lldb_private::OptionGroup
lldb_private::OptionGroupOptions
OptionGroup lets you define a class that encapsulates settings that you want
to reuse in multiple commands. It contains only the option definitions and the
ability to set the option values, but it doesn't directly interface with the
lldb_private::Options class that is the front end to all of the CommandObject
option parsing. For that the OptionGroupOptions class can be used. It aggregates
one or more OptionGroup objects and directs the option setting to the
appropriate OptionGroup class. For an example of this, take a look at the
CommandObjectFile and how it uses its "m_option_group" object shown below
to be able to set values in both the FileOptionGroup and PlatformOptionGroup
classes. The members used in CommandObjectFile are:
OptionGroupOptions m_option_group;
FileOptionGroup m_file_options;
PlatformOptionGroup m_platform_options;
Then in the constructor for CommandObjectFile you can combine the option
settings. The code below shows a simplified version of the constructor:
CommandObjectFile::CommandObjectFile(CommandInterpreter &interpreter) :
CommandObject (...),
m_option_group (interpreter),
m_file_options (),
m_platform_options(true)
{
m_option_group.Append (&m_file_options);
m_option_group.Append (&m_platform_options);
m_option_group.Finalize();
}
We append the m_file_options and then the m_platform_options and then tell
the option group the finalize the results. This allows the m_option_group to
become the organizer of our prefs and after option parsing we end up with
valid preference settings in both the m_file_options and m_platform_options
objects. This also allows any other commands to use the FileOptionGroup and
PlatformOptionGroup classes to implement options for their commands.
Renamed:
virtual void Options::ResetOptionValues();
to:
virtual void Options::OptionParsingStarting();
And implemented a new callback named:
virtual Error Options::OptionParsingFinished();
This allows Options subclasses to verify that the options all go together
after all of the options have been specified and gives the chance for the
command object to return an error. It also gives a chance to take all of the
option values and produce or initialize objects after all options have
completed parsing.
Modfied:
virtual Error
SetOptionValue (int option_idx, const char *option_arg) = 0;
to be:
virtual Error
SetOptionValue (uint32_t option_idx, const char *option_arg) = 0;
(option_idx is now unsigned).
llvm-svn: 129415
the CommandInterpreter where it was always being used.
Make sure that Modules can track their object file offsets correctly to
allow opening of sub object files (like the "__commpage" on darwin).
Modified the Platforms to be able to launch processes. The first part of this
move is the platform soon will become the entity that launches your program
and when it does, it uses a new ProcessLaunchInfo class which encapsulates
all process launching settings. This simplifies the internal APIs needed for
launching. I want to slowly phase out process launching from the process
classes, so for now we can still launch just as we used to, but eventually
the platform is the object that should do the launching.
Modified the Host::LaunchProcess in the MacOSX Host.mm to correctly be able
to launch processes with all of the new eLaunchFlag settings. Modified any
code that was manually launching processes to use the Host::LaunchProcess
functions.
Fixed an issue where lldb_private::Args had implicitly defined copy
constructors that could do the wrong thing. This has now been fixed by adding
an appropriate copy constructor and assignment operator.
Make sure we don't add empty ModuleSP entries to a module list.
Fixed the commpage module creation on MacOSX, but we still need to train
the MacOSX dynamic loader to not get rid of it when it doesn't have an entry
in the all image infos.
Abstracted many more calls from in ProcessGDBRemote down into the
GDBRemoteCommunicationClient subclass to make the classes cleaner and more
efficient.
Fixed the default iOS ARM register context to be correct and also added support
for targets that don't support the qThreadStopInfo packet by selecting the
current thread (only if needed) and then sending a stop reply packet.
Debugserver can now start up with a --unix-socket (-u for short) and can
then bind to port zero and send the port it bound to to a listening process
on the other end. This allows the GDB remote platform to spawn new GDB server
instances (debugserver) to allow platform debugging.
llvm-svn: 129351
This allows you to have a platform selected, then specify a triple using
"i386" and have the remaining triple items (vendor, os, and environment) set
automatically.
Many interpreter commands take the "--arch" option to specify an architecture
triple, so now the command options needed to be able to get to the current
platform, so the Options class now take a reference to the interpreter on
construction.
Modified the build LLVM building in the Xcode project to use the new
Xcode project level user definitions:
LLVM_BUILD_DIR - a path to the llvm build directory
LLVM_SOURCE_DIR - a path to the llvm sources for the llvm that will be used to build lldb
LLVM_CONFIGURATION - the configuration that lldb is built for (Release,
Release+Asserts, Debug, Debug+Asserts).
I also changed the LLVM build to not check if "lldb/llvm" is a symlink and
then assume it is a real llvm build directory versus the unzipped llvm.zip
package, so now you can actually have a "lldb/llvm" directory in your lldb
sources.
llvm-svn: 129112
class now implements the Host functionality for a lot of things that make
sense by default so that subclasses can check:
int
PlatformSubclass::Foo ()
{
if (IsHost())
return Platform::Foo (); // Let the platform base class do the host specific stuff
// Platform subclass specific code...
int result = ...
return result;
}
Added new functions to the platform:
virtual const char *Platform::GetUserName (uint32_t uid);
virtual const char *Platform::GetGroupName (uint32_t gid);
The user and group names are cached locally so that remote platforms can avoid
sending packets multiple times to resolve this information.
Added the parent process ID to the ProcessInfo class.
Added a new ProcessInfoMatch class which helps us to match processes up
and changed the Host layer over to using this new class. The new class allows
us to search for processs:
1 - by name (equal to, starts with, ends with, contains, and regex)
2 - by pid
3 - And further check for parent pid == value, uid == value, gid == value,
euid == value, egid == value, arch == value, parent == value.
This is all hookup up to the "platform process list" command which required
adding dumping routines to dump process information. If the Host class
implements the process lookup routines, you can now lists processes on
your local machine:
machine1.foo.com % lldb
(lldb) platform process list
PID PARENT USER GROUP EFF USER EFF GROUP TRIPLE NAME
====== ====== ========== ========== ========== ========== ======================== ============================
99538 1 username usergroup username usergroup x86_64-apple-darwin FileMerge
94943 1 username usergroup username usergroup x86_64-apple-darwin mdworker
94852 244 username usergroup username usergroup x86_64-apple-darwin Safari
94727 244 username usergroup username usergroup x86_64-apple-darwin Xcode
92742 92710 username usergroup username usergroup i386-apple-darwin debugserver
This of course also works remotely with the lldb-platform:
machine1.foo.com % lldb-platform --listen 1234
machine2.foo.com % lldb
(lldb) platform create remote-macosx
Platform: remote-macosx
Connected: no
(lldb) platform connect connect://localhost:1444
Platform: remote-macosx
Triple: x86_64-apple-darwin
OS Version: 10.6.7 (10J869)
Kernel: Darwin Kernel Version 10.7.0: Sat Jan 29 15:17:16 PST 2011; root:xnu-1504.9.37~1/RELEASE_I386
Hostname: machine1.foo.com
Connected: yes
(lldb) platform process list
PID PARENT USER GROUP EFF USER EFF GROUP TRIPLE NAME
====== ====== ========== ========== ========== ========== ======================== ============================
99556 244 username usergroup username usergroup x86_64-apple-darwin trustevaluation
99548 65539 username usergroup username usergroup x86_64-apple-darwin lldb
99538 1 username usergroup username usergroup x86_64-apple-darwin FileMerge
94943 1 username usergroup username usergroup x86_64-apple-darwin mdworker
94852 244 username usergroup username usergroup x86_64-apple-darwin Safari
The lldb-platform implements everything with the Host:: layer, so this should
"just work" for linux. I will probably be adding more stuff to the Host layer
for launching processes and attaching to processes so that this support should
eventually just work as well.
Modified the target to be able to be created with an architecture that differs
from the main executable. This is needed for iOS debugging since we can have
an "armv6" binary which can run on an "armv7" machine, so we want to be able
to do:
% lldb
(lldb) platform create remote-ios
(lldb) file --arch armv7 a.out
Where "a.out" is an armv6 executable. The platform then can correctly decide
to open all "armv7" images for all dependent shared libraries.
Modified the disassembly to show the current PC value. Example output:
(lldb) disassemble --frame
a.out`main:
0x1eb7: pushl %ebp
0x1eb8: movl %esp, %ebp
0x1eba: pushl %ebx
0x1ebb: subl $20, %esp
0x1ebe: calll 0x1ec3 ; main + 12 at test.c:18
0x1ec3: popl %ebx
-> 0x1ec4: calll 0x1f12 ; getpid
0x1ec9: movl %eax, 4(%esp)
0x1ecd: leal 199(%ebx), %eax
0x1ed3: movl %eax, (%esp)
0x1ed6: calll 0x1f18 ; printf
0x1edb: leal 213(%ebx), %eax
0x1ee1: movl %eax, (%esp)
0x1ee4: calll 0x1f1e ; puts
0x1ee9: calll 0x1f0c ; getchar
0x1eee: movl $20, (%esp)
0x1ef5: calll 0x1e6a ; sleep_loop at test.c:6
0x1efa: movl $12, %eax
0x1eff: addl $20, %esp
0x1f02: popl %ebx
0x1f03: leave
0x1f04: ret
This can be handy when dealing with the new --line options that was recently
added:
(lldb) disassemble --line
a.out`main + 13 at test.c:19
18 {
-> 19 printf("Process: %i\n\n", getpid());
20 puts("Press any key to continue..."); getchar();
-> 0x1ec4: calll 0x1f12 ; getpid
0x1ec9: movl %eax, 4(%esp)
0x1ecd: leal 199(%ebx), %eax
0x1ed3: movl %eax, (%esp)
0x1ed6: calll 0x1f18 ; printf
Modified the ModuleList to have a lookup based solely on a UUID. Since the
UUID is typically the MD5 checksum of a binary image, there is no need
to give the path and architecture when searching for a pre-existing
image in an image list.
Now that we support remote debugging a bit better, our lldb_private::Module
needs to be able to track what the original path for file was as the platform
knows it, as well as where the file is locally. The module has the two
following functions to retrieve both paths:
const FileSpec &Module::GetFileSpec () const;
const FileSpec &Module::GetPlatformFileSpec () const;
llvm-svn: 128563
public types and public enums. This was done to keep the SWIG stuff from
parsing all sorts of enums and types that weren't needed, and allows us to
abstract our API better.
llvm-svn: 128239
overlap in the SWIG integration which has now been fixed by introducing
callbacks for initializing SWIG for each language (python only right now).
There was also a breakpoint command callback that called into SWIG which has
been abtracted into a callback to avoid cross over as well.
Added a new binary: lldb-platform
This will be the start of the remote platform that will use as much of the
Host functionality to do its job so it should just work on all platforms.
It is pretty hollowed out for now, but soon it will implement a platform
using the GDB remote packets as the transport.
llvm-svn: 128053
static archive that can be linked against. LLDB.framework/lldb.so
exports a very controlled API. Splitting the API into a static
library allows other tools (debugserver for now) to use the power
of the LLDB debugger core, yet not export it as its API is not
portable or maintainable. The Host layer and many of the other
internal only APIs can now be statically linked against.
Now LLDB.framework/lldb.so links against "liblldb-core.a" instead
of compiling the .o files only for the shared library. This fix
is only for compiling with Xcode as the Makefile based build already
does this.
The Xcode projecdt compiler has been changed to LLVM. Anyone using
Xcode 3 will need to manually change the compiler back to GCC 4.2,
or update to Xcode 4.
llvm-svn: 127963
platform status -- gets status information for the selected platform
platform create <platform-name> -- creates a new instance of a remote platform
platform list -- list all available platforms
platform select -- select a platform instance as the current platform (not working yet)
When using "platform create" it will create a remote platform and make it the
selected platform. For instances for iPhone OS debugging on Mac OS X one can
do:
(lldb) platform create remote-ios --sdk-version=4.0
Remote platform: iOS platform
SDK version: 4.0
SDK path: "/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/DeviceSupport/4.0"
Not connected to a remote device.
(lldb) file ~/Documents/a.out
Current executable set to '~/Documents/a.out' (armv6).
(lldb) image list
[ 0] /Volumes/work/gclayton/Documents/devb/attach/a.out
[ 1] /Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/DeviceSupport/4.0/Symbols/usr/lib/dyld
[ 2] /Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/DeviceSupport/4.0/Symbols/usr/lib/libSystem.B.dylib
Note that this is all happening prior to running _or_ connecting to a remote
platform. Once connected to a remote platform the OS version might change which
means we will need to update our dependecies. Also once we run, we will need
to match up the actualy binaries with the actualy UUID's to files in the
SDK, or download and cache them locally.
This is just the start of the remote platforms, but this modification is the
first iteration in getting the platforms really doing something.
llvm-svn: 127934
N streams by making the stream a vector of stream shared pointers
that is protected by a mutex. Streams can be get/set by index which
allows indexes to be defined as stream indentifiers. If a stream is
set at index 3 and there are now streams in the collection, then
empty stream objects are inserted to ensure that stream at index 3
has a valid stream. There is also an append method that allows a stream
to be pushed onto the stack. This will allow our streams to be very
flexible in where the output goes.
Modified the CommandReturnObject to use the new StreamTee functionality.
This class now defines two StreamTee indexes: 0 for the stream string
stream, and 1 for the immediate stream. This is used both on the output
and error streams.
Added the ability to get argument types as strings or as descriptions.
This is exported through the SBCommandInterpreter API to allow external
access.
Modified the Driver class to use the newly exported argument names from
SBCommandInterpreter::GetArgumentTypeAsCString().
llvm-svn: 126067
a Stream, and then added GetOutputData & GetErrorData to get the accumulated data.
- Added a StreamTee that will tee output to two provided lldb::StreamSP's.
- Made the CommandObjectReturn use this so you can Tee the results immediately to
the debuggers output file, as well as saving up the results to return when the command
is done executing.
- HandleCommands now uses this so that if you have a set of commands that continue the target
you will see the commands come out as they are processed.
- The Driver now uses this to output the command results as you go, which makes the interface
more reactive seeming.
llvm-svn: 126015
Targets can now specify some additional parameters for when we debug
executables that can help with plug-in selection:
target.execution-level = auto | user | kernel
target.execution-mode = auto | dynamic | static
target.execution-os-type = auto | none | halted | live
On some systems, the binaries that are created are the same wether you use
them to debug a kernel, or a user space program. Many times inspecting an
object file can reveal what an executable should be. For these cases we can
now be a little more complete by specifying wether to detect all of these
things automatically (inspect the main executable file and select a plug-in
accordingly), or manually to force the selection of certain plug-ins.
To do this we now allow the specficifation of wether one is debugging a user
space program (target.execution-level = user) or a kernel program
(target.execution-level = kernel).
We can also specify if we want to debug a program where shared libraries
are dynamically loaded using a DynamicLoader plug-in
(target.execution-mode = dynamic), or wether we will treat all symbol files
as already linked at the correct address (target.execution-mode = static).
We can also specify if the inferior we are debugging is being debugged on
a bare board (target.execution-os-type = none), or debugging an OS where
we have a JTAG or other direct connection to the inferior stops the entire
OS (target.execution-os-type = halted), or if we are debugging a program on
something that has live debug services (target.execution-os-type = live).
For the "target.execution-os-type = halted" mode, we will need to create
ProcessHelper plug-ins that allow us to extract the process/thread and other
OS information by reading/writing memory.
This should allow LLDB to be used for a wide variety of debugging tasks and
handle them all correctly.
llvm-svn: 125815
where the implementation is hidden in the host layer. This avoids
a slew of "#if LLDB_CONFIG_TERMIOS_SUPPORTED" statements in the
code and keeps things cleaner.
llvm-svn: 125057
#include "lldb/Host/Config.h"
Or the LLDB_CONFIG_TERMIOS_SUPPORTED defined won't be set. I will fix all
of this Termios stuff later today by moving lldb/Core/TTYState.* into the
host layer and then we conditionalize all of this inside TTYState.cpp and
then we get rid of LLDB_CONFIG_TERMIOS_SUPPORTED all together.
Typically, when we start to see too many "#if LLDB_CONFIG_XXXX" preprocessor
directives, this is a good indicator that something needs to be moved over to
the host layer. TTYState can be modified to do all of the things that many
areas of the code are currently doing, and it will avoid all of the
preprocessor noise.
llvm-svn: 125027
(lldb) process connect <remote-url>
Currently when you specify a file with the file command it helps us to find
a process plug-in that is suitable for debugging. If you specify a file you
can rely upon this to find the correct debugger plug-in:
% lldb a.out
Current executable set to 'a.out' (x86_64).
(lldb) process connect connect://localhost:2345
...
If you don't specify a file, you will need to specify the plug-in name that
you wish to use:
% lldb
(lldb) process connect --plugin process.gdb-remote connect://localhost:2345
Other connection URL examples:
(lldb) process connect connect://localhost:2345
(lldb) process connect tcp://127.0.0.1
(lldb) process connect file:///dev/ttyS1
We are currently treating the "connect://host:port" as a way to do raw socket
connections. If there is a URL for this already, please let me know and we
will adopt it.
So now you can connect to a remote debug server with the ProcessGDBRemote
plug-in. After connection, it will ask for the pid info using the "qC" packet
and if it responds with a valid process ID, it will be equivalent to attaching.
If it response with an error or invalid process ID, the LLDB process will be
in a new state: eStateConnected. This allows us to then download a program or
specify the program to run (using the 'A' packet), or specify a process to
attach to (using the "vAttach" packets), or query info about the processes
that might be available.
llvm-svn: 124846
extra launch options:
LLDB_LAUNCH_FLAG_DISABLE_ASLR disables ASLR for all launched processes
LLDB_LAUNCH_FLAG_DISABLE_STDIO will disable STDIO (reroute to "/dev/null")
for all launched processes
LLDB_LAUNCH_FLAG_LAUNCH_IN_TTY will force all launched processes to be
launched in new terminal windows.
Also, don't init python if we never create a script interpreter.
llvm-svn: 124341
allowing timeouts & informing the user when the lock is unavailable.
Fixed problem where Debugger::Terminate was clearing the debugger list
even when the global ref count was greater than zero.
llvm-svn: 123674
the way LLDB lazily gets complete definitions for types within the debug info.
When we run across a class/struct/union definition in the DWARF, we will only
parse the full definition if we need to. This works fine for top level types
that are assigned directly to variables and arguments, but when we have a
variable with a class, lets say "A" for this example, that has a member:
"B *m_b". Initially we don't need to hunt down a definition for this class
unless we are ever asked to do something with it ("expr m_b->getDecl()" for
example). With my previous approach to lazy type completion, we would be able
to take a "A *a" and get a complete type for it, but we wouldn't be able to
then do an "a->m_b->getDecl()" unless we always expanded all types within a
class prior to handing out the type. Expanding everything is very costly and
it would be great if there were a better way.
A few months ago I worked with the llvm/clang folks to have the
ExternalASTSource class be able to complete classes if there weren't completed
yet:
class ExternalASTSource {
....
virtual void
CompleteType (clang::TagDecl *Tag);
virtual void
CompleteType (clang::ObjCInterfaceDecl *Class);
};
This was great, because we can now have the class that is producing the AST
(SymbolFileDWARF and SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap) sign up as external AST sources
and the object that creates the forward declaration types can now also
complete them anywhere within the clang type system.
This patch makes a few major changes:
- lldb_private::Module classes now own the AST context. Previously the TypeList
objects did.
- The DWARF parsers now sign up as an external AST sources so they can complete
types.
- All of the pure clang type system wrapper code we have in LLDB (ClangASTContext,
ClangASTType, and more) can now be iterating through children of any type,
and if a class/union/struct type (clang::RecordType or ObjC interface)
is found that is incomplete, we can ask the AST to get the definition.
- The SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap class now will create and use a single AST that
all child SymbolFileDWARF classes will share (much like what happens when
we have a complete linked DWARF for an executable).
We will need to modify some of the ClangUserExpression code to take more
advantage of this completion ability in the near future. Meanwhile we should
be better off now that we can be accessing any children of variables through
pointers and always be able to resolve the clang type if needed.
llvm-svn: 123613
when handling one-liner commands that contain escaped characters. In
order to deal with the new namespace/dictionary stuff, the command was
being embedded within a second string, which messed up the escaping.
This fixes the problem by handling one-liners in a different manner, so they
no longer need to be embedded within another string, and can still be
processed in the proper namespace/dictionary context.
llvm-svn: 123467
exist within the same process (one script interpreter object per debugger object). The
python script interpreter objects are all using the same global Python script interpreter;
they use separate dictionaries to keep their data separate, and mutex's to prevent any object
attempting to use the global Python interpreter when another object is already using it.
llvm-svn: 123415
a shell would interpret it. A few examples that we now handle correctly
INPUT: "Hello "world
OUTPUT: "Hello World"
INPUT: "Hello "' World'
OUTPUT: "Hello World"
INPUT: Hello" World"
OUTPUT: "Hello World"
This broke the setting of dictionary values for the "settings set" command
for things like:
(lldb) settings set target.process.env-vars ["MY_ENV_VAR"]=YES
since we would drop the quotes. I fixed the user settings controller to use
a regular expression so it can accept any of the following inputs for
dictionary setting:
settings set target.process.env-vars ["MY_ENV_VAR"]=YES
settings set target.process.env-vars [MY_ENV_VAR]=YES
settings set target.process.env-vars MY_ENV_VAR=YES
We might want to eventually drop the first two syntaxes, but I won't make
that decision right now.
This allows more natural setting of the envirorment variables:
settings set target.process.env-vars MY_ENV_VAR=YES ABC=DEF CWD=/tmp
llvm-svn: 122166
Extend Swig's include search path.
Cover both /usr/include and /usr/local/include. This should allow Swig to find
system headers such as stdint.h on all platforms we currently support.
llvm-svn: 121943
- Make sure cmd_obj & cmd_obj_sp contain a valid objects before attempting to
dereference, in CommandObjectCommandsAlias::Execute and
CommandInterpreter::HandleCommand.
- Modify CommandInterpreter::GetCommandSPExact to properly handle
multi-word command inputs.
llvm-svn: 121779
- Added new utility function to Arg, GetQuotedCommandString, which re-assembles
the args into a string, replacing quotes that were originally there.
- Modified user settings stuff to always show individual elements when printing out
arrays and dictionaries.
- Added more extensive help to 'settings set', explaining more about dictionaries
and arrays (including current dictionary syntax).
- Fixed bug in user settings where quotes were being stripped and lost, so that
sometimes array or dictionary elements that ought to have been a single element
were being split up.
llvm-svn: 121438
not the command should take raw input, then handle & dispatch the arguments appropriately.
Also change the 'alias' command to be a command that takes raw input. This is necessary to
allow aliases to be created for other commands that take raw input and might want to include
raw input in the alias itself.
Fix a bug in the aliasing mechanism when creating aliases for commands with 3-or-more words.
Raw input should now be properly handled by all the command and alias mechanisms.
llvm-svn: 121423
- Add logging for command resolution ('log enable lldb commands')
- Fix alias resolution to properly handle commands that take raw input (resolve the alias, but
don't muck up the raw arguments).
Net result: Among other things, 'expr' command can now take strings with escaped characters and
not have the command handling & alias resolution code muck up the escaped characters. E.g.
'expr printf ("\n\n\tHello there!")' should now work properly.
Not working yet: Creating aliases with raw input for commands that take raw input. Working on that.
e.g. 'command alias print_hi expr printf ("\n\tHi!")' does not work yet.
llvm-svn: 121171
comes from by using a virtual function to provide it from the Module's
SymbolVendor by default. This allows the DWARF parser, when being used to
parse DWARF in .o files with a parent DWARF + debug map parser, to get its
type list from the DWARF + debug map parser so when we go and find full
definitions for types (that might come from other .o files), we can use the
type list from the debug map parser. Otherwise we ended up mixing clang types
from one .o file (say a const pointer to a forward declaration "class A") with
the a full type from another .o file. This causes expression parsing, when
copying the clang types from those parsed by the DWARF parser into the
expression AST, to fail -- for good reason. Now all types are created in the
same list.
Also added host support for crash description strings that can be set before
doing a piece of work. On MacOSX, this ties in with CrashReporter support
that allows a string to be dispalyed when the app crashes and allows
LLDB.framework to print a description string in the crash log. Right now this
is hookup up the the CommandInterpreter::HandleCommand() where each command
notes that it is about to be executed, so if we crash while trying to do this
command, we should be able to see the command that caused LLDB to exit. For
all other platforms, this is a nop.
llvm-svn: 118672
version); change include statements to use Python.h in the Python framework
on Mac OS X systems; leave it using regular Python.h on other systems.
Note: I think this *ought* to work properly on Linux systems, but I don't have
a system to test it on...
llvm-svn: 117612
all of the calls inlined in the header file for better performance.
Fixed the summary for C string types (array of chars (with any combo if
modifiers), and pointers to chars) work in all cases.
Fixed an issue where a forward declaration to a clang type could cause itself
to resolve itself more than once if, during the resolving of the type itself
it caused something to try and resolve itself again. We now remove the clang
type from the forward declaration map in the DWARF parser when we start to
resolve it and avoid this additional call. This should stop any duplicate
members from appearing and throwing all the alignment of structs, unions and
classes.
llvm-svn: 117437
it logs the function calls, their arguments and the return values. This is not
complete or polished, but I am committing it now, at the request of someone who
really wants to use it, even though it's not really done. It currently does not
attempt to log all the functions, just the most important ones. I will be
making further adjustments to the API logging code over the next few days/weeks.
(Suggestions for improvements are welcome).
Update the Python build scripts to re-build the swig C++ file whenever
the python-extensions.swig file is modified.
Correct the help for 'log enable' command (give it the correct number & type of
arguments).
llvm-svn: 117349
So the issue here was that we have lldb_private::FileSpec that by default was
always resolving a path when using the:
FileSpec::FileSpec (const char *path);
and in the:
void FileSpec::SetFile(const char *pathname, bool resolve = true);
This isn't what we want in many many cases. One example is you have "/tmp" on
your file system which is really "/private/tmp". You compile code in that
directory and end up with debug info that mentions "/tmp/file.c". Then you
type:
(lldb) breakpoint set --file file.c --line 5
If your current working directory is "/tmp", then "file.c" would be turned
into "/private/tmp/file.c" which won't match anything in the debug info.
Also, it should have been just a FileSpec with no directory and a filename
of "file.c" which could (and should) potentially match any instances of "file.c"
in the debug info.
So I removed the constructor that just takes a path:
FileSpec::FileSpec (const char *path); // REMOVED
You must now use the other constructor that has a "bool resolve" parameter that you must always supply:
FileSpec::FileSpec (const char *path, bool resolve);
I also removed the default parameter to SetFile():
void FileSpec::SetFile(const char *pathname, bool resolve);
And fixed all of the code to use the right settings.
llvm-svn: 116944
static bool
Host::GetLLDBPath (lldb::PathType path_type, FileSpec &file_spec);
This will fill in "file_spec" with an appropriate path that is appropriate
for the current Host OS. MacOSX will return paths within the LLDB.framework,
and other unixes will return the paths they want. The current PathType
enums are:
typedef enum PathType
{
ePathTypeLLDBShlibDir, // The directory where the lldb.so (unix) or LLDB mach-o file in LLDB.framework (MacOSX) exists
ePathTypeSupportExecutableDir, // Find LLDB support executable directory (debugserver, etc)
ePathTypeHeaderDir, // Find LLDB header file directory
ePathTypePythonDir // Find Python modules (PYTHONPATH) directory
} PathType;
All places that were finding executables are and python paths are now updated
to use this Host call.
Added another new host call to launch the inferior in a terminal. This ability
will be very host specific and doesn't need to be supported on all systems.
MacOSX currently will create a new .command file and tell Terminal.app to open
the .command file. It also uses the new "darwin-debug" app which is a small
app that uses posix to exec (no fork) and stop at the entry point of the
program. The GDB remote plug-in is almost able launch a process and attach to
it, it currently will spawn the process, but it won't attach to it just yet.
This will let LLDB not have to share the terminal with another process and a
new terminal window will pop up when you launch. This won't get hooked up
until we work out all of the kinks. The new Host function is:
static lldb::pid_t
Host::LaunchInNewTerminal (
const char **argv, // argv[0] is executable
const char **envp,
const ArchSpec *arch_spec,
bool stop_at_entry,
bool disable_aslr);
Cleaned up FileSpec::GetPath to not use strncpy() as it was always zero
filling the entire path buffer.
Fixed an issue with the dynamic checker function where I missed a '$' prefix
that should have been added.
llvm-svn: 116690
and 'process handle'. The test suite would like to control the asynch/sync
execution of the interpreter during the middle of the test method, so the
CommandInterpreter::SetSynchronous(bool value) is modified to allow the mode to
be changed more than once.
In practice, it would be advisable to control the process and to set the
async/sync mode from a single thread, too.
llvm-svn: 116467
Add missing break statment to case statement in Process::ShouldBroadcastEvent.
Add new command, "process handle" to allow users to control process behavior on
the receipt of various Unix signals (whether the process should stop; whether the
process should be passed the signal; whether the debugger user should be notified
that the signal came in).
llvm-svn: 116430
ScriptInterpreterPython class and made a simple callback function that
ScriptInterpreterPython::BreakpointCallbackFunction() now calls so we don't
include any internal API stuff into the cpp file that is generated by SWIG.
Fixed a few build warnings in debugserver.
llvm-svn: 115926
arguments are specified in a standardized way, will have a standardized name, and
have functioning help.
The next step is to start writing useful help for all the argument types.
llvm-svn: 115335
command options; makes it easier to ensure that the same type of
argument will have the same name everywhere, hooks up help for command
arguments, so that users can ask for help when they are confused about
what an argument should be; puts in the beginnings of the ability to
do tab-completion for certain types of arguments, allows automatic
syntax help generation for commands with arguments, and adds command
arguments into command options help correctly.
Currently only the breakpoint-id and breakpoint-id-range arguments, in
the breakpoint commands, have been hooked up to use the new mechanism.
The next steps will be to fix the command options arguments to use
this mechanism, and to fix the rest of the regular command arguments
to use this mechanism. Most of the help text is currently missing or
dummy text; this will need to be filled in, and the existing argument
help text will need to be cleaned up a bit (it was thrown in quickly,
mostly for testing purposes).
Help command now works for all argument types, although the help may not
be very helpful yet.
Those commands that take "raw" command strings now indicate it in their
help text.
llvm-svn: 115318
an auto-generated Python function, and pass the stoppoint context frame and
breakpoint location as parameters to the function (named 'frame' and 'bp_loc'),
to be used inside the breakpoint command Python code, if desired.
llvm-svn: 114849
Fix minor bug in 'commands alias'; alias commands can now handle command options
and arguments in the same alias. Also fixes problem that disallowed "process launch --" as
an alias.
Fix typo in comment in Python script interpreter.
llvm-svn: 114499
the parent of Process settings; add 'default-arch' as a
class-wide setting for Target. Replace lldb::GetDefaultArchitecture
with Target::GetDefaultArchitecture & Target::SetDefaultArchitecture.
Add 'use-external-editor' as user setting to Debugger class & update
code appropriately.
Add Error parameter to methods that get user settings, for easier
reporting of bad requests.
Fix various other minor related bugs.
Fix test cases to work with new changes.
llvm-svn: 114352
- All single character options will now be printed together
- Changed all options that contains underscores to contain '-' instead
- Made the help come out a little flatter by showing the long and short
option on the same line.
- Modified the short character for "--ignore-count" options to "-i"
llvm-svn: 114265
accessed by the objects that own the settings. The previous approach wasn't
very usable and made for a lot of unnecessary code just to access variables
that were already owned by the objects.
While I fixed those things, I saw that CommandObject objects should really
have a reference to their command interpreter so they can access the terminal
with if they want to output usaage. Fixed up all CommandObjects to take
an interpreter and cleaned up the API to not need the interpreter to be
passed in.
Fixed the disassemble command to output the usage if no options are passed
down and arguments are passed (all disassebmle variants take options, there
are no "args only").
llvm-svn: 114252
command for a breakpoint, for example:
(lldb) breakpoint command add -p 1 "conditional_break.stop_if_called_from_a()"
The ScriptInterpreter interface has an extra method:
/// Set a one-liner as the callback for the breakpoint command.
virtual void
SetBreakpointCommandCallback (CommandInterpreter &interpreter,
BreakpointOptions *bp_options,
const char *oneliner);
to accomplish the above.
Also added a test case to demonstrate lldb's use of breakpoint callback command
to stop at function c() only when its immediate caller is function a(). The
following session shows the user entering the following commands:
1) command source .lldb (set up executable, breakpoint, and breakpoint command)
2) run (the callback mechanism will skip two breakpoints where c()'s immeidate caller is not a())
3) bt (to see that indeed c()'s immediate caller is a())
4) c (to continue and finish the program)
test/conditional_break $ ../../build/Debug/lldb
(lldb) command source .lldb
Executing commands in '.lldb'.
(lldb) file a.out
Current executable set to 'a.out' (x86_64).
(lldb) breakpoint set -n c
Breakpoint created: 1: name = 'c', locations = 1
(lldb) script import sys, os
(lldb) script sys.path.append(os.path.join(os.getcwd(), os.pardir))
(lldb) script import conditional_break
(lldb) breakpoint command add -p 1 "conditional_break.stop_if_called_from_a()"
(lldb) run
run
Launching '/Volumes/data/lldb/svn/trunk/test/conditional_break/a.out' (x86_64)
(lldb) Checking call frames...
Stack trace for thread id=0x2e03 name=None queue=com.apple.main-thread:
frame #0: a.out`c at main.c:39
frame #1: a.out`b at main.c:34
frame #2: a.out`a at main.c:25
frame #3: a.out`main at main.c:44
frame #4: a.out`start
c called from b
Continuing...
Checking call frames...
Stack trace for thread id=0x2e03 name=None queue=com.apple.main-thread:
frame #0: a.out`c at main.c:39
frame #1: a.out`b at main.c:34
frame #2: a.out`main at main.c:47
frame #3: a.out`start
c called from b
Continuing...
Checking call frames...
Stack trace for thread id=0x2e03 name=None queue=com.apple.main-thread:
frame #0: a.out`c at main.c:39
frame #1: a.out`a at main.c:27
frame #2: a.out`main at main.c:50
frame #3: a.out`start
c called from a
Stopped at c() with immediate caller as a().
a(1) returns 4
b(2) returns 5
Process 20420 Stopped
* thread #1: tid = 0x2e03, 0x0000000100000de8 a.out`c + 7 at main.c:39, stop reason = breakpoint 1.1, queue = com.apple.main-thread
36
37 int c(int val)
38 {
39 -> return val + 3;
40 }
41
42 int main (int argc, char const *argv[])
(lldb) bt
bt
thread #1: tid = 0x2e03, stop reason = breakpoint 1.1, queue = com.apple.main-thread
frame #0: 0x0000000100000de8 a.out`c + 7 at main.c:39
frame #1: 0x0000000100000dbc a.out`a + 44 at main.c:27
frame #2: 0x0000000100000e4b a.out`main + 91 at main.c:50
frame #3: 0x0000000100000d88 a.out`start + 52
(lldb) c
c
Resuming process 20420
Process 20420 Exited
a(3) returns 6
(lldb)
llvm-svn: 113596
are always printed immediately after the command, before optional
options; also so that in the detailed descriptions of each command
option, the options and their help are output in alphabetical order
(sorted by the short option) rather in whatever order they happened to
be in the table.
llvm-svn: 113496
Make get/set variable at the debugger level always set the particular debugger's instance variables rather than
the default variables.
llvm-svn: 113474
handles user settable internal variables (the equivalent of set/show
variables in gdb). In addition to the basic infrastructure (most of
which is defined in UserSettingsController.{h,cpp}, there are examples
of two classes that have been set up to contain user settable
variables (the Debugger and Process classes). The 'settings' command
has been modified to be a command-subcommand structure, and the 'set',
'show' and 'append' commands have been moved into this sub-commabnd
structure. The old StateVariable class has been completely replaced
by this, and the state variable dictionary has been removed from the
Command Interpreter. Places that formerly accessed the state variable
mechanism have been modified to access the variables in this new
structure instead (checking the term-width; getting/checking the
prompt; etc.)
Variables are attached to classes; there are two basic "flavors" of
variables that can be set: "global" variables (static/class-wide), and
"instance" variables (one per instance of the class). The whole thing
has been set up so that any global or instance variable can be set at
any time (e.g. on start up, in your .lldbinit file), whether or not
any instances actually exist (there's a whole pending and default
values mechanism to help deal with that).
llvm-svn: 113041
The goal is to separate the parser's data from the data
belonging to the parser's clients. This allows clients
to use the parser to obtain (for example) a JIT compiled
function or some DWARF code, and then discard the parser
state.
Previously, parser state was held in ClangExpression and
used liberally by ClangFunction, which inherited from
ClangExpression. The main effects of this refactoring
are:
- reducing ClangExpression to an abstract class that
declares methods that any client must expose to the
expression parser,
- moving the code specific to implementing the "expr"
command from ClangExpression and
CommandObjectExpression into ClangUserExpression,
a new class,
- moving the common parser interaction code from
ClangExpression into ClangExpressionParser, a new
class, and
- making ClangFunction rely only on
ClangExpressionParser and not depend on the
internal implementation of ClangExpression.
Side effects include:
- the compiler interaction code has been factored
out of ClangFunction and is now in an AST pass
(ASTStructExtractor),
- the header file for ClangFunction is now fully
documented,
- several bugs that only popped up when Clang was
deallocated (which never happened, since the
lifetime of the compiler was essentially infinite)
are now fixed, and
- the developer-only "call" command has been
disabled.
I have tested the expr command and the Objective-C
step-into code, which use ClangUserExpression and
ClangFunction, respectively, and verified that they
work. Please let me know if you encounter bugs or
poor documentation.
llvm-svn: 112249
Change the prototype of ScriptInterpreter::ExecuteOneLine() to return bool
instead of void and take one additional parameter as CommandReturnObject *.
Propagate the status of one-liner execution back appropriately.
llvm-svn: 109899
Makefile patch to explicitly use PROJ_SRC_DIR when required. It fixes
build when obj dir is not source dir.
I also fixed a build warning in ClangResultSynthesizer.cpp.
llvm-svn: 108210
enabled LLVM make style building and made this compile LLDB on Mac OS X. We
can now iterate on this to make the build work on both linux and macosx.
llvm-svn: 108009
Move the "source", "alias", and "unalias" commands to "commands *".
Move "source-file" to "source list".
Added a "source info" command but it isn't implemented yet.
llvm-svn: 107751
instead of the last history item to provide a command for the "empty" command.
Use this in the source-file command to make <RETURN> continue the listing rather
than relist the first listing...
llvm-svn: 107736
interface so everybody does it the same way. Add an "exact" lookup for internal uses.
Fix up a few little cases where we weren't reporting command lookup errors correctly.
Added "b" as an alias for "breakpoint" so it doesn't collide with "bt".
llvm-svn: 107718
Add functions to look up debugger by id
Add global variable to lldb python module, to hold debugger id
Modify embedded Python interpreter to update the global variable with the
id of its current debugger.
Modify the char ** typemap definition in lldb.swig to accept 'None' (for NULL)
as a valid value.
The point of all this is so that, when you drop into the embedded interpreter
from the command interpreter (or when doing Python-based breakpoint commands),
there is a way for the Python side to find/get the correct debugger
instance ( by checking debugger_unique_id, then calling
SBDebugger::FindDebuggerWithID on it).
llvm-svn: 107287
Add a way for the completers to say whether the completed argument should have a space inserted after is
or not.
Added the file name completer to the "file" command.
llvm-svn: 107247
to the debugger from GUI windows. Previously there was one global debugger
instance that could be accessed that had its own command interpreter and
current state (current target/process/thread/frame). When a GUI debugger
was attached, if it opened more than one window that each had a console
window, there were issues where the last one to setup the global debugger
object won and got control of the debugger.
To avoid this we now create instances of the lldb_private::Debugger that each
has its own state:
- target list for targets the debugger instance owns
- current process/thread/frame
- its own command interpreter
- its own input, output and error file handles to avoid conflicts
- its own input reader stack
So now clients should call:
SBDebugger::Initialize(); // (static function)
SBDebugger debugger (SBDebugger::Create());
// Use which ever file handles you wish
debugger.SetErrorFileHandle (stderr, false);
debugger.SetOutputFileHandle (stdout, false);
debugger.SetInputFileHandle (stdin, true);
// main loop
SBDebugger::Terminate(); // (static function)
SBDebugger::Initialize() and SBDebugger::Terminate() are ref counted to
ensure nothing gets destroyed too early when multiple clients might be
attached.
Cleaned up the command interpreter and the CommandObject and all subclasses
to take more appropriate arguments.
llvm-svn: 106615
The top of the header file seems to indicate that this was
intended to be over at include/lldb/Core but we should be in line
with the .cpp file's location so it's include/lldb/Utility for now.
llvm-svn: 105753