Summary:
The only usage there was in GetModificationTime(). I also took the opportunity
to move this function from FileSpec to the FileSystem class - since we are
using FileSpecs to also represent remote files for which we cannot (easily)
retrieve modification time, it makes sense to make the decision to get the
modification time more explicit.
The new function returns a llvm::sys::TimePoint<>. To aid the transition
from TimeValue, I have added a constructor to it which enables implicit
conversion from a time_point.
Reviewers: zturner, clayborg
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, tberghammer, danalbert, beanz, mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25392
llvm-svn: 285702
for floating point registers was not recording them correctly. I needed to
change the EmulateInstructionARM64 unwind plans from using the DWARF
register numbering scheme to using the LLDB register numbering scheme
(because dwarf doesn't define register numbers for the 64-bit "d" registers).
Updated the EmulateInstructionARM64 unit tests to work with the LLDB
register numbering scheme and added a unit test to check the floating
point register spills & restores are correctly recorded.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D25864
<rdar://problem/28745483>
llvm-svn: 285662
Summary:
Most of the changes are very straight-forward, the only tricky part was the
"packet speed-test" function, which is very time-heavy. As the function was
completely untested, I added a quick unit smoke test for it.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25391
llvm-svn: 285602
Summary:
.. handling for windows path was completely broken because the function was
expecting \ as path separators, but we were passing it normalized file paths,
where these have been replaced by forward slashes. Apart from this, the function
was incorrect for posix paths as well in some corner cases, as well as being
generally hard to follow.
The corner cases were:
- /../bar -> should be same as /bar
- /bar/.. -> should be same as / (slightly dodgy as the former depends on /bar actually
existing, but since we're doing it in an abstract way, I think the
transformation is reasonable)
I rewrite the function to fix these corner cases and handle windows paths more
correctly. The function should now handle the posix paths (modulo symlinks, but
we cannot really do anything about that without a real filesystem). For windows
paths, there are a couple of corner cases left, mostly to do with drive letter
handling, which cannot be fixed until the rest of the class understands drive
letters better.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26081
llvm-svn: 285593
Summary:
This plugin resembles the already existing Windows-only Minidump plugin.
The WinMinidumpPlugin uses the Windows API for parsing Minidumps
while this plugin is cross-platform because it includes a Minidump
parser (which is already commited)
It is able to produce a backtrace, to read the general puprose regiters,
inspect local variables, show image list, do memory reads, etc.
For now the only arches that this supports are x86_32 and x86_64.
This is because I have only written register contexts for those.
Others will come in next CLs.
I copied the WinMinidump tests and adapted them a little bit for them to
work with the new plugin (and they pass)
I will add more tests, aiming for better code coverage.
There is still functionality to be added, see TODOs in code.
Reviewers: labath, zturner
Subscribers: beanz, mgorny, modocache, lldb-commits, amccarth
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25905
llvm-svn: 285587
Summary:
This, like the x86_64 case, reads the register values from the minidump
file, and emits a binary buffer that is ordered using the offsets from
the RegisterInfoInterface argument. That way we can reuse an existing
register context.
Added unit tests.
Reviewers: labath, zturner
Subscribers: beanz, mgorny, modocache, amccarth, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25832
llvm-svn: 285584
Most of them fail right now and are commented out. The main problem is handling
of backslashes on windows, but also the posix path code has a couple of issues.
llvm-svn: 285393
Summary:
Now the Minidump parser can parse the:
1) MemoryInfoList - containing region info about memory ranges (readable,
writable, executable)
2) Memory64List - this is the stuct used when the Minidump is a
full-memory one.
3) Adding filtering of the module list (shared libraries list) - there
can be mutliple records in the module list under the same name but with
different load address (e.g. when the binary has non contigious
sections). FilterModuleList eliminates the duplicated modules, leaving
the one with the lowest load addr.
Added unit tests for everything.
Reviewers: labath, zturner
Subscribers: beanz, mgorny, modocache, lldb-commits, amccarth
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25569
llvm-svn: 284593
prologue, then loads & stores x20 on the stack from a different
location in the middle of the function, and then restores the
reg in the epilogue. The saving/restoring of x20 in the middle
of the function should be ignored.
llvm-svn: 283969
MSVC does not like the declaration of a terminate() function (I guess it looks
too much like std::terminate()). While I'm there, move the setup/teardown code
into the functions gtest provides for that purpose.
llvm-svn: 283870
plan generator.
Fix a small bug in EmulateInstructionARM64::GetFramePointerRegister
which was returning the stack pointer reg instead of fp, prevented
the unwinder from recognizing the switch to using the fp in a
function. (<rdar://problem/28663117>)
Add a new eContextRestoreStackPointer context hint so that the arm64
emulator can flag when the frame pointer value is copied back in to
the stack pointer and that should be used to compute the canonical
frame address again in an epilogue sequence. (<rdar://problem/28704862>)
Small changes to UnwindAssemblyInstEmulation to have a method we can
call without a live process/thread/etc for unit tests.
<rdar://problem/28663117>
<rdar://problem/28704862>
<rdar://problem/28509178>
llvm-svn: 283847
insturction profiling. Add a test that verifies that we reject a
32-bit only instruction in 64-bit (long) mode.
This wraps up all the testing I want to add for
x86AssemblyInspectionEngine.
llvm-svn: 283404
Tests are failing and build is failing on windows and darwin.
Will fix and commit it later
-------------------------------------------------------------
Revert "xfailing minidump tests again ... :("
This reverts commit 97eade002c9e43c1e0d11475a4888083a8965044.
Revert "Fixing new Minidump plugin tests"
This reverts commit 0dd93b3ab39c8288696001dd50b9a093b813b09c.
Revert "Add the new minidump files to the Xcode project."
This reverts commit 2f638a1d046b8a88e61e212220edc40aecd2ce44.
Revert "xfailing tests for Minidump plugin"
This reverts commit 99311c0b22338a83e6a00c4fbddfd3577914c003.
Revert "Adding a new Minidump post-mortem debugging plugin"
This reverts commit b09a7e4dae231663095a84dac4be3da00b03a021.
llvm-svn: 283352
Summary:
This plugin resembles the already existing Windows-only Minidump plugin.
The WinMinidumpPlugin uses the Windows API for parsing Minidumps
while this plugin is cross-platform because it includes a Minidump
parser (which is already commited)
It is able to produce a backtrace, to read the general puprose regiters,
inspect local variables, show image list, do memory reads, etc.
For now the only arch that this supports is x86 64 bit
This is because I have only written a register context for that arch.
Others will come in next CLs.
I copied the WinMinidump tests and adapted them a little bit for them to
work with the new plugin (and they pass)
I will add more tests, aiming for better code coverage.
There is still functionality to be added, see TODOs in code.
Reviewers: labath, zturner
Subscribers: beanz, mgorny, amccarth, lldb-commits, modocache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25196
llvm-svn: 283259
unittests. If I have time, I'd like to see if I can write some
tests of the eh_frame augmentation which is a wholly separate code
path (it seems like maybe it should be rolled into the main instruction
scanning codepath, to be honest, and operate on the generated
UnwindPlan instead of bothering with raw instructions at all).
Outside the eh_frame augmentation, I'm comfortable that this unwind
generator is being tested well now.
llvm-svn: 283186
There were a number of issues with the Args class preventing
efficient use of strings and incoporating LLVM's StringRef class.
The two biggest were:
1. Backing memory stored in a std::string, so we would frequently
have to use const_cast to get a mutable buffer for passing to
various low level APIs.
2. backing std::strings stored in a std::list, which doesn't
provide random access.
I wanted to solve these two issues so that we could provide
StringRef access to the underlying arguments, and also a way
to provide range-based access to the underlying argument array
while still providing convenient c-style access via an argv style
const char**.
The solution here is to store arguments in a single "entry" class
which contains the backing memory, a StringRef with precomputed
length, and the quote char. The backing memory is a manually
allocated const char* so that it is not invalidated when the
container is resized, and there is a separate argv array provided
for c-style access.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25099
llvm-svn: 283157
assembly inspection class is designed to detect. This is only about
half of the instructions that it needs to recognize - I'll complete
this in a separate checkin.
The larger full-function style test cases I'd checked in previously
covered nearly all of these already, but I wanted simpler test cases
too, so if they fail in the future, it will be easier to spot the
issue.
llvm-svn: 283010
'push 0x20(%esp)' which clang can generate when emitting
-fomit-frame-pointer code for 32-bit.
Add a unit test program which includes this instruction.
Also fix a bug in the refactoring/rewrite of the x86 assembly
instruction profiler where I'd hard coded it as a 64-bit disassembler
instead of using the ArchSpec to pick a 32-bit or 64-bit disassembler
from llvm. When the disassembler would hit an instruction
that is invalid in 64-bit mode, it would stop disassembling the function.
This likely led to the TestSBData testsuite failure on linux with 32-bit
i386 and gcc-4.9; I'll test that in a bit.
The newly added unit test program is 32-bit i386 code and it includes
an instruction which is invalid in 64-bit mode so it will catch this.
<rdar://problem/28557876>
llvm-svn: 282991
a large stack frame with lots of spilled registers.
While writing the i386 version of this test, it looks
like I found a bug in the 32-bit instruction profiler
code. I may ned to fix the assembly inspection engine
before I can finish writing that test, so I'm only
committing the 64-bit one tonight.
<rdar://problem/28509178>
llvm-svn: 282683
a linux bot test failure. That one is fixed; hopefully there won't
be any others turned up this time.
The eh_frame augmentation code wasn't working right after the
reorg/rewrite of the classes. It works correctly now for the one
test that was failing - but we'll see what the test bots come up
with.
<rdar://problem/28509178>
llvm-svn: 282659
A testbot found a regression introduced in the testsuite with
the changes in r282565 on Ubuntu (TestStepNoDebug.ReturnValueTestCase).
I'll get this set up on an ubuntu box and figure out what is happening
there -- likely a problem with the eh_frame augmentation, which isn't
used on macosx.
llvm-svn: 282566
x86AssemblyInspectionEngine and the current UnwindAssembly_x86 to
allow for the core engine to be exercised by unit tests.
The UnwindAssembly_x86 class will have access to Targets, Processes,
Threads, RegisterContexts -- it will be working in the full lldb
environment.
x86AssemblyInspectionEngine is layered away from all of that, it is
given some register definitions and a bag of bytes to profile.
I wrote an initial unittest for a do-nothing simple x86_64/i386
function to start with. I'll be adding more.
The x86 assembly unwinder was added to lldb early in its bringup;
I made some modernization changes as I was refactoring the code
to make it more consistent with how we write lldb today.
I also added RegisterContextMinidump_x86_64.cpp to the xcode project
file so I can run the unittests from that.
The testsuite passes with this change, but there was quite a bit of
code change by the refactoring and it's possible there are some
issues. I'll be testing this more in the coming days, but it looks
like it is behaving correctly as far as I can tell with automated
testing.
<rdar://problem/28509178>
llvm-svn: 282565
Summary:
This is a register context converter from Minidump to Linux reg context.
This knows the layout of the register context in the Minidump file
(which is the same as in Windows FYI) and as a result emits a binary data
buffer that matches the Linux register context binary layout.
This way we can reuse the existing RegisterContextLinux_x86_64 and
RegisterContextCorePOSIX_x86_64 classes.
Reviewers: labath, zturner
Subscribers: beanz, mgorny, lldb-commits, amccarth
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24919
llvm-svn: 282529
Also fixed up a couple misbehaving functions. It is perfectly
legal to have env vars with no values (i.e. the '=' and following
need not be present).
llvm-svn: 282171
The test exposed a bug in the StructuredData Serialization code, which did not
escape the backslash properly. This manifested itself as windows breakpoint
serialization roundtrip test not succeeding (as windows paths included
backslashes).
llvm-svn: 282167
This patch also marks the const char* versions as =delete to prevent
their use. This has the potential to cause build breakages on some
platforms which I can't compile. I have tested on Windows, Linux,
and OSX. Best practices for fixing broken callsites are outlined in
Args.h in a comment above the deleted function declarations.
Eventually we can remove these =delete declarations, but for now they
are important to make sure that all implicit conversions from
const char * are manually audited to make sure that they do not invoke a
conversion from nullptr.
llvm-svn: 281919
Where possible, remove the const char* version. To keep the
risk and impact here minimal, I've only done the simplest
functions.
In the process, I found a few opportunities for adding some
unit tests, so I added those as well.
Tested on Windows, Linux, and OSX.
llvm-svn: 281799
This makes the code easier to grok, and since this is a very low
level function it also is very helpful to have this take a StringRef
since it means anyone higher up the chain who has a StringRef would
have to first convert it to a null-terminated string. This way it
can work equally well with StringRefs or const char*'s, which will
enable the conversion of higher up functions to StringRef.
Tested on Windows, Linux, and OSX and saw no regressions.
llvm-svn: 281642
I'm was trying to do some cleanup and code modernization and in
doing so I needed to change ParseMachCPUDashSubtypeTriple to take
a StringRef. To ensure I don't break anything, I'm adding some
unit tests for this function. As a side benefit, this also expands
test coverage of this function to all platforms, since in general
this code would rarely be exercised on non Mac platforms, and never
in the test suite.
llvm-svn: 281387
Summary:
Added parsing of the MiscInfo data stream.
The main member of it that we care about is the process_id
On Linux generated Minidump (from breakpad) we don't have
the MiscInfo, we have the /proc/$pid/status from where we can get the
pid.
Also parsing the module list - the list of all of the loaded
modules/shared libraries.
Parsing the exception stream.
Parsing MinidumpStrings.
I have unit tests for all of that.
Also added some tests using a Minidump generated from Windows tools (not
from breakpad)
Reviewers: labath, zturner
Subscribers: beanz, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24385
llvm-svn: 281348
This change does the following:
* Changes the signature for the continuation delegate method that handles
async structured data from accepting an already-parsed structured data
element to taking just the packet contents.
* Moves the conversion of the JSON-async: packet contents from
GDBRemoteClientBase to the continuation delegate method.
* Adds a new unit test for verifying that the $JSON-asyc: packets get
decoded and that the decoded packets get forwarded on to the delegate
for further processing. Thanks to Pavel for making that whole section of
code easily unit testable!
* Tightens up the packet verification on reception of a $JSON-async:
packet contents. The code prior to this change is susceptible to a
segfault if a packet is carefully crafted that starts with $J but
has a total length shorter than the length of "$JSON-async:".
Reviewers: labath, clayborg, zturner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23884
llvm-svn: 281121
The behaviour of FileSpec differed between host OS versions. Hardcode the path
syntax to posix, as we don't care about that in this test.
llvm-svn: 281025
Summary:
This adds the jModulesInfo packet, which is the equivalent of qModulesInfo, but it enables us to
query multiple modules at once. This makes a significant speed improvement in case the
application has many (over a hundred) modules, and the communication link has a non-negligible
latency. This functionality is accessed by ProcessGdbRemote::PrefetchModuleSpecs(), which does
the caching. GetModuleSpecs() is modified to first consult the cache before asking the remote
stub. PrefetchModuleSpecs is currently only called from POSIX-DYLD dynamic loader plugin, after
it reads the list of modules from the inferior memory, but other uses are possible.
This decreases the attach time to an android application by about 40%.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: tberghammer, lldb-commits, danalbert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24236
llvm-svn: 280919
After the reformat, the unittests do not compile due to missing due to redefinition errors
between PosixApi.h and ucrt/direct.h. This is a bit of a shot in the dark, as I have not tested
it on windows, but I am restoring the original include order, so it should hopefully fix it.
llvm-svn: 280793
*** 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
this is a resubmission of r280476. The problem with the original commit was that it was printing
out all numbers as signed, which was wrong for unsigned numbers with the MSB set. Fix that and
add a unit test covering that case.
llvm-svn: 280480
This reverts commit r280476 as it breaks several tests on i386. I was fixing an 32-bit
breakage, and I did not run the 32-bit test suite before submitting, oops.
llvm-svn: 280478
Summary:
It seems the original intention of the function was printing signed values in decimal format, and
unsigned values in hex (without the leading "0x"). However, signed and unsigned long were
exchanged, which lead to amusing test failures in TestMemoryFind.py.
Instead of just switching the two, I think we should just print everything in decimal here, as
the current behaviour is very confusing (especially when one does not request printing of types).
Nothing seems to depend on this behaviour except and we already have a way for the user to
request the format he wants when printing values for most commands (which presumably does not go
through this function).
I also add a unit tests for the function in question.
Reviewers: clayborg, granata.enrico
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24126
llvm-svn: 280476
Summary:
This is a Minidump parsing code.
There are still some more structures/data streams that need to be added.
The aim ot this is to be used in the implementation of
a minidump debugging plugin that works on all platforms/architectures.
Currently we have a windows-only plugin that uses the WinAPI to parse
the dump files.
Also added unittests for the current functionality.
Reviewers: labath, amccarth
Subscribers: tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, lldb-commits, dschuff
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23545
llvm-svn: 280356
The rewrite of StringExtractor::GetHexMaxU32 changes functionality in a way which makes
lldb-server crash. The crash (assert) happens when parsing the "qRegisterInfo0" packet, because
the function tries to drop_front more bytes than the packet contains. It's not clear to me
whether we should consider this a bug in the caller or the callee, but it any case, it worked
before, so I am reverting this until we can figure out what the proper interface should be.
llvm-svn: 280207
Makes Peek() return a StringRef instead of a const char*.
This leads to a few callers of Peek() being able to be made a
little nicer (for example using StringRef member functions instead
of c-style strncmp and related functions) and generally safer
usage.
llvm-svn: 280139
This is a NFC that adds more unit test coverage of the GetHex***
functions as well as the functions to extract numbers with a
specific endianness.
llvm-svn: 280124
MutableArrayRef<T> is essentially a safer version of passing around
(T*, length) pairs and provides some convenient functions for working
with the data without having to manually manipulate indices.
This is a minor NFC.
llvm-svn: 280123
StringExtractor::GetNameColonValue() looks for a substring of the
form "<name>:<value>" and returns <name> and <value> to the caller.
This results in two unnecessary string copies, since the name and
value are not translated in any way and simply returned as-is.
By converting this to return StringRefs we can get rid of hundreds
of string copies.
llvm-svn: 280000
These are helpful on their own, but will be even more useful
once the GetNameColonValue is updated to return StringRefs
instead of std::strings.
llvm-svn: 279919
This started as an effort to change StringExtractor to store a
StringRef internally instead of a std::string. I got that working
locally with just 1 test failure which I was unable to figure out the
cause of. But it was also a massive changelist due to a trickle
down effect of changes.
So I'm starting over, using what I learned from the first time to
tackle smaller, more isolated changes hopefully leading up to
a full conversion by the end.
At first the changes (such as in this CL) will seem mostly
a matter of preference and pointless otherwise. However, there
are some places in my larger CL where using StringRef turned 20+
lines of code into 2, drastically simplifying logic. Hopefully
once these go in they will illustrate some of the benefits of
thinking in terms of StringRef.
llvm-svn: 279917
Summary:
This is a preparatory commit for D22914, where I'd like to replace this mutex by an R/W lock
(which is also not recursive). This required a couple of changes:
- The only caller of Read/WriteRegister, GDBRemoteRegisterContext class, was already acquiring
the mutex, so these functions do not need to. All functions which now do not take a lock, take
an lock argument instead, to remind the caller of this fact.
- GetThreadSuffixSupported() was being called from locked and unlocked contexts (including
contexts where the process was running, and the call would fail if it did not have the result
cached). I have split this into two functions, one which computes the thread suffix support and
caches it (this one always takes the lock), and another, which returns the cached value (and
never needs to take the lock). This feels quite natural as ProcessGdbRemote was already
pre-caching this value at the start.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23802
llvm-svn: 279725
Summary:
The tricky part here was that the exisiting implementation of WriteAllRegisters was expecting
hex-encoded data (as that was what the first implementation I replaced was using, but here we had
binary data to begin with. I thought the read/write register functions would be more useful if
they handled the hex-encoding themselves (all the other client functions provide the responses in
a more-or-less digested form). The read functions return a DataBuffer, so they can allocate as
much memory as they need to, while the write functions functions take an llvm::ArrayRef, as that
can be constructed from pretty much anything.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23659
llvm-svn: 279232
This change adds the Process/gdb-remote gtests to the Xcode
build. It also adds a virtual method impl to the continuation
delegate that I added with the StructuredDataPlugin change.
llvm-svn: 279203
Summary:
Before this, each function had a copy of the code which handled appending of the thread suffix to
the packet (or using $Hg instead). I have moved that code into a single function and made
everyone else use that. The function takes the partial packet as a StreamString rvalue reference,
to avoid a copy and to remind the users that the packet will have undeterminate contents after
the call.
This also fixes the incorrect formatting of the QRestoreRegisterState packet in case thread
suffix is not supported.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23604
llvm-svn: 279040
Summary:
CPlusPlusLanguage::MethodName was not correctly parsing templated functions whose demangled name
included the return type -- the space before the function name was included in the "context" and
the context itself was not terminated correctly due to a misuse of the substr function (second
argument is length, not the end position). Fix that and add a regression test.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23608
llvm-svn: 279038
Apparently clang will happily capture a const variable in a lambda without it being specified in
the capture clause. MSVC does not like that.
llvm-svn: 278925
Summary:
When saving/restoring registers the GDBRemoteRegisterContext class was manually constructing
the register save/restore packets. This creates appropriate helper functions in
GDBRemoteCommunicationClient, and switches the class to use those. It also removes what a
duplicate packet send in some of those functions, a thing that I can only attribute to a bad
merge artefact.
I also add a test framework for testing gdb-remote client functionality and add tests for the new
functions I introduced. I'd like to be able to test the register context changes in isolation as
well, but currently there doesn't seem to be a way to reasonably construct a standalone register
context object, so we'll have to rely on the end-to-end tests to verify that.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23553
llvm-svn: 278915
Despite its comment, the function is only used in the Client class, and its presence was merely
complicating mock implementation in unit tests.
llvm-svn: 278785
Summary:
The following problem was occuring:
- broadcaster B had two listeners: L1 and L2 (thread T1)
- (T1) B has started to broadcast an event, it has locked a shared_ptr to L1 (in
ListenerIterator())
- on another thread T2 the penultimate reference to L1 was destroyed (the transient object in B is
now the last reference)
- (T2) the last reference to L2 was destroyed as well
- (T1) B has finished broadcasting the event to L1 and destroyed the last shared_ptr
- (T1) this triggered the destructor, which called into B->RemoveListener()
- (T1) all pointers in the m_listeners list were now stale, so RemoveListener emptied the list
- (T1) Eventually control returned to the ListenerIterator() for doing broadcasting, which was
still in the middle of iterating through the list
- (T1) Only now, it was holding onto a dangling iterator. BOOM.
I fix this issue by making sure nothing can interfere with the
iterate-and-remove-expired-pointers loop, by moving this logic into a single function, which
first locks (or clears) the whole list and then returns the list of valid and locked Listeners
for further processing. Instead of std::list I use an llvm::SmallVector which should hopefully
offset the fact that we create a copy of the list for the common case where we have only a few
listeners (no heap allocations).
A slight difference in behaviour is that now RemoveListener does not remove an element from the
list -- it only sets it's mask to 0, which means it will be removed during the next iteration of
GetListeners(). This is purely an implementation detail and it should not be externally
noticable.
I was not able to reproduce this bug reliably without inserting sleep statements into the code,
so I do not add a test for it. Instead, I add some unit tests for the functions that I do modify.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: tberghammer, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23406
llvm-svn: 278664
Resumbitting the commit after fixing the following problems:
- broken unit tests on windows: incorrect gtest usage on my part (TEST vs. TEST_F)
- the new code did not correctly handle the case where we went to interrupt the process, but it
stopped due to a different reason - the interrupt request would remain queued and would
interfere with the following "continue". I also added a unit test for this case.
This reapplies r277156 and r277139.
llvm-svn: 278118
This reverts commit r277139, because:
- broken unittest on windows (likely typo on my part)
- seems to break TestCallThatRestart (needs investigation)
llvm-svn: 277154
SendContinuePacketAndWaitForResponse was huge function with very complex interactions with
several other functions (SendAsyncSignal, SendInterrupt, SendPacket). This meant that making any
changes to how packet sending functions and threads interact was very difficult and error-prone.
This change does not add any functionality yet, it merely paves the way for future changes. In a
follow-up, I plan to add the ability to have multiple query packets in flight (i.e.,
request,request,response,response instead of the usual request,response sequences) and use that
to speed up qModuleInfo packet processing.
Here, I introduce two special kinds of locks: ContinueLock, which is used by the continue thread,
and Lock, which is used by everyone else. ContinueLock (atomically) sends a continue packet, and
blocks any other async threads from accessing the connection. Other threads create an instance of
the Lock object when they want to access the connection. This object, while in scope prevents the
continue from being send. Optionally, it can also interrupt the process to gain access to the
connection for async processing.
Most of the syncrhonization logic is encapsulated within these two classes. Some of it still
had to bleed over into the SendContinuePacketAndWaitForResponse, but the function is still much
more manageable than before -- partly because of most of the work is done in the ContinueLock
class, and partly because I have factored out a lot of the packet processing code separate
functions (this also makes the functionality more easily testable). Most importantly, there is
none of syncrhonization code in the async thread users -- as far as they are concerned, they just
need to declare a Lock object, and they are good to go (SendPacketAndWaitForResponse is now a
very thin wrapper around the NoLock version of the function, whereas previously it had over 100
lines of synchronization code). This will make my follow up changes there easy.
I have written a number of unit tests for the new code and I have ran the test suite on linux and
osx with no regressions.
Subscribers: tberghammer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22629
llvm-svn: 277139
Summary:
The function was returning the null pointer for peeks of size zero, which seems like a sensible
thing to do, but is actually pretty easy to get bitten by that if you are extracting a variable
length field which happens to be of zero length and then doing pointer arithmetic on that (which
SymbolFileDWARF does, and ended up crashing in case of empty DW_AT_location).
This changes the function to return a null pointer only when it gets queried for data which is
outside of the range of the extractor, which is more c++-y, as one can still do reasonable things
with pointers to data of size zero (think, end() iterators).
I also add a test and fix some signedness warnings in the existing data extractor tests.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22755
llvm-svn: 276734
Summary: One of the cases handled by ValueObjectChild::UpdateValue() uses the entire width of the parent's scalar value as the size of the child, and extracts the child by calling Scalar::ExtractBitfield(). This seems valid but APInt::trunc(), APInt::sext() and APInt::zext() assert that the bit field must not have the same size as the parent scalar. Replacing those calls with sextOrTrunc(), zextOrTrunc(), sextOrSelf() and zextOrSelf() fixes the assertion failures.
Reviewers: uweigand, labath
Subscribers: labath, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20355
llvm-svn: 270062
Summary:
AdbClient was attempting to handle the case where the socket input arrived in pieces, but it was
failing to handle the case where the connection was closed before that happened. In this case, it
would just spin in an infinite loop calling Connection::Read. (This was also the cause of the
spurious timeouts on the darwin->android buildbot. The exact cause of the premature EOF remains
to be investigated, but is likely a server bug.)
Since this wait-for-a-certain-number-of-bytes seems like a useful functionality to have, I am
moving it (with the infinite loop fixed) to the Connection class, and adding an
appropriate test for it.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner, ovyalov
Subscribers: tberghammer, danalbert, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19533
llvm-svn: 268380
Recommit modified version of r266311 including build bot regression fix.
This differs from the original r266311 by:
- Fixing Scalar::Promote to correctly zero- or sign-extend value depending
on signedness of the *source* type, not the target type.
- Omitting a few stand-alone fixes that were already committed separately.
llvm-svn: 266422
This implements a PDBASTParser and corresponding logic in
SymbolFilePDB to do type lookup by name. This is just a first
pass and leaves many aspects of type lookup unimplemented, and
just focuses on laying the framework. With this patch, you should
be able to lookup basic types by name from a PDB.
Full class definitions are not completed yet, we will instead
just return a forward declaration of the class.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18848
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton
llvm-svn: 266392
Currently, the DataExtractor::GetMaxU64Bitfield and GetMaxS64Bitfield
routines assume the incoming "bitfield_bit_offset" parameter uses
little-endian bit numbering, i.e. a bitfield_bit_offset 0 refers to
a bitfield whose least-significant bit coincides with the least-
significant bit of the surrounding integer.
On many big-endian systems, however, the big-endian bit numbering
is used for bit fields. Here, a bitfield_bit_offset 0 refers to
a bitfield whose most-significant bit conincides with the most-
significant bit of the surrounding integer.
Now, in principle LLDB could arbitrarily choose which semantics of
bitfield_bit_offset to use. However, there are two problems with
the current approach:
- When parsing DWARF, LLDB decodes bit offsets in little-endian
bit numbering on LE systems, but in big-endian bit numbering
on BE systems. Passing those offsets later on into the
DataExtractor routines gives incorrect results on BE.
- In the interim, LLDB's type layer combines byte and bit offsets
into a single number. I.e. instead of recording bitfields by
specifying the byte offset and byte size of the surrounding
integer *plus* the bit offset of the bit field within that field,
it simply records a single bit offset number.
Now, note that converting from byte offset + bit offset to a
single offset value and back is well-defined if we either use
little-endian byte order *and* little-endian bit numbering,
or use big-endian byte order *and* big-endian bit numbering.
Any other combination will yield incorrect results.
Therefore, the simplest approach would seem to be to always use
the bit numbering that matches the system byte order. This makes
storing a single bit offset valid, and makes the existing DWARF
code correct. The only place to fix is to teach DataExtractor
to use big-endian bit numbering on big endian systems.
However, there is only additional caveat: we also get bit offsets
from LLDB synthetic bitfields. While the exact semantics of those
doesn't seem to be well-defined, from test cases it appears that
the intent was for the user-provided synthetic bitfield offset to
always use little-endian bit numbering. Therefore, on a big-endian
system we now have to convert those to big-endian bit numbering
to remain consistent.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18982
llvm-svn: 266312
The Scalar implementation and a few other places in LLDB directly
access the internal implementation of APInt values using the
getRawData method. Unfortunately, pretty much all of these places
do not handle big-endian systems correctly. While on little-endian
machines, the pointer returned by getRawData can simply be used as
a pointer to the integer value in its natural format, no matter
what size, this is not true on big-endian systems: getRawData
actually points to an array of type uint64_t, with the first element
of the array always containing the least-significant word of the
integer. This means that if the bitsize of that integer is smaller
than 64, we need to add an offset to the pointer returned by
getRawData in order to access the value in its natural type, and
if the bitsize is *larger* than 64, we actually have to swap the
constituent words before we can access the value in its natural type.
This patch fixes every incorrect use of getRawData in the code base.
For the most part, this is done by simply removing uses of getRawData
in the first place, and using other APInt member functions to operate
on the integer data.
This can be done in many member functions of Scalar itself, as well
as in Symbol/Type.h and in IRInterpreter::Interpret. For the latter,
I've had to add a Scalar::MakeUnsigned routine to parallel the existing
Scalar::MakeSigned, e.g. in order to implement an unsigned divide.
The Scalar::RawUInt, Scalar::RawULong, and Scalar::RawULongLong
were already unused and can be simply removed. I've also removed
the Scalar::GetRawBits64 function and its few users.
The one remaining user of getRawData in Scalar.cpp is GetBytes.
I've implemented all the cases described above to correctly
implement access to the underlying integer data on big-endian
systems. GetData now simply calls GetBytes instead of reimplementing
its contents.
Finally, two places in the clang interface code were also accessing
APInt.getRawData in order to actually construct a byte representation
of an integer. I've changed those to make use of a Scalar instead,
to avoid having to re-implement the logic there.
The patch also adds a couple of unit tests verifying correct operation
of the GetBytes routine as well as the conversion routines. Those tests
actually exposed more problems in the Scalar code: the SetValueFromData
routine didn't work correctly for 128- and 256-bit data types, and the
SChar routine should have an explicit "signed char" return type to work
correctly on platforms where char defaults to unsigned.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18981
llvm-svn: 266311
Summary:
In D18689, I removed the call to Normalize() in FileSpec::SetFile, because it no longer seemed
needed, and it resolved a quirk in the FileSpec API (spec.GetCString() returnes a path with
backslashes, but spec.GetDirectory().GetCString() has forward slashes). This turned out to be a
problem because we would consider paths with different separators as different (which led to
unresolved breakpoints for instance).
Here, I am putting back in the call to Normalize() and adding a unittest for FileSpec::Equal. I
am commenting out the GetDirectory unittests until we figure out the what is the expected
behaviour here.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19060
llvm-svn: 266286
Summary:
Even though FileSpec attempted to handle both kinds of path syntaxes (posix and windows) on both
platforms, it relied on the llvm path library to do its work, whose behavior differed on
different platforms. This led to subtle differences in FileSpec behavior between platforms. This
replaces the pieces of the llvm library with our own implementations. The functions are simply
copied from llvm, with #ifdefs replaced by runtime checks for ePathSyntaxWindows.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18689
llvm-svn: 265299
In doing so, two bugs were uncovered (and fixed). The first bug
is that ClangASTContext::RemoveFastQualifiers() was broken, and
was not removing fast qualifiers (or doing anything else for that
matter). The second bug is that UnifyAccessSpecifiers treated
AS_None asymmetrically, which is probably an edge case, but seems
like a bug nonetheless.
llvm-svn: 265200
On some versions of Windows, the address is returned as "::1", while on others it's
"0:0:...:0:1". Accept both versions, as they represent the same address.
llvm-svn: 264850
Summary:
This fixes a couple of corner cases in FileSpec, related to AppendPathComponent and
handling of root directory (/) file spec. I add a bunch of unit tests for the new behavior.
Summary of changes:
FileSpec("/bar").GetCString(): before "//bar", after "/bar".
FileSpec("/").CopyByAppendingPathComponent("bar").GetCString(): before "//bar", after "/bar".
FileSpec("C:", ePathSyntaxWindows).CopyByAppendingPathComponent("bar").GetCString(): before "C:/bar", after "C:\bar".
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18044
llvm-svn: 263207
PDB is Microsoft's debug information format, and although we
cannot yet generate it, we still must be able to consume it.
Reason for this is that debug information for system libraries
(e.g. kernel32, C Runtime Library, etc) only have debug info
in PDB format, so in order to be able to support debugging
of system code, we must support it.
Currently this code should compile on every platform, but on
non-Windows platforms the PDB plugin will return 0 capabilities,
meaning that for now PDB is only supported on Windows. This
may change in the future, but the API is designed in such a way
that this will require few (if any) changes on the LLDB side.
In the future we can just flip a switch and everything will
work.
This patch only adds support for line tables. It does not return
information about functions, types, global variables, or anything
else. This functionality will be added in a followup patch.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17363
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton
llvm-svn: 262528
Summary:
the python2 branch seems erroneous as it expected the object to be both a "String" and "Bytes".
Fix the expectation.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17545
llvm-svn: 261901
Summary: This also fixes an infinite recursion between lldb_private::operator>> () and Scalar::operator>>= ().
Reviewers: sagar, tberghammer, labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16868
Patch by Marianne Mailhot-Sarrasin
llvm-svn: 260239
65535 is still a valid port. This should fix the android failures we were getting when we chose
to connect over 65535 to the remote lldb-server.
llvm-svn: 259638
This needs to be able to handle bytes, strings, and bytearray objects.
In Python 2 this was easy because bytes and strings are the same thing,
but in Python 3 the 2 cases need to be handled separately. So as not
to mix raw Python C API code with PythonDataObjects code, I've also
introduced a PythonByteArray class to PythonDataObjects to make the
paradigm used here consistent.
llvm-svn: 258741
Primarily a trial test for me to try out the
git clang-format integration. Works like a charm!
This change adds a gtest fixture for the EditlineTest
common setup and teardown code.
llvm-svn: 258565
This is a helper class which supports a number of
features including exception to string formatting with
backtrace handling and auto-restore of exception state
upon scope exit.
Additionally, unit tests are included to verify the
feature set of the class.
llvm-svn: 252994
This allows other potential unit test suites (of which one is
forthcoming in a subsequent patch) to re-use the same initialization
and teardown of the GIL.
llvm-svn: 252993
This adds PythonTuple and PythonCallable classes to PythonDataObjects.
Additionally, unit tests are provided that exercise this functionality,
including invoking manipulating and checking for validity of tuples,
and invoking and checking for validity of callables using a variety
of different syntaxes.
The goal here is to eventually replace the code in python-wrapper.swig
that directly uses the Python C API to deal with callables and name
resolution with this code that can be more easily tested and debugged.
llvm-svn: 252787
The Go interpreter doesn't JIT or use LLVM, so this also
moves all the JIT related code from UserExpression to a new class LLVMUserExpression.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13073
Fix merge
llvm-svn: 251820
These are two simple tests that make sure single line and
multiline content are processed and received by Editline.cpp.
Fancier tests to come...
llvm-svn: 251681
Also added a placeholder Editline gtest for some code that I'll add as soon
as I make sure this addition doesn't break any of the build bots.
This change also introduces some Xcode user-defined variables that I've used
to attempt to isolate the way Python is integrated into the build. I don't have
the rest of LLDB using it yet, I'm using the gtests as my guinea pig on that.
Currently these are:
PYTHON_FRAMEWORK_PATH
PYTHON_VERSION_MAJOR
PYTHON_VERSION_MINOR
I will convert the rest over to it after this gets a little time to bake
and any kinks are worked out of it.
llvm-svn: 251261
The purpose of the class is to make it easy to execute tasks in parallel
Basic design goals:
* Have a very lightweight and easy to use interface where a list of
lambdas can be executed in parallel
* Use a global thread pool to limit the number of threads used
(std::async don't do it on Linux) and to eliminate the thread creation
overhead
* Destroy the thread currently not in use to avoid the confusion caused
by them during debugging LLDB
Possible future improvements:
* Possibility to cancel already added, but not yet started tasks
* Parallel for_each implementation
* Optimizations in the thread creation destroyation code
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13727
llvm-svn: 250820
Python file handling got an overhaul in Python 3, and it affects
the way we have to interact with files. Notably:
1) `PyFile_FromFile` no longer exists, and instead we have to use
`PyFile_FromFd`. This means having a way to get an fd from
a FILE*. For this we reuse the lldb_private::File class to
convert between FILE*s and fds, since there are some subtleties
regarding ownership rules when FILE*s and fds refer to the same
file.
2) PyFile is no longer a builtin type, so there is no such thing as
`PyFile_Check`. Instead, files in Python 3 are just instances
of `io.IOBase`. So the logic for checking if something is a file
in Python 3 is to check if it is a subclass of that module.
Additionally, some unit tests are added to verify that `PythonFile`
works as expected on Python 2 and Python 3, and
`ScriptInterpreterPython` is updated to use `PythonFile` instead of
manual calls to the various `PyFile_XXX` methods.
llvm-svn: 250444
There were a couple of issues related to string handling that
needed to be fixed. In particular, we cannot get away with
converting `PyUnicode` objects to `PyBytes` objects and storing
the `PyBytes` regardless of Python version. Instead we have to
store a `PyUnicode` on Python 3 and a `PyString` on Python 2.
The reason for this is that if you call `PyObject_Str` on a
`PyBytes` in Python 3, it will return you a string that actually
contains the string value wrappedin the characters b''. So if we
create a `PythonString` with the value "test", and we call Str()
on it, we will get back the string "b'test'", which breaks string
equality. The only way to fix this is to store a native
`PyUnicode` object under Python 3.
With this CL, ScriptInterpreterPythonTests unit tests pass 100%
under Python 2 and Python 3.
llvm-svn: 250327
PythonObjects were being incorrectly ref-counted. This problem was
pervasive throughout the codebase, leading to an unknown number of memory
leaks and potentially use-after-free.
The issue stems from the fact that Python native methods can either return
"borrowed" references or "owned" references. For the former category, you
*must* incref it prior to decrefing it. And for the latter category, you
should not incref it before decrefing it. This is mostly an issue when a
Python C API method returns a `PyObject` to you, but it can also happen with
a method accepts a `PyObject`. Notably, this happens in `PyList_SetItem`,
which is documented to "steal" the reference that you give it. So if you
pass something to `PyList_SetItem`, you cannot hold onto it unless you
incref it first. But since this is one of only two exceptions in the
entire API, it's confusing and difficult to remember.
Our `PythonObject` class was indiscriminantely increfing every object it
received, which means that if you passed it an owned reference, you now
have a dangling reference since owned references should not be increfed.
We were doing this in quite a few places.
There was also a fair amount of manual increfing and decrefing prevalent
throughout the codebase, which is easy to get wrong.
This patch solves the problem by making any construction of a
`PythonObject` from a `PyObject` take a flag which indicates whether it is
an owned reference or a borrowed reference. There is no way to construct a
`PythonObject` without this flag, and it does not offer a default value,
forcing the user to make an explicit decision every time.
All manual uses of `PyObject` have been cleaned up throughout the codebase
and replaced with `PythonObject` in order to make RAII the predominant
pattern when dealing with native Python objects.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13617
Reviewed By: Greg Clayton
llvm-svn: 250195
With this change, liblldb is 95% of the way towards being able
to work under both Python 2.x and Python 3.x. This should
introduce no functional change for Python 2.x, but for Python
3.x there are some important changes. Primarily, these are:
1) PyString doesn't exist in Python 3. Everything is a PyUnicode.
To account for this, PythonString now stores a PyBytes instead
of a PyString. In Python 2, this is equivalent to a PyUnicode,
and in Python 3, we do a conversion from PyUnicode to PyBytes
and store the PyBytes.
2) PyInt doesn't exist in Python 3. Everything is a PyLong. To
account for this, PythonInteger stores a PyLong instead of a
PyInt. In Python 2.x, this requires doing a conversion to
PyLong when creating a PythonInteger from a PyInt. In 3.x,
there is no PyInt anyway, so we can assume everything is a
PyLong.
3) PyFile_FromFile doesn't exist in Python 3. Instead there is a
PyFile_FromFd. This is not addressed in this patch because it
will require quite a large change to plumb fd's all the way
through the system into the ScriptInterpreter. This is the only
remaining piece of the puzzle to get LLDB supporting Python 3.x.
Being able to run the test suite is not addressed in this patch.
After the extension module can compile and you can enter an embedded
3.x interpreter, the test suite will be addressed in a followup.
llvm-svn: 249886
Summary:
When `module_spec.GetFileSpec().GetDirectory().AsCString()` returned a `nullptr` this line caused a segmentation fault:
`std::string module_directory = module_spec.GetFileSpec().GetDirectory().AsCString()`
Some context:
I was remote debugging an executable built with Clang in an Ubuntu VM on my Windows machine using lldb-mi. I copied the executable and nothing else from the Ubuntu VM to the Windows machine.
Then started lldb-server in the Ubuntu VM:
```
./bin/lldb-server gdbserver *:8888 -- /home/enlight/Projects/dbgmits/build/Debug/data_tests_target
```
And ran `lldb-mi --interpreter` on Windows with the following commands:
```
-file-exec-and-symbols C:\Projects\data_tests_target
-target-select remote 192.168.56.101:8888
-exec-continue
```
After which the segmentation fault occurred at the aforementioned line. Inside this method `module_spec.GetFileSpec()` returns an empty `FileSpec` (no dir, no filename), while `module_spec.GetSymbolFileSpec().GetFilename()` returns `"libc-2.19.so"`.
Patch thanks to Vadim Macagon.
Reviewers: brucem, zturner, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13201
llvm-svn: 249387
Previously embedded interpreters were handled as ad-hoc source
files compiled into source/Interpreter. This made it hard to
disable a specific interpreter, or to add support for other
interpreters and allow the developer to choose which interpreter(s)
were enabled for a particular build.
This patch converts script interpreters over to a plugin-based system.
Script interpreters now live in source/Plugins/ScriptInterpreter, and
the canonical LLDB interpreter, ScriptInterpreterPython, is moved there
as well.
Any new code interfacing with the Python C API must live in this location
from here on out. Additionally, generic code should never need to
reference or make assumptions about the presence of a specific interpreter
going forward.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11431
Reviewed By: Greg Clayton
llvm-svn: 243681
Summary:
Fix StringExtractor.h issues.
* source/Plugins/Process/MacOSX-Kernel/ProcessKDP.cpp
(#include "Utility/StringExtractor.h): Not needed, this is already
included by ProcessKDP.h
* unittests/Utility/StringExtractorTest.cpp
(#include "Utility/StringExtractor.h): Update include path to the
new location.
Reviewers: labath, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10995
llvm-svn: 241596
Summary:
Since all TSC operations are now executed synchronously, TSC has become a little more than a
messenger between different parts of NativeProcessLinux. Therefore, the reason for its existance
has disappeared.
This commit moves the contents of the TSC into the NPL class. This will enable us to remove all
the boilerplate code in NPL (as it stands now, this is most of the class), which I plan to do in
subsequent commits.
Unfortunately, this also means we will lose the unit tests for the TSC. However, since the size
of the TSC has diminished, the unit tests were not testing much at this point anyway, so it's not
a big loss.
No functional change.
Test Plan: All tests continue to pass.
Reviewers: vharron, chaoren
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9296
llvm-svn: 236587
Summary:
This change removes the thread state coordinator thread by making all the operations it was
performing synchronous. In order to prevent deadlock, NativeProcessLinux must now always call
m_monitor->DoOperation with the m_threads_mutex released. This is needed because HandleWait
callbacks lock the mutex (which means the monitor thread will block waiting on whoever holds the
lock). If the other thread now requests a monitor operation, it will wait for the monitor thread
do process it, creating a deadlock.
To preserve this invariant I have introduced two new Monitor commands: "begin operation block"
and "end operation block". They begin command blocks the monitor from processing waitpid
events until the corresponding end command, thereby assuring the monitor does not attempt to
acquire the mutex.
Test Plan: Run the test suite locally, verify no tests fail.
Reviewers: vharron, chaoren
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9227
llvm-svn: 236501
Summary:
Currently, linking of the unittests fails on linux because it is missing a bunch of symbols from
libedit, curses, etc. This fixes the build by adding the correct dependencies.
Test Plan: Linking works, unit tests run.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9244
llvm-svn: 235853
The order of libraries passed to the linker didn't work under linux (you
need the llvm libraries first, then the lldb libraries). I modelled this
after clang's setup here. Seemed simple enough to just be consistent.
llvm-svn: 232461
A recent refactor had introduced a bug where if you escaped a
character, the rest of the string would get processed incorrectly.
This patch fixes that bug and adds some unit tests for Args.
llvm-svn: 232288
Sigh. There's really not a good alternative until we decouple
python from lldb better. The only way the build works right now
is by having every executable link against every LLDB library.
This causes implicit transitive link dependencies on the union
of everything that LLDB brings in. Which means that if all we
want is one header file from interpreter, we have to bring in
everything, including everything that everything depends on,
which means python.
There's outstanding efforts to address this, but it's not yet
complete. So until then, this is all we can do.
llvm-svn: 232287
On Windows, you need to call WSAStartup() before making any socket
calls, and WSACleanup() before you shutdown. This wasn't being
done, so all of the socket tests were failing. This fixes
that, which brings the unit test suite to a fully working state
on Windows.
llvm-svn: 232247
This makes the directory structure mirror the canonical LLVM
directory structure for a gtest suite.
Additionally, this patch deletes the xcode project. Nobody
is currently depending on this, and it would be better to have
gtest unit tests be hand-maintained in the Xcode workspace
rather than using this python test runner. Patches to that
effect will be submitted as followups.
llvm-svn: 232211