This change adds AllocateMemory and DeallocateMemory methods to the SBProcess
API, so that clients can allocate and deallocate memory blocks within the
process being debugged (for storing JIT-compiled code or other uses).
(I am developing a debugger + REPL using the API; it will need to store
JIT-compiled code within the target.)
Reviewed By: clayborg, jingham
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105389
This adds a basic SB API for creating and stopping traces.
Note: This doesn't add any APIs for inspecting individual instructions. That'd be a more complicated change and it might be better to enhande the dump functionality to output the data in binary format. I'll leave that for a later diff.
This also enhances the existing tests so that they test the same flow using both the command interface and the SB API.
I also did some cleanup of legacy code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103500
Mostly just making sure the indentation is right (SBDebugger had 0 spaces
as it was still plain text, the others had too much indentation or other
minor issues).
This translates most of the old ASCII art in our documentation to the
equivalent in restructured text (which the new version of the LLDB docs
is using).
This patch moves the SB API method GetExtendedCrashInformation from
SBTarget to SBProcess since it only makes sense to call this method on a
sane process which might not be the case on a SBTarget object.
It also addresses some feedbacks received after landing the first patch
for the 'crash-info' feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75049
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
All the code required to generate the language bindings for Python and
Lua lives under scripts, even though the majority of this code aren't
scripts at all, and surrounded by scripts that are totally unrelated.
I've reorganized these files and moved everything related to the
language bindings into a new top-level directory named bindings. This
makes the corresponding files self contained and much more discoverable.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72437