<rdar://problem/11455913>
"target symbol add" should flush the cached frames
"register write" should flush the thread state in case registers modifications change stack
llvm-svn: 157042
For "process attach", make the success criterion as the inferior changes its state to eStateStopped.
Otherwise, mark it as a failure and say so.
llvm-svn: 157036
Add "--name" option to "image lookup" that will search both functions and symbols.
Also made all of the output from any of the "image lookup" commands be the same regardless of the lookup type (function name, symbol name, func or symbol, file and line, address, etc). The --verbose or -v option also will expand the results as needed and display things so they look the same.
llvm-svn: 156835
Also changed the defaults for SBThread::Step* to not delete extant plans.
Also added some test cases to test more complex stepping scenarios.
llvm-svn: 156667
Switch over to the "*-apple-macosx" for desktop and "*-apple-ios" for iOS triples.
Also make the selection process for auto selecting platforms based off of an arch much better.
llvm-svn: 156354
Correctly specify the LLDB_OPT_SET's that the 'shlib' command option belongs to by using a newly added macro like this:
#define LLDB_OPT_NOT_10 ( LLDB_OPT_SET_FROM(1, 10) & ~LLDB_OPT_SET_10 )
rdar://problem/11393864
llvm-svn: 156337
No one was using it and Locker(pthread_mutex_t *) immediately asserts for
pthread_mutex_t's that don't come from a Mutex anyway. Rather than try to make
that work, we should maintain the Mutex abstraction and not pass around the
platform implementation...
Make Mutex::Locker::Lock take a Mutex & or a Mutex *, and remove the constructor
taking a pthread_mutex_t *. You no longer need to call Mutex::GetMutex to pass
your mutex to a Locker (you can't in fact, since I made it private.)
llvm-svn: 156221
should be MasterPlans that want to stay on the plan stack. So make all plans NOT
MasterPlans by default and then have the SB API's and the CommandObjectThread step
commands set this explicitly.
Also added a "clean up" phase to the Thread::ShouldStop so that if plans get stranded
on the stack, we can remove them. This is done by adding an IsPlanStale method to the
thread plans, and if the plan can know that it is no longer relevant, it returns true,
and the plan and its sub-plans will get discarded.
llvm-svn: 156101
Error
Host::RunShellCommand (const char *command,
const char *working_dir,
int *status_ptr,
int *signo_ptr,
std::string *command_output_ptr,
uint32_t timeout_sec);
This will allow us to use this functionality in the host lldb_private::Platform, and also use it in our lldb-platform binary. It leverages the existing code in Host::LaunchProcess and ProcessLaunchInfo.
llvm-svn: 154730
Cleaned up the Mutex::Locker and the ReadWriteLock classes a bit.
Also cleaned up the GDBRemoteCommunication class to not have so many packet functions. Used the "NoLock" versions of send/receive packet functions when possible for a bit of performance.
llvm-svn: 154458
Work around a deadlocking issue where "SBDebugger::MemoryPressureDetected ()" is being called and is causing a deadlock. We now just try and get the lock when trying to trim down the unique modules so we don't deadlock debugger GUI programs until we can find the root cause.
llvm-svn: 154339
Symbol files (dSYM files on darwin) can now be specified during program execution:
(lldb) target symbols add /path/to/symfile/a.out.dSYM/Contents/Resources/DWARF/a.out
This command can be used when you have a debug session in progress and want to add symbols to get better debug info fidelity.
llvm-svn: 153693
indicates that the section is thread specific. Any functions the load a module
given a slide, will currently ignore any sections that are thread specific.
lldb_private::Section now has:
bool
Section::IsThreadSpecific () const
{
return m_thread_specific;
}
void
Section::SetIsThreadSpecific (bool b)
{
m_thread_specific = b;
}
The ELF plug-in has been modified to set this for the ".tdata" and the ".tbss"
sections.
Eventually we need to have each lldb_private::Thread subclass be able to
resolve a thread specific section, but for now they will just not resolve. The
code for that should be trivual to add, but the address resolving functions
will need to be changed to take a "ExecutionContext" object instead of just
a target so that thread specific sections can be resolved.
llvm-svn: 153537
Fixed type lookups to "do the right thing". Prior to this fix, looking up a type using "foo::bar" would result in a type list that contains all types that had "bar" as a basename unless the symbol file was able to match fully qualified names (which our DWARF parser does not).
This fix will allow type matches to be made based on the basename and then have the types that don't match filtered out. Types by name can be fully qualified, or partially qualified with the new "bool exact_match" parameter to the Module::FindTypes() method.
This fixes some issue that we discovered with dynamic type resolution as well as improves the overall type lookups in LLDB.
llvm-svn: 153482
This is the feature that allowed the user to have things like:
class Base { ... };
class Derived : public Base { ... };
and have formatters defined for Base work automatically for Derived.
This feature turned out to be too expensive since it requires completing types.
This patch takes care of removing cascading (other than typedefs chain cascading), updating the test suite accordingly, and adding required Cocoa class names to keep the AppKit formatters working
llvm-svn: 153272
Each platform now knows if it can handle an architecture and a platform can be found using an architecture. Each platform can look at the arch, vendor and OS and know if it should be used or not.
llvm-svn: 153104
Changes to synthetic children:
- the update(self): function can now (optionally) return a value - if it returns boolean value True, ValueObjectSyntheticFilter will not clear its caches across stop-points
this should allow better performance for Python-based synthetic children when one can be sure that the child ValueObjects have not changed
- making a difference between a synthetic VO and a VO with a synthetic value: now a ValueObjectSyntheticFilter will not return itself as its own synthetic value, but will (correctly)
claim to itself be synthetic
- cleared up the internal synthetic children architecture to make a more consistent use of pointers and references instead of shared pointers when possible
- major cleanup of unnecessary #include, data and functions in ValueObjectSyntheticFilter itself
- removed the SyntheticValueType enum and replaced it with a plain boolean (to which it was equivalent in the first place)
Some clean ups to the summary generation code
Centralized the code that clears out user-visible strings and data in ValueObject
More efficient summaries for libc++ containers
llvm-svn: 153061
This fix really needed to happen as a previous fix I had submitted for
calculating symbol sizes made many symbols appear to have zero size since
the function that was calculating the symbol size was calling another function
that would cause the calculation to happen again. This resulted in some symbols
having zero size when they shouldn't. This could then cause infinite stack
traces and many other side affects.
llvm-svn: 152244
lldb crashes under guard malloc
Fix CommandObjectSettingsAppend::ExecuteRawCommandString() so that it does not perform the cmd_args.Shift()
operation after it has got the var_name out of the raw string, since StringRef is manipulating the raw
string later on.
llvm-svn: 152194
Several places in the ScriptInterpreter interface used StringList objects where an std::string would suffice - Fixed
Refactoring calls that generated special-purposes functions in the Python interpreter to use helper functions instead of duplicating blobs of code
llvm-svn: 152164
2) providing an updated list of tagged pointers values for the objc_runtime module - hopefully this one is final
3) changing ValueObject::DumpValueObject to use an Options class instead of providing a bulky list of parameters to pass around
this change had been laid out previously, but some clients of DumpValueObject() were still using the old prototype and some arguments
were treated in a special way and passed in directly instead of through the Options class
4) providing new GetSummaryAsCString() and GetValueAsCString() calls in ValueObject that are passed a formatter object and a destination string
and fill the string by formatting themselves using the formatter argument instead of the default for the current ValueObject
5) removing the option to have formats and summaries stick to a variable for the current stoppoint
after some debate, we are going with non-sticky: if you say frame variable --format hex foo, the hex format will only be applied to the current command execution and not stick when redisplaying foo
the other option would be full stickiness, which means that foo would be formatted as hex for its whole lifetime
we are open to suggestions on what feels "natural" in this regard
llvm-svn: 151801
more of the local path, platform path, associated symbol file, UUID, arch,
object name and object offset. This allows many of the calls that were
GetSharedModule to reduce the number of arguments that were used in a call
to these functions. It also allows a module to be created with a ModuleSpec
which allows many things to be specified prior to any accessors being called
on the Module class itself.
I was running into problems when adding support for "target symbol add"
where you can specify a stand alone debug info file after debugging has started
where I needed to specify the associated symbol file path and if I waited until
after construction, the wrong symbol file had already been located. By using
the ModuleSpec it allows us to construct a module with as little or as much
information as needed and not have to change the parameter list.
llvm-svn: 151476
I started work on being able to add symbol files after a debug session
had started with a new "target symfile add" command and quickly ran into
problems with stale Address objects in breakpoint locations that had
lldb_private::Section pointers into modules that had been removed or
replaced. This also let to grabbing stale modules from those sections.
So I needed to thread harded the Address, Section and related objects.
To do this I modified the ModuleChild class to now require a ModuleSP
on initialization so that a weak reference can created. I also changed
all places that were handing out "Section *" to have them hand out SectionSP.
All ObjectFile, SymbolFile and SymbolVendors were inheriting from ModuleChild
so all of the find plug-in, static creation function and constructors now
require ModuleSP references instead of Module *.
Address objects now have weak references to their sections which can
safely go stale when a module gets destructed.
This checkin doesn't complete the "target symfile add" command, but it
does get us a lot clioser to being able to do such things without a high
risk of crashing or memory corruption.
llvm-svn: 151336
objects for the backlink to the lldb_private::Process. The issues we were
running into before was someone was holding onto a shared pointer to a
lldb_private::Thread for too long, and the lldb_private::Process parent object
would get destroyed and the lldb_private::Thread had a "Process &m_process"
member which would just treat whatever memory that used to be a Process as a
valid Process. This was mostly happening for lldb_private::StackFrame objects
that had a member like "Thread &m_thread". So this completes the internal
strong/weak changes.
Documented the ExecutionContext and ExecutionContextRef classes so that our
LLDB developers can understand when and where to use ExecutionContext and
ExecutionContextRef objects.
llvm-svn: 151009
the lldb_private::StackFrame objects hold onto a weak pointer to the thread
object. The lldb_private::StackFrame objects the the most volatile objects
we have as when we are doing single stepping, frames can often get lost or
thrown away, only to be re-created as another object that still refers to the
same frame. We have another bug tracking that. But we need to be able to
have frames no longer be able to get the thread when they are not part of
a thread anymore, and this is the first step (this fix makes that possible
but doesn't implement it yet).
Also changed lldb_private::ExecutionContextScope to return shared pointers to
all objects in the execution context to further thread harden the internals.
llvm-svn: 150871
New public API for handling formatters: creating, deleting, modifying categories, and formatters, and managing type/formatter association.
This provides SB classes for each of the main object types involved in providing formatter support:
SBTypeCategory
SBTypeFilter
SBTypeFormat
SBTypeSummary
SBTypeSynthetic
plus, an SBTypeNameSpecifier class that is used on the public API layer to abstract the notion that formatters can be applied to plain type-names as well as to regular expressions
For naming consistency, this patch also renames a lot of formatters-related classes.
Plus, the changes in how flags are handled that started with summaries is now extended to other classes as well. A new enum (lldb::eTypeOption) is meant to support this on the public side.
The patch also adds several new calls to the formatter infrastructure that are used to implement by-index accessing and several other design changes required to accommodate the new API layer.
An architectural change is introduced in that backing objects for formatters now become writable. On the public API layer, CoW is implemented to prevent unwanted propagation of changes.
Lastly, there are some modifications in how the "default" category is constructed and managed in relation to other categories.
llvm-svn: 150558
Tracking modules down when you have a UUID and a path has been improved.
DynamicLoaderDarwinKernel no longer parses mach-o load commands and it
now uses the memory based modules now that we can load modules from memory.
Added a target setting named "target.exec-search-paths" which can be used
to supply a list of directories to use when trying to look for executables.
This allows one or more directories to be used when searching for modules
that may not exist in the SDK/PDK. The target automatically adds the directory
for the main executable to this list so this should help us in tracking down
shared libraries and other binaries.
llvm-svn: 150426
"target modules lookup" also work with the
"--function" option, so you can search for
functions that aren't inlined. This is the
same query that the expression parser makes, so
it's good for diagnosing situations where the
expression parser doesn't find a function you
think should be there.
llvm-svn: 150289
indicate whether inline functions are desired.
This allows the expression parser, for instance,
to filter out inlined functions when looking for
functions it can call.
llvm-svn: 150279
user space programs. The core file support is implemented by making a process
plug-in that will dress up the threads and stack frames by using the core file
memory.
Added many default implementations for the lldb_private::Process functions so
that plug-ins like the ProcessMachCore don't need to override many many
functions only to have to return an error.
Added new virtual functions to the ObjectFile class for extracting the frozen
thread states that might be stored in object files. The default implementations
return no thread information, but any platforms that support core files that
contain frozen thread states (like mach-o) can make a module using the core
file and then extract the information. The object files can enumerate the
threads and also provide the register state for each thread. Since each object
file knows how the thread registers are stored, they are responsible for
creating a suitable register context that can be used by the core file threads.
Changed the process CreateInstace callbacks to return a shared pointer and
to also take an "const FileSpec *core_file" parameter to allow for core file
support. This will also allow for lldb_private::Process subclasses to be made
that could load crash logs. This should be possible on darwin where the crash
logs contain all of the stack frames for all of the threads, yet the crash
logs only contain the registers for the crashed thrad. It should also allow
some variables to be viewed for the thread that crashed.
llvm-svn: 150154
with subcommand 'expression' and 'variable'. The first subcommand is for supplying an expression to
be evaluated into an address to watch for, while the second is for watching a variable.
'watchpoint set expression' is a raw command, which means that you need to use the "--" option terminator
to end the '-w' or '-x' option processing and to start typing your expression.
Also update several test cases to comply and add a couple of test cases into TestCompletion.py,
in particular, test that 'watchpoint set ex' completes to 'watchpoint set expression ' and that
'watchpoint set var' completes to 'watchpoint set variable '.
llvm-svn: 150109
the '-e' option (for watching of an address) to be present.
Update some existing test cases with the required option and add some more test cases.
Since the '-v' option takes <variable-name> and the '-e' option takes <expr> as the command arg,
the existing infrastructure for generating the option usage can produce confusing help message,
like:
watchpoint set -e [-w <watch-type>] [-x <byte-size>] <variable-name | expr>
watchpoint set -v [-w <watch-type>] [-x <byte-size>] <variable-name | expr>
The solution adopted is to provide an extra member field to the struct CommandArgumentData called
(uint32_t)arg_opt_set_association, whose purpose is to link this particular argument data with some
option set(s). Also modify the signature of CommandObject::GetFormattedCommandArguments() to:
GetFormattedCommandArguments (Stream &str, uint32_t opt_set_mask = LLDB_OPT_SET_ALL)
it now takes an additional opt_set_mask which can be used to generate a filtered formatted command
args for help message.
Options::GenerateOptionUsage() impl is modified to call the GetFormattedCommandArguments() appropriately.
So that the help message now looks like:
watchpoint set -e [-w <watch-type>] [-x <byte-size>] <expr>
watchpoint set -v [-w <watch-type>] [-x <byte-size>] <variable-name>
rdar://problem/10703256
llvm-svn: 150032
Fixed "target modules list" (aliased to "image list") to output more information
by default. Modified the "target modules list" to have a few new options:
"--header" or "-h" => show the image header address
"--offset" or "-o" => show the image header address offset from the address in the file (the slide applied to the shared library)
Removed the "--symfile-basename" or "-S" option, and repurposed it to
"--symfile-unique" "-S" which will show the symbol file if it differs from
the executable file.
ObjectFile's can now be loaded from memory for cases where we don't have the
files cached locally in an SDK or net mounted root. ObjectFileMachO can now
read mach files from memory.
Moved the section data reading code into the ObjectFile so that the object
file can get the section data from Process memory if the file is only in
memory.
lldb_private::Module can now load its object file in a target with a rigid
slide (very common operation for most dynamic linkers) by using:
bool
Module::SetLoadAddress (Target &target, lldb::addr_t offset, bool &changed)
lldb::SBModule() now has a new constructor in the public interface:
SBModule::SBModule (lldb::SBProcess &process, lldb::addr_t header_addr);
This will find an appropriate ObjectFile plug-in to load an image from memory
where the object file header is at "header_addr".
llvm-svn: 149804
When used in conjunction with --inline-children, this option will cause the names of the values to be omitted from the output. This can be beneficial in cases such as vFloat, where it will compact the representation from
([0]=1,[1]=2,[2]=3,[3]=4) to (1, 2, 3, 4).
Added a test case to check that the new option works correctly.
Also took some time to revisit SummaryFormat and related classes and tweak them for added readability and maintainability.
Finally, added a new class name to which the std::string summary should be applied.
llvm-svn: 149644
Also add test cases for watching a variable as well as a location expressed as an expression.
o TestMyFirstWatchpoint.py:
Modified to test "watchpoint set -w write global".
o TestWatchLocationWithWatchSet.py:
Added to test "watchpoint set -w write -x 1 g_char_ptr + 7" where a contrived example program
with several threads is supposed to only access the array index within the range [0..6], but
there's some misbehaving thread writing past the range.
rdar://problem/10701761
llvm-svn: 149280
due to RTTI worries since llvm and clang don't use RTTI, but I was able to
switch back with no issues as far as I can tell. Once the RTTI issue wasn't
an issue, we were looking for a way to properly track weak pointers to objects
to solve some of the threading issues we have been running into which naturally
led us back to std::tr1::weak_ptr. We also wanted the ability to make a shared
pointer from just a pointer, which is also easily solved using the
std::tr1::enable_shared_from_this class.
The main reason for this move back is so we can start properly having weak
references to objects. Currently a lldb_private::Thread class has a refrence
to its parent lldb_private::Process. This doesn't work well when we now hand
out a SBThread object that contains a shared pointer to a lldb_private::Thread
as this SBThread can be held onto by external clients and if they end up
using one of these objects we can easily crash.
So the next task is to start adopting std::tr1::weak_ptr where ever it makes
sense which we can do with lldb_private::Debugger, lldb_private::Target,
lldb_private::Process, lldb_private::Thread, lldb_private::StackFrame, and
many more objects now that they are no longer using intrusive ref counted
pointer objects (you can't do std::tr1::weak_ptr functionality with intrusive
pointers).
llvm-svn: 149207
ExecutionContext objects have shared pointers to Target, Process, Thread
and Frame objects and they can end up being held onto for too long.
llvm-svn: 149133
map that tracks all live Module classes. We must leak our mutex for our
collection class as it might be destroyed in an order we can't control.
llvm-svn: 149131
where we changed the CommandObjectSettingsSet object impl to require raw command string.
Do the same for CommandObjectSettingsAppend/InsertBefore/InsertAfter classes and
add test cases for basic functionalities as well as for variable name completion.
llvm-svn: 148719
where we changed the CommandObjectSettingsSet object impl to require raw command string.
Do the same for CommandObjectSettingsReplace class and add two test cases; one for
the "settings replace" command and the other to ensure that completion for variable
name still works.
llvm-svn: 148615
Fix a bug where "settings set -r th" wouldn't complete.
o UserSettingsController.cpp:
Fix a bug where "settings set target.process." wouldn't complete.
o test/functionalities/completion:
Add various completion test cases related to 'settings set' command.
llvm-svn: 148596
http://llvm.org/viewvc/llvm-project?rev=148491&view=rev check in broke the argument completion
for "settings set th", followed by TAB. Provide a way for commands who want raw commands to
hook into the completion mechanism.
llvm-svn: 148500
Fixed an issue where backtick char is not properly honored when setting the frame-format variable, like the following:
(lldb) settings set frame-format frame #${frame.index}: ${frame.pc}{ ${module.file.basename}{`${function.name-with-args}${function.pc-offset}}}{ at ${line.file.basename}:${line.number}}\n
(lldb) settings show frame-format
frame-format (string) = "frame #${frame.index}: ${frame.pc}{ `${module.file.basename}{${function.name-with-args}${function.pc-offset}}}{` at ${line.file.basename}:${line.number}}\n"
(lldb)
o CommandObjectSettings.h/.cpp:
Modify the command object impl to require raw command string instead of parsed command string,
which also fixes an outstanding issue that customizing the prompt with trailing spaces doesn't
work.
o Args.cpp:
During CommandInterpreter::HandleCommand(), there is a PreprocessCommand phase which already
strips/processes pairs of backticks as an expression eval step. There's no need to treat
a backtick as starting a quote.
o TestAbbreviations.py and change_prompt.lldb:
Fixed incorrect test case/logic.
o TestSettings.py:
Remove expectedFailure decorator.
llvm-svn: 148491
parser has hitherto been an implementation waiting
for a use. I have now tied the '-o' option for
the expression command -- which indicates that the
result is an Objective-C object and needs to be
printed -- to the ExpressionParser, which
communicates the desired type to Clang.
Now, if the result of an expression is determined
by an Objective-C method call for which there is
no type information, that result is implicitly
cast to id if and only if the -o option is passed
to the expression command. (Otherwise if there
is no explicit cast Clang will issue an error.
This behavior is identical to what happened before
r146756.)
Also added a testcase for -o enabled and disabled.
llvm-svn: 147099
as part of the thread format output.
Currently this is only done for the ThreadPlanStepOut.
Add a convenience API ABI::GetReturnValueObject.
Change the ValueObject::EvaluationPoint to BE an ExecutionContextScope, rather than
trying to hand out one of its subsidiary object's pointers. That way this will always
be good.
llvm-svn: 146806
take a SymbolFile reference and a lldb::user_id_t and be used in objects
which represent things in debug symbols that have types where we don't need
to know the true type yet, such as in lldb_private::Variable objects. This
allows us to defer resolving the type until something is used. More specifically
this allows us to get 1000 local variables from the current function, and if
the user types "frame variable argc", we end up _only_ resolving the type for
"argc" and not for the 999 other local variables. We can expand the use of this
as needed in the future.
Modified the DWARFMappedHash class to be able to read the HashData that has
more than just the DIE offset. It currently will read the atoms in the header
definition and read the data correctly. Currently only the DIE offset and
type flags are supported. This is needed for adding type flags to the
.apple_types hash accelerator tables.
Fixed a assertion crash that would happen if we have a variable that had a
DW_AT_const_value instead of a location where "location.LocationContains_DW_OP_addr()"
would end up asserting when it tried to parse the variable location as a
DWARF opcode list.
Decreased the amount of memory that LLDB would use when evaluating an expression
by 3x - 4x for clang. There was a place in the namespace lookup code that was
parsing all namespaces with a certain name in a DWARF file instead of stopping
when it found the first match. This was causing all of the compile units with
a matching namespace to get parsed into memory and causing unnecessary memory
bloat.
Improved "Target::EvaluateExpression(...)" to not try and find a variable
when the expression contains characters that would certainly cause an expression
to need to be evaluated by the debugger.
llvm-svn: 146130
will allow us to represent a process/thread ID using a pointer for the OS
plug-ins where they might want to represent the process or thread ID using
the address of the process or thread structure.
llvm-svn: 145644
Fixed an issue where if we are debugging on a remote platform and set a
platform path for our executable, it was not being honored by the new
launch functions that used the ProcessLaunchInfo.
llvm-svn: 145371
to launch a process for debugging. Since this isn't supported on all platforms,
we need to do what we used to do if this isn't supported. I added:
bool
Platform::CanDebugProcess ();
This will get checked before trying to launch a process for debugging and then
fall back to launching the process through the current host debugger. This
should solve the issue for linux and keep the platform code clean.
Centralized logging code for logging errors, warnings and logs when reporting
things for modules or symbol files. Both lldb_private::Module and
lldb_private::SymbolFile now have the following member functions:
void
LogMessage (Log *log, const char *format, ...);
void
ReportWarning (const char *format, ...);
void
ReportError (const char *format, ...);
These will all output the module name and object (if any) such as:
"error: lldb.so ...."
"warning: my_archive.a(foo.o) ...."
This will keep the output consistent and stop a lot of logging calls from
having to try and output all of the information that uniquely identifies
a module or symbol file. Many places in the code were grabbing the path to the
object file manually and if the module represented a .o file in an archive, we
would see log messages like:
error: foo.a - some error happened
llvm-svn: 145219
Fixed an issue with the options for memory read where --count couldn't be used
with the --binary option when writing data to a file.
Also removed the GDB format option from the --binary version of memory read.
llvm-svn: 145067
the thread specific data and were destroying the thread specfic data more
than once.
Also added the ability to ask a lldb::StateType if it is stopped with an
additional paramter of "must_exist" which means that the state must be a
stopped state for a process that still exists. This means that eStateExited
and eStateUnloaded will no longer return true if "must_exist" is set to true.
llvm-svn: 144875
info for us to attach by pid, or by name and will also allow us to eventually
do a lot more powerful attaches. If you look at the options for the "platform
process list" command, there are many options which we should be able to
specify. This will allow us to do things like "attach to a process named 'tcsh'
that has a parent process ID of 123", or "attach to a process named 'x' which
has an effective user ID of 345".
I finished up the --shell implementation so that it can be used without the
--tty option in "process launch". The "--shell" option now can take an
optional argument which is the path to the shell to use (or a partial name
like "sh" which we will find using the current PATH environment variable).
Modified the Process::Attach to use the new ProcessAttachInfo as the sole
argument and centralized a lot of code that was in the "process attach"
Execute function so that everyone can take advantage of the powerful new
attach functionality.
llvm-svn: 144615
This is the actual fix for the above radar where global variables that weren't
initialized were not being shown correctly when leaving the DWARF in the .o
files. Global variables that aren't intialized have symbols in the .o files
that specify they are undefined and external to the .o file, yet document the
size of the variable. This allows the compiler to emit a single copy, but makes
it harder for our DWARF in .o files with the executable having a debug map
because the symbol for the global in the .o file doesn't exist in a section
that we can assign a fixed up linked address to, and also the DWARF contains
an invalid address in the "DW_OP_addr" location (always zero). This means that
the DWARF is incorrect and actually maps all such global varaibles to the
first file address in the .o file which is usually the first function. So we
can fix this in either of two ways: make a new fake section in the .o file
so that we have a file address in the .o file that we can relink, or fix the
the variable as it is created in the .o file DWARF parser and actually give it
the file address from the executable. Each variable contains a
SymbolContextScope, or a single pointer that helps us to recreate where the
variables came from (which module, file, function, etc). This context helps
us to resolve any file addresses that might be in the location description of
the variable by pointing us to which file the file address comes from, so we
can just replace the SymbolContextScope and also fix up the location, which we
would have had to do for the other case as well, and update the file address.
Now globals display correctly.
The above changes made it possible to determine if a variable is a global
or static variable when parsing DWARF. The DWARF emits a DW_TAG_variable tag
for each variable (local, global, or static), yet DWARF provides no way for
us to classify these variables into these categories. We can now detect when
a variable has a simple address expressions as its location and this will help
us classify these correctly.
While making the above changes I also noticed that we had two symbol types:
eSymbolTypeExtern and eSymbolTypeUndefined which mean essentially the same
thing: the symbol is not defined in the current object file. Symbol objects
also have a bit that specifies if a symbol is externally visible, so I got
rid of the eSymbolTypeExtern symbol type and moved all code locations that
used it to use the eSymbolTypeUndefined type.
llvm-svn: 144489
the --tty option. So you can now get shell expansion and file redirection:
(lldb) process launch --tty --shell -- *.jpg < in.txt > out.txt
Again, the "--tty" is mandatory for now until we hook this up to other
functions. The shell is also currently hard coded to "/bin/bash" and not the
"SHELL" variable. "/bin/tcsh" was causing problems which I need to dig into.
llvm-svn: 144443
the argument description in the command name could cause a command
alias to crash, e.g.
command alias zzz target stop-hook delete 1
because the "name" is used to re-fetch the exact CommandObject when
adding the final arg.
<rdar://problem/10423753>
llvm-svn: 144330
be in the target. All of the environment, args, stdin/out/err files, etc have
all been moved. Also re-enabled the ability to launch a process in a separate
terminal on MacOSX.
llvm-svn: 144061
a) adds a new --synchronicity (-s) setting for "command script add" that allows the user to decide if scripted commands should run synchronously or asynchronously (which can make a difference in how events are handled)
b) clears up several error messages
c) adds a new --allow-reload (-r) setting for "command script import" that allows the user to reload a module even if it has already been imported before
d) allows filename completion for "command script import" (much like what happens for "target create")
e) prevents "command script add" from replacing built-in commands with scripted commands
f) changes AddUserCommand() to take an std::string instead of a const char* (for performance reasons)
plus, it fixes an issue in "type summary add" command handling which caused several test suite errors
llvm-svn: 144035
- If you download and build the sources in the Xcode project, x86_64 builds
by default using the "llvm.zip" checkpointed LLVM.
- If you delete the "lldb/llvm.zip" and the "lldb/llvm" folder, and build the
Xcode project will download the right LLVM sources and build them from
scratch
- If you have a "lldb/llvm" folder already that contains a "lldb/llvm/lib"
directory, we will use the sources you have placed in the LLDB directory.
Python can now be disabled for platforms that don't support it.
Changed the way the libllvmclang.a files get used. They now all get built into
arch specific directories and never get merged into universal binaries as this
was causing issues where you would have to go and delete the file if you wanted
to build an extra architecture slice.
llvm-svn: 143678
on internal only (public API hasn't changed) to simplify the paramter list
to the launch calls down into just one argument. Also all of the argument,
envronment and stdio things are now handled in a much more centralized fashion.
llvm-svn: 143656
in the same hashed format as the ".apple_names", but they map objective C
class names to all of the methods and class functions. We need to do this
because in the DWARF the methods for Objective C are never contained in the
class definition, they are scattered about at the translation unit level and
they don't even have attributes that say the are contained within the class
itself.
Added 3 new formats which can be used to display data:
eFormatAddressInfo
eFormatHexFloat
eFormatInstruction
eFormatAddressInfo describes an address such as function+offset and file+line,
or symbol + offset, or constant data (c string, 2, 4, 8, or 16 byte constants).
The format character for this is "A", the long format is "address".
eFormatHexFloat will print out the hex float format that compilers tend to use.
The format character for this is "X", the long format is "hex float".
eFormatInstruction will print out disassembly with bytes and it will use the
current target's architecture. The format character for this is "i" (which
used to be being used for the integer format, but the integer format also has
"d", so we gave the "i" format to disassembly), the long format is
"instruction".
Mate the lldb::FormatterChoiceCriterion enumeration private as it should have
been from the start. It is very specialized and doesn't belong in the public
API.
llvm-svn: 143114
properly marked as valid.
Also modified the "memory read" command to be able to intelligently repeat
subsequent memory requests, so now you can do:
(lldb) memory read --format hex --count 32 0x1000
Then hit enter to keep viewing the memory that follows the last valid request.
llvm-svn: 143015
lldb_private::Error objects the rules are:
- short strings that don't start with a capitol letter unless the name is a
class or anything else that is always capitolized
- no trailing newline character
- should be one line if possible
Implemented a first pass at adding "--gdb-format" support to anything that
accepts format with optional size/count.
llvm-svn: 142999
OptionGroupFormat. Updated OptionGroupFormat to be able to also use the
"--size" and "--count" options. Commands that use a OptionGroupFormat instance
can choose which of the options they want by initializing OptionGroupFormat
accordingly. Clients can either get only the "--format", "--format" + "--size",
or "--format" + "--size" + "--count". This is in preparation for upcoming
chnages where there are alternate ways (GDB format specification) to set a
format.
llvm-svn: 142911
process IDs, and thread IDs, but was mainly needed for for the UserID's for
Types so that DWARF with debug map can work flawlessly. With DWARF in .o files
the type ID was the DIE offset in the DWARF for the .o file which is not
unique across all .o files, so now the SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap class will
make the .o file index part (the high 32 bits) of the unique type identifier
so it can uniquely identify the types.
llvm-svn: 142534
watchpoint modify -c 'global==5'
modifies the last created watchpoint so that the condition expression
is evaluated at the stop point to decide whether we should proceed with
the stopping.
Also add SBWatchpont::SetCondition(const char *condition) to set condition
programmatically.
Test cases to come later.
llvm-svn: 142227
a watchpoint for either the variable encapsulated by SBValue (Watch) or the pointee
encapsulated by SBValue (WatchPointee).
Removed SBFrame::WatchValue() and SBFrame::WatchLocation() API as a result of that.
Modified the watchpoint related test suite to reflect the change.
Plus replacing WatchpointLocation with Watchpoint throughout the code base.
There are still cleanups to be dome. This patch passes the whole test suite.
Check it in so that we aggressively catch regressions.
llvm-svn: 141925
Fixed up DWARFDebugAranges to use the new range classes.
Fixed the enumeration parsing to take a lldb_private::Error to avoid a lot of duplicated code. Now when an invalid enumeration is supplied, an error will be returned and that error will contain a list of the valid enumeration values.
llvm-svn: 141382
symbol context that represents an inlined function. This function has been
renamed internally to:
bool
SymbolContext::GetParentOfInlinedScope (const Address &curr_frame_pc,
SymbolContext &next_frame_sc,
Address &next_frame_pc) const;
And externally to:
SBSymbolContext
SBSymbolContext::GetParentOfInlinedScope (const SBAddress &curr_frame_pc,
SBAddress &parent_frame_addr) const;
The correct blocks are now correctly calculated.
Switched the stack backtracing engine (in StackFrameList) and the address
context printing over to using the internal SymbolContext::GetParentOfInlinedScope(...)
so all inlined callstacks will match exactly.
llvm-svn: 140910
if no frame is specified. This is useful to get the source context lines re-displayed
when you need a reminder of where you are in the source currently.
llvm-svn: 140819
iterate on the available watchpoint locations and to perform watchpoint manipulations.
I still need to export the SBWatchpointLocation class as well as the added watchpoint
manipulation methods to the Python interface. And write test cases for them.
llvm-svn: 140575
- New SBSection objects that are object file sections which can be accessed
through the SBModule classes. You can get the number of sections, get a
section at index, and find a section by name.
- SBSections can contain subsections (first find "__TEXT" on darwin, then
us the resulting SBSection to find "__text" sub section).
- Set load addresses for a SBSection in the SBTarget interface
- Set the load addresses of all SBSection in a SBModule in the SBTarget interface
- Add a new module the an existing target in the SBTarget interface
- Get a SBSection from a SBAddress object
This should get us a lot closer to being able to symbolicate using LLDB through
the public API.
llvm-svn: 140437
return before we try to dereference the target later in the function.
Currently,
% lldb -x
(lldb) target stop-hook list
crashes because of this.
llvm-svn: 140417
etc to specific source files.
Added SB API's to specify these source files & also more than one module.
Added an "exact" option to CompileUnit's FindLineEntry API.
llvm-svn: 140362
Add eArgTypeWatchpointID and eArgTypeWatchpointIDRange to the CommandArgumentType enums and
modify the signature of CommandObject::AddIDsArgumentData() from:
AddIDsArgumentData(CommandArgumentEntry &arg)
to:
AddIDsArgumentData(CommandArgumentEntry &arg, CommandArgumentType ID, CommandArgumentType IDRange)
to accommodate.
llvm-svn: 140346
shared pointers.
Changed the ExecutionContext over to use shared pointers for
the target, process, thread and frame since these objects can
easily go away at any time and any object that was holding onto
an ExecutionContext was running the risk of using a bad object.
Now that the shared pointers for target, process, thread and
frame are just a single pointer (they all use the instrusive
shared pointers) the execution context is much safer and still
the same size.
Made the shared pointers in the the ExecutionContext class protected
and made accessors for all of the various ways to get at the pointers,
references, and shared pointers.
llvm-svn: 140298
Fix the RegularExpression class so it has a real copy constructor.
Fix the breakpoint setting with multiple shared libraries so it makes
one breakpoint not one per shared library.
Add SBFileSpecList, to be used to expose the above to the SB interface (not done yet.)
llvm-svn: 140225
to the command argument entry. Add a static helper function:
CommandObject::AddIDsArgumentData(CommandArgumentEntry &arg)
to be used from CommandObjectBreakpoint.cpp. The helper function could also be useful
for commands in the future to manipulate watchpoints.
llvm-svn: 140221
stdarg formats to use __attribute__ format so the compiler can flag
incorrect uses. Fix all incorrect uses. Most of these are innocuous,
a few were resulting in crashes.
llvm-svn: 140185
__attribute__ format so the compiler knows that this method takes
printf style formatter arguments and checks that it's being used
correctly. Fix a couple dozen incorrect SetErrorStringWithFormat()
calls throughout the sources.
llvm-svn: 140115
ModuleSP
Module::GetSP();
Since we are now using intrusive ref counts, we can easily turn any
pointer to a module into a shared pointer just by assigning it.
llvm-svn: 139984
We had some cases where getting the shared pointer for a module from
the global module list was causing a performance issue when debugging
with DWARF in .o files. Now that the module uses intrusive ref counts,
we can easily convert any pointer to a shared pointer.
llvm-svn: 139983
Modify CommandObjectFrame.cpp to populate this field when creating a watchpoint location.
Update the test case to verify that the declaration info matches the file and line number.
llvm-svn: 139946
to execute expressions even in the absence of a process.
This allows expressions to run in situations where the
target cannot run -- e.g., to perform calculations based
on type information, or to inspect a binary's static
data.
This modification touches the following files:
lldb-private-enumerations.h
Introduce a new enum specifying the policy for
processing an expression. Some expressions should
always be JITted, for example if they are functions
that will be used over and over again. Some
expressions should always be interpreted, for
example if the target is unsafe to run. For most,
it is acceptable to JIT them, but interpretation
is preferable when possible.
Target.[h,cpp]
Have EvaluateExpression now accept the new enum.
ClangExpressionDeclMap.[cpp,h]
Add support for the IR interpreter and also make
the ClangExpressionDeclMap more robust in the
absence of a process.
ClangFunction.[cpp,h]
Add support for the new enum.
IRInterpreter.[cpp,h]
New implementation.
ClangUserExpression.[cpp,h]
Add support for the new enum, and for running
expressions in the absence of a process.
ClangExpression.h
Remove references to the old DWARF-based method
of evaluating expressions, because it has been
superseded for now.
ClangUtilityFunction.[cpp,h]
Add support for the new enum.
ClangExpressionParser.[cpp,h]
Add support for the new enum, remove references
to DWARF, and add support for checking whether
the expression could be evaluated statically.
IRForTarget.[h,cpp]
Add support for the new enum, and add utility
functions to support the interpreter.
IRToDWARF.cpp
Removed
CommandObjectExpression.cpp
Remove references to the obsolete -i option.
Process.cpp
Modify calls to ClangUserExpression::Evaluate
to pass the correct enum (for dlopen/dlclose)
SBValue.cpp
Add support for the new enum.
SBFrame.cpp
Add support for he new enum.
BreakpointOptions.cpp
Add support for the new enum.
llvm-svn: 139772
o Rename from OptionGroupWatchpoint::WatchMode to OptionGroupWatchpoint::WatchType,
and CommandArgumentType::eArgTypeWatchMode to CommandArgumentType::eArgTypeWatchType.
Update the sources to reflect the change.
o Add a CreateWatchpointLocation() method to Target class, which is currently not implmeneted
(returns an empty WatchpointLocationSP object). Add logic to CommandObjectFrame::Execute()
to exercise the added API for creating a watchpoint location.
llvm-svn: 139560
to effect an early error return.
Plus add logic to 'frame variable' command object to check that when watchpoint option is on,
only one variable with exact name (no regex) is specified as the sole command arg.
llvm-svn: 139524
--show-aliases (-a) shows aliases for commands, as well as built-in commands
--hide-user-defined (-u) hides user defined commands
by default 'help' without arguments does not show aliases anymore. to see them, add --show-aliases
to have only built-in commands appear, use 'help --hide-user-defined' ; there is currently no way to hide
built-in commands from the help output
'help command' is not changed by this commit, and help is shown even if command is an alias and -a is not specified
llvm-svn: 139377
Set the default Source File & line to main (if it can be found.) at startup. Selecting the current thread & or frame resets
the current source file & line, and "source list" as well as the breakpoint command "break set -l <NUM>" will use the
current source file.
llvm-svn: 139323
Reduced the amount of memory required to avoid loops in DumpPrintableRepresentation() from 32 bits down to 1 bit
- Additionally, disallowed creating summary strings of the form ${var%S} which did nothing but cause endless loops by definition
llvm-svn: 139201
- introduced two new classes ValueObjectConstResultChild and ValueObjectConstResultImpl: the first one is a ValueObjectChild obtained from
a ValueObjectConstResult, the second is a common implementation backend for VOCR and VOCRCh of method calls meant to read through pointers stored
in frozen objects ; now such reads transparently move from host to target as required
- as a consequence of the above, removed code that made target-memory copies of expression results in several places throughout LLDB, and also
removed code that enabled to recognize an expression result VO as such
- introduced a new GetPointeeData() method in ValueObject that lets you read a given amount of objects of type T from a VO
representing a T* or T[], and doing dereferences transparently
in private layer it returns a DataExtractor ; in public layer it returns an instance of a newly created lldb::SBData
- as GetPointeeData() does the right thing for both frozen and non-frozen ValueObject's, reimplemented ReadPointedString() to use it
en lieu of doing the raw read itself
- introduced a new GetData() method in ValueObject that lets you get a copy of the data that backs the ValueObject (for pointers,
this returns the address without any previous dereferencing steps ; for arrays it actually reads the whole chunk of memory)
in public layer this returns an SBData, just like GetPointeeData()
- introduced a new CreateValueFromData() method in SBValue that lets you create a new SBValue from a chunk of data wrapped in an SBData
the limitation to remember for this kind of SBValue is that they have no address: extracting the address-of for these objects (with any
of GetAddress(), GetLoadAddress() and AddressOf()) will return invalid values
- added several tests to check that "p"-ing objects (STL classes, char* and char[]) will do the right thing
Solved a bug where global pointers to global variables were not dereferenced correctly for display
New target setting "max-string-summary-length" gives the maximum number of characters to show in a string when summarizing it, instead of the hardcoded 128
Solved a bug where the summary for char[] and char* would not be shown if the ValueObject's were dumped via the "p" command
Removed m_pointers_point_to_load_addrs from ValueObject. Introduced a new m_address_type_of_children, which each ValueObject can set to tell the address type
of any pointers and/or references it creates. In the current codebase, this is load address most of the time (the only notable exception being file
addresses that generate file address children UNLESS we have a live process)
Updated help text for summary-string
Fixed an issue in STL formatters where std::stlcontainer::iterator would match the container's synthetic children providers
Edited the syntax and help for some commands to have proper argument types
llvm-svn: 139160
(in addition to the previous error message if the value could not be
parsed as a numbe). These both generate reasonable errors now -
reg write rip 0x500000000000000000000a
reg write rip 0x5jjjj
llvm-svn: 138543
expression parser. You can use a persistent
type like this:
(lldb) expr struct $foo { int a; int b; };
(lldb) struct $foo i; i.a = 2; i.b = 3; i
($foo) $0 = {
(int) a = 2
(int) b = 3
}
typedefs work similarly.
This patch affects the following files:
test/expression_command/persistent_types/*
A test case for persistent types,
in particular structs and typedefs.
ClangForward.h
Added TypeDecl, needed to declare some
functions in ASTResultSynthesizer.h
ClangPersistentVariables.[h,cpp]
Added a list of persistent types to the
persistent variable store.
ASTResultSynthesizer.[h,cpp]
Made the AST result synthesizer iterate
across TypeDecls in the expression, and
record any persistent types found. Also
made a minor documentation fix.
ClangUserExpression.[h,cpp]
Extended the user expression class to
keep the state needed to report the
persistent variable store for the target
to the AST result synthesizers.
Also introduced a new error code for
expressions that executed normally but
did not return a result.
CommandObjectExpression.cpp
Improved output for expressions (like
declarations of new persistent types) that
don't return a result. This is no longer
treated as an error.
llvm-svn: 138383
- FormatCategories now are directly mapped by ConstString objects instead of going through
const char* -> ConstString -> const char*
- FormatCategory callback does not pass category name anymore. This is not necessary because
FormatCategory objects themselves hold their name as a member variable
llvm-svn: 138254
- reorganizing the PTS (Partial Template Specializations) in FormatManager.h
- applied a patch by Filipe Cabecinhas to make LLDB compile with GCC
Functional changes:
- fixed an issue where command type summary add for type "struct Foo" would not match any types.
currently, "struct" will be stripped off and type "Foo" will be matched.
similar behavior occurs for class, enum and union specifiers.
llvm-svn: 138020
- reorganizing classes layout to have public part first
Typedefs that we want to keep private, but must be defined for some public code to work correctly are an exception
- avoiding methods in the form T foo() { code; } all on one-line
- moving method implementations from .h to .cpp whenever feasible
Templatized code is an exception and so are very small methods
- generally, adhering to coding conventions followed project-wide
Functional changes:
- fixed an issue where using ${var} in a summary for an aggregate, and then displaying a pointer-to-aggregate would lead to no summary being displayed
The issue was not a major one because all ${var} was meant to do in that context was display an error for invalid use of pointer
Accordingly fixed test cases and added a new test case
llvm-svn: 137944
- all instances of "vobj" have been renamed to "valobj"
- class Debugger::Formatting has been renamed to DataVisualization (defined in FormatManager.h/cpp)
The interface to this class has not changed
- FormatCategory now uses ConstString's as keys to the navigators instead of repeatedly casting
from ConstString to const char* and back all the time
Next step is making the same happen for categories themselves
- category gnu-libstdc++ is defined in the constructor for a FormatManager
The source code for it is defined in gnu_libstdcpp.py, drawn from examples/synthetic at compile time
All references to previous 'osxcpp' name have been removed from both code and file names
Functional changes:
- the name of the option to use a summary string for 'type summary add' has changed from the previous --format-string
to the new --summary-string. It is expected that the short option will change from -f to -s, and -s for --python-script
will become -o
llvm-svn: 137886
The category is enabled by default. If you run into issues with it, disable it and the previous behavior of LLDB is restored
** This is a temporary solution. The general solution to having formatters pulled in at startup should involve going through the Platform.
Fixed an issue in type synthetic list where a category with synthetic providers in it was not shown if all the providers were regex-based
llvm-svn: 137850
If no docstring is provided, a default help text is created
LLDB will refuse to create scripted commands if the scripting language is anything but Python
Some additional comments in AppleObjCRuntimeV2.cpp to describe the memory layout expected by the dynamic type lookup code
llvm-svn: 137801
- They now have an SBCommandReturnObject instead of an SBStream as third argument
- The class CommandObjectPythonFunction has been merged into CommandObjectCommands.cpp
- The command to manage them is now:
command script with subcommands add, list, delete, clear
command alias is returned to its previous functionality
- Python commands are now part of an user dictionary, instead of being seen as aliases
llvm-svn: 137785
It is now possible to use 'command alias --python' to define a command name that actually triggers execution of a Python function
(e.g. command alias --python foo foo_impl makes a command named 'foo' that runs Python function 'foo_impl')
The Python function foo_impl should have as signature: def foo_impl(debugger, args, stream, dict): where
debugger is an object wrapping an LLDB SBDebugger
args is the command line arguments, as an unparsed Python string
stream is an SBStream that represents the standard output
dict is an internal utility parameter and should be left untouched
The function should return None on no error, or an error string to describe any problems
llvm-svn: 137722
The converse is also true: an error is shown when the user tries to add a synthetic provider to a category that already has a filter for the same type
llvm-svn: 137493
*New setting target.max-children-count gives an upper-bound to the number of child objects that will be displayed at each depth-level
This might be a breaking change in some scenarios. To override the new limit you can use the --show-all-children (-A) option
to frame variable or increase the limit in your lldbinit file
*Command "type synthetic" has been split in two:
- "type synthetic" now only handles Python synthetic children providers
- the new command "type filter" handles filters
Because filters and synthetic providers are both ways to replace the children of a ValueObject, only one can be effective at any given time.
llvm-svn: 137416
Filipe was attempting to do a:
(lldb) process load ~/path/foo.dylib
But the process load command wasn't resolving the path. We have to be careful
about resolving the path here because we want to do it in terms of the platform
we are using. the "~/" can mean a completely different path if you are remotely
debugging on another machine as another user. So to support this, platforms now
can resolve remote paths:
bool
Platform::ResolveRemotePath (const FileSpec &platform_path,
FileSpec &resolved_platform_path);
The host/local platform will just resolve the path.
llvm-svn: 137307
This is helping us track down some extra references to ModuleSP objects that
are causing things to get kept around for too long.
Added a module pointer accessor to target and change a lot of code to use
it where it would be more efficient.
"taret delete" can now specify "--clean=1" which will cleanup the global module
list for any orphaned module in the shared module cache which can save memory
and also help track down module reference leaks like we have now.
llvm-svn: 137294
ability to dump more information about modules in "target modules list". We
can now dump the shared pointer reference count for modules, the pointer to
the module itself (in case performance tools can help track down who has
references to said pointer), and the modification time.
Added "target delete [target-idx ...]" to be able to delete targets when they
are no longer needed. This will help track down memory usage issues and help
to resolve when module ref counts keep getting incremented. If the command gets
no arguments, the currently selected target will be deleted. If any arguments
are given, they must all be valid target indexes (use the "target list"
command to get the current target indexes).
Took care of a bunch of "no newline at end of file" warnings.
TimeValue objects can now dump their time to a lldb_private::Stream object.
Modified the "target modules list --global" command to not error out if there
are no targets since it doesn't require a target.
Fixed an issue in the MacOSX DYLD dynamic loader plug-in where if a shared
library was updated on disk, we would keep using the older one, even if it was
updated.
Don't allow the ModuleList::GetSharedModule(...) to return an empty module.
Previously we could specify a valid path on disc to a module, and specify an
architecture that wasn't contained in that module and get a shared pointer to
a module that wouldn't be able to return an object file or a symbol file. We
now make sure an object file can be extracted prior to adding the shared pointer
to the module to get added to the shared list.
llvm-svn: 137196
new --raw-output (-R) option to frame variable prevents using summaries and synthetic children
other future formatting enhancements will be excluded by using the -R option
test case enhanced to check that -R works correctly
llvm-svn: 137185
command that allows us to see all modules that exist and
their corresponding global shared pointer count. This will
help us track down memory issues when modules aren't being
removed and cleaned up from the module list.
llvm-svn: 137078
Fixed a bug where Objective-C variables coming out of the expression parser could crash the Python synthetic providers:
- expression parser output has a "frozen data" component, which is a byte-exact copy of the value (in host memory),
if trying to read into memory based on the host address, LLDB would crash. we are now passing the correct (target)
pointer to the Python code
Objective-C "id" variables are now formatted according to their dynamic type, if the -d option to frame variable is used:
- Code based on the Objective-C 2.0 runtime is used to obtain this information without running code on the target
llvm-svn: 136695
- Completely new implementation of SBType
- Various enhancements in several other classes
Python synthetic children providers for std::vector<T>, std::list<T> and std::map<K,V>:
- these return the actual elements into the container as the children of the container
- basic template name parsing that works (hopefully) on both Clang and GCC
- find them in examples/synthetic and in the test suite in functionalities/data-formatter/data-formatter-python-synth
New summary string token ${svar :
- the syntax is just the same as in ${var but this new token lets you read the values
coming from the synthetic children provider instead of the actual children
- Python providers above provide a synthetic child len that returns the number of elements
into the container
Full bug fix for the issue in which getting byte size for a non-complete type would crash LLDB
Several other fixes, including:
- inverted the order of arguments in the ClangASTType constructor
- EvaluationPoint now only returns SharedPointer's to Target and Process
- the help text for several type subcommands now correctly indicates argument-less options as such
llvm-svn: 136504