GetMaxU64Bitfield(...) uses the ul suffix but we require a 64 bit unsigned integer and ul could be 32 bit. So this replacing it with a explicit cast and refactors the code around it to use an early exit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70992
Summary:
Yet another step on the long road towards getting rid of lldb's Stream class.
We probably should just make this some kind of member of Address/AddressRange, but it seems quite often we just push
in random integers in there and this is just about getting rid of Stream and not improving arbitrary APIs.
I had to rename another `DumpAddress` function in FormatEntity that is dumping the content of an address to make Clang happy.
Reviewers: labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71052
Summary:
Our rnglist support was working only for the trivial cases (one CU),
because we only ever parsed one contribution out of the debug_rnglists
section. This means we were never able to resolve range lists for the
second and subsequent units (DW_FORM_sec_offset references came out
blang, and DW_FORM_rnglistx references always used the ranges lists from
the first unit).
Since both llvm and lldb rnglist parsers are sufficiently
self-contained, and operate similarly, we can fix this problem by
switching to the llvm parser instead. Besides the changes which are due
to variations in the interface, the main thing is that now the range
list object is a member of the DWARFUnit, instead of the entire symbol
file. This ensures that each unit can get it's own private set of range
list indices, and is consistent with how llvm's DWARFUnit does it
(overall, I've tried to structure the code the same way as the llvm
version).
I've also added a test case for the two unit scenario.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, clayborg
Subscribers: dblaikie, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71021
Summary:
This patch adds code which will substitute references to the full object
constructors/destructors with their base object versions.
Like all substitutions in this category, this operation is not really
sound, but doing this in a more precise way allows us to get rid of a
much larger hack -- matching function according to their demangled
names, which effectively does the same thing, but also much more.
This is a (very late) follow-up to D54074.
Background: clang has an optimization which can eliminate full object
structors completely, if they are found to be equivalent to their base
object versions. It does this because it assumes they can be regenerated
on demand in the compile unit that needs them (e.g., because they are
declared inline). However, this doesn't work for the debugging scenario,
where we don't have the structor bodies available -- we pretend all
constructors are defined out-of-line as far as clang is concerned. This
causes clang to emit references to the (nonexisting) full object
structors during expression evaluation.
Fun fact: This is not a problem on darwin, because the relevant
optimization is disabled to work around a linker bug.
Reviewers: teemperor, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70721
Summary:
Lldb's "format-independent" debug info made use of the fact that DWARF
(<=4) did not use the file index zero, and reused the support file index
zero for storing the compile unit name.
While this provided some convenience for DWARF<=4, it meant that the PDB
plugin needed to artificially remap file indices in order to free up
index 0. Furthermore, DWARF v5 make file index 0 legal, which meant that
similar remapping would be needed in the dwarf plugin too.
What this patch does instead is remove the requirement of having the
compile unit name in the index 0. It is not that useful since the name
can always be fetched from the CompileUnit object. Remapping code in the
pdb plugin(s) has been removed or simplified.
DWARF plugin has started inserting an empty FileSpec at index 0 to
ensure the indices keep matching up (in case of DWARF<=4). For DWARF5,
we insert the file 0 from the line table.
I add a test to ensure we can correctly lookup line table entries
referencing file 0, and in particular the case where the file 0 is also
duplicated in another file entry, as this is how clang produces line
tables in some circumstances (see pr44170). Though this is probably a
bug in clang, this is not forbidden by DWARF, and lldb already has
support for that in some (but not all) cases -- this adds a test for the
code path which was not fixed in this patch.
Reviewers: clayborg, JDevlieghere, jdoerfert
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70954
Summary:
This patch fixes a bug where when target triple created from elf information
is arm-*-linux-eabihf and platform triple is armv8l-*-linux-gnueabihf. Merging
both triple results in armv8l--unknown-unknown.
This happens because we order a triple update while calling CoreUpdated and
CoreUpdated creates a new triple with no vendor or environment information.
Making sure we do not update triple and just update to more specific core
fixes the issue.
Reviewers: labath, jasonmolenda, clayborg
Reviewed By: jasonmolenda
Subscribers: jankratochvil, kristof.beyls, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70155
options class. This value was hanging around so for instance if you made a scripted breakpoint
resolver, then went to set another breakpoint, it would still think you had passed in a class
name and the breakpoint wouldn't do what you expected.
Make it possible to override reproducer capture with the
LLDB_CAPTURE_REPRODUCER environment variable.
The goal of this change is twofold.
(1) I want to be able to enable capturing reproducers during regular
test runs, both locally and on the bots. To do so I need a way to
force capture. I cannot do this through the Python API, because
reproducer capture must be enabled *before* the debugger
initialized, which happens automatically when doing `import lldb`.
(2) I want to provide an escape hatch for when reproducers are enabled
by default. Downstream we have reproducer capture enabled by default
in the driver.
This patch solves both problems by overriding the reproducer mode based
on the environment variable. Acceptable values are 0/1 and ON/OFF.
The changes are minor; primarily debugserver needs to go through
accessor functions/macros when changing pc/fp/sp/lr, and debugserver
needs to clear any existing pointer auth bits from values in two
cases. debugserver can fetch the number of bits used for addressing
from a sysctl, and will include that in the qHostInfo reply. Update
qHostInfo documentation to document it.
The previous fix attempt, in 62a635e864, used too much escaping
for the backslashes.
But instead of using regexes to match both path separator forms,
remove the path altogether to unify the output from the testcase
between platforms.
Summary:
Using a BreakpointList corrupts the breakpoints' IDs because
BreakpointList::Add sets the ID, so use a vector instead, and
update the signature to return the vector wrapped in an
llvm::Expected which can propagate any error from the inner
call to StringIsBreakpointName.
Note that, despite the similar name, SBTarget::FindBreakpointsByName
doesn't suffer the same problem, because it uses a SBBreakpointList,
which is more like a BreakpointIDList than a BreakpointList under the
covers.
Add a check to TestBreakpointNames that, without this fix, notices the
ID getting mutated and fails.
Reviewers: jingham, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70907
Summary:
The FileSpec class is often used as a sort of a pattern -- one specifies
a bare file name to search, and we check if in matches the full file
name of an existing module (for example).
These comparisons used FileSpec::Equal, which had some support for it
(via the full=false argument), but it was not a good fit for this job.
For one, it did a symmetric comparison, which makes sense for a function
called "equal", but not for typical searches (when searching for
"/foo/bar.so", we don't want to find a module whose name is just
"bar.so"). This resulted in patterns like:
if (FileSpec::Equal(pattern, file, pattern.GetDirectory()))
which would request a "full" match only if the pattern really contained
a directory. This worked, but the intended behavior was very unobvious.
On top of that, a lot of the code wanted to handle the case of an
"empty" pattern, and treat it as matching everything. This resulted in
conditions like:
if (pattern && !FileSpec::Equal(pattern, file, pattern.GetDirectory())
which are nearly impossible to decipher.
This patch introduces a FileSpec::Match function, which does exactly
what most of FileSpec::Equal callers want, an asymmetric match between a
"pattern" FileSpec and a an actual FileSpec. Empty paterns match
everything, filename-only patterns match only the filename component.
I've tried to update all callers of FileSpec::Equal to use a simpler
interface. Those that hardcoded full=true have been changed to use
operator==. Those passing full=pattern.GetDirectory() have been changed
to use FileSpec::Match.
There was also a handful of places which hardcoded full=false. I've
changed these to use FileSpec::Match too. This is a slight change in
semantics, but it does not look like that was ever intended, and it was
more likely a result of a misunderstanding of the "proper" way to use
FileSpec::Equal.
[In an ideal world a "FileSpec" and a "FileSpec pattern" would be two
different types, but given how widespread FileSpec is, it is unlikely
we'll get there in one go. This at least provides a good starting point
by centralizing all matching behavior.]
Reviewers: teemperor, JDevlieghere, jdoerfert
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70851
ParseChildMembers does a few things, only one part is actually parsing a single
member. This extracts the member parsing logic into its own function.
This commit just moves the code as-is into its own function and forwards the parameters/
local variables to it, which means it should be NFC.
The only actual changes to the code are replacing 'break's (and one very curious 'continue'
that behaves like a 'break') with 'return's.
Summary: This should allow further simplifications, but it's a first step.
Reviewers: teemperor, jingham, friss
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70983
The naming used by editline for the history operations is counter
intuitive to how it's used in lldb for the REPL.
- The H_PREV operation returns the previous element in the history,
which is newer than the current one.
- The H_NEXT operation returns the next element in the history, which
is older than the current one.
This exposed itself as a bug in the REPL where the behavior of up- and
down-arrow was inverted. This wasn't immediately obvious because of how
we save the current "live" entry.
This patch fixes the bug and introduces and enum to wrap the editline
operations that match the semantics of lldb.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70932
To ensure a reproducer works correctly, the version of LLDB used for
capture and replay must match. Right now the reproducer already contains
the LLDB version. However, this is purely informative. LLDB will happily
replay a reproducer generated with a different version of LLDB, which
can cause subtle differences.
This patch adds a version check which compares the current LLDB version
with the one in the reproducer. If the version doesn't match, LLDB will
refuse to replay. It also adds an escape hatch to make it possible to
still replay the reproducer without having to mess with the recorded
version. This might prove useful when you know two versions of LLDB
match, even though the version string doesn't. This behavior is
triggered by passing a new flag -reproducer-skip-version-check to the
lldb driver.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70934
Summary:
The IOHandler class source file is currently around 4600 LOC. However only 200
of these lines are concerned with the actual IOHandler class and the rest are the
implementations for Editline, IOHandlerConfirm and the Curses interface. All these
large features also cause that the IOHandler (which is in Core) has a large set of dependencies
on other parts of LLDB.
This patch splits out the code for the curses interface into its own file. This way
the simple IOHandler code is no longer buried in-between much larger functionalities.
Next up is splitting out the other IOHandlers into their own files and then move them
to more appropriate parts of LLDB.
Reviewers: labath, clayborg, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70946
This code was just creating a new SymbolContextList with any found functions
in the front and orders them by how close they are to the current frame.
This refactors this code into its own function to make this more obvious.
Doesn't do any other changes to the code, so this is NFC.
I assumed this was just a single typo, but it seems we actually have
a whole bunch of tabs in this file which cause Python to complain
about mixing tabs and spaces.
Mixing tabs and spaces makes Python exit with this error:
File "llvm/lldb/packages/Python/lldbsuite/test/functionalities/return-value/TestReturnValue.py", line 23
return (self.getArchitecture() == "aarch64" and self.getPlatform() == "linux")
^
TabError: inconsistent use of tabs and spaces in indentation
Summary:
Previously the ABI plugin exposed some "register infos" and the
gdb-remote code used those to fill in the missing bits. Now, the
"filling in" code is in the ABI plugin itself, and the gdb-remote code
just invokes that.
The motivation for this is two-fold:
a) the "augmentation" logic is useful outside of process gdb-remote. For
instance, it would allow us to avoid repeating the register number
definitions in minidump code.
b) It gives more implementation freedom to the ABI classes. Now that
these "register infos" are essentially implementation details, classes
can use other methods to obtain dwarf/eh_frame register numbers -- for
instance they can consult llvm MC layer.
Since the augmentation code was not currently tested anywhere, I took
the opportunity to create a simple test for it.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, clayborg, tatyana-krasnukha
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70906
The idea is to remove front-end analysis for the parameter's value
modification and leave it to the value tracking system. Front-end in some
cases marks a parameter as modified even the line of code that modifies the
parameter gets optimized, that implies that this will cover more entry
values even. In addition, extending the support for modified parameters
will be easier with this approach.
Since the goal is to recognize if a parameter’s value has changed, the idea
at very high level is: If we encounter a DBG_VALUE other than the entry
value one describing the same variable (parameter), we can assume that the
variable’s value has changed and we should not track its entry value any
more. That would be ideal scenario, but due to various LLVM optimizations,
a variable’s value could be just moved around from one register to another
(and there will be additional DBG_VALUEs describing the same variable), so
we have to recognize such situation (otherwise, we will lose a lot of entry
values) and salvage the debug entry value.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68209