register sets that are unavailable.
Thanks to Greg Clayton for his review feedback.
llvm-svn: 178252
LLDB is crashing when logging is enabled from lldb-perf-clang. This has to do with the global destructor chain as the process and its threads are being torn down.
All logging channels now make one and only one instance that is kept in a global pointer which is never freed. This guarantees that logging can correctly continue as the process tears itself down.
llvm-svn: 178191
ValueObjects themselves use DumpValueObjectOptions as the currency for the same purpose
The code to convert between these two units was replicated (to varying degrees of correctness) in several spots in the code
This checkin provides one and only one (and hopefully correct :-) entry point for this conversion
llvm-svn: 178044
Functions in "(anonymous namespace)" was causing LLDB to crash when trying to complete a type and it would also cause functions arguments to appear in wrong place in frame display when showing function arguments.
llvm-svn: 177965
Ensure that option -Y also works for expression as it does for frame variable
Also, if the user passes an explicit format specifier when printing a variable, override the summary's decision to hide the value.
This is required for scenarios like this to work:
(lldb) p/x c
(Class) $0 = 0x0000000100adb7f8 NSObject
Previously this would say:
(lldb) p/x c
(Class) $0 = NSObject
ignoring the explicit format specifier
llvm-svn: 177893
commands of the form
frame variable -f c-string foo
where foo is an arbitrary pointer (e.g. void*) now do the right thing, i.e. they deref the pointer and try to get a c-string at the pointed address instead of dumping the pointer bytes as a string. the old behavior is used as a fallback if things don’t go well
llvm-svn: 177799
Fixed a crasher in the SourceManager where it wasn't checking the m_target member variable for NULL.
In doing this fix, I hardened this class to have weak pointers to the debugger and target in case they do go away. I also changed SBSourceManager to hold onto weak pointers to the debugger and target so they don't keep objects alive by holding a strong reference to them.
llvm-svn: 177365
lldb remembers not-found source file, setting target.source-map doesn't make it re-check for it. Now this is fixed. Each time the source path remappings get updated, the modification ID in the PathMappingList gets bumped and then we know the re-check for sources.
llvm-svn: 177125
Made the "--reverse" option to "source list" also be able to use the "--count". This helps us implement support for regexp source list command:
(lldb) l -10
Which gets turned into:
(lldb) source list --reverse --count 10
Also simplified the code that is used to track showing more source from the last file and line.
llvm-svn: 176961
DWARF with .o files now uses 40-60% less memory!
Big fixes include:
- Change line table internal representation to contain "file addresses". Since each line table is owned by a compile unit that is owned by a module, it makes address translation into lldb_private::Address easy to do when needed.
- Removed linked address members/methods from lldb_private::Section and lldb_private::Address
- lldb_private::LineTable can now relink itself using a FileRangeMap to make it easier to re-link line tables in the future
- Added ObjectFile::ClearSymtab() so that we can get rid of the object file symbol tables after we parse them once since they are not needed and kept memory allocated for no reason
- Moved the m_sections_ap (std::auto_ptr to section list) and m_symtab_ap (std::auto_ptr to the lldb_private::Symtab) out of each of the ObjectFile subclasses and put it into lldb_private::ObjectFile.
- Changed how the debug map is parsed and stored to be able to:
- Lazily parse the debug map for each object file
- not require the address map for a .o file until debug information is linked for a .o file
llvm-svn: 176454
Calculate "can branch" using the MC API's rather than our hand-rolled regex'es.
As extra credit, allow setting the disassembly flavor for x86 based architectures to intel or att.
<rdar://problem/11319574>
<rdar://problem/9329275>
llvm-svn: 176392
in the Process destructor. Doing it there can be too late depending on what the internal state
and ProcessGDBRemote Async threads are doing.
<rdar://problem/13297536>
llvm-svn: 176203
StackFrame assumes m_sc is additive, but m_sc can lose its target. So now the SymbolContext::Clear() method takes a bool that indicates if the target should be cleared. Modified all existing code to properly set the bool argument.
llvm-svn: 175953
- generate-vers.pl has to be called by cmake to generate the version number
- parallel builds not yet supported; dependency on clang must be explicitly specified
Tested on Linux.
- Building on Mac will require code-signing logic to be implemented.
- Building on Windows will require OS-detection logic and some selective directory inclusion
Thanks to Carlo Kok (who originally prepared these CMakefiles for Windows) and Ben Langmuir
who ported them to Linux!
llvm-svn: 175795
Adding data formatters for iterators for std::map and std::vector (both libc++ and libstdcpp)
This does not include reverse iterators since they are both trickier (due to requirements the standard imposes on them) and much less useful
llvm-svn: 175787
Fixed a crasher when the ConnectionFileDescriptor was used in a process with over FD_SETSIZE (1024) files open. It would corrupt the stack and cause the stack checker to assert and kill the program.
The final fix was to "#define _DARWIN_UNLIMITED_SELECT" at the top of the one and only file that uses select () in the LLDB codebase and then make an array of "fd_set" objects so they can handle more than 1024 file descriptors. The new code can handle as many file descriptors as a process can create.
llvm-svn: 175378
1 - A store off the end of a buffer in ValueObject.cpp
2 - DataExtractor had cases where bad offsets could cause invalid memory to be accessed.
llvm-svn: 174757
lldb was mmap'ing archive files once per .o file it loads, now it correctly shares the archive between modules.
LLDB was also always mapping entire contents of universal mach-o files, now it maps just the slice that is required.
Added a new logging channel for "lldb" called "mmap" to help track future regressions.
Modified the ObjectFile and ObjectContainer plugin interfaces to take a data offset along with the file offset and size so we can implement the correct caching and efficient reading of parts of files without mmap'ing the entire file like we used to.
The current implementation still keeps entire .a files mmaped (once) and entire slices from universal files mmaped to ensure that if a client builds their binaries during a debug session we don't lose our data and get corrupt object file info and debug info.
llvm-svn: 174524
Cleaned up the objective C name parsing code to use a class.
Now breakpoints that are set by name that are objective C methods without the leading '+' or '-' will resolve. We do this by expanding all the objective C names for a given string. For example:
(lldb) b [MyString cStringUsingEncoding:]
Will set a breakpoint with multiple possible names:
-[MyString cStringUsingEncoding:]
+[MyString cStringUsingEncoding:]
Also if you have a category, it will strip the category and set a breakpoint in all variants:
(lldb) [MyString(my_category) cStringUsingEncoding:]
Will resolve to the following names:
-[MyString(my_category) cStringUsingEncoding:]
+[MyString(my_category) cStringUsingEncoding:]
-[MyString cStringUsingEncoding:]
+[MyString cStringUsingEncoding:]
Likewise when we have:
(lldb) b -[MyString(my_category) cStringUsingEncoding:]
It will resolve to two names:
-[MyString(my_category) cStringUsingEncoding:]
-[MyString cStringUsingEncoding:]
llvm-svn: 173858
Providing a compact display mode for "po" to use where the convenience variable name and the pointer value are both hidden.
This is for convenience when dealing with ObjC instances where the description often gets it right and the debugger-provided information is not useful to most people.
If you need either of these, "expr" will still show them.
llvm-svn: 173748
Data formatters now cache themselves.
This commit provides a new formatter cache mechanism. Upon resolving a formatter (summary or synthetic), LLDB remembers the resolution for later faster retrieval.
Also moved the data formatters subsystem from the core to its own group and folder for easier management, and done some code reorganization.
The ObjC runtime v1 now returns a class name if asked for the dynamic type of an object. This is required for formatters caching to work with the v1 runtime.
Lastly, this commit disposes of the old hack where ValueObjects had to remember whether they were queried for formatters with their static or dynamic type.
Now the ValueObjectDynamicValue class works well enough that we can use its dynamic value setting for the same purpose.
llvm-svn: 173728
Add the ability to give breakpoints a "kind" string, and have the StopInfoBreakpoint
print that in the brief description if set. Also print the kind - if set - in the breakpoint
listing.
Give kinds to a bunch of the internal breakpoints.
We were deleting the Mac OS X dynamic loader breakpoint as though the id we had stored away was
a breakpoint site ID, but in fact it was a breakpoint id, so we never actually deleted it. Fixed that.
llvm-svn: 173555
Major fixed to allow reading files that are over 4GB. The main problems were that the DataExtractor was using 32 bit offsets as a data cursor, and since we mmap all of our object files we could run into cases where if we had a very large core file that was over 4GB, we were running into the 4GB boundary.
So I defined a new "lldb::offset_t" which should be used for all file offsets.
After making this change, I enabled warnings for data loss and for enexpected implicit conversions temporarily and found a ton of things that I fixed.
Any functions that take an index internally, should use "size_t" for any indexes and also should return "size_t" for any sizes of collections.
llvm-svn: 173463
Extending ValueObjectDynamicValue so that it stores a TypeAndOrName instead of a TypeSP.
This change allows us to reflect the notion that a ValueObject can have a dynamic type for which we have no debug information.
Previously, we would coalesce that to the static type of the object, potentially losing relevant information or even getting it wrong.
This fix ensures we can correctly report the class name for Cocoa objects whose types are hidden classes that we know nothing about (e.g. __NSArrayI for immutable arrays).
As a side effect, our --show-types argument to frame variable no longer needs to append custom dynamic type information.
llvm-svn: 173216
vector<bool> is specialized and the existing general summary for vectors would lie to the user.
Tackling libstdc++ and synthetic children is the following, less critical, part of this task
llvm-svn: 172671
AddCXXSummary in FormatManager::LoadSystemFormatters();
that function pulls in code that assumes python; can't
be used without the ifdef.
llvm-svn: 172300
Providing a data formatter for libc++ std::wstring
In the process, refactoring the std::string data formatter to be written in C++ so that commonalities between the two can be exploited
Also, providing a new API on the ValueObject to navigate a hierarchy by index-path
Lastly, an appropriate test case is included
llvm-svn: 172282
Fixed an issue with the auto loading of script resources in debug info files. Any platform can add support for this, and on MacOSX we allow dSYM files to contain python modules that get automatically loaded when a dSYM file is associated with an executable or shared library.
The modifications will now:
- Let the module locate the symbol file naturally instead of using a function that only works in certain cases. This helps us to locate the script resources as long as the dSYM file can be found.
- Don't try and do any of this if the script interpreter has scripting disabled.
- Allow more than one scripting resource to be found in a symbol file by returning the list
- Load the scripting resources when a symbol file is added via the "target symbols add" command.
- Be smarter about matching the dSYM mach-o file to an existing executable in the target images by stripping extensions on the symfile basname if needed.
llvm-svn: 172275
Fixed an issue where the platform auto select code was changing the architecture and causing the wrong architecture to be assigned to the target.
llvm-svn: 172251
Also modified the Value class so that you can evaluate expressions without a process, yet with some sections loaded in the target. This allows casting pointers that are in data sections to types and being able to evaluate expressions in the data. For example:
(lldb) target create a.out
(lldb) target modules load --file a.out --slide 0
... find address of something in data ...
(lldb) script
expr_opts = lldb.SBExpressionOptions()
v = lldb.target.EvaluateExpression('(foo *)0x1230000', expr_opts)
print v
vv = lldb.value(v)
print v.pt.x
Above we were able to cast a pointer to an address which was in a.out's data
section and print out entire structures and navigate to the child ivars of the expression.
llvm-svn: 172227
Providing data formatters for char16_t* and char32_t* C++11-style Unicode strings
Using this chance to refactor the UTF data reader used for data formatters for added generality
Added a relevant test case
llvm-svn: 172119
last source point listed.
Also fix the setting of the default file & line to the file containing main, when you do a plain "list".
<rdar://problem/12685226>
llvm-svn: 171945
Setting breakpoints using "breakpoint set --selector <SEL>" previously didn't when there was no dSYM file.
Also fixed issues in the test suite that arose after fixing the bug.
Also fixed the log channels to properly ref count the log streams using weak pointers to the streams. This fixes a test suite problem that would happen when you specified a full path to the compiler with the "--compiler" option.
llvm-svn: 171816
Have the disassembler's Instruction::Dump always insert at least
one space character between an opcode and its arguments, don't let
a long opcode name abut the arguments.
llvm-svn: 171561
Supporting a compact display syntax for ObjC pointers where 0x00.....0 is replaced by a much more legible "nil"
e.g. this would show:
(NSArray *) $2 = nil
instead of:
(NSArray *) $2 = 0x0000000000000000 <nil>
llvm-svn: 170161
equality can be strict or loose and we want code to
explicitly choose one or the other.
Also renamed the Compare function to IsEqualTo, to
avoid confusion.
<rdar://problem/12856749>
llvm-svn: 170152
When displaying function.name-with-args format will now print "varname=<unavailable>" instead of omitting argument names and values when there is an error reading the value.
llvm-svn: 169781
Making MightHaveChildren() always return true regardless for our own data formatters
This is meant to optimize performance for common most-often-not-empty container classes
llvm-svn: 169759
Change the wording of NSNumber summary from absurd value to unexpected value when a tagged pointer shows up that does not match our knowledge of the internals
llvm-svn: 169751
- remove unused members
- add NO_PEDANTIC to selected Makefiles
- fix return values (removed NULL as needed)
- disable warning about four-char-constants
- remove unneeded const from operator*() declaration
- add missing lambda function return types
- fix printf() with no format string
- change sizeof to use a type name instead of variable name
- fix Linux ProcessMonitor.cpp to be 32/64 bit friendly
- disable warnings emitted by swig-generated C++ code
Patch by Matt Kopec!
llvm-svn: 169645
Fixed zero sized arrays to work correctly. This will only happen once we get a clang that emits correct debug info for zero sized arrays. For now I have marked the TestStructTypes.py as an expected failure.
llvm-svn: 169465
- add new header lldb-python.h to be included before other system headers
- short term fix (eventually python dependencies must be cleaned up)
Patch by Matt Kopec!
llvm-svn: 169341
type of an Objective-C selector, don't bother
making the expression parser resolve it all over
again. Just send the message straight to the
object pointer as if it were an id, and cast the
result.
<rdar://problem/12799087>
llvm-svn: 169300
Cleaned up the option parsing code to always pass around the short options as integers. Previously we cast this down to "char" and lost some information. I recently added an assert that would detect duplicate short character options which was firing during the test suite.
This fix does the following:
- make sure all short options are treated as "int"
- make sure that short options can be non-printable values when a short option is not required or when an option group is mixed into many commands and a short option is not desired
- fix the help printing to "do the right thing" in all cases. Previously if there were duplicate short character options, it would just not emit help for the duplicates
- fix option parsing when there are duplicates to parse options correctly. Previously the option parsing, when done for an OptionGroup, would just start parsing options incorrectly by omitting table entries and it would end up setting the wrong option value
llvm-svn: 169189