Summary:
This redoes https://reviews.llvm.org/D79726 and fixes two things.
- The logic that determines whether to automatically disconnect during the tear down is not very dumb compared to the original implementation. Each test will determine whether to do that or not.
- The terminate commands and terminate event were being sent after the disconnect response was sent to the IDE. That was not good, as VSCode stops the debug session as soon as it receives a disconnect response. Now, the terminate event and terminateEvents are being executed before the disconnect response is sent. This ensures that any connection between the IDE and lldb-vscode is alive while the terminate commands are executed. Besides, it also allows displaying the output of the terminate commands on the debug console, as it's still alive.
Reviewers: clayborg, aadsm, kusmour, labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81978
Summary:
Recently I've noticed that VSCode sometimes doesn't send the terminateDebuggee flag within the disconnectRequest,
even though lldb-vscode sets the terminateDebuggee capability correctly.
This has been causing that inferiors don't die after the debug session ends, and many users have reported issues because of this.
An easy way to mitigate this is to set better default values for the terminateDebuggee field in the disconnect request.
I'm assuming that for a launch request, the default will be true, and for attach it'll be false.
Reviewers: clayborg, labath, aadsm
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81200
OSType with less than 8 bytes has special code that isn't tested yet.
The same for C-strings that don't have `const char *` type. Also we're now testing
escaping the ASCII escape sequence (\033).
Add support for changing the stdout and stderr file in Lua's I/O library
and hook it up with the debugger's output and error file respectively
for the interactive Lua interpreter.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D82273
Add a way to quit the interactive script interpreter from a shell tests.
Currently, the only way (that I know) to exit the interactive Lua
interpreter is to send a EOF with CTRL-D. I noticed that the embedded
Python script interpreter accepts quit (while the regular python
interpreter doesn't). I've added a special case to the Lua interpreter
to do the same.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82272
Reland 90c1af106a . This changes the char format
tests which were printing the pointer value of the C-string instead of its
contents, so this test failed on other machines. Now they just print the
bytes in a uint128_t.
Original commit description:
The previous tests apparently missed a few code branches in DumpDataExtractor
code. Also renames the 'test_instruction' which had the same name as another
test (and Python therefore ignored the test entirely).
The previous tests apparently missed a few code branches in DumpDataExtractor
code. Also renames the 'test_instruction' which had the same name as another
test (and Python therefore ignored the test entirely).
Summary:
TerminalSizeChanged is called from our SIGWINCH signal handler but the
IOHandlerEditline currently doesn't check if we are actually using the real
editline backend. If we're not using the real editline backend, `m_editline_up`
won't be set and `IOHandlerEditline::TerminalSizeChanged` will access
the empty unique_ptr. In a real use case we don't use the editline backend
when we for example read input from a file. We also create some temporary
IOHandlerEditline's during LLDB startup it seems that are also treated
as non-interactive (apparently to read startup commands).
This patch just adds a nullptr check for`m_editline_up` as we do in the rest of
IOHandlerEditline.
Fixes rdar://problem/63921950
Reviewers: labath, friss
Reviewed By: friss
Subscribers: abidh, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81729
and delete a bunch (but not all) redundant code. If you compare the remaining implementations of Platform*Simulator.cpp, there is still an obvious leftover cleanup task.
Specifically, this patch
- removes SDK initialization from dotest (there is equivalent but more
complete code in Makefile.rules)
- make Platform*Simulator inherit the generic implementation of
PlatformAppleSimulator (more can be done here)
- simplify the platform logic in Makefile.rules
- replace the custom SDK finding logic in Platform*Simulator with XcodeSDK
- adds a test for each supported simulator
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81980
On the buildbot long and int have the same size but long and long long don't,
so the bug where we find the first type by size will produce a different error.
Make the test dynamic based on int/long/long long size to fix the bot.
Executing commands below will get you bombarded by a wall of Python
command prompts (>>> ).
$ echo 'foo' | ./bin/lldb -o script
$ cat /tmp/script
script
print("foo")
$ lldb --source /tmp/script
The issue is that our custom input reader doesn't handle EOF. According
to the Python documentation, file.readline always includes a trailing
newline character unless the file ends with an incomplete line. An empty
string signals EOF. This patch raises an EOFError when that happens.
[1] https://docs.python.org/2/library/stdtypes.html#file.readline
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81898
Summary:
When we get an error back from IRForTarget we directly print that error to the
debugger output stream instead of putting it in the result object. The result
object only gets a vague "The expression could not be prepared to run in the
target" error message that doesn't actually tell the user what went wrong.
This patch just puts the IRForTarget errors into the status object that is
returned to the caller instead of directly printing it to the debugger. Also
updates one test that now can actually check for the error message it is
supposed to check for (instead of the default error which is all we had before).
Reviewers: JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81654
The Python 3 interpreter in Xcode has a relative RPATH and dyld fails to
load it when we copy it into the build directory.
This patch adds an additional check that the copied binary can be
executed. If it doesn't, we assume we're dealing with the Xcode python
interpreter and return the path to the real executable. That is
sufficient for the sanitizers because only system binaries need to be
copied to work around SIP.
This patch also moves all that logic out of LLDBTest and into the lit
configuration so that it's executed only once per test run, instead of
once for every test. Although I didn't benchmark the difference this
should result in a mild speedup.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81696
Encountered the following situation: Let we started thread T1 and it hit
breakpoint on B1 location. We suspended T1 and continued the process.
Then we started thread T2 which hit for example the same location B1.
This time in a breakpoint callback we decided not to stop returning
false.
Expected result: process continues (as if T2 did not hit breakpoint) its
workflow with T1 still suspended. Actual result: process do stops (as if
T2 callback returned true).
Solution: We need invalidate StopInfo for threads that was previously
suspended just because something that is already inactive can not be the
reason of stop. Thread::GetPrivateStopInfo() may be appropriate place to
do it, because it gets called (through Thread::GetStopInfo()) every time
before process reports stop and user gets chance to change
m_resume_state again i.e if we see m_resume_state == eStateSuspended
it definitely means it was set during previous stop and it also means
this thread can not be stopped again (cos' it was frozen during
previous stop).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80112
These tests are flaky on the reproducer bot. I suspect it has something
to do with the module cache. Skipping the whole category while I
investigate the issue.
Before 539b47c9 this test was not actually using the debug_names section
because the -gdwarf added by Makefile.rules on windows overrode the
-gdwarf-5 flag from CFLAGS_EXTRAS. Now that -gdwarf-5 is respected, the
test is failing.
SBFileSpec.fullpath always uses the forward slash to join the directory with the
base name. This causes mismatches when comparing Windows paths with backslashes
in two of the minidump tests. To get around that we just compare the directory
names separately from the filenames.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81465
Color the error: and warning: part of the CommandReturnObject output,
similar to how an error is printed from the driver when colors are
enabled.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81058
D80519 <https://reviews.llvm.org/D80519>
added support for `DW_TAG_GNU_call_site` but
Bug 45886 <https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45886>
found one case did not work.
There is:
0x000000b1: DW_TAG_GNU_call_site
DW_AT_low_pc (0x000000000040111e)
DW_AT_abstract_origin (0x000000cc "a")
...
0x000000cc: DW_TAG_subprogram
DW_AT_name ("a")
DW_AT_prototyped (true)
DW_AT_low_pc (0x0000000000401109)
^^^^^^^^^^^^ - here it did overwrite the 'low_pc' variable containing value 0x40111e we wanted
DW_AT_high_pc (0x0000000000401114)
DW_AT_frame_base (DW_OP_call_frame_cfa)
DW_AT_GNU_all_call_sites (true)
DW_TAG_GNU_call_site attributes order as produced by GCC:
0x000000b1: DW_TAG_GNU_call_site
DW_AT_low_pc (0x000000000040111e)
DW_AT_abstract_origin (0x000000cc "a")
clang produces the attributes in opposite order:
0x00000064: DW_TAG_GNU_call_site
DW_AT_abstract_origin (0x0000002a "a")
DW_AT_low_pc (0x0000000000401146)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81334
Previously, we were simply ignoring them and continuing the evaluation.
This behavior does not seem useful, because the resulting value will
most likely be completely bogus.
Summary:
The way that the support for the GNU dialect of tail call frames was
implemented in D80519 meant that the were reporting very bogus PC values
which pointed into the middle of an instruction: the -1 trick is
necessary for the address to resolve to the right function, but we
should still be reporting a more realistic PC value -- I say "realistic"
and not "real", because it's very debatable what should be the correct
PC value for frames like this.
This patch achieves that my moving the -1 from SymbolFileDWARF into the
stack frame computation code. The idea is that SymbolFileDWARF will
merely report whether it has provided an address of the instruction
after the tail call, or the address of the call instruction itself. The
StackFrameList machinery uses this information to set the "behaves like
frame zero" property of the artificial frames (the main thing this flag
does is it controls the -1 subtraction when looking up the function
address).
This required a moderate refactor of the CallEdge class, because it was
implicitly assuming that edges pointing after the call were real calls
and those pointing the the call insn were tail calls. The class now
carries this information explicitly -- it carries three mostly
independent pieces of information:
- an address of interest in the caller
- a bit saying whether this address points to the call insn or after it
- whether this is a tail call
Reviewers: vsk, dblaikie
Subscribers: aprantl, mgrang, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81010
SBTarget::AddModule currently handles the UUID parameter in a very
weird way: UUIDs with more than 16 bytes are trimmed to 16 bytes. On
the other hand, shorter-than-16-bytes UUIDs are completely ignored. In
this patch, we change the parsing code to handle UUIDs of arbitrary
size.
To support arbitrary size UUIDs in SBTarget::AddModule, this patch
changes UUID::SetFromStringRef to parse UUIDs of arbitrary length. We
subtly change the semantics of SetFromStringRef - SetFromStringRef now
only succeeds if the entire input is consumed to prevent some
prefix-parsing confusion. This is up for discussion, but I believe
this is more consistent - we always return false for invalid UUIDs
rather than sometimes truncating to a valid prefix. Also, all the
call-sites except the API and interpreter seem to expect to consume
the entire input.
This also adds tests for adding existing modules 4-, 16-, and 20-byte
build-ids. Finally, we took the liberty of testing the minidump
scenario we care about - removing placeholder module from minidump and
replacing it with the real module.
Reviewed By: labath, friss
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80755
The printf expression crashes with the message:
Attempted to dereference an invalid pointer
Someone who knows more about Windows should suggest how to fix this.
Support printing strings which contain invalid utf8 sub-sequences, e.g.
strings like "hello world \xfe", instead of bailing out with "Summary
Unavailable".
I took the opportunity here to delete some hand-rolled utf8 -> utf32
conversion code and replace it with calls into llvm's Support library.
rdar://61554346
Summary:
The code changes are very straight-forward -- just handle both DW_AT_GNU
and DW_AT_call versions of all tags and attributes. There is just one
small gotcha: in the GNU version, DW_AT_low_pc was used both for the
"return pc" and the "call pc" values, depending on whether the tag was
describing a tail call, while the official scheme uses different
attributes for the two things.
Reviewers: vsk, dblaikie
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80519
This patch marks TestCreateDuringInstructionStep.py as flakey for Linux.
This is failing randomly on arm/aarch64. I will monitor buildbot and
skip it if it fails again.
Commit 0800529fe6 adds a runtime error which triggers when using
SBAddress properties that use the current process/target from a
non-interactive session. TestThreadPlanCommands.py was doing exactly
this and this patch fixes that by use GetLoadAddress instead.
Several SBAddress properties use the lldb.target or lldb.process
convenience variables which are only set under the interactive script
interpreter. Unfortunately, users have been using these properties in
Python script and commands. This patch raises a Python exception to
force users to use GetLoadAddress instead.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80848
One can have multiple simulator runtimes installed, supporting
various generations of OSs. The logic in TestAppleSimulatorOSType
might select a rnutime older than the one targeted by the current
tools, preventing the executable from running. This commit changes
the test to look for the most recent runtime available instead.
Summary:
This patch adds two new arguments to the MakeInlineTest function. The
main motivation is a follow-up patch I'm preparing, but they seem
generally useful.
The first argument allows the user to specify the "build dictionary".
With this argument one can avoid the need to provide a custom Makefile
if all he needs is to override a couple of make variables. This hooks in
neatly into the existing dictionary support for non-inline tests.
The second argument specifies the name of the test. This could be used
to provide better names to the generated test classes, but it's mainly
useful in conjuction with the first argument: now that we can specify a
custom build dictionary, it may sometimes make sense to run the same
test twice with different build configurations. To achieve that, we need
to give the two tests different names, and this argument achieves that.
The usage of the arguments is demonstrated via TestBasicEntryValues.py.
Reviewers: vsk, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80518
This adds a new target `check-lldb-reproducers` that replaces the old
`check-lldb-repro`. The latter would only run the shell tests, while
`check-lldb-reproducers` includes the API tests as well. The new target
will be used on GreenDragon.
It's still possible to run just the shell tests with reproducers,
although now that requires crafting the lit invocation yourself. The
parameters haven't changed and are the shame for the API and shell
tests:
--param lldb-run-with-repro=capture
--param lldb-run-with-repro=replay
This patch also updates the reproducer documentation.
This property is explicitly for use only in the interactive editor,
and NOT in commands. It's use worked until we got more careful about
not leaving lldb.target lying around in the script interpreter.
I also added a quick sniff test for the save_crashlog command.
<rdar://problem/60350620>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80680
After this patch all remaining tests should pass on macOS when replayed
from a reproducer.
To capture the reproducers:
./bin/llvm-lit ../llvm-project/lldb/test/ --param lldb-run-with-repro=capture
To replay the reproducers:
./bin/llvm-lit ../llvm-project/lldb/test/ --param lldb-run-with-repro=replay
The reproducer don't model timeouts so tests that rely on them end up
with unexpected packets during replay. Skip them until we can handle
this scenario.
Although it's not entirely clear to me why, this test was generating its
binary in the source directory instead of the build directory. This
patch fixes that following the same approach as other tests.
Summary:
It turns out that the order in which we provide completions for expressions is
nondeterministic. This leads to confusing user experience and also breaks the
reproducer tests (as two LLDB tests can go out of sync due to the
non-determinism in the completion lists)
The reason for the non-determinism is that the CompletionConsumer informs us
about decls in the order in which it finds declarations in the lookup store of
the DeclContexts it visits (mainly this snippet in SemaLookup.cpp):
``` lang=c++
// Enumerate all of the results in this context.
for (DeclContextLookupResult R :
Load ? Ctx->lookups()
: Ctx->noload_lookups(/*PreserveInternalState=*/false)) {
[...]
```
This storage of the lookup is sorted by pointer values (see the hash of
`DeclarationName`) and can therefore be non-deterministic. The LLDB code
completion consumer that receives these calls originally expected that the order
of declarations is defined by Clang, but it seems the API expects the client to
provide an order to the completions.
This patch fixes the issue as follows:
* We sort the completions we get from Clang alphabetically and also by the
priority value we get from Clang (with priority value sorting having precedence
over the alphabetical sorting)
* We make all the functions/variables that touch a completion before the sorting
const-qualified. The idea is that this should prevent that we never have
observable side-effect from touching these declarations in a non-deterministic
order (e.g., we don't try to complete the type by accident).
This way we behave like the other parts of Clang which also sort the results by
some deterministic value (usually the name or something computed from a name,
e.g., edit distance to a given string).
We most likely also need to fix the Clang code to make the loop I listed above
deterministic to prevent these issues in the future (tracked in rdar://63442513
). This wouldn't replace the functionality provided in this patch though as we
would still need the priority and overall alphabetical sorting.
Note: I had to increase the lldb-vscode completion limit to 100 as the tests
look for strings that aren't in the first 50 results anymore due to variable
names starting with letters like 'v' (which are now always shown much further
down in the list due to the alphabetical sorting).
Fixes rdar://63200995
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: mgrang, abidh
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80292
Summary:
For ObjCInterfaceDecls, LLDB iterates over the `methods` of the interface in FindExternalVisibleDeclsByName
since commit ef423a3ba5 .
However, when LLDB calls `oid->methods()` in that function, Clang will pull in all declarations in the current
DeclContext from the current ExternalASTSource (which is again, `ClangExternalASTSourceCallbacks`). The
reason for that is that `methods()` is just a wrapper for `decls()` which is supposed to provide a list of *all*
(both currently loaded and external) decls in the DeclContext.
However, `ClangExternalASTSourceCallbacks::FindExternalLexicalDecls` doesn't implement support for ObjCInterfaceDecl,
so we don't actually add any declarations and just mark the ObjCInterfaceDecl as having no ExternalLexicalStorage.
As LLDB uses the ExternalLexicalStorage to see if it can complete a type with the ExternalASTSource, this causes
that LLDB thinks our class can't be completed any further by the ExternalASTSource
and will from on no longer make any CompleteType/FindExternalLexicalDecls calls to that decl. This essentially
renders those types unusable in the expression parser as they will always be considered incomplete.
This patch just changes the call to `methods` (which is just a `decls()` wrapper), to some ad-hoc `noload_methods`
call which is wrapping `noload_decls()`. `noload_decls()` won't trigger any calls to the ExternalASTSource, so
this prevents that ExternalLexicalStorage will be set to false.
The test for this is just adding a method to an ObjC interface. Before this patch, this unset the ExternalLexicalStorage
flag and put the interface into the state described above.
In a normal user session this situation was triggered by setting a breakpoint in a method of some ObjC class. This
caused LLDB to create the MethodDecl for that specific method and put it into the the ObjCInterfaceDecl.
Also `ObjCLanguageRuntime::LookupInCompleteClassCache` needs to be unable to resolve the type do
an actual definition when the breakpoint is set (I'm not sure how exactly this can happen, but we just
found no Type instance that had the `TypePayloadClang::IsCompleteObjCClass` flag set in its payload in
the situation where this happens. This however doesn't seem to be a regression as logic wasn't changed
from what I can see).
The module-ownership.mm test had to be changed as the only reason why the ObjC interface in that test had
it's ExternalLexicalStorage flag set to false was because of this unintended side effect. What actually happens
in the test is that ExternalLexicalStorage is first set to false in `DWARFASTParserClang::CompleteTypeFromDWARF`
when we try to complete the `SomeClass` interface, but is then the flag is set back to true once we add
the last ivar of `SomeClass` (see `SetMemberOwningModule` in `TypeSystemClang.cpp` which is called
when we add the ivar). I'll fix the code for that in a follow-up patch.
I think some of the code here needs some rethinking. LLDB and Clang shouldn't infer anything about the ExternalASTSource
and its ability to complete the current type form the `ExternalLexicalStorage` flag. We probably should
also actually provide any declarations when we get asked for the lexical decls of an ObjCInterfaceDecl. But both of those
changes are bigger (and most likely would cause us to eagerly complete more types), so those will be follow up patches
and this patch just brings us back to the state before commit ef423a3ba5 .
Fixes rdar://63584164
Reviewers: aprantl, friss, shafik
Reviewed By: aprantl, shafik
Subscribers: arphaman, abidh, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80556
Summary:
A struct argument can be passed-by-value to a callee via a pointer to a
temporary stack copy. Add support for emitting an entry value DBG_VALUE
when an indirect parameter DBG_VALUE becomes unavailable. This is done
by omitting DW_OP_stack_value from the entry value expression, to make
the expression describe the location of an object.
rdar://63373691
Reviewers: djtodoro, aprantl, dstenb
Subscribers: hiraditya, lldb-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #lldb, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80345
Many tests use (commented out) print statement for debugging the test
itself. This patch adds a new trace method to lldbtest to reuse the
existing tracing infrastructure and replace these print statements.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80448
The llvm DWARFExpression dump is nearly identical, but better -- for
example it does print a spurious space after zero-argument expressions.
Some parts of our code (variable locations) have been already switched
to llvm-based expression dumping. This switches the remainder: unwind
plans and some unit tests.
Summary:
This is an attempt to fix https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45988,
where SBValue::GetNumChildren returns 2, but SBValue::GetChildAtIndex(1) returns
an invalid value sentinel.
The root cause of this seems to be that GetNumChildren can return the number of
children of a wrong value. In particular, for pointers GetNumChildren just
recursively calls itself on the pointee type, so it effectively walks chains of
pointers. This is different from the logic of GetChildAtIndex, which only
recurses if pointee.IsAggregateType() returns true (IsAggregateType is false for
pointers and references), so it never follows chain of pointers.
This patch aims to make GetNumChildren (more) consistent with GetChildAtIndex by
only recursively calling GetNumChildren for aggregate types.
Ideally, GetNumChildren and GetChildAtIndex would share the code that decides
which pointers/references are followed, but that is a bit more invasive change.
Reviewers: teemperor, jingham, clayborg
Reviewed By: teemperor, clayborg
Subscribers: clayborg, labath, shafik, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80254
This patchs adds an optional warning that is printed when stopped at a
frame that was compiled in a source language that LLDB has no plugin
for.
The motivational use-case is debugging Swift code on Linux. When the
user accidentally invokes the system LLDB that was built without the
Swift plugin, it is very much non-obvious why debugging doesnt
work. This warning makes it easy to figure out what went wrong.
<rdar://problem/56986569>
This reverts commit 5f88f39ab8. It broke these
three tests on the Window bot:
lldb-api :: commands/expression/completion/TestExprCompletion.py
lldb-api :: lang/cpp/scope/TestCppScope.py
lldb-api :: lang/cpp/standards/cpp11/TestCPP11Standard.py
These files haven't been touched since 2015. According to Pavel these
were intended to be test for the test framework which never really took
of and are mostly irrelevant by now.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80408
200 microseconds is not enough time for any expression to execute
reliably. On linux, calling pthread_exit can result in call to dlopen,
which cannot complete in that time, particularly when running under a
debugger.
On linux, this test failed all the time, on macos, about two thirds of
runs were failing. This patch increases the timeout to 100ms, which is
enough to get it passing reliably on linux, though I wouldn't be
surprised if an even bigger timeout would be needed for remote test
runs.
Summary:
Currently we never enable C++14 in the expression evaluator. This enables it when the language of the program is C++14.
It seems C++17 and so on isn't yet in any of the language enums (and the DWARF standard it seems), so C++17 support will be a follow up patch.
Reviewers: labath, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: labath, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80308
Remove commented out code, fix the indentation and always use the full
path to the executable. The latter is necessary for the test to pass
from reproducer replay.
Print a little snippet before exiting when passed unrecognized
arguments. The goal is twofold:
- Point users to lldb --help.
- Make it clear that we exited the debugger.
There appears to be consensus in D80165 that this is the desired
behavior and I personally agree.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80226
Summary: Adding this in line with "stopCommands" and "exitCommands" so that we can run commands at the end of the debugging session.
Reviewers: clayborg, wallace, labath
Reviewed By: clayborg, labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79726
Before the transition to libOption it was possible to specify arguments
for the inferior without -- as long as they didn't start with a dash.
For example, the following invocations should all behave the same:
$ lldb inferior inferior-arg
$ lldb inferior -- inferior-arg
$ lldb -- inferior inferior-arg
This patch fixes that behavior, documents it and adds a test to cover
the different combinations.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80165
This reverts commit 525a591f0f.
Fixed an issue with pointers to members based on typedefs. In this case,
LLVM would emit a second UDT. I fixed it by not passing the class type
to getTypeIndex when the base type is not a function type. lowerType
only uses the class type for direct function types. This suggests if we
have a PMF with a function typedef, there may be an issue, but that can
be solved separately.
> Before this patch, S_[L|G][THREAD32|DATA32] records were emitted with a simple name, not the fully qualified name (namespace + class scope).
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79447
This causes asserts in Chromium builds:
CodeViewDebug.cpp:2997: void llvm::CodeViewDebug::emitDebugInfoForUDTs(const std::vector<std::pair<std::string, const DIType *>> &):
Assertion `OriginalSize == UDTs.size()' failed.
I will follow up on the Phabricator issue.
This patch introduces the `(-h|--host)` option to the `platform shell`
command. It allows the user to run shell commands from the host platform
(always available) without putting lldb in the background.
Since the default behaviour of `platform shell` is to run the command of
the selected platform, having such a choice can be quite handy when
debugging remote targets, for instances.
This patch also introduces a `shell` alias, to improve the command
discoverability and make it more convenient to use for the user.
rdar://62856024
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79659
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
This patch improves data formatting for CFDictionaryRef and CFSetRef.
It uses the same data-formatter as NSCFDictionaries and NSCFSets introduced
previously but did require some adjustments in Core::ValueObject.
Since the "Ref" types are opaque pointers to the actual CF containers, if the
value object has a synthetic value, lldb will use the opaque pointer's pointee
type to create the new ValueObjectChild needed to dereference the ValueObject.
This allows the "Ref" types to behaves the same as CF containers when used with
the `frame variable` command, the SBAPI or in Xcode's variable inspector.
This patch also adds support for incomplete types in ValueObject.
rdar://53104287
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79554
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
Before this patch, S_[L|G][THREAD32|DATA32] records were emitted with a simple name, not the fully qualified name (namespace + class scope).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79447
This recommits f665e80c02 which was reverted in 1cbd1b8f69 for breaking
TestFoundationDisassembly.py. The fix is to use --force in the test to avoid
bailing out on large functions.
I have also doubled the large function limit to 8000 bytes (~~ 2000 insns), as
the foundation library contains a lot of large-ish functions. The intent of this
feature is to prevent accidental disassembling of enormous (multi-megabyte)
"functions", not to get in people's way.
The original commit message follows:
If we have a binary without symbol information (and without
LC_FUNCTION_STARTS, if on a mac), then we have to resort to using
heuristics to determine the function boundaries. However, these don't
always work, and so we can easily end up thinking we have functions
which are several megabytes in size. Attempting to (accidentally)
disassemble these can take a very long time spam the terminal with
thousands of lines of disassembly.
This patch works around that problem by adding a sanity check to the
disassemble command. If we are about to disassemble a function which is
larger than a certain threshold, we will refuse to disassemble such a
function unless the user explicitly specifies the number of instructions
to disassemble, uses start/stop addresses for disassembly, or passes the
(new) --force argument.
The threshold is currently fairly aggressive (4000 bytes ~~ 1000
instructions). If needed, we can increase it, or even make it
configurable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79789
Summary:
When the ClangModulesDeclVendor currently fails it just prints very basic and often incomplete diagnostics without any source locations:
```
(lldb) p @import Foundation
error: while importing modules:
'foo/bar.h' file not found
could not build module 'Darwin'
[...]
```
or even just
```
(lldb) p @import Foundation
error: while importing modules:
could not build module 'Darwin'
[...]
```
These diagnostics help neither the user nor us with figuring out what is the reason for the failure.
This patch wires up a full TextDiagnosticPrinter in the ClangModulesDeclVendor and makes
sure we always return the error stream to the user when we fail to compile our modules.
Fixes rdar://63216849
Reviewers: aprantl, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79947
Skip tests or parts thereof that aren't expected to work when run from a
reproducer. Also improve the doc comments in configuration.py to prevent
mistakes in the future.
These test don't execute the binaries they build, and so they don't need
to build for the host. By hardcoding the target, we don't have do xfail
or skip them for targets which don't have the appropriate support in
clang(-cl).
Summary:
If we have a binary without symbol information (and without
LC_FUNCTION_STARTS, if on a mac), then we have to resort to using
heuristics to determine the function boundaries. However, these don't
always work, and so we can easily end up thinking we have functions
which are several megabytes in size. Attempting to (accidentally)
disassemble these can take a very long time spam the terminal with
thousands of lines of disassembly.
This patch works around that problem by adding a sanity check to the
disassemble command. If we are about to disassemble a function which is
larger than a certain threshold, we will refuse to disassemble such a
function unless the user explicitly specifies the number of instructions
to disassemble, uses start/stop addresses for disassembly, or passes the
(new) --force argument.
The threshold is currently fairly aggressive (4000 bytes ~~ 1000
instructions). If needed, we can increase it, or even make it
configurable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79789
Summary:
The D programming language has 'char', 'wchar', and 'dchar' as base types,
which are defined as UTF-8, UTF-16, and UTF-32, respectively.
It also has type constructors (e.g. 'const' and 'immutable'),
that leads to D compilers emitting DW_TAG_base_type with DW_ATE_UTF
and name 'char', 'immutable(wchar)', 'const(char)', etc...
Before this patch, DW_ATE_UTF would only recognize types that
followed the C/C++ naming, and emit an error message for the rest, e.g.:
```
error: need to add support for DW_TAG_base_type 'immutable(char)'
encoded with DW_ATE = 0x10, bit_size = 8
```
The code was changed to check the byte size first,
then fall back to the old name-based check.
Reviewers: clayborg, labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: labath, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79559
This patch marks following tests as xfail for arm-linux target.
lldb/test/API/functionalities/load_using_paths/TestLoadUsingPaths.py
lldb/test/API/python_api/thread/TestThreadAPI.py
lldb/test/Shell/Recognizer/assert.test
Bugs have been filed for all of them for the corresponding failing
component.
This patch fixes minidebuginfo-set-and-hit-breakpoint.test for arm-linux
targets. 32-bit elf executables use .rel.dyn and 64-bit uses .rela.dyn for
relocation entries for dynamic symbols.
Summary:
This patch fixes an error happening in TestNumThreads.py when it encounters frame.GetFunctionName none for address only locations in stripped libc.
This error was showing up on arm-linux docker container running lldb buildbot.
Reviewers: labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79777
Summary:
The comment in the Editine.h header made it sound like editline was
just unable to handle terminal resizing. We were not ever telling
editline that the terminal had changed size, which might explain why
it wasn't working.
This patch threads a `TerminalSizeChanged()` callback through the
IOHandler and invokes it from the SIGWINCH handler in the driver. Our
`Editline` class already had a `TerminalSizeChanged()` method which
was invoked only when editline was configured.
This patch also changes `Editline` to not apply the changes right away
in `TerminalSizeChanged()`, but instead defer that to the next
character read. During my testing, it happened once that the signal
was received while our `ConnectionFileDescriptor::Read` was allocating
memory. As `el_resize` seems to allocate memory too, this crashed.
Reviewers: labath, teemperor
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79654
While debugging why TestProcessList.py failed during passive replay, I
remembered that we don't serialize the arguments for ProcessInfo. This
is necessary to make the test pass and to make platform process list -v
behave the same during capture and replay.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79646
Summary:
TestNSDictionarySynthetic sets up an NSURL which does not initialize its
_baseURL member. When the test runs and we print out the NSURL, we print
out some garbage memory pointed-to by the _baseURL member, like:
```
_baseURL = 0x0800010020004029 @"d��qX"
```
and this can cause a python unicode decoding error like:
```
UnicodeDecodeError: 'utf8' codec can't decode byte 0xa0 in position
10309: invalid start byte
```
There's a discrepancy here because lldb's StringPrinter facility tries
to only print out "printable" sequences (see: isprint32()), whereas python
rejects the StringPrinter output as invalid utf8. For the specific error
seen above, lldb's `isprint32(0xa0) = true`, even though 0xa0 is not
really "printable" in the usual sense.
The problem is that lldb and python disagree on what exactly is
"printable". Both have dismayingly hand-rolled utf8 validation code
(c.f. _Py_DecodeUTF8Ex), and I can't really tell which one is more
correct.
I tried replacing lldb's isprint32() with a call to libc's iswprint():
this satisfied python, but broke emoji printing :|.
Now, I believe that lldb (and python too) ought to just call into some
battle-tested utf library, and that we shouldn't aim for compatibility
with python's strict unicode decoding mode until then.
FWIW I ran this test under an ASanified lldb hundreds of times but
didn't turn up any other issues.
rdar://62941711
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, jingham, shafik
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79645
Summary:
The test machinery translates each continuous block of "//%" comments
into a single breakpoint. If there's no code between the blocks the
breakpoints will end up at the same location in the program. When the
process stops at a breakpoint lldb correctly reports all breakpoint IDs,
but the test machinery only looks at the first one. This results in a
very dangerous situation as it means some checks can be silently
stopped.
This patch fixes that by making the test machinery iterate through all
breakpoints at a given location and execute all commands.
Reviewers: vsk, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79563
Summary:
This function rewrites the test to be (hopefully) less susceptible to
codegen changes and re-enables it.
The most interesting changes are:
- use an __attribute__((optnone)) function instead of a volatile asm to
"use" a value. This isn't strictly necessary, but it makes the
function simpler while achieving the same effect.
- use a call to a function with the exact same signature instead of a
volatile asm to "destroy" arguments. This makes the independent of the
ABI, and (together with avoiding the usage of the arguments after the
call) ensures that the compiler has no reason to move the argument
from its initial register (previously we needed to guess where will
the compiler store the arguments).
Reviewers: vsk, djtodoro, dblaikie
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79491
Summary: Apply the common completion created in [[ https://reviews.llvm.org/D75418 | Revision D75418 ]] to the commands `breakpoint write` and `breakpoint name add/delete`.
Reviewers: teemperor, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: teemperor
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79686
Summary:
1. A new common completion `CommandCompletions::Breakpoints` to provide a list of the breakpoints of the current context;
2. Apply the completion above to the commands breakpoint enable/disable/delete/modify;
3. Unit test.
Reviewers: teemperor, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: teemperor
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79666
Following test cases need minor adjustment in order to accomodate xfail
decorator:
lldb/test/Shell/SymbolFile/NativePDB/break-by-line.cpp
lldb/test/Shell/SymbolFile/NativePDB/source-list.cpp
D55859 and D63339 prevented needless dependencies on system symbol
files. This testcase was checked-in afterwards and it brings back one
such unwanted dependency. Under some circumstances it may cause false
FAILs and/or excessive resource usage to run the testcase.
clang-format does not support .py so I have formatted it as I found most
compatible.
Also this is not a full testcase-style initialization, for example
--no-lldbinit ignores env("NO_LLDBINIT") setting which lldbtest.py does
implement:
# If we spawn an lldb process for test (via pexpect), do not load the
# init file unless told otherwise.
if os.environ.get("NO_LLDBINIT") != "NO":
self.lldbOption += " --no-lldbinit"
But this is what lldbpexpect.py does - it also ignores
env("NO_LLDBINIT"). Sure one could also fix lldbpexpect.py to unify the
initialization more with lldbtest.py but I find that outside of the
scope of this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79649
Because LLDB isn't the one spawning the subprocess, the PID is different
during replay. Exclude it form the substring check during replay.
Depends on D79646 to pass with reproducer replay.
Summary:
On macOS, we can't do the DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES trick with a shim
python binary as the ASan interceptors get loaded too late. Find the
"real" python binary, copy it, and invoke it.
Hopefully this makes the GreenDragon and swift-ci sanitizer bots
happy...
I tested this out by running `../llvm-macosx-x86_64/bin/llvm-lit test
--filter TestNSDictionarySynthetic.py` in an ASanified swift-lldb build
directory and it worked (i.e. no more "interceptors loaded too late"
messages).
Reviewers: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79607