Commit Graph

58 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Enrico Granata fcb37ae365 <rdar://problem/15182550>
Removing Host/Atomic.h
This header file was not being copied as part of our public API headers and this in turn was causing any plugin to link against LLDB.framework, since SharingPtr.h depends on it

Out of several possible options to fix this issue, the cleanest one is to revert LLDB to use std::atomic<>, as we are a C++11 project and should take advantage of it

The original rationale for going from std::atomic to Host/Atomic.h was that MSVC++ fails to link in CLR mode when std::atomic is used
This is a very Visual Studio/.net specific issue, which hopefully will be fixed
Until them, to allow Windows development to proceed, we are going with a targeted solution where we #ifdef include the Windows specific calls, and let everyone else use the
proper atomic support, as should be

If there is an unavoidable need for a LLDB-specific atomic header, the right way to go at it would be to make an API/lldb-atomic.h header and #ifdef the Windows dependency there

The FormatManager should not need to conditionalize use of std::atomic<>, as other parts of the LLDB internals are successfully using atomic (Address and IRExecutionUnit), so this
Win-specific hack is limited to SharingPtr

llvm-svn: 192993
2013-10-18 18:57:49 +00:00
Joerg Sonnenberger 340a17595e Convert to UNIX line endings.
llvm-svn: 191367
2013-09-25 10:37:32 +00:00
Virgile Bello f792acb20f Use <atomic> instead of "llvm/Support/Atomic.h". Removed unused RefCounter class.
llvm-svn: 190062
2013-09-05 16:38:02 +00:00
Daniel Malea e0f8f574c7 merge lldb-platform-work branch (and assorted fixes) into trunk
Summary:
    This merge brings in the improved 'platform' command that knows how to
    interface with remote machines; that is, query OS/kernel information, push
    and pull files, run shell commands, etc... and implementation for the new
    communication packets that back that interface, at least on Darwin based
    operating systems via the POSIXPlatform class. Linux support is coming soon.

    Verified the test suite runs cleanly on Linux (x86_64), build OK on Mac OS
    X Mountain Lion.

    Additional improvements (not in the source SVN branch 'lldb-platform-work'):
    - cmake build scripts for lldb-platform
    - cleanup test suite
    - documentation stub for qPlatform_RunCommand
    - use log class instead of printf() directly
    - reverted work-in-progress-looking changes from test/types/TestAbstract.py that work towards running the test suite remotely.
    - add new logging category 'platform'

    Reviewers: Matt Kopec, Greg Clayton

    Review: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1493

llvm-svn: 189295
2013-08-26 23:57:52 +00:00
Virgile Bello b2f1fb2943 MingW compilation (windows). Includes various refactoring to improve portability.
llvm-svn: 189107
2013-08-23 12:44:05 +00:00
Michael Sartain 9eb4cc6266 Add new files to CMakeLists.txt to fix cmake build error.
llvm-svn: 184143
2013-06-17 23:07:22 +00:00
Enrico Granata 7594f14f7d <rdar://problem/14134716>
This is a rewrite of the command history facility of LLDB

It takes the history management out of the CommandInterpreter into its own CommandHistory class
It reimplements the command history command to allow more combinations of options to work correctly (e.g. com hist -c 1 -s 5)
It adds a new --wipe (-w) option to command history to allow clearing the history on demand
It extends the lldbtest runCmd: and expect: methods to allow adding commands to history if need be
It adds a test case for the reimplemented facility

llvm-svn: 184140
2013-06-17 22:51:50 +00:00
Greg Clayton 8cda7f0830 Added a test case that verifies that LLDB can debug across a process exec'ing itself into a new program. This currently is only enabled for Darwin since we exec from 64 bit to 32 bit and vice versa for 'x86_64' targets.
This can easily be adapted for linux and other platforms, but I didn't want to break any buildbots by assuming it will work.

llvm-svn: 182428
2013-05-21 21:55:59 +00:00
Filipe Cabecinhas 10a7a59871 More CMake fixes for OS X.
llvm-svn: 180243
2013-04-25 01:36:53 +00:00
Filipe Cabecinhas b3e795855d Make KQueue import the header in the correct path.
llvm-svn: 179795
2013-04-18 20:58:20 +00:00
Daniel Malea ffeb4b605a Fix build on Linux
- add a workaround header to define uuid_t on platforms that need it
- unbreak remote debugging of mac os x apps

llvm-svn: 179710
2013-04-17 19:24:22 +00:00
Jason Molenda 1ad66dbae4 Various fixes for armv7 floating point/vector register support.
Drop the old f registers from debugserver's register list.  Add the
NEON 128-bit q registers to debugserver, support reading and writing.
Add the new contains / invalidates mappings for the s, d, and q 
registers so lldb will know what registers overlay what other registers.
Change the default format of s and d registers to be floating point
instead of hex.  Remove some UTF-8 hyphen chars in comments in the ARM
register number definition headers.  
<rdar://problem/13121797> 

llvm-svn: 176915
2013-03-13 00:14:30 +00:00
Daniel Malea b29cf48e56 Update CMake lists of sources to include files added in r175787 and r175323
llvm-svn: 175797
2013-02-21 21:16:52 +00:00
Daniel Malea 23720cc66c Adding CMake build system to LLDB. Some known issues remain:
- generate-vers.pl has to be called by cmake to generate the version number
- parallel builds not yet supported; dependency on clang must be explicitly specified

Tested on Linux.
- Building on Mac will require code-signing logic to be implemented.
- Building on Windows will require OS-detection logic and some selective directory inclusion

Thanks to Carlo Kok (who originally prepared these CMakefiles for Windows) and Ben Langmuir
who ported them to Linux!

llvm-svn: 175795
2013-02-21 20:58:22 +00:00
Greg Clayton e48310dc6b Added a kqueue class which isn't being used yet, but was part of trying to work around the limitations with the unix select() call and how it is limited to FD_SETSIZE file descriptors.
Also added a TimeSpecTimeout class which can be used with any calls that take a "struct timespec *" as an argument. It is used by the KQueue class.

Also updated some project settings.

llvm-svn: 175377
2013-02-16 22:46:58 +00:00
Filipe Cabecinhas 2f4ed2a8df Only enable RTTI for cxa_demangle.cpp
If testing on Linux+clang proves it needs RTTI, wa can remove the
conditionals.

llvm-svn: 175242
2013-02-15 02:36:40 +00:00
Greg Clayton c7bece56fa <rdar://problem/13069948>
Major fixed to allow reading files that are over 4GB. The main problems were that the DataExtractor was using 32 bit offsets as a data cursor, and since we mmap all of our object files we could run into cases where if we had a very large core file that was over 4GB, we were running into the 4GB boundary.

So I defined a new "lldb::offset_t" which should be used for all file offsets.

After making this change, I enabled warnings for data loss and for enexpected implicit conversions temporarily and found a ton of things that I fixed.

Any functions that take an index internally, should use "size_t" for any indexes and also should return "size_t" for any sizes of collections.

llvm-svn: 173463
2013-01-25 18:06:21 +00:00
Daniel Malea 48b917bceb Enable RTTI for liblldbCore.a when GCC is the compiler
- gcc does not like -fno-rtti mixed with dynamic_cast<> (in cxa_demangle.cpp)

llvm-svn: 169767
2012-12-10 21:05:57 +00:00
Daniel Malea a85e6b6c32 Fix a few more clang (3.2) warnings on Linux:
- remove unused members
- add NO_PEDANTIC to selected Makefiles
- fix return values (removed NULL as needed)
- disable warning about four-char-constants
- remove unneeded const from operator*() declaration
- add missing lambda function return types
- fix printf() with no format string
- change sizeof to use a type name instead of variable name
- fix Linux ProcessMonitor.cpp to be 32/64 bit friendly
- disable warnings emitted by swig-generated C++ code

Patch by Matt Kopec!

llvm-svn: 169645
2012-12-07 22:21:08 +00:00
Greg Clayton 3852b3e189 <rdar://problem/12398225>
Improve performance of StringExtractor::GetHexS8().

llvm-svn: 164852
2012-09-28 21:51:54 +00:00
Greg Clayton 7b70be3970 Removed redundant isxdigit checks and added the ability to GetHexU8() so it can extract an 8 bit hex value if one is available. It will set EOF if "set_eof_on_fail" is true or if out of data. This allows a string decoder to grab a string without losing the last part of the packet with a packet like "414243,abc" (it can extract "ABC" and leave the file position set to the comma).
llvm-svn: 154239
2012-04-07 00:42:53 +00:00
Johnny Chen e979eda7e0 rdar://problem/10652076
Initial step -- infrastructure change -- to fix the bug.  Change the RegisterInfo data structure
to contain two additional fields (uint32_t *value_rges and uint32_t *invalidate_regs) to facilitate
architectures which have register mapping.

Update all existing RegsiterInfo arrays to have two extra NULL's (the additional fields) in each row,
GDBRemoteRegisterContext.cpp is modified to add d0-d15 and q0-q15 register info entries which take
advantage of the value_regs field to specify the containment relationship:

d0 -> (s0, s1)
...
d15 -> (s30, s31)
q0 -> (d0, d1)
...
q15 -> (d30, d31)

llvm-svn: 151686
2012-02-29 01:07:59 +00:00
Greg Clayton 29ad7b914f Added a ModuleList::Destroy() method which will reclaim the std::vector
memory by doing a swap.

Also added a few utilty functions that can be enabled for debugging issues
with modules staying around too long when external clients still have references
to them.

llvm-svn: 149138
2012-01-27 18:45:39 +00:00
Greg Clayton bdf3a01bb0 Allow a way to track all allocations for our intrusive ref counted pointers.
It is disabled by default, but can be enabled to track down shared pointer 
cycles.

llvm-svn: 148461
2012-01-19 04:44:00 +00:00
Greg Clayton 4d122c4009 Adopt the intrusive pointers in:
lldb_private::Breakpoint
lldb_private::BreakpointLocations
lldb_private::BreakpointSite
lldb_private::Debugger
lldb_private::StackFrame
lldb_private::Thread
lldb_private::Target

llvm-svn: 139985
2011-09-17 08:33:22 +00:00
Greg Clayton 747bcb03d2 Convert lldb::ModuleSP to use an instrusive ref counted pointer.
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
2011-09-17 06:21:20 +00:00
Greg Clayton a63d08c9ff Modified the LocateMacOSXFilesUsingDebugSymbols(...) function to locate
an executable file if it is right next to a dSYM file that is found using
DebugSymbols. The code also looks into a bundle if the dSYM file is right
next to a bundle.

Modified the MacOSX kernel dynamic loader plug-in to correctly set the load
address for kext sections. This is a tad tricky because of how LLDB chooses
to treat mach-o segments with no name. Also modified the loader to properly
handle the older version 1 kext summary info.

Fixed a crasher in the Mach-o object file parser when it is trying to set
the section size correctly for dSYM sections.

Added packet dumpers to the CommunicationKDP class. We now also properly 
detect address byte sizes based on the cpu type and subtype that is provided.
Added a read memory and read register support to CommunicationKDP. Added a
ThreadKDP class that now uses subclasses of the RegisterContextDarwin_XXX for
arm, i386 and x86_64. 

Fixed some register numbering issues in the RegisterContextDarwin_arm class
and added ARM GDB numbers to the ARM_GCC_Registers.h file.

Change the RegisterContextMach_XXX classes over to subclassing their
RegisterContextDarwin_XXX counterparts so we can share the mach register 
contexts between the user and kernel plug-ins.

llvm-svn: 135466
2011-07-19 03:57:15 +00:00
Enrico Granata 79dce0a66e fixing missing RefCounter class
llvm-svn: 135012
2011-07-13 00:00:57 +00:00
Johnny Chen c18a538646 API fix and missing headers.
Host.cpp was missing Error.h and the implementation of
LaunchProcess. Once againg I have added a "fake" implementation
waiting for a real one.

Fixed the call GetAddressRange to reflect the new interface in
DynamicLoaderLinuxDYLD.cpp.

Added string.h to ARM_DWARF_Registers.cpp that is needed for ::memset.

Signed-off-by: Johnny Chen <johnny.chen@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 131695
2011-05-19 23:07:19 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 6a94e50448 #include <string.h> for memset
llvm-svn: 131648
2011-05-19 17:34:51 +00:00
Greg Clayton 79ea878bf9 Got the EmulateInstruction CFI code a lot closer to producing CFI data.
Switch the EmulateInstruction to use the standard RegisterInfo structure
that is defined in the lldb private types intead of passing the reg kind and
reg num everywhere. EmulateInstruction subclasses also need to provide
RegisterInfo structs given a reg kind and reg num. This eliminates the need
for the GetRegisterName() virtual function and allows more complete information
to be passed around in the read/write register callbacks. Subclasses should
always provide RegiterInfo structs with the generic register info filled in as
well as at least one kind of register number in the RegisterInfo.kinds[] array.

llvm-svn: 130256
2011-04-26 23:48:45 +00:00
Greg Clayton 2ed751bd47 Changed the emulate instruction function to take emulate options which
are defined as enumerations. Current bits include:

        eEmulateInstructionOptionAutoAdvancePC
        eEmulateInstructionOptionIgnoreConditions

Modified the EmulateInstruction class to have a few more pure virtuals that
can help clients understand how many instructions the emulator can handle:

        virtual bool
        SupportsEmulatingIntructionsOfType (InstructionType inst_type) = 0;


Where instruction types are defined as:

//------------------------------------------------------------------
/// Instruction types
//------------------------------------------------------------------    
typedef enum InstructionType
{
    eInstructionTypeAny,                // Support for any instructions at all (at least one)
    eInstructionTypePrologueEpilogue,   // All prologue and epilogue instructons that push and pop register values and modify sp/fp
    eInstructionTypePCModifying,        // Any instruction that modifies the program counter/instruction pointer
    eInstructionTypeAll                 // All instructions of any kind

}  InstructionType;


This allows use to tell what an emulator can do and also allows us to request
these abilities when we are finding the plug-in interface.

Added the ability for an EmulateInstruction class to get the register names
for any registers that are part of the emulation. This helps with being able
to dump and log effectively.

The UnwindAssembly class now stores the architecture it was created with in
case it is needed later in the unwinding process.

Added a function that can tell us DWARF register names for ARM that goes
along with the source/Utility/ARM_DWARF_Registers.h file: 

        source/Utility/ARM_DWARF_Registers.c
        
Took some of plug-ins out of the lldb_private namespace.

llvm-svn: 130189
2011-04-26 04:39:08 +00:00
Greg Clayton dc5eb693bd Put plug-ins into the correct directories as they were incorrectly located
in a Utility directory.

llvm-svn: 130135
2011-04-25 18:36:36 +00:00
Greg Clayton 8b82f087a0 Moved the execution context that was in the Debugger into
the CommandInterpreter where it was always being used.

Make sure that Modules can track their object file offsets correctly to
allow opening of sub object files (like the "__commpage" on darwin).

Modified the Platforms to be able to launch processes. The first part of this
move is the platform soon will become the entity that launches your program
and when it does, it uses a new ProcessLaunchInfo class which encapsulates
all process launching settings. This simplifies the internal APIs needed for
launching. I want to slowly phase out process launching from the process
classes, so for now we can still launch just as we used to, but eventually
the platform is the object that should do the launching.

Modified the Host::LaunchProcess in the MacOSX Host.mm to correctly be able
to launch processes with all of the new eLaunchFlag settings. Modified any
code that was manually launching processes to use the Host::LaunchProcess
functions.

Fixed an issue where lldb_private::Args had implicitly defined copy 
constructors that could do the wrong thing. This has now been fixed by adding
an appropriate copy constructor and assignment operator.

Make sure we don't add empty ModuleSP entries to a module list.

Fixed the commpage module creation on MacOSX, but we still need to train
the MacOSX dynamic loader to not get rid of it when it doesn't have an entry
in the all image infos.

Abstracted many more calls from in ProcessGDBRemote down into the 
GDBRemoteCommunicationClient subclass to make the classes cleaner and more
efficient.

Fixed the default iOS ARM register context to be correct and also added support
for targets that don't support the qThreadStopInfo packet by selecting the
current thread (only if needed) and then sending a stop reply packet.

Debugserver can now start up with a --unix-socket (-u for short) and can 
then bind to port zero and send the port it bound to to a listening process
on the other end. This allows the GDB remote platform to spawn new GDB server
instances (debugserver) to allow platform debugging.

llvm-svn: 129351
2011-04-12 05:54:46 +00:00
Stephen Wilson 78709173d2 Add a missing header
strtoul() is defined in stdlib.h and the header was missing in
StringExtractor.cpp.

Patch by Marco Minutoli!

llvm-svn: 129070
2011-04-07 10:20:23 +00:00
Greg Clayton 9b1e1cdf23 Added a speed test to the GDBRemoteCommunicationClient and
GDBRemoteCommunicationServer classes. This involved adding a new packet
named "qSpeedTest" which can test the speed of a packet send/response pairs
using a wide variety of send/recv packet sizes.

Added a few new connection classes: one for shared memory, and one for using
mach messages (Apple only). The mach message stuff is experimental and not 
working yet, but added so I don't lose the code. The shared memory stuff
uses pretty standard calls to setup shared memory.

llvm-svn: 128837
2011-04-04 18:18:57 +00:00
Greg Clayton 32e0a7509c Many improvements to the Platform base class and subclasses. The base Platform
class now implements the Host functionality for a lot of things that make 
sense by default so that subclasses can check:

int
PlatformSubclass::Foo ()
{
    if (IsHost())
        return Platform::Foo (); // Let the platform base class do the host specific stuff
    
    // Platform subclass specific code...
    int result = ...
    return result;
}

Added new functions to the platform:

    virtual const char *Platform::GetUserName (uint32_t uid);
    virtual const char *Platform::GetGroupName (uint32_t gid);

The user and group names are cached locally so that remote platforms can avoid
sending packets multiple times to resolve this information.

Added the parent process ID to the ProcessInfo class. 

Added a new ProcessInfoMatch class which helps us to match processes up
and changed the Host layer over to using this new class. The new class allows
us to search for processs:
1 - by name (equal to, starts with, ends with, contains, and regex)
2 - by pid
3 - And further check for parent pid == value, uid == value, gid == value, 
    euid == value, egid == value, arch == value, parent == value.
    
This is all hookup up to the "platform process list" command which required
adding dumping routines to dump process information. If the Host class 
implements the process lookup routines, you can now lists processes on 
your local machine:

machine1.foo.com % lldb
(lldb) platform process list 
PID    PARENT USER       GROUP      EFF USER   EFF GROUP  TRIPLE                   NAME
====== ====== ========== ========== ========== ========== ======================== ============================
99538  1      username   usergroup  username   usergroup  x86_64-apple-darwin      FileMerge
94943  1      username   usergroup  username   usergroup  x86_64-apple-darwin      mdworker
94852  244    username   usergroup  username   usergroup  x86_64-apple-darwin      Safari
94727  244    username   usergroup  username   usergroup  x86_64-apple-darwin      Xcode
92742  92710  username   usergroup  username   usergroup  i386-apple-darwin        debugserver


This of course also works remotely with the lldb-platform:

machine1.foo.com % lldb-platform --listen 1234

machine2.foo.com % lldb
(lldb) platform create remote-macosx
  Platform: remote-macosx
 Connected: no
(lldb) platform connect connect://localhost:1444
  Platform: remote-macosx
    Triple: x86_64-apple-darwin
OS Version: 10.6.7 (10J869)
    Kernel: Darwin Kernel Version 10.7.0: Sat Jan 29 15:17:16 PST 2011; root:xnu-1504.9.37~1/RELEASE_I386
  Hostname: machine1.foo.com
 Connected: yes
(lldb) platform process list 
PID    PARENT USER       GROUP      EFF USER   EFF GROUP  TRIPLE                   NAME
====== ====== ========== ========== ========== ========== ======================== ============================
99556  244    username   usergroup  username   usergroup  x86_64-apple-darwin      trustevaluation
99548  65539  username   usergroup  username   usergroup  x86_64-apple-darwin      lldb
99538  1      username   usergroup  username   usergroup  x86_64-apple-darwin      FileMerge
94943  1      username   usergroup  username   usergroup  x86_64-apple-darwin      mdworker
94852  244    username   usergroup  username   usergroup  x86_64-apple-darwin      Safari

The lldb-platform implements everything with the Host:: layer, so this should
"just work" for linux. I will probably be adding more stuff to the Host layer
for launching processes and attaching to processes so that this support should
eventually just work as well.

Modified the target to be able to be created with an architecture that differs
from the main executable. This is needed for iOS debugging since we can have
an "armv6" binary which can run on an "armv7" machine, so we want to be able
to do:

% lldb
(lldb) platform create remote-ios
(lldb) file --arch armv7 a.out

Where "a.out" is an armv6 executable. The platform then can correctly decide
to open all "armv7" images for all dependent shared libraries.

Modified the disassembly to show the current PC value. Example output:

(lldb) disassemble --frame
a.out`main:
   0x1eb7:  pushl  %ebp
   0x1eb8:  movl   %esp, %ebp
   0x1eba:  pushl  %ebx
   0x1ebb:  subl   $20, %esp
   0x1ebe:  calll  0x1ec3                   ; main + 12 at test.c:18
   0x1ec3:  popl   %ebx
-> 0x1ec4:  calll  0x1f12                   ; getpid
   0x1ec9:  movl   %eax, 4(%esp)
   0x1ecd:  leal   199(%ebx), %eax
   0x1ed3:  movl   %eax, (%esp)
   0x1ed6:  calll  0x1f18                   ; printf
   0x1edb:  leal   213(%ebx), %eax
   0x1ee1:  movl   %eax, (%esp)
   0x1ee4:  calll  0x1f1e                   ; puts
   0x1ee9:  calll  0x1f0c                   ; getchar
   0x1eee:  movl   $20, (%esp)
   0x1ef5:  calll  0x1e6a                   ; sleep_loop at test.c:6
   0x1efa:  movl   $12, %eax
   0x1eff:  addl   $20, %esp
   0x1f02:  popl   %ebx
   0x1f03:  leave
   0x1f04:  ret
   
This can be handy when dealing with the new --line options that was recently
added:

(lldb) disassemble --line
a.out`main + 13 at test.c:19
   18  	{
-> 19  		printf("Process: %i\n\n", getpid());
   20  	    puts("Press any key to continue..."); getchar();
-> 0x1ec4:  calll  0x1f12                   ; getpid
   0x1ec9:  movl   %eax, 4(%esp)
   0x1ecd:  leal   199(%ebx), %eax
   0x1ed3:  movl   %eax, (%esp)
   0x1ed6:  calll  0x1f18                   ; printf

Modified the ModuleList to have a lookup based solely on a UUID. Since the
UUID is typically the MD5 checksum of a binary image, there is no need
to give the path and architecture when searching for a pre-existing
image in an image list.

Now that we support remote debugging a bit better, our lldb_private::Module
needs to be able to track what the original path for file was as the platform
knows it, as well as where the file is locally. The module has the two 
following functions to retrieve both paths:

const FileSpec &Module::GetFileSpec () const;
const FileSpec &Module::GetPlatformFileSpec () const;

llvm-svn: 128563
2011-03-30 18:16:51 +00:00
Greg Clayton 1cb6496eb0 Did a lot more work on abtracting and organizing the platforms.
On Mac OS X we now have 3 platforms:
PlatformDarwin - must be subclassed to fill in the missing pure virtual funcs
                 but this implements all the common functionality between
                 remote-macosx and remote-ios. It also allows for another
                 platform to be used (remote-gdb-server for now) when doing
                 remote connections. Keeping this pluggable will allow for
                 flexibility.
PlatformMacOSX - Now implements both local and remote macosx desktop platforms.
PlatformRemoteiOS - Remote only iOS that knows how to locate SDK files in the
                    cached SDK locations on the host.

A new agnostic platform has been created:
PlatformRemoteGDBServer - this implements the platform using the GDB remote 
                          protocol and uses the built in lldb_private::Host
                          static functions to implement many queries.

llvm-svn: 128193
2011-03-24 04:28:38 +00:00
Stephen Wilson ad65c0511f Add a missing include needed on Linux and remove a trailing comma.
llvm-svn: 128134
2011-03-23 02:02:29 +00:00
Greg Clayton d314e810a7 Added new platform commands:
platform connect <args>
platform disconnect

Each platform can decide the args they want to use for "platform connect". I 
will need to add a function that gets the connect options for the current
platform as each one can have different options and argument counts.

Hooked up more functionality in the PlatformMacOSX and PlatformRemoteiOS.
Also started an platform agnostic PlatformRemoteGDBServer.cpp which can end
up being used by one or more actual platforms. It can also be specialized and
allow for platform specific commands.

llvm-svn: 128123
2011-03-23 00:09:55 +00:00
Greg Clayton 576d8834fe Split the GDBRemoteCommunication class into three classes:
GDBRemoteCommunication - The base GDB remote communication class
GDBRemoteCommunicationClient - designed to be used for clients the connect to
                               a remote GDB server
GDBRemoteCommunicationServer - designed to be used on the server side of a
                               GDB server implementation.

llvm-svn: 128070
2011-03-22 04:00:09 +00:00
Greg Clayton 7133762232 Fixed CommandReturnObject::SetImmediateErrorFile() to set the correct stream.
Modifed lldb_private::Process to be able to handle connecting to a remote 
target that isn't running a process. This leaves lldb_private::Process in the
eStateConnected state from which we can then do an attach or launch.

Modified ProcessGDBRemote to be able to set stdin, stdout, stderr, working
dir, disable ASLR and a few other settings down by using new GDB remote 
packets. This allows us to keep all of our current launch flags and settings
intact and still be able to communicate them over to the remote GDB server.
Previously these were being sent as arguments to the debugserver binary that
we were spawning. Also modified ProcessGDBRemote to handle losing connection
to the remote GDB server and always exit immediately. We do this by watching
the lldb_private::Communication event bit for the read thread exiting in the
ProcessGDBRemote async thread.

Added support for many of the new 'Q' packets for setting stdin, stdout,
stderr, working dir and disable ASLR to the GDBRemoteCommunication class for
easy accesss.

Modified debugserver for all of the new 'Q' packets and also made it so that
debugserver always exists if it loses connection with the remote debugger.

llvm-svn: 126444
2011-02-24 22:24:29 +00:00
Greg Clayton e576ab2996 All UnwindPlan objects are now passed around as shared pointers.
ArchDefaultUnwindPlan plug-in interfaces are now cached per architecture 
instead of being leaked for every frame.

Split the ArchDefaultUnwindPlan_x86 into ArchDefaultUnwindPlan_x86_64 and
ArchDefaultUnwindPlan_i386 interfaces.

There were sporadic crashes that were due to something leaking or being 
destroyed when doing stack crawls. This patch should clear up these issues.

llvm-svn: 125541
2011-02-15 00:19:15 +00:00
Greg Clayton 000aeb89ae Patch from Kirk Beitz to make things compile on MinGW minus the putenv part.
llvm-svn: 125199
2011-02-09 17:41:27 +00:00
Greg Clayton c4e411ffc0 Thread safety changes in debugserver and also in the process GDB remote plugin.
I added support for asking if the GDB remote server supports thread suffixes
for packets that should be thread specific (register read/write packets) because
the way the GDB remote protocol does it right now is to have a notion of a
current thread for register and memory reads/writes (set via the "$Hg%x" packet)
and a current thread for running ("$Hc%x"). Now we ask the remote GDB server
if it supports adding the thread ID to the register packets and we enable
that feature in LLDB if supported. This stops us from having to send a bunch
of packets that update the current thread ID to some value which is prone to
error, or extra packets.

llvm-svn: 123762
2011-01-18 19:36:39 +00:00
Greg Clayton de9d0494ef Modified the stop reply packet to be able to send the thread name using the
new "hexname" key for the "key:value;" duple that is part of the packet. This
allows for thread names to contain special characters such as $ # : ; + -

Debugserver now detects if the thread name contains special characters and
sends the chars in hex format if needed.

llvm-svn: 123053
2011-01-08 03:17:57 +00:00
Johnny Chen 8c46c6fee1 Patch from Stephen Wilson:
Provide full qualification for #include's.

llvm-svn: 122274
2010-12-20 21:45:22 +00:00
Greg Clayton 5573fde342 Cleaned a few build related things up:
Added a virtual destructor to ClangUtilityFunction with a body to it cleans
itself up.

Moved our SharingPtr into the lldb_private namespace to keep it easy to make
an exports file that exports only what is needed ("lldb::*").

llvm-svn: 114771
2010-09-24 23:07:41 +00:00
Jason Molenda 0c7cc85649 Add a new ArchVolatileRegs plugin class to identify
whether a given register number is treated as volatile
or not for a given architecture/platform.

approx 450 lines of boilerplate, 50 lines of actual code. :)

llvm-svn: 114537
2010-09-22 07:37:07 +00:00
Jason Molenda fbcb7f2c4e The first part of an lldb native stack unwinder.
The Unwind and RegisterContext subclasses still need
to be finished; none of this code is used by lldb at
this point (unless you call into it by hand).

The ObjectFile class now has an UnwindTable object.

The UnwindTable object has a series of FuncUnwinders
objects (Function Unwinders) -- one for each function
in that ObjectFile we've backtraced through during this
debug session.

The FuncUnwinders object has a few different UnwindPlans.
UnwindPlans are a generic way of describing how to find
the canonical address of a given function's stack frame
(the CFA idea from DWARF/eh_frame) and how to restore the
caller frame's register values, if they have been saved
by this function.

UnwindPlans are created from different sources.  One source is the
eh_frame exception handling information generated by the compiler
for unwinding an exception throw.  Another source is an assembly
language inspection class (UnwindAssemblyProfiler, uses the Plugin
architecture) which looks at the instructions in the funciton
prologue and describes the stack movements/register saves that are
done.

Two additional types of UnwindPlans that are worth noting are
the "fast" stack UnwindPlan which is useful for making a first
pass over a thread's stack, determining how many stack frames there
are and retrieving the pc and CFA values for each frame (enough
to create StackFrameIDs).  Only a minimal set of registers is
recovered during a fast stack walk.  

The final UnwindPlan is an architectural default unwind plan.
These are provided by the ArchDefaultUnwindPlan class (which uses
the plugin architecture).  When no symbol/function address range can
be found for a given pc value -- when we have no eh_frame information
and when we don't have a start address so we can't examine the assembly
language instrucitons -- we have to make a best guess about how to 
unwind.  That's when we use the architectural default UnwindPlan.
On x86_64, this would be to assume that rbp is used as a stack pointer
and we can use that to find the caller's frame pointer and pc value.
It's a last-ditch best guess about how to unwind out of a frame.

There are heuristics about when to use one UnwindPlan versues the other --
this will all happen in the still-begin-written UnwindLLDB subclass of
Unwind which runs the UnwindPlans.

llvm-svn: 113581
2010-09-10 07:49:16 +00:00