Fixed a crasher when using memory threads where a thread is sticking around too long and was causing problems when it didn't have a thread plan.
llvm-svn: 187395
LLDB requires that the inferior process be stopped before, and remain
stopped during, certain accesses to process state.
Previously this was achieved with a POSIX rwlock which had a write lock
taken for the duration that the process was running, and released when
the process was stopped. Any access to process state was performed with
a read lock held.
However, POSIX requires that pthread_rwlock_unlock() be called from the
same thread as pthread_rwlock_wrlock(), and lldb needs to stop and start
the process from different threads. Violating this constraint is
technically undefined behaviour, although as it happens Linux and Darwin
result in the unlock proceeding in this case. FreeBSD follows POSIX
more strictly, and the unlock would fail, resulting in a hang later upon
the next attempt to take the lock.
All read lock consumers use ReadTryLock() and handle failure to obtain
the lock (typically by logging an error "process is running"). Thus,
instead of using the lock state itself to track the running state, this
change adds an explicit m_running flag. ReadTryLock tests the flag, and
if the process is not running it returns with the read lock held.
WriteLock and WriteTryLock are renamed to SetRunning and TrySetRunning,
and (if successful) they set m_running with the lock held. This way,
read consumers can determine if the process is running and act
appropriately, and write consumers are still held off from starting the
process if read consumers are active.
Note that with this change there are still some curious access patterns,
such as calling WriteUnlock / SetStopped twice in a row, and there's no
protection from multiple threads trying to simultaneously start the
process. In practice this does not seem to be a problem, and was
exposing other undefined POSIX behaviour prior to this change.
llvm-svn: 187377
and so the StackID changes with every step. Do so by checking the parent frame ID, and if it hasn't changed,
then we haven't stepped in.
rdar://problem/14516227
llvm-svn: 187094
plan providers from a "ThreadPlan *" to a "lldb::ThreadPlanSP". That was needed to fix
a bug where the ThreadPlanStepInRange wasn't checking with its sub-plans to make sure they
succeed before trying to proceed further. If the sub-plan failed and as a result didn't make
any progress, you could end up retrying the same failing algorithm in an infinite loop.
<rdar://problem/14043602>
llvm-svn: 186618
- MachO files now correctly extract the UUID all the time
- More file size and offset verification done for universal mach-o files to watch for truncated files
- ObjectContainerBSDArchive now supports enumerating all objects in BSD archives (.a files)
- lldb_private::Module() can not be properly constructed using a ModuleSpec for a .o file in a .a file
- The BSD archive plug-in shares its cache for GetModuleSpecifications() and the create callback
- Improved printing for ModuleSpec objects
llvm-svn: 186211
A long time ago we start with clang types that were created by the symbol files and there were many functions in lldb_private::ClangASTContext that helped. Later we create ClangASTType which contains a clang::ASTContext and an opauque QualType, but we didn't switch over to fully using it. There were a lot of places where we would pass around a raw clang_type_t and also pass along a clang::ASTContext separately. This left room for error.
This checkin change all type code over to use ClangASTType everywhere and I cleaned up the interfaces quite a bit. Any code that was in ClangASTContext that was type related, was moved over into ClangASTType. All code that used these types was switched over to use all of the new goodness.
llvm-svn: 186130
ensure that the watchpoint not the step is reported as the stop reason. Also, stash away & restore
the current stop reason just so it can't go away on us.
llvm-svn: 185474
bother checking if a region is safe to use. In
cases where regions need to be synthesized rather
than properly allocated, the memory reads required
to determine whether the area is used are
- insufficient, because intermediate locations
could be in use, and
- unsafe, because on some platforms reading from
memory can trigger events.
All this only makes a difference on platforms
where memory allocation in the target is impossible.
Behavior on platforms where it is possible should
stay the same.
<rdar://problem/14023970>
llvm-svn: 185046
Made sure that temporary object created from HarmonizeThreadIdsForProfileData() doesn’t get passed around without creating an object first.
Reviewed by Greg
llvm-svn: 184769
325,000 breakpoints for running "breakpoint set --func-regex ." on lldb itself (after hitting a breakpoint at main so that LLDB.framework is loaded) used to take up to an hour to set, now we are down under a minute. With warm file caches, we are at 40 seconds, and that is with setting 325,000 breakpoint through the GDB remote API. Linux and the native debuggers might be faster. I haven't timed what how much is debug info parsing and how much is the protocol traffic to/from GDB remote.
That there were many performance issues. Most of them were due to storing breakpoints in the wrong data structures, or using the wrong iterators to traverse the lists, traversing the lists in inefficient ways, and not optimizing certain function name lookups/symbol merges correctly.
Debugging after that is also now very efficient. There were issues with replacing the breakpoint opcodes in memory that was read, and those routines were also fixed.
llvm-svn: 183820
Two things:
1) fixing a bug where memory read was not clearing the m_force flag after it was passed, so that subsequent memory reads would not need to be forced even if over boundary
2) adding a setting target.max-memory-read-size that you can set instead of the hardcoded 1024 bytes limit we had before
llvm-svn: 183276
Fixed performance issues that arose after changing SBTarget, SBProcess, SBThread and SBFrame over to using a std::shared_ptr to a ExecutionContextRef. The ExecutionContextRef doesn't store a std::weak_ptr to a stack frame because stack frames often get replaced with new version, so it held onto a StackID object that would allow us to ask the thread each time for the frame for the StackID. The linear function was too slow for large recursive stacks. We also fixed an issue where anytime the std::shared_ptr<ExecutionContextRef> in any SBTarget, SBProcess, SBThread objects was turned into an ExecutionContext object, it would try to resolve all items in the ExecutionContext which are shared pointers. Even if the StackID in the ExecutionContextRef was invalid, it was looking through all frames in every thread. This causes a lot of unnecessary frame accesses.
llvm-svn: 182627
settings set use-color [false|true]
settings set prompt "${ansi.bold}${ansi.fg.green}(lldb)${ansi.normal} "
also "--no-use-colors" on the command prompt
llvm-svn: 182609
Yet another implementation of the python in dSYM autoload :)
This time we are going with a ternary setting:
true - load, do not warn
false - do not load, do not warn
warn - do not load, warn (default)
llvm-svn: 182414
There are two settings:
target.load-script-from-symbol-file is a boolean that says load or no load (default: false)
target.warn-on-script-from-symbol-file is also a boolean, it says whether you want to be warned when a script file is not loaded due to security (default: true)
the auto loading on change for target.load-script-from-symbol-file is preserved
llvm-svn: 182336
This changes the setting target.load-script-from-symbol-file to be a ternary enum value:
default (the default value) will NOT load the script files but will issue a warning suggesting workarounds
yes will load the script files
no will not load the script files AND will NOT issue any warning
if you change the setting value from default to yes, that will then cause the script files to be loaded
(the assumption is you didn't know about the setting, got a warning, and quickly want to remedy it)
if you have a settings set command for this in your lldbinit file, be sure to change "true" or "false" into an appropriate "yes" or "no" value
llvm-svn: 182323
Name matching was working inconsistently across many places in LLDB. Anyone doing name lookups where you want to look for all types of names should used "eFunctionNameTypeAuto" as the sole name type mask. This will ensure that we get consistent "lookup function by name" results. We had many function calls using as mask like "eFunctionNameTypeBase | eFunctionNameTypeFull | eFunctionNameTypeMethod | eFunctionNameTypeSelector". This was due to the function lookup by name evolving over time, but as it stands today, use eFunctionNameTypeAuto when you want general name lookups. Either ModuleList::FindFunctions() or Module::FindFunctions() will figure out the right kinds of names to lookup and remove the "eFunctionNameTypeAuto" and replace it with the exact subset of what the name can be.
This checkin also changes eFunctionNameTypeAny over to use eFunctionNameTypeAuto to reflect this.
llvm-svn: 182179
regions that aren't actually allocated in the
process. This cache is used by the expression
parser if the underlying process doesn't support
memory allocation, to avoid needless repeated
searches for unused address ranges.
Also fixed a silly bug in IRMemoryMap where it
would continue searching even after it found a
valid region.
<rdar://problem/13866629>
llvm-svn: 182028
- add IsVirtualStep() virtual function to ThreadPlan, and implement it for
ThreadPlanStepInRange
- make GetPrivateStopReason query the current thread plan for a virtual stop to
decide if the current stop reason needs to be preserved
- remove extra check for an existing process in GetPrivateStopReason
llvm-svn: 181795
Provide a mechanism through which users can disable loading the Python scripts from dSYM files
This relies on a target setting: target.load-script-from-symbol-file which defaults to false ("do NOT load the script")
You need to set it to true before creating your target (or in your lldbinit file if you constantly rely on this feature) to allow the scripts to load
llvm-svn: 181709
Avoid a deadlock when using the OperatingSystemPython code and typing "process interrupt". There was a possible lock inversion between the target API lock and the process' thread list lock due to code trying to discard the thread list. This was fixed by adding a boolean to Process::Halt() that indicates if the thread plans should be discarded and doing it in the private state thread when we process the stopped state.
llvm-svn: 181651
<rdar://problem/13594769>
Main changes in this patch include:
- cleanup plug-in interface and use ConstStrings for plug-in names
- Modfiied the BSD Archive plug-in to be able to pick out the correct .o file when .a files contain multiple .o files with the same name by using the timestamp
- Modified SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap to properly verify the timestamp on .o files it loads to ensure we don't load updated .o files and cause problems when debugging
The plug-in interface changes:
Modified the lldb_private::PluginInterface class that all plug-ins inherit from:
Changed:
virtual const char * GetPluginName() = 0;
To:
virtual ConstString GetPluginName() = 0;
Removed:
virtual const char * GetShortPluginName() = 0;
- Fixed up all plug-in to adhere to the new interface and to return lldb_private::ConstString values for the plug-in names.
- Fixed all plug-ins to return simple names with no prefixes. Some plug-ins had prefixes and most ones didn't, so now they all don't have prefixed names, just simple names like "linux", "gdb-remote", etc.
llvm-svn: 181631
This re-submission of this patch fixes a problem where the code sometimes caused a deadlock. The Process::SetPrivateState method was locking the Process::m_private_state variable and then later calling ThreadList::DidStop, which locks the ThreadList mutex. Other methods in ThreadList which were being called from other threads lock the ThreadList mutex and then call Process::GetPrivateState which locks the Process::m_private_state mutex. To avoid deadlocks, Process::SetPrivateState now locks the ThreadList mutex before locking the Process::m_private_state mutex.
llvm-svn: 181609
namespace lldb_private {
class Thread
{
virtual lldb::StopInfoSP
GetPrivateStopReason() = 0;
};
}
To not be virtual. The lldb_private::Thread now handles the correct caching and will call a new pure virtual function:
namespace lldb_private {
class Thread
{
virtual bool
CalculateStopInfo() = 0;
}
}
This function must be overridden by thead lldb_private::Thread subclass and the only thing it needs to do is to set the Thread::StopInfo() with the current stop reason and return true, or return false if there is no stop reason. The lldb_private::Thread class will take care of calling this function only when it is required. This allows lldb_private::Thread subclasses to be a bit simpler and not all need to duplicate the cache and invalidation settings.
Also renamed:
lldb::StopInfoSP
lldb_private::Thread::GetPrivateStopReason();
To:
lldb::StopInfoSP
lldb_private::Thread::GetPrivateStopInfo();
Also cleaned up a case where the ThreadPlanStepOverBreakpoint might not re-set its breakpoint if the thread disappears (which was happening due to a bug when using the OperatingSystem plug-ins with memory threads and real threads).
llvm-svn: 181501
- Played with the current dual run lock implementation for a few days, noticed
no regressions, so enabling in trunk so we see if any problems are detected
by buildbots.
llvm-svn: 181446
value. This fixes problems, for instance, with the StepRange plans, where they know that
they explained the stop because they were at their "run to here" breakpoint, then deleted
that breakpoint, so when they got asked again, doh! I had done this for a couple of plans
in an ad hoc fashion, this just formalizes it.
Also add a "ResumeRequested" in Process so that the code in the completion handlers can
tell the ShouldStop logic they want to resume rather than just directly resuming. That allows
us to handle resuming in a more controlled fashion.
Also, SetPublicState can take a "restarted" flag, so that it doesn't drop the run lock when
the target was immediately restarted.
--This line, and those below , will be ignored--
M test/lang/objc/objc-dynamic-value/TestObjCDynamicValue.py
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadList.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanStepOut.h
M include/lldb/Target/Thread.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanBase.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanStepThrough.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanStepInstruction.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanStepInRange.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanStepOverBreakpoint.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanStepUntil.h
M include/lldb/Target/StopInfo.h
M include/lldb/Target/Process.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanRunToAddress.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlan.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanCallFunction.h
M include/lldb/Target/ThreadPlanStepOverRange.h
M source/Plugins/LanguageRuntime/ObjC/AppleObjCRuntime/AppleThreadPlanStepThroughObjCTrampoline.h
M source/Plugins/LanguageRuntime/ObjC/AppleObjCRuntime/AppleThreadPlanStepThroughObjCTrampoline.cpp
M source/Target/StopInfo.cpp
M source/Target/Process.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanRunToAddress.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlan.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanCallFunction.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanStepOverRange.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadList.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanStepOut.cpp
M source/Target/Thread.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanBase.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanStepThrough.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanStepInstruction.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanStepInRange.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanStepOverBreakpoint.cpp
M source/Target/ThreadPlanStepUntil.cpp
M lldb.xcodeproj/xcshareddata/xcschemes/Run Testsuite.xcscheme
llvm-svn: 181381