settings set use-color [false|true]
settings set prompt "${ansi.bold}${ansi.fg.green}(lldb)${ansi.normal} "
also "--no-use-colors" on the command prompt
llvm-svn: 182609
The "lldb" driver was interfering with STDOUT and STDERR if the output was over 1024 charcters long. The output was grabbing 1024 characters at a time, before it output the characters, it was writing characters to the screen to clear the current line. This has been fixed.
I also fixed the command interpreter from mixing the "(lldb) " prompt in with program output by always manually checking for program output. This was done by having the command interpreter know when it is in the middle of executing a command by setting a bool. This was needed since sometimes when a command would run the target, like with a command like 'expression (int)printf("hello\n")', the process would push a new input reader, and then pop it when it was done. This popping of the input reader would cause the command interpreter to get sent a reactivated message (from the private process state thread) and cause it to ask for another command, even though we were still in the middle of the command ('expression (int)printf("hello\n")'). Now we set a bool to true, run the command and set the bool to false. If we get reactivated while we are in the middle of a command, we don't say we are ready for a new command. This coupled with emitting the STDOUT/STDERR first after each command, followed by the command results, followed by then saying we are ready for a new command, should help cleanup the command line output on all platforms.
llvm-svn: 181807
LLDB now can use a single dash for all long options for all commands form the command line and from the command interpreter. This involved just switching all calls from getopt_long() to getopt_long_only().
llvm-svn: 178789
hitting auto-continue signals while running a thread plan would cause us to lose control of the debug
session.
<rdar://problem/12993641>
llvm-svn: 174793
This should be more consistent with the notion of command success/failure and avoids spewing warnings that the user might not care about
There will need to be an option to specify the level of verbosity desired (never show anything, only show failures, errors and warning, everything)
llvm-svn: 170167
Fixing an issue where errors in command files sourced as arguments to command-line lldb (e.g. ./lldb -s foo.cmd) would not be shown to the user
llvm-svn: 170146
Cleaned up the option parsing code to always pass around the short options as integers. Previously we cast this down to "char" and lost some information. I recently added an assert that would detect duplicate short character options which was firing during the test suite.
This fix does the following:
- make sure all short options are treated as "int"
- make sure that short options can be non-printable values when a short option is not required or when an option group is mixed into many commands and a short option is not desired
- fix the help printing to "do the right thing" in all cases. Previously if there were duplicate short character options, it would just not emit help for the duplicates
- fix option parsing when there are duplicates to parse options correctly. Previously the option parsing, when done for an OptionGroup, would just start parsing options incorrectly by omitting table entries and it would end up setting the wrong option value
llvm-svn: 169189
Then make the Thread a Broadcaster, and get it to broadcast when the selected frame is changed (but only from the Command Line) and when Thread::ReturnFromFrame
changes the stack.
Made the Driver use this notification to print the new thread status rather than doing it in the command.
Fixed a few places where people were setting their broadcaster class by hand rather than using the static broadcaster class call.
<rdar://problem/12383087>
llvm-svn: 165640
Add an lldb command line option to specify a core file: --core/-c.
For consistency, change the "target create" command to also use --core.
llvm-svn: 161993
Convert from calling Halt in the lldb Driver.cpp's input reader's sigint handler to sending this AsyncInterrupt so it can be handled in the
event loop.
If you are attaching and get an async interrupt, abort the attach attempt.
Also remember to destroy the process if get interrupted while attaching.
Getting this to work also required handing the eBroadcastBitInterrupt in a few more places in Process WaitForEvent & friends.
<rdar://problem/10792425>
llvm-svn: 160903
Just call SBDebugger::SetTerminalWidth on the driver's SBDebugger, which does the same job, but no locks.
Also add the value checking to SetTerminalWidth you get with SetInternalVariable(..., "term-width", ...).
rdar://problem/11310563
llvm-svn: 155665
Added the ability to override command line commands. In some cases GUI interfaces
might want to intercept commands like "quit" or "process launch" (which might cause
the process to re-run). They can now do so by overriding/intercepting commands
by using functions added to SBCommandInterpreter using a callback function. If the
callback function returns true, the command is assumed to be handled. If false
is returned the command should be evaluated normally.
Adopted this up in the Driver.cpp for intercepting the "quit" command.
llvm-svn: 151708
instances to not pthread_cancel the read threads and wreak havoc on the mutex
in our ConnectionFileDescriptor class.
Also cleaned up some shutdown delays.
llvm-svn: 149355
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
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