The class only supports a single DWARF unit (needed for my new test), and it
reimplements chunks of object and symbol file classes. We can just make it use
the real thing, save some LOC and get the full feature set.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90393
This patch completes https://reviews.llvm.org/D83560. Now that the
compiler can emit `DW_OP_implicit_value` into DWARF expressions, lldb
needed to learn reading these opcodes for variable inspection and
expression evaluation.
This implicit location descriptor specifies an immediate value with two
operands: the length (ULEB128) followed by a block representing the value
in the target memory representation.
rdar://67406091
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89842
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
This patch adds support for the _M and _m gdb-remote packets, which
(de)allocate memory in the inferior. This works by "injecting" a
m(un)map syscall into the inferior. This consists of:
- finding an executable page of memory
- writing the syscall opcode to it
- setting up registers according to the os syscall convention
- single stepping over the syscall
The advantage of this approach over calling the mmap function is that
this works even in case the mmap function is buggy or unavailable. The
disadvantage is it is more platform-dependent, which is why this patch
only works on X86 (_32 and _64) right now. Adding support for other
linux architectures should be easy and consist of defining the
appropriate syscall constants. Adding support for other OSes depends on
the its ability to do a similar trick.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89124
This is essentially a replacement for the PacketUnimplementedError
previously present in the gdb-remote server code.
The reason I am introducing a generic error is because I wanted the
native process classes to be able to signal that they do not support
some functionality. They could not use PacketUnimplementedError as they
are independent of a specific transport protocol. Putting the error
class in the the native process code was also not ideal because the
gdb-remote code is also used for lldb-server's platform mode, which does
not (should not) know how to debug individual processes.
I'm putting it under Utility, as I think it can be generally useful for
notifying about unsupported/unimplemented functionality (and in
particular, for programatically testing whether something is
unsupported).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89121
This patch fixes a few issues seen when running `ninja check-lldb` in a Release build with VS2017:
- Some binaries couldn't be found (such as lldb-vscode.exe), because .exe wasn't appended to the file name.
- Many tests used to fail since our installed locale is in French - the OS error messages are not emitted in English.
- Our codepage being Windows-1252, python failed to decode some error messages with accentuations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88975
When running in an ipv6-only environment where `AF_INET` sockets are not available, many lldb tests (mostly gdb remote tests) fail because things like `127.0.0.1` don't work there.
Use `localhost` instead of `127.0.0.1` whenever possible, or include a fallback of creating `AF_INET6` sockets when `AF_INET` fails.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87333
This reverts commit f775fe5964.
I fixed a return type error in the original patch that was causing a test failure.
Also added a REQUIRES: python to the shell test so we'll skip this for
people who build lldb w/o Python.
Also added another test for the error printing.
This patch makes the include_directories, file_names and opcodes fields
of the line table optional. This helps us simplify some tests.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87878
Code was added that used llvm error checking to parse .debug_aranges, but the error check after parsing the DWARFDebugArangesSet was reversed and was causing no error to be returned with no valid address ranges being actually used. This meant we always would fall back onto creating out own address ranges by parsing the compile unit's ranges. This was causing problems for cases where the DW_TAG_compile_unit had a single address range by using a DW_AT_low_pc and DW_AT_high_pc attribute pair (not using a DW_AT_ranges attribute), but the .debug_aranges had correct split ranges. In this case we would end up using the single range for the compile unit that encompassed all of the ranges from the .debug_aranges section and would cause address resolving issues in LLDB where address lookups would fail for certain addresses.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87626
The Length, AbbrOffset and Values fields of the debug_info section are
optional. This patch helps remove them and simplify test cases.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86857
Fixes error: no matching constructor for initialization of
'std::pair<std::__cxx11::basic_string<char>, std::__cxx11::basic_string<char> >'
with older toolchain (clang/libcxx) on Ubuntu 16.04. The issue is the
StringRef-to-std::string conversion.
This applies the same fix that D84748 did for macro definitions.
Appropriate include path is now automatically set for all libraries
which link against gtest targets, which avoids the need to set
include_directories in various parts of the project.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86616
Breakpad creates minidump files that can a module loaded multiple times. We found that when a process mmap's the object file for a library, this can confuse breakpad into creating multiple modules in the module list. This patch fixes the GetFilteredModules() to check the linux maps for permissions and use the one that has execute permissions. Typically when people mmap a file into memory they don't map it as executable. This helps people to correctly load minidump files for post mortem analysis.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86375
Since a842950b62 this test started using
the reproducer subsystem but we never initialized it in the test. The
Subsystem takes an argument, so we can't use the usual SubsystemRAII at the
moment to do this for us.
This just adds the initialize/terminate calls to get the test passing again.
Extract all the provider related logic from Reproducer.h and move it
into its own header ReproducerProvider.h. These classes are seeing most
of the development these days and this reorganization reduces
incremental compilation from ~520 to ~110 files when making changes to
the new header.
This patch adds support for emitting multiple abbrev tables. Currently,
compilation units will always reference the first abbrev table.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86194
Similarly to D85836, collapse all Scalar float types to a single enum
value, and use APFloat semantics to differentiate between. This
simplifies the code, and opens to door to supporting other floating
point semantics (which would be needed for fully supporting
architectures with more interesting float types such as PPC).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86220
This patch is a big sed to rename the following variables:
s/PYTHON_LIBRARIES/Python3_LIBRARIES/g
s/PYTHON_INCLUDE_DIRS/Python3_INCLUDE_DIRS/g
s/PYTHON_EXECUTABLE/Python3_EXECUTABLE/g
s/PYTHON_RPATH/Python3_RPATH/g
I've also renamed the CMake module to better express its purpose and for
consistency with FindLuaAndSwig.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85976
The class contains an enum listing all host integer types as well as
some non-host types. This setup is a remnant of a time when this class
was actually implemented in terms of host integer types. Now that we are
using llvm::APInt, they are mostly useless and mean that each function
needs to enumerate all of these cases even though it treats most of them
identically.
I only leave e_sint and e_uint to denote the integer signedness, but I
want to remove that in a follow-up as well.
Removing these cases simplifies most of these functions, with the only
exception being PromoteToMaxType, which can no longer rely on a simple
enum comparison to determine what needs to be promoted.
This also makes the class ready to work with arbitrary integer sizes, so
it does not need to be modified when someone needs to add a larger
integer size.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85836
Apparently when the strings are created, the `'\n'` is converted to the
platform's natural new line indicator, which is CR+LF on Windows. But
upon reading back with `sscanf`, the CRs caused a matching failure.
This patch configures LLDB.framework to build as a flat unversioned
framework on non-macOS Darwin targets, which have never supported the
macOS framework layout.
This patch also renames the 'IOS' cmake variable to 'APPLE_EMBEDDED' to
reflect the fact that lldb is built for several different kinds of embedded
Darwin targets, not just iOS.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85770
These definitions are needed by any file which uses gtest. Previously we
were adding them in the add_unittest function, but over time we've
accumulated libraries (which don't go through add_unittest) building on
gtest and this has resulted in proliferation of the definitions.
Making this a part of the library interface enables them to be managed
centrally. This follows a patch for -Wno-suggest-override (D84554) which
took a similar approach.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84748
The implementation of these classes was copied & pasted from the
iPhone simulator plugin with only a handful of configuration
parameters substituted. This patch moves the redundant implementations
into the base class PlatformAppleSimulator.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85243
The code in ObjectFileMachO didn't disambiguate between ios and
ios-simulator object files for Mach-O objects using the legacy
ambiguous LC_VERSION_MIN load commands. This used to not matter before
taught ArchSpec that ios and ios-simulator are no longer compatible.
rdar://problem/66545307
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85358
Summary:
Initially, Apple simulator binarie triples didn't use a `-simulator`
environment and were just differentiated based on the architecture.
For example, `x86_64-apple-ios` would obviously be a simualtor as iOS
doesn't run on x86_64. With Catalyst, we made the disctinction
explicit and today, all simulator triples (even the legacy ones) are
constructed with an environment. This is especially important on Apple
Silicon were the architecture is not different from the one of the
simulated device.
This change makes the simulator part of the environment always part of
the criteria to detect whether 2 `ArchSpec`s are equal or compatible.
Reviewers: aprantl
Subscribers: inglorion, dexonsmith, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84716
Summary:
This commit is somewhat NFC-ish today as the environment of triples
is not considered when comparing s if one of them is
not set (I plan to change that).
We have made simulator triples unambiguous these days, but the
simulator platforms still advertise triples without the
environment. This wasn't an issue when the sims ran only on
a very different architecure than the real device, but this
has changed with Apple Silicon.
This patch simplifies the way GetSupportedArchitectureAtIndex
is implemented for the sim platforms and adds the environment.
It also trivially adds support for Apple Silicon to those
platforms.
Reviewers: aprantl
Subscribers: lldb-commits
The function didn't combine a large entry which overlapped several other
entries, if those other entries were not overlapping among each other.
E.g., (0,20),(5,6),(10,11) produced (0,20),(10,11)
Now it just produced (0,20).
This was originally reverted because the m_valid member in TypeMatcher was
unused in builds with disabled asserts. Now the member is gone and the default
constructor is deleted (thanks Eric for the idea!).
Summary:
FormattersContainer stores LLDB's formatters. It's implemented as a templated
map-like data structures that supports any kind of value type and only allows
ConstString and RegularExpression as the key types. The keys are used for
matching type names (e.g., the ConstString key `std::vector` matches the type
with the same name while RegularExpression keys match any type where the
RegularExpression instance matches).
The fact that a single FormattersContainer can only match either by string
comparison or regex matching (depending on the KeyType) causes us to always have
two FormatterContainer instances in all the formatting code. This also leads to
us having every type name matching logic in LLDB twice. For example,
TypeCategory has to implement every method twice (one string matching one, one
regex matching one).
This patch changes FormattersContainer to instead have a single `TypeMatcher`
key that wraps the logic for string-based and regex-based type matching and is
now the only possible KeyType for the FormattersContainer. This means that a
single FormattersContainer can now match types with both regex and string
comparison.
To summarize the changes in this patch:
* Remove all the `*_Impl` methods from `FormattersContainer`
* Instead call the FormatMap functions from `FormattersContainer` with a
`TypeMatcher` type that does the respective matching.
* Replace `ConstString` with `TypeMatcher` in the few places that directly
interact with `FormattersContainer`.
I'm working on some follow up patches that I split up because they deserve their
own review:
* Unify FormatMap and FormattersContainer (they are nearly identical now).
* Delete the duplicated half of all the type matching code that can now use one
interface.
* Propagate TypeMatcher through all the formatter code interfaces instead of
always offering two functions for everything.
There is one ugly design part that I couldn't get rid of yet and that is that we
have to support getting back the string used to construct a `TypeMatcher` later
on. The reason for this is that LLDB only supports referencing existing type
matchers by just typing their respective input string again (without even
supplying if it's a regex or not).
Reviewers: davide, mib
Reviewed By: mib
Subscribers: mgorny, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84151
This patch refactors `emitDebugInfo()` to make the length field be
inferred from its content. Besides, the `Visitor` class is removed in
this patch. The original `Visitor` class helps us determine an
appropriate length and emit the .debug_info section. These two
processes can be merged into one process. Besides, the length field
should be inferred when it's missing rather than when it's zero.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84008
add_compile_options is more sensitive to its location in the file than add_definitions--it only takes effect for sources that are added after it. This updated patch ensures that the add_compile_options is done before adding any source files that depend on it.
Using add_definitions caused the flag to be passed to rc.exe on Windows and thus broke Windows builds.
After lots of follow-up fixes, there are still problems, such as
-Wno-suggest-override getting passed to the Windows Resource Compiler
because it was added with add_definitions in the CMake file.
Rather than piling on another fix, let's revert so this can be re-landed
when there's a proper fix.
This reverts commit 21c0b4c1e8.
This reverts commit 81d68ad27b.
This reverts commit a361aa5249.
This reverts commit fa42b7cf29.
This reverts commit 955f87f947.
This reverts commit 8b16e45f66.
This reverts commit 308a127a38.
This reverts commit 274b6b0c7a.
This reverts commit 1c7037a2a5.
This was originally reverted because the Linux bots were red after this landed,
but it seems that was actually caused by a different commit. I double checked
that this works on Linux, so let's reland this on Linux.
Summary:
FormattersContainer stores LLDB's formatters. It's implemented as a templated
map-like data structures that supports any kind of value type and only allows
ConstString and RegularExpression as the key types. The keys are used for
matching type names (e.g., the ConstString key `std::vector` matches the type
with the same name while RegularExpression keys match any type where the
RegularExpression instance matches).
The fact that a single FormattersContainer can only match either by string
comparison or regex matching (depending on the KeyType) causes us to always have
two FormatterContainer instances in all the formatting code. This also leads to
us having every type name matching logic in LLDB twice. For example,
TypeCategory has to implement every method twice (one string matching one, one
regex matching one).
This patch changes FormattersContainer to instead have a single `TypeMatcher`
key that wraps the logic for string-based and regex-based type matching and is
now the only possible KeyType for the FormattersContainer. This means that a
single FormattersContainer can now match types with both regex and string
comparison.
To summarize the changes in this patch:
* Remove all the `*_Impl` methods from `FormattersContainer`
* Instead call the FormatMap functions from `FormattersContainer` with a
`TypeMatcher` type that does the respective matching.
* Replace `ConstString` with `TypeMatcher` in the few places that directly
interact with `FormattersContainer`.
I'm working on some follow up patches that I split up because they deserve their
own review:
* Unify FormatMap and FormattersContainer (they are nearly identical now).
* Delete the duplicated half of all the type matching code that can now use one
interface.
* Propagate TypeMatcher through all the formatter code interfaces instead of
always offering two functions for everything.
There is one ugly design part that I couldn't get rid of yet and that is that we
have to support getting back the string used to construct a `TypeMatcher` later
on. The reason for this is that LLDB only supports referencing existing type
matchers by just typing their respective input string again (without even
supplying if it's a regex or not).
Reviewers: davide, mib
Reviewed By: mib
Subscribers: mgorny, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84151
Summary:
FormattersContainer stores LLDB's formatters. It's implemented as a templated
map-like data structures that supports any kind of value type and only allows
ConstString and RegularExpression as the key types. The keys are used for
matching type names (e.g., the ConstString key `std::vector` matches the type
with the same name while RegularExpression keys match any type where the
RegularExpression instance matches).
The fact that a single FormattersContainer can only match either by string
comparison or regex matching (depending on the KeyType) causes us to always have
two FormatterContainer instances in all the formatting code. This also leads to
us having every type name matching logic in LLDB twice. For example,
TypeCategory has to implement every method twice (one string matching one, one
regex matching one).
This patch changes FormattersContainer to instead have a single `TypeMatcher`
key that wraps the logic for string-based and regex-based type matching and is
now the only possible KeyType for the FormattersContainer. This means that a
single FormattersContainer can now match types with both regex and string
comparison.
To summarize the changes in this patch:
* Remove all the `*_Impl` methods from `FormattersContainer`
* Instead call the FormatMap functions from `FormattersContainer` with a
`TypeMatcher` type that does the respective matching.
* Replace `ConstString` with `TypeMatcher` in the few places that directly
interact with `FormattersContainer`.
I'm working on some follow up patches that I split up because they deserve their
own review:
* Unify FormatMap and FormattersContainer (they are nearly identical now).
* Delete the duplicated half of all the type matching code that can now use one
interface.
* Propagate TypeMatcher through all the formatter code interfaces instead of
always offering two functions for everything.
There is one ugly design part that I couldn't get rid of yet and that is that we
have to support getting back the string used to construct a `TypeMatcher` later
on. The reason for this is that LLDB only supports referencing existing type
matchers by just typing their respective input string again (without even
supplying if it's a regex or not).
Reviewers: davide, mib
Reviewed By: mib
Subscribers: mgorny, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84151
The colon in the file name is interpreted as a drive name and therefore
the path looks like foo:\\bar.c. Compare FileSpecs instead of their
string representation so we don't have to worry about that.
file:line:column form that we use to print out locations. Since we
print them this way it makes sense we also accept that form.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83975
This patch adds Clang's new (and GCC's old) -Wsuggest-override to the warning flags for the LLVM build. The warning is a stronger form of -Winconsistent-missing-override which warns _everywhere_ that override is missing, not just in places where it's inconsistent within a class.
Some directories in the monorepo need the warning disabled for compatibility's, or sanity's, sake; in particular, libcxx/libcxxabi, and any code implementing or interoperating with googletest, googlemock, or google benchmark (which do not themselves use override). This patch adds -Wno-suggest-override to the relevant CMakeLists.txt's to accomplish this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84126
The function was fairly complicated and didn't support new bigger
integer sizes. Use llvm function for loading an APInt from memory to
write a unified implementation for all sizes.
Summary:
Currently the frame recognizers are stored in a global list (the list in the
StackFrameRecognizersManagerImpl singleton to be precise). All commands and
plugins that modify the list are just modifying that global list of recognizers
which is shared by all Target and Debugger instances.
This is clearly against the idea of LLDB being usable as a library and it also
leads to some very obscure errors as now multiple tests are sharing the used
frame recognizers. For example D83400 is currently failing as it reorders some
test_ functions which permanently changes the frame recognizers of all
debuggers/targets. As all frame recognizers are also initialized in a 'once'
guard, it's also impossible to every restore back the original frame recognizers
once they are deleted in a process.
This patch just moves the frame recognizers into the current target. This seems
the way everyone assumes the system works as for example the assert frame
recognizers is using the current target to find the function/so-name to look for
(which only works if the recognizers are stored in the target).
Reviewers: jingham, mib
Reviewed By: jingham, mib
Subscribers: MrHate, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83757
Summary:
On macOS 11, the libraries that have been integrated in the system
shared cache are not present on the filesystem anymore. LLDB was
using those files to get access to the symbols of those libraries.
LLDB can get the images from the target process memory though.
This has 2 consequences:
- LLDB cannot load the images before the process starts, reporting
an error if someone tries to break on a system symbol.
- Loading the symbols by downloading the data from the inferior
is super slow. It takes tens of seconds at the start of the
debug session to populate the Module list.
To fix this, we can use the library images LLDB has in its own
mapping of the shared cache. Shared cache images are somewhat
special as their LINKEDIT segment is moved to the end of the cache
and thus the images are not contiguous in memory. All of this can
hidden in ObjectFileMachO.
This patch fixes a number of test failures on macOS 11 due to the
first problem described above and adds some specific unittesting
for the new SharedCache Host utilities.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, labath
Subscribers: llvm-commits, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83023
It served a puprose while we were using the test name to provide a name
for the created file. Now that the files are created in memory, we don't
need that.
Summary:
This patch extends the ModuleSpec class to include a
DataBufferSP which contains the module data. If this
data is provided, LLDB won't try to hit the filesystem
to create the Module, but use only the data stored in
the ModuleSpec.
Reviewers: labath, espindola
Subscribers: emaste, MaskRay, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83512
The function's reliance on host types meant that it was needlessly
complicated, and did not handle the newer (wider) types. Rewrite it in
terms of APInt/APFloat functions to save code and improve functionality.
This patch does several things that are all closely related:
- It introduces a new YamlRecorder as a counterpart to the existing
DataRecorder. As the name suggests the former serializes data as yaml
while the latter uses raw texts or bytes.
- It introduces a new MultiProvider base class which can be backed by
either a DataRecorder or a YamlRecorder.
- It reimplements the CommandProvider in terms of the new
MultiProvider.
Finally, it adds unit testing coverage for the MultiProvider, a naive
YamlProvider built on top of the new YamlRecorder and the existing
MutliLoader.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83441
Somehow UBSan would only report the unaligned load in TestLinuxCore.py
when running the tests with reproducers. This patch fixes the issue by
using a memcpy in the GetDouble and the GetFloat method.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83256
These functions were doing a bitcast on the float value, which is not
consistent with the other getters, which were doing a numeric conversion
(47.0 -> 47). Change these to do numeric conversions too.
Summary:
The Scalar class claims to follow the C type conversion rules. This is
true for the Promote function, but it is not true for the implicit
conversions done in the getter methods.
These functions had a subtle bug: when extending the type, they used the
signedness of the *target* type in order to determine whether to do
sign-extension or zero-extension. This is not how things work in C,
which uses the signedness of the *source* type. I.e., C does
(sign-)extension before it does signed->unsigned conversion, and not the
other way around.
This means that: (unsigned long)(int)-1
is equal to (unsigned long)0xffffffffffffffff
and not (unsigned long)0x00000000ffffffff
Unsurprisingly, we have accumulated code which depended on this
inconsistent behavior. It mainly manifested itself as code calling
"ULongLong/SLongLong" as a way to get the value of the Scalar object in
a primitive type that is "large enough". Previously, the ULongLong
conversion did not do sign-extension, but now it does.
This patch makes the Scalar getters consistent with the declared
semantics, and fixes the couple of call sites that were using it
incorrectly.
Reviewers: teemperor, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82772
The refactor in 48ca15592f reintroduced UB when converting out-of-bounds
floating point numbers to integers -- the behavior for ULongLong() was
originally fixed in r341685, but did not survive my refactor because I
based my template code on one of the methods which did not have this
fix.
This time, I apply the fix to all float->int conversions, instead of
just the "double->unsigned long long" case. I also use a slightly
simpler version of the code, with fewer round-trips
(APFloat->APSInt->native_int vs
APFloat->native_float->APInt->native_int).
I also add some unit tests for the conversions.
'InitialLength' is replaced with 'Format' (DWARF32 by default) and 'Length' in this patch.
Besides, test cases for DWARFv4 and DWARFv5, DWARF32 and DWARF64 is
added.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82622
This function was modifying and returning pointers to static storage,
which meant that any two accesses to different Scalar objects could
potentially race (depending on which types the objects were storing and
the host endianness).
In the new version the user is responsible for providing a buffer into
which this method will store its binary representation. The main caller
(RegisterValue::GetBytes) already has one such buffer handy, so this did
not require any major rewrites.
To make that work, I've needed to mark the RegisterValue value buffer
mutable -- not an ideal solution, but definitely better than modifying
global storage. This could be further improved by changing
RegisterValue::GetBytes to take a buffer too.
The "type" argument to the function is mostly useless -- the only
interesting aspect of it is signedness. Pass signedness directly and
compute the value of bits and signedness fields -- that's exactly
what the single caller of this function does.
Summary:
Since commit 7b3ef05a37 the Objective-C++ plugin is dead code.
That commit added Objective-C++ to the list of languages for which `Language::LanguageIsCPlusPlus`
returns true. As the C++ language plugin also uses that method to figure out if it is responsible for a
given language, the C++ plugin since then also became the plugin that we found when looking for
a language plugin for Objective-C++. The only real fallout from that is that the source highlighting
for Objective-C++ files never worked as we always found the C++ plugin which refuses to highlight
files with Objective-C++ extensions.
This patch just adds a special exception for Objective-C++ to the list of languages that are governed
by the C++ plugin. Also adds a test that makes sure that we find the right plugin for all C language
types and that the highlighting for `.mm` (Objective-C++) and `.m` (Objective-C) files works.
I didn't revert 7b3ef05a37 as it does make sense to return
true for Objective-C++ from `Language::LanguageIsCPlusPlus` (e.g., we currently check if we care about
ODR violations by doing `if (Language::LanguageIsCPlusPlus(...))` and this should also work for
Objective-C++).
Fixes rdar://64420183
Reviewers: aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: mgorny, abidh, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82109
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
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
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.
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
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:
Assignment operator `operator=(long long)` currently allocates `sizeof(long)`.
On some platforms it works as they have `sizeof(long) == sizeof(long long)`,
but on others (e.g. Windows) it's not the case.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80995
This fixes an unhandled signed integer overflow in AddWithCarry() by
using the llvm::checkedAdd() function. Thats to Vedant Kumar for the
suggestion!
<rdar://problem/60926115>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80955
Summary:
On Android, this method gets called twice: first when establishing
a host-server connection, then when attaching to a process id.
Each call takes several seconds to finish (especially slower on Windows)
and eliminating the call for the typical case improves latency significantly.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79586
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
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.
This reverts commit b783f70a42. This
change had multiple issues which required post-commit fixups, and not
all issues are fixed yet. In particular, the LLDB build bot for ARM is
still broken. There is also an ongoing conversation in the original
phabricator review about whether there is undefined behavior in the
code.
This addresses some post-commit review feedback from
https://reviews.llvm.org/D80150 by renaming "Mock.h" to something less
misleading, and keeping logic related to the ObjC plugin separate from
the generic DataFormatters library.
Disable the test which attempts to format an NSDate with a date_value of
0 on _WIN32.
When _WIN32 is defined, GetOSXEpoch returns a date that should be in
2001, but after this is passed through timegm (which, afaict isn't
portable?) the result is a date in 1970:
```
lldb-x64-windows-ninja\llvm-project\lldb\unittests\DataFormatter\MockTests.cpp(39): error: Expected: *formatDateValue(0)
Which is: "1970-01-01 00:00:00 Pacific Standard Time"
To be equal to: "2001-01-01 00:00:00 UTC"
```
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/lldb-aarch64-ubuntu/builds/4520/steps/test/logs/stdio
Summary:
Fixes UBSan-reported issues where the date value inside of an
uninitialized NSDate overflows the 64-bit epoch.
rdar://61774575
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, mib, teemperor
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80150
Summary:
In our project we are using remote client-server LLDB configuration.
We want to parse as much debugging symbols as we can before debugger starts attachment to the remote process.
To do that we are passing the path of the local executable module to CreateTarget method at the client.
But, it seems that this method are not parsing the executable module symbols.
To fix this I added PreloadSymbols call for executable module to target creation method.
This patch also fixes a problem where the DynamicLoader would reset a
module when launching the target. We fix it by making sure
Platform::ResolveExecutable returns the module object obtained from the
remote platform.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78654
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
This was reverted due to a python2-specific bug. Re-landing with a fix
for python2.
Summary:
One small step in my long running quest to improve python exception handling in
LLDB. Replace GetInteger() which just returns an int with As<long long> and
friends, which return Expected types that can track python exceptions
Reviewers: labath, jasonmolenda, JDevlieghere, vadimcn, omjavaid
Reviewed By: labath, omjavaid
Subscribers: omjavaid, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78462
Also, this moves numSDKs out of the actual enum, as to not mess with
the switch-cases-covered warning.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79603
For Swift LLDB (but potentially also for module support in Clang-land)
we need a way to accumulate the path remappings produced by
Module::RegisterXcodeSDK(). In order to make this work for
SymbolFileDebugMaps, registering the search path remapping with both
modules is necessary.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79384
<rdar://problem/62750529>
When debugging a remote platform, the platform you get from
GetPlatformForArchitecture doesn't inherit from PlatformDarwin.
HostInfoMacOSX seems like the right place to have a global store of
local paths.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79364
When debugging from a SymbolMap the creation of CompileUnits for the
individual object files is so lazy that RegisterXcodeSDK() is not
invoked at all before the Swift TypeSystem wants to read it. This
patch fixes this by introducing an explicit
SymbolFile::ParseXcodeSDK() call that can be invoked deterministically
before the result is required.
<rdar://problem/62532151+62326862>
https://reviews.llvm.org/D79273
It looks like the new implementation is correct, since there were TODOs
here about getting the new behavior.
I am not sure if "C:..\.." should become "C:" or "C:\", though. The new
output doesn't precisely match the TODO message, but it seems
appropriate given the specification of remove_dots and how .. traversals
work at the root directory.
Summary:
Languages can have different ways of formatting special characters.
E.g. when debugging C++ code a string might look like "\b", but when
debugging Swift code the same string would look like "\u{8}".
To make this work, plugins override GetStringPrinterEscapingHelper.
However, because there's a large amount of subtly divergent work done in
each override, we end up with large amounts of duplicated code. And all
the memory smashers fixed in one copy of the logic (see D73860) don't
get fixed in the others.
IMO the GetStringPrinterEscapingHelper is overly general and hard to
use. I propose deleting it and replacing it with an EscapeStyle enum,
which can be set as needed by each plugin.
A fix for some swift-lldb memory smashers falls out fairly naturally
from this deletion (https://github.com/apple/llvm-project/pull/1046). As
the swift logic becomes really tiny, I propose moving it upstream as
part of this change. I've added unit tests to cover it.
rdar://61419673
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, davide
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77843
Sadly IPv6 is still not present anywhere. The test was attempting to
detect&skip such hosts, but the way it did that (essentially, by calling
getaddrinfo) meant that it only detected hosts which have IPv6 support
completely compiled out. It did not do anything about hosts which have
it compiled in, but lack runtime configuration even for the ::1 loopback
address.
This patch changes the detection logic to use a new method. It does it
by attempting to bind a socket to the appropriate loopback address. That
should ensure the hosts loopback interface is fully set up. In an effort
to avoid silently skipping the test on too many hosts, the test is
fairly strict about the kind of error it expects in these cases -- it
will only skip the test when receiving EADDRNOTAVAIL. If we find other
error codes that can be reasonably returned in these situations, we can
add more of them.
The (small) change in TCPSocket.cpp is to ensure that the code correctly
propagates the error received from the OS.
For developing the OS itself there exists an "internal" variant of
each SDK. This patch adds support for these SDK directories to the
XcodeSDK class.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78675
Summary:
One small step in my long running quest to improve python exception handling in
LLDB. Replace GetInteger() which just returns an int with As<long long> and
friends, which return Expected types that can track python exceptions
Reviewers: labath, jasonmolenda, JDevlieghere, vadimcn
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78462
Several SB API functions return strings using (char*, size_t) output
arguments. During capture, we serialize an empty string for the char*
because the memory can be uninitialized.
During active replay, we have custom replay redirects that ensure that
we don't override the buffer from which we're reading, but rather write
to a buffer on the heap with the given length. This is sufficient for
the active reproducer use case, where we only care about the side
effects of the API calls, not the values actually returned.
This approach does not not work for passive replay because here we
ignore all the incoming arguments, and re-execute the current function
with the arguments deserialized from the reproducer. This means that
these function will update the deserialized copy of the arguments,
rather than whatever was passed in by the SWIG wrapper.
To solve this problem, this patch extends the reproducer instrumentation
to handle this special case for passive replay. We nog ignore the
replayer in the registry and the incoming char pointer, and instead
reinvoke the current method on the deserialized class, and populate the
output argument.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77759
This wasn't a great idea to begin with, as you can't really rely on the
implementation, but since it also doesn't work with MSVC I've just made
the ctors public.
Support passive replay as proposed in the RFC [1] on lldb-dev and
described in more detail on the lldb website [2].
This patch extends the LLDB_RECORD macros to re-invoke the current
function with arguments deserialized from the reproducer. This relies on
the function being called in the exact same order as during replay. It
uses the same mechanism to toggle the API boundary as during recording,
which guarantees that only boundary crossing calls are replayed.
Another major change is that before this patch we could ignore the
result of an API call, because we only cared about the observable
behavior. Now we need to be able to return the replayed result to the
SWIG bindings.
We reuse a lot of the recording infrastructure, which can be a little
confusing. We kept the existing naming to limit the amount of churn, but
might revisit that in a future patch.
[1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2020-April/016100.html
[2] https://lldb.llvm.org/resources/reproducers.html
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77602
Summary:
Lookup and subsequent insert was done using uninitialized
FileSpec object, which caused the cache to be a no-op.
Bug: llvm.org/PR45310
Depends on D76804.
Reviewers: labath, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: mgorny, jingham, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76805
Fix a bug where UnwindAssemblyInstEmulation would confuse which
register is used to compute the Canonical Frame Address after it
had branched over a mid-function epilogue (where the CFA reg changes
from $fp to $sp in the process of epiloguing). Reinstate the
correct CFA register after we forward the unwind rule for branch
targets. The failure mode was that UnwindAssemblyInstEmulation
would think CFA was set in terms of $sp after one of these epilogues,
and if it sees modifications to $sp after the branch target, it would
change the CFA offset in the unwind rule -- even though the CFA is
defined in terms of $fp and the $sp changes are irrelevant to correct
calculation.
<rdar://problem/60300528>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78077
Summary:
Removing the Test prefix from the file name and its usages. The standard is using only Test as a suffix.
This was correctly pointed out in https://reviews.llvm.org/D77444.
Reviewers: labath, clayborg
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77878
The instrumentation unit tests' current implementation uses global
variables to track constructor calls for the instrumented classes during
replay. This is suboptimal because it indirectly relies on how the
reproducer instrumentation is implemented. I found out when adding
support for passive replay and the test broke because we made an extra
(temporary) copy of the instrumented objects.
Additionally, the old approach wasn't very self-explanatory. It took me
a bit of time to understand why we were expecting the number of objects
in the test.
This patch rewrites the test and uses the index-to-object-mapping to
verify the objects created during replay. You can now specify the
expected objects, in order, and whether they should be valid or not. I
find that it makes the tests much easier to understand. More
importantly, this approach is resilient to implementation detail changes
in the instrumentation.
Types that came from a Clang module are nested in DW_TAG_module tags
in DWARF. This patch recreates the Clang module hierarchy in LLDB and
1;95;0csets the owning module information accordingly. My primary motivation
is to facilitate looking up per-module APINotes for individual
declarations, but this likely also has other applications.
This reapplies the previously reverted commit, but without support for
ClassTemplateSpecializations, which I'm going to look into separately.
rdar://problem/59634380
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75488
The synchronization logic in the previous had a subtle bug. Moving of
the "m_read_thread_did_exit = true" into the critical section made it
possible for some threads calling SynchronizeWithReadThread call to get
stuck. This could happen if there were already past the point where they
checked this variable. In that case, they would block on waiting for the
eBroadcastBitNoMorePendingInput event, which would never come as the
read thread was blocked on getting the synchronization mutex.
The new version moves that line out of the critical section and before
the sending of the eBroadcastBitNoMorePendingInput event, and also adds
some comments to explain why the things need to be in this sequence:
- m_read_thread_did_exit = true: prevents new threads for waiting on
events
- eBroadcastBitNoMorePendingInput: unblock any current thread waiting
for the event
- Disconnect(): close the connection. This is the only bit that needs to
be in the critical section, and this is to ensure that we don't close
the connection while the synchronizing thread is mucking with it.
Original commit message follows:
Communication::SynchronizeWithReadThread is called whenever a process
stops to ensure that we process all of its stdout before we report the
stop. If the process exits, we first call this method, and then close
the connection.
However, when the child process exits, the thread reading its stdout
will usually (but not always) read an EOF because the other end of the
pty has been closed. In response to an EOF, the Communication read
thread closes it's end of the connection too.
This can result in a race where the read thread is closing the
connection while the synchronizing thread is attempting to get its
attention via Connection::InterruptRead.
The fix is to hold the synchronization mutex while closing the
connection.
I've found this issue while tracking down a rare flake in some of the
vscode tests. I am not sure this is the cause of those failures (as I
would have expected this issue to manifest itself differently), but it
is an issue nonetheless.
The attached test demonstrates the steps needed to reproduce the race.
It will fail under tsan without this patch.
Reviewers: clayborg, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77295