Summary: Inspired by https://reviews.llvm.org/D74636, I'm introducing a basic version of Environment in the API. More functionalities can be added as needed.
Reviewers: labath, clayborg
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits, diazhector98
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76111
Summary:
If no custom launching is used, lldb-vscode launches a program with an empty environment by default. In some scenarios, the user might want to simply use the same environment as the IDE to have a set of working environment variables (e.g. PATH wouldn't be empty). In fact, most DAPs in VSCode have this behavior by default. In other cases the user definitely needs to set their custom environment, which is already supported. To make the first case easier for the user (e.g. not having to copy the PATH to the launch.json every time they want to debug simple programs that rely on PATH), a new option is now offered. inheritEnvironment will launch the program copying its own environment, and it's just a boolean flag.
{F11347695}
Reviewers: clayborg, aadsm, diazhector98, kusmour
Subscribers: labath, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74636
Summary:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D65363 introduced the launchCommands argument. However, it did not add
a corresponding definition in the package.json
Reviewers: clayborg, labath, kusmour, aadsm
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76529
The fourth field in the property struct is the default unsigned or enum
value for all types, except for Array and Dictionary types. For those,
it is the element type. During the tablegen conversion, this was
incorrectly translated to DefaultValueUnsigned with a value
corresponding to the OptionValue: enum type. So for
OptionValue::eTypeString this became DefaultUnsignedValue<16>. This
patch extends the tablegen backend to understand ElementType to express
this as ElementType<"String">.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76535
Summary: Inspired by https://reviews.llvm.org/D74636, I'm introducing a basic version of Environment in the API. More functionalities can be added as needed.
Reviewers: labath, clayborg
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits, diazhector98
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76111
Summary:
On Linux, when executing lldb-vscode on a remote machine, lldb-vscode doesn't die after the debug session ends. It keeps trying to read JSON input to no avail.
This diff indicates lldb-vscode to stop reading after a termination event has been processed.
Reviewers: clayborg, aadsm, kusmour
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76314
If LLDB attaches to an already running target, then structure SBAttachInfo is
used instead of SBLaunchInfo. lldb-vscode function request_attach sets some
values to g_vsc.launch_info, however this field is then not passed anywhere, so
this action has no effect. This commit removes invocation of
SBLaunchInfo::SetDetachOnError, which has no equivalent in SBAttachInfo.
File package.json doesn't describe detachOnError property for "attach" request
type, therefore it is not needed to update it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76351
Summary:
This patch improves step over performance for the case when we are
stepping over a call with a next-branch-breakpoint (see
https://reviews.llvm.org/D58678), and we encounter a stop during the
call. Currently, this causes the thread plan to step-out //each frame//
until it reaches the step-over range. This is a regression introduced by
https://reviews.llvm.org/D58678 (which did improve other things!). Prior
to that change, the step-over plan would always step-out just once.
With this patch, if we find ourselves stopped in a deeper stack frame
and we already have a next branch breakpoint, we simply return from the
step-over plan's ShouldStop handler without pushing the step out plan.
In my experiments this improved the time of stepping over a call that
loads 12 dlls from 14s to 5s. This was in remote debugging scenario with
10ms RTT, the call in question was Vulkan initialization
(vkCreateInstance), which loads various driver dlls. Loading those dlls
must stop on the rendezvous breakpoint, causing the perf problem
described above.
Reviewers: clayborg, labath, jingham
Reviewed By: jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76216
(This is D68010 but I also set the new parameter in LibStdcpp.cpp to fix
the Debian tests).
Summary:
Printing a summary for an empty NSPathStore2 string currently prints random bytes behind the empty string pointer from memory (rdar://55575888).
It seems the reason for this is that the SourceSize parameter in the `ReadStringAndDumpToStreamOptions` - which is supposed to contain the string
length - actually uses the length 0 as a magic value for saying "read as much as possible from the buffer" which is clearly wrong for empty strings.
This patch adds another flag that indicates if we have know the string length or not and makes this behaviour dependent on that (which seemingly
was the original purpose of this magic value).
Reviewers: aprantl, JDevlieghere, shafik
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: christof, abidh, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68010
Currently when an expression fails to parse and we have a FixIt, we keep
the failed UserExpression around while trying to parse the expression with
applied fixits. This means that we have this rather confusing control flow:
1. Original expression created and parsing attempted.
2. Expression with applied FixIts is created and parsing attempted.
3. Original expression is destroyed and parser deconstructed.
4. Expression with applied FixIts is destroyed and parser deconstructed.
This patch just deletes the original expression so that step 2 and 3 are
swapped and the whole process looks more like just sequentially parsing two
expressions (which is what we actually do here).
Doesn't fix anything just makes the code less fragile.
Summary:
TestInlineStepping tests LLDB's ability to step in the presence of
inline frames. The testcase source has a number of functions and some
of them are marked `always_inline`.
The test is built around the assumption that the inline function will
be fully represented once inlined, but this is not true with the
current arm64 code generation. For example:
void caller() {
always_inline_function(); // Step here
}
When stppeing into `caller()` above, you might immediatly end up in
the inlines frame for `always_inline_function()`, because there might
literally be no code associated with `caller()` itself.
This patch hacks around the issue by adding an `asm volatile("nop")`
on some lines with inlined calls where we expect to be able to
step. Like so:
void caller() {
asm volatile("nop"); always_inline_function(); // Step here
}
This guarantees there is always going to be one instruction for this
line in the caller.
Reviewers: labath, jingham
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, danielkiss, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76406
Summary:
TestBuiltinTrap fail on darwin embedded because the `__builin_trap`
builtin doesn't get any line info attached to it by clang when
building for arm64.
The test was already XFailed for linux arm(64), I presume for the same
reasons. This patch just XFails it independently of the platform.
Reviewers: labath
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, danielkiss, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76408
This reverts commit 939ca455e7.
This failed on the debian bot for some reason:
File "/home/worker/lldb-x86_64-debian/lldb-x86_64-debian/llvm-project/lldb/test/API/functionalities/data-formatter/data-formatter-stl/libstdcpp/string/TestDataFormatterStdString.py", line 67, in test_with_run_command
"s summary wrong")
AssertionError: 'L"hello world! מזל טוב!\\0!\\0!!!!\\0\\0A\\0\\U0000fffd\\U0000fffd\\U0000fffd\\ [truncated]... != 'L"hello world! מזל טוב!"'
Diff is 2156 characters long. Set self.maxDiff to None to see it. : s summary wrong
Summary:
Printing a summary for an empty NSPathStore2 string currently prints random bytes behind the empty string pointer from memory (rdar://55575888).
It seems the reason for this is that the SourceSize parameter in the `ReadStringAndDumpToStreamOptions` - which is supposed to contain the string
length - actually uses the length 0 as a magic value for saying "read as much as possible from the buffer" which is clearly wrong for empty strings.
This patch adds another flag that indicates if we have know the string length or not and makes this behaviour dependent on that (which seemingly
was the original purpose of this magic value).
Reviewers: aprantl, JDevlieghere, shafik
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: christof, abidh, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68010
This test was stripping a binary generated by Makefile.rules which is
potentially codesigned. Stripping invalidates the code signature, so
we might need to re-sign after stripping.
The test was stripping the binaries from the Python
code. Unfortunately, if running on darwin embedded in a context that
requires code signing, the stripping was invalidating the signature,
thus breaking the test.
This patch moves the stripping to the Makefile and resigns the
stripped binaries if required.
It was an inline test before. Clang stopped emitting line information
for the TLS initialization and the inline test didn't have a way to
break before it anymore.
This rewrites the test as a full-fldeged python test and improves the
checking of the error case to verify that the failure we are looking
for is related to the TLS setup not being complete.
The test checks that we correctly set the right number of breakpoints
when breaking into an `always_inline` function. The line of this
funstion selected for this test was the return statement, but with
recent compiler, this return statement doesn't necessarily exist after
inlining, even at O0.
Switch the breakpoint to a different line of the inline function.
Summary:
The memory history plugin for Asan creates a HistoryThread with the
recorded PC values provided by the Asan runtime. In other cases,
thoses PCs are gathered by LLDB directly.
The PCs returned by the Asan runtime are the PCs of the calls in the
backtrace, not the return addresses you would normally get when
unwinding the stack (look for a call to GetPreviousIntructionPc in
AsanGetStack).
When the above addresses are passed to the unwinder, it will subtract
1 from each address of the non zero frames because it treats them as
return addresses. This can lead to the final report referencing the
wrong line.
This patch fixes this issue by threading a flag through HistoryThread
and HistoryUnwinder that tells them to treat every frame like the
first one. The Asan MemoryHistory plugin can then use this flag.
This fixes running TestMemoryHistory on arm64 devices, although it's
hard to guarantee that the test will continue to exhibit the boundary
condition that triggers this bug.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, kubamracek
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, danielkiss, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76341
D63643 added these testfiles but some of the %t4dwo and %t5dwo builds
are the same as corresponding %t4 and %t5 builds. Fortunately the
testcases do PASS.
After just adding -gsplit-dwarf these both skeleton files:
tools/lldb/test/SymbolFile/DWARF/Output/debug-types-expressions.test.tmp4dwo
tools/lldb/test/SymbolFile/DWARF/Output/debug-types-expressions.test.tmp5dwo
were referencing to this one non-skeleton file:
tools/lldb/test/SymbolFile/DWARF/debug-types-expressions.dwo
Surprisingly it does not affect the other test debug-types-basic.test
probably because it compiles to .o and then links it. While
debug-types-expressions.test compiles directly to an executable.
So fixed that while keeping the direct executable compilation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76316
This patch changes the way the StackFrame Recognizers match a certain
frame.
Until now, recognizers could be registered with a function
name but also an alternate symbol.
This change is motivated by a test failure for the Assert frame
recognizer on Linux. Depending the version of the libc, the abort
function (triggered by an assertion), could have more than two
signatures (i.e. `raise`, `__GI_raise` and `gsignal`).
Instead of only checking the default symbol name and the alternate one,
lldb will iterate over a list of symbols to match against.
rdar://60386577
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76188
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
Make sure that `process` is not None before calling is_alive. Otherwise
this might result in an AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no
attribute 'is_alive'.
Although lldb.process and friends could already be None in the past, for
example after leaving an interactive scripting session, the issue became
more prevalent after `fc1fd6bf9fcfac412b10b4193805ec5de0e8df57`.
I audited the other interface files for usages of target, process,
thread and frame, but this seems the only place where a global is used
from an SB class.
The current implementation isn't very resilient when it comes to the
output of xcrun. Currently it cannot deal with:
- Trailing newlines.
- Leading newlines and errors/warnings before the Xcode path.
- Xcode not being named Xcode.app.
This extract the logic into a helper in PlatformDarwin and fixes those
issues. It's also the first step towards removing code duplication
between the different platforms and downstream Swift.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76261
Fix to get the AST we generate for function templates closer to what clang generates and expects.
We fix which FuntionDecl we are passing to CreateFunctionTemplateSpecializationInfo and we strip
template parameters from the name when creating the FunctionDecl and FunctionTemplateDecl.
These two fixes together fix asserts and ambiguous lookup issues for several cases which are added to the already existing small function template test.
This fixes issues with overloads, overloads and ADL, variadic function templates and templated operator overloads.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75761
The error_stream and result parameter were inconsistently checked for
being null, so we might as well make them references instead of crashing
in case someone passes a nullptr and hits one of the code paths that are
currently not doing a nullptr check on those parameters. Also change
output_stream for consistency.
I believe the actual opcode does not matter because the AVR architecture
is a Harvard architecture that does not support writing to program
memory. Therefore, debuggers and emulators provide hardware breakpoints.
But for some reason, this opcode must be defined or else LLDB will crash
with an assertion error.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74255
This was previously crashing due to a missing nullptr check (see
e2d8aa6bf7 ). This just adds a test that should
make sure this doesn't crash in case a user ends up in this strange setup.
The GDB replay server sanity-checks that every packet it receives
matches what it expects from the serialized packet log. This mechanism
tripped for TestReproducerAttach.py on Linux, because one of the packets
(jModulesInfo) uses run-length encoding. The replay server was comparing
the expanded incoming packet with the unexpanded packet in the log. As a
result, it claimed to have received an unexpected packet, which caused
the test to fail.
This patch addresses that issue by expanding the run-length encoding
before comparing the packets.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76163
The nullptr check here was removed in 4ef50a33b1
when I replaced (nearly) all log->Print to LLDB_LOG calls (which automatically
check for this stuff). But it seems this one call escaped my sed call.
Currently working on a test that can cover this code path but we can revert
this until I have found one.
Commit [1] added a declaration of function-member
StackFrame::BehavesLikeZerothFrame but hasn't added an implementation
for the function. This commit removes this declation, because the
function is not used anywhere.
[1] 31e6dbe1c6 Fix PC adjustment in StackFrame::GetSymbolContext
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75979
Patch by Anton Kolesov <Anton.Kolesov@synopsys.com>
Fix to code from https://reviews.llvm.org/D64993.
Field StackFrame::m_behaves_like_zeroth_frame was introduced in commit
[1], however that commit hasn't added a copying of the field to
UpdatePreviousFrameFromCurrentFrame, therefore the value wouldn't change
when updating frames to reflect the current situation.
The particular scenario, where this matters is following. Assume we have
function main that invokes function func1. We set breakpoint at
func1 entry and in main after the func1 call, and do not stop at
the main entry. Therefore, when debugger stops for the first time,
func1 is frame#0, while main is frame#1, thus
m_behaves_like_zeroth_frame is set to 0 for main frame. Execution is
resumed, and stops now in main, where it is now frame#0. However while
updating the frame object, m_behaves_like_zeroth_frame remains false.
This field plays an important role when calculating line information for
backtrace: for frame#0, PC is the current line, therefore line
information is retrieved for PC, however for all other frames this is
not the case - calculated PC is a return-PC, i.e. instruction after the
function call line, therefore for those frames LLDB needs to step back
by one instruction. Initial implementation did this strictly for frames
that have index != 0 (and index is updated properly in
UpdatePreviousFrameFromCurrentFrame), but m_behaves_like_zeroth_frame
added a capability for middle-of-stack frames to behave in a similar
manner. But because current code now doesn't check frame idx,
m_behaves_like_zeroth_frame must be set to true for frames with 0 index,
not only for frame that behave like one. In the described test case,
after stopping in main, LLDB would still consider frame#0 as
non-zeroth, and would subtract instruction from the PC, and would report
previous like as current line.
The error doesn't manifest itself in LLDB interpreter though - it can be
reproduced through LLDB-MI and when using SB API, but not when we
interpreter command "continue" is executed. Honestly, I didn't fully
understand why it works in interpreter, I did found that bug "fixes"
itself if I enable DEBUG_STACK_FRAMES in StackFrameList.cpp, because
that calls StackFrame::Dump and that calls
GetSymbolContext(eSymbolContextEverything), which fills the context of
frame on the first breakpoint, therefore it doesn't have to be
recalculated (improperly) on a second frame. However, on first
breakpoint symbol context is calculated for the "call" line, not the
next one, therefore it should be recalculated anyway on a second
breakpoint, and it is done correctly, even though
m_behaves_like_zeroth_frame is still incorrect, as long as
GetSymbolContext(eSymbolContextEverything) has been called.
[1] 31e6dbe1c6 Fix PC adjustment in StackFrame::GetSymbolContext
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75975
Patch by Anton Kolesov <Anton.Kolesov@synopsys.com>
Ideally we'd want all shebangs to be configurable, but that's not a
viable solution. Given that lldb-dotest is already configured, we might
as well make sure it uses the correct interpreter.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76167
This patch extends the reproducers to intercept calls to FindProcesses.
During capture it serializes the ProcessInstanceInfoList returned by the
API. During replay, it returns the serialized data instead of querying
the host.
The motivation for this patch is supporting the process attach workflow
during replay. Without this change it would incorrectly look for the
inferior on the host during replay and failing if no matching process
was found.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75877
Add YAML traits for ArchSpec and ProcessInstanceInfo so they can be
serialized for the reproducers.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76004
In addition to the commit rG352f16db87f583ec7f55f8028647b5fd8616111f,
this one fixes settings behavior on clearing - the setting should be
reverted to their default value, not an empty one.
Add YAML traits for the ConstString and FileSpec classes so they can be
serialized as part of ProcessInfo. The latter needs to be serializable
for the reproducers.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76002
Since D75537 the test suite clears all settings before a test. This caused
two tests to fail:
lldb-api :: functionalities/inline-stepping/TestInlineStepping.py
lldb-api :: lang/cpp/std-function-step-into-callable/TestStdFunctionStepIntoCallable.py
The reason for that is that OptionValueRegex::Clear was setting the regex
to empty instead of the default value that was passed initially. This caused
that the target.process.thread.step-avoid-regexp setting which is used in the
tests was set to "" instead of "^std::".
This patch is just a quick fix that sets the regex back to the original value
to make the tests pass.
In total these 3 setting values have changed with D75537 and also need to be
fixed (even though they don't seem to break any tests).
target.process.thread.step-avoid-regexp (regex) -> from '^std::' to empty string
platform.module-cache-directory (file) -> from "~/.lldb/module_cache" to empty string
script-lang (enum) -> from 'default' to 'python'
offset_t is unsigned, so if the RHS is signed we get a warning from clang:
warning: comparison of integers of different signs: 'const unsigned long long' and 'const int'
Global properties are shared between debugger instances and
if a test doesn't clear changes in settings it made,
this leads to side effects in other tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75537
If a producer emits a nonzero segment size, `lldb` will silently read
incorrect values and crash, or do something worse later as the tuple
size is expected to be 2, rather than 3.
Neither LLVM, nor GCC produce segmented aranges, but this dangerous case
should still be checked and handled.
Reviewed by: clayborg, labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75925
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Most clients of SourceManager.h need to do things like turning source
locations into file & line number pairs, but this doesn't require
bringing in FileManager.h and LLVM's FS headers.
The main code change here is to sink SM::createFileID into the cpp file.
I reason that this is not performance critical because it doesn't happen
on the diagnostic path, it happens along the paths of macro expansion
(could be hot) and new includes (less hot).
Saves some includes:
309 - /usr/local/google/home/rnk/llvm-project/clang/include/clang/Basic/FileManager.h
272 - /usr/local/google/home/rnk/llvm-project/clang/include/clang/Basic/FileSystemOptions.h
271 - /usr/local/google/home/rnk/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/Support/VirtualFileSystem.h
267 - /usr/local/google/home/rnk/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/Support/FileSystem.h
266 - /usr/local/google/home/rnk/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/Support/Chrono.h
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75406
Module.h takes 86ms to parse, mostly parsing the class itself. Avoid it
if possible. ASTContext.h depends on ExternalASTSource.h.
A few NFC changes were needed to make this possible:
- Move ASTSourceDescriptor to Module.h. This needs Module to be
complete, and seems more related to modules and AST files than
external AST sources.
- Move "import complete" bit from Module* pointer int pair to
NextLocalImport pointer. Required because PointerIntPair<Module*,...>
requires Module to be complete, and now it may not be.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman, hans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75784
Badly-written code can combine an unrelated TypeSystem and opaque type
pointer into a CompilerType. This is particularly an issue in
swift-lldb. This patch adds an assertion mechanism that catches these
kinds of mistakes early. Because this is an assertion-only code path
there is not cost for release builds.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76011
This patch allows skipping a test based on a default setting, which is
useful when running the testsuite in different "modes" based on a
default setting. This is a feature I need for the Swift testsuite, but
I think it's generally useful.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75864
A couple of tests sporadically fail on these assertions, but the error
messages do not give a clue as to what has actually happened.
Improve them so that we can better understand what is going wrong.
The function consisted of a complicated set of conditions to compute the
address ranges which are to be disassembled (depending on the mode
selected by command line switches). This patch creates a separate
function for each mode, so that DoExecute is only left with the task of
figuring out how to dump the relevant ranges.
This is NFC-ish, except for one change in the error message, which is
actually an improvement.
Summary:
This is the only real unwinder, and things have been this way for quite
a long time. At this point, the class has accumulated so many features
it is unlikely that anyone will want to reimplement the whole thing.
The class is also fairly closely coupled (through UnwindPlans and
FuncUnwinders) with a lot of other lldb components that it is hard to
imagine a different unwinder implementation being substantially
different without reimplementing all of those.
The existing unwinding functionality is nonetheless fairly complex and
there is space for adding more structure to it, but I believe a more
worthwhile effort would be to take the existing UnwindLLDB class and try
to break it down and introduce extension/customization points, instead
of writing a brand new Unwind implementation.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, JDevlieghere, xiaobai
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75848
This patch forces architecture "arm" if underlying os reports core
armv7l or armv8l. On linux systems 32 bit sysroot running on 64bit
AArch64 hardware reports armv7l or armv8l which is essently arm
32bit mode. This fixes 5 testcases on 32bit arm.
Summary:
The class has two pairs of functions whose functionalities differ in
only how one specifies how much he wants to disasseble. One limits the
process by the size of the input memory region. The other based on the
total amount of instructions disassembled. They also differ in various
features (like error reporting) that were only added to one of the
versions.
There are various ways in which this could be addressed. This patch
does it by introducing a helper struct called "Limit", which is
effectively a pair specifying the value that you want to limit, and the
actual limit itself.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: sdardis, jrtc27, atanasyan, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75730
This patch removes skipIf decorator from instruction counting tests.
We now use inline intruction in testing inferior to make sure that
number of instructions stays fixed. This was tested on aarch64 linux.
There is still the bug that empty lines seem to skip any following expressions
and it makes it harder to commend between all the comments. Let's make this
a normal test instead which is just slightly more verbose but can be properly
formatted.
Summary:
Compiling ObjC++ with Clang modules is usually not working well and compiling
the small debugserver with modules is not worth the trouble.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: mgorny, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74891
Summary: This is currently hidden in the Host CMakeLists but we should also use this macro in other parts of LLDB where we have ObjC++ sources (see D74891)
Reviewers: JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75164
Summary: Provide a list of Unix signals for the tap completion for command "process signal".
Reviewers: teemperor
Subscribers: labath, jingham, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75418
Summary:
This patch inlines all the single-line functions that we only use once in the test
and replaces the assertTrue with an assertEquals to improve the error message
when this test fails.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75497
Summary:
Otherwise this code won't run on the Release+Asserts builds we have on the CI.
Fixes rdar://problem/59867885 (partly)
Reviewers: aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75493
Starting with iOS 13 simulator binaries are identified with an
explicit platform in the new LC_BUILD_VERSION load command.
On older deployment targets using the LC_VERSION_MIN load commands,
this patch detects when an ios process runs on a macOS host and
updates the target triple with the "simulator" environment
accordingly.
(Patch re-applied with bugfix this time).
This is part of https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-11971
rdar://problem/58438125
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75696
Starting with iOS 13 simulator binaries are identified with an
explicit platform in the new LC_BUILD_VERSION load command.
On older deployment targets using the LC_VERSION_MIN load commands,
this patch detects when an ios process runs on a macOS host and
updates the target triple with the "simulator" environment
accordingly.
(Patch re-applied without modifications, the bot failure was unrelated).
This is part of https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-11971
rdar://problem/58438125
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75696
Starting with iOS 13 simulator binaries are identified with an
explicit platform in the new LC_BUILD_VERSION load command.
On older deployment targets using the LC_VERSION_MIN load commands,
this patch detects when an ios process runs on a macOS host and
updates the target triple with the "simulator" environment
accordingly.
This is part of https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-11971
rdar://problem/58438125
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75696
The static Disassembler can be thought of as shorthands for three
operations:
- fetch an appropriate disassembler instance (FindPluginForTarget)
- ask it to dissassemble some bytes (ParseInstructions)
- ask it to dump the disassembled instructions (PrintInstructions)
The only thing that's standing in the way of this interpretation is that
the Disassemble function also does some address resolution before
calling ParseInstructions. This patch moves this functionality into
ParseInstructions so that it is available to users who call
ParseInstructions directly.
We have a test which checks that instruction-step really steps one
instruction, but the way it checks this makes it very susceptible to
codegen changes. This rewrites the test inferior to use inline assembly,
which guarantees a known sequence of instructions that the test can
check. This does mean we have to write separate assembly for each
architecture, but that is no better than having architecture-specific
assertions, which the test was already starting to accumulate.
This patch makes sure that LLDB AArch64/Linux testsuite skips
single_step_only_steps_one_instruction* tests. There is no possible
gaurantee for this test to pass and there already exists a bug report
against this bug.
Summary:
It isn't used anywhere (except on imaginary triples like
sparc-apple-ios) and it also violates plugin separation.
This patch deletes it and declares UnwindLLDB to be _the_ lldb unwinder.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, JDevlieghere, xiaobai
Subscribers: jyknight, mgorny, krytarowski, fedor.sergeev, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75680
The indexes need to start at 0 but in D74951 I removed the first parameter
and didn't decrement all the indexes. This patch at least makes sure that
LLDB logging no longer crashes (but it still deadlocks).
Some functions in this file only use the "target" component of an
execution context. Adjust the argument lists to reflect that.
This avoids some defensive null checks and simplifies most of the
callers.
the previously static member function took a Disassembler* argument
anyway. This renames the argument to "this". The function also always
succeeds (returns true), so I change the return type to void.
by "inlining" them into their single caller (CommandObjectDisassemble).
The functions mainly consist of long argument lists and defensive
checks. These become unnecessary after inlining, so the end result is
less code. Additionally, this makes the implementation of
CommandObjectDisassemble more uniform (first figure out what you're
going to disassemble, then actually do it), which enables further
cleanups.
Some tests set settings and don't clean them up, this leads to side effects in other tests.
The patch removes a global debugger instance with a per-test debugger to avoid such effects.
From what I see, lldb.DBG was needed to determine the platform before a test is run,
lldb.selected_platform is used for this purpose now. Though, this required adding a new function
to the SBPlatform interface.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74903
This prevents calling Breakpoint::shared_from_this of an object that is not owned by any shared_ptr.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74557
This command had nearly identical code for the "then" and "else"
branches of the "if (m_options.num_instructions != 0)" condition.
This patch factors out the common parts of the two blocks to reduce
duplication.
Haibo told me he didn't have any issues with Python 3.8 and I was able
to confirm that. Even though we don't have bot running with 3.8, I think
it safe to mark it as supported in the docs.
Summary: I don't see why we want to keep that code around.
Reviewers: #lldb, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: #lldb, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: davide
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75496
While we have some tests for this command already, they are very vague.
This is not surprising -- it's hard to make strict assertions about the
assembly if your input is a c++ source file. This means that the tests
can more-or-less only detect when the command breaks completely, and not
when there is a subtle change in meaning due to e.g. a code refactor --
which is something that I am getting ready to do.
This tests in this patch create binaries with well known data (via assembler
and yaml2obj). This means that we are able to make precise assertions
about the text that lldb is supposed to print. As some of the features
of this command are only available with a real process, I use a minidump
core file to create a sufficiently realistic process object.
Instead of a ExecutionContext*. All it needs is the target so it can
read the memory.
This removes some defensive checks from the function. I've added
equivalent checks to the callers in cases where a non-null target
pointer was not guaranteed to be available.
Summary:
Since RangeDataVector is assumed to always be sorted we can treat it as
an flattened BST and augment it with additional information about the
ranges belonging to each "subtree". By storing the maximum endpoint in
every subtree we can query for intervals in O(log n) time.
Reviewers: labath, teemperor
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: jarin, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74759
Summary:
If a command from a sourced file produces asynchronous output, this
output often does not make its way to the user. This happens because the
asynchronous output machinery relies on the iohandler stack to ensure
the output does not interfere with the things the iohandler is doing.
However, if this happens near the end of the command stream then by the
time the asynchronous output is produced we may already have already
started tearing down the sourcing session. Specifically, we may already
pop the relevant iohandler, leaving the stack empty.
This patch makes sure this kind of output gets printed by adding a
fallback to IOHandlerStack::PrintAsync to print the output directly if
the stack is empty. This is safe because if we have no iohandlers then
there is nothing to synchronize.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75454
and follow-ups:
a2ca1c2d "build: disable zlib by default on Windows"
2181bf40 "[CMake] Link against ZLIB::ZLIB"
1079c68a "Attempt to fix ZLIB CMake logic on Windows"
This changed the output of llvm-config --system-libs, and more
importantly it broke stand-alone builds. Instead of piling on more fix
attempts, let's revert this to reduce the risk of more breakages.
Summary:
This gets rid of some nesting and of the raw char* variable that caused
the memory management bug we hit recently.
This commit also removes the fallback code which should trigger when
the StopInfo provides no stop description. All currently implemented
StopInfos have a `GetDescription()` method that shouldn't return an
empty description.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, labath, mib
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74157
Summary:
Currently `SymbolFileDWARF::TypeSet` is a typedef to a `std::set<Type *>`.
In `SymbolFileDWARF::GetTypes` we iterate over a TypeSet variable when finding
types so that logic is non-deterministic as it depends on the actual pointer address values.
This patch changes the `TypeSet` to a `llvm::UniqueVector` which always iterates in
the order in which we inserted the types into the list.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: mgrang, abidh, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75481
Summary:
This function is (supposed) to be a list of asserts that just do a generic sanity check
on declarations we return. Right now this function is hidden behind the
LLDB_CONFIGURATION_DEBUG macro which means it will *only* be run in
debug builds (but not Release+assert builds and so on).
As we have not a single CI running in Debug build, failures in VerifyDecl are hidden
from us until someone by accident executes the tests in Debug mode on their own machine.
This patch removes the `ifdef`'s for LLDB_CONFIGURATION_DEBUG and puts
the `getAccess()` call in `VerifyDecl` behind a `#ifndef NDEBUG` to make sure
that this function is just an empty function with internal linkage when NDEBUG
is defined (so compilers should just optimize away the calls to it).
Reviewers: aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: shafik, abidh, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75330
MathExtras.h was just wrapping SwapByteOrder.h functionality, so have
the callers use it directly. Use the MathExtras.h name (ByteSwap_NN) as
the standard naming, since it appears to be the most popular.
The lldb sanitizer bot is flagging a container-overflow error after we
introduced test TestWasm.py. MemoryCache::Read didn't behave correctly
in case of partial reads that can happen with object files whose size is
smaller that the cache size. It should return the actual number of bytes
read and not try to fill the buffer with random memory.
Module::GetMemoryObjectFile needs to be modified accordingly, to resize
its buffer to only the size that was read.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75200
Currently we only show the user that the expression failed but not
what is actually wrong with it. This just dumps the error we get
back alongside the other output to the error stream.
This should also help with finding out with why sometimees the
TestWatchLocationWithWatchSet.py test fails here on the LLDB
incremental bot on Green Dragon.
The GetOffset documentation was copied from the function above
so I completely deleted that one. The rest was just outdated
documentation that didn't keep up with renamed or changed
function parameters/return types.
Summary: This adds unit tests for FindEntryIndexesThatContain, this is done in preparation for changing the logic of the function.
Reviewers: labath, teemperor
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: arphaman, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75180
Summary:
This packet is necessary to make lldb work with the remote-gdb stub in
user mode qemu when running position-independent binaries. It reports
the relative position (load bias) of the loaded executable wrt. the
addresses in the file itself.
Lldb needs to know this information in order to correctly set the load
address of the executable. Normally, lldb would be able to find this out
on its own by following the breadcrumbs in the process auxiliary vector,
but we can't do this here because qemu does not support the
qXfer:auxv:read packet.
This patch does not implement full scope of the qOffsets packet (it only
supports packets with identical code, data and bss offsets), because it
is not fully clear how should the different offsets be handled and I am
not aware of a producer which would make use of this feature (qemu will
always
<https://github.com/qemu/qemu/blob/master/linux-user/elfload.c#L2436>
return the same value for code and data offsets). In fact, even gdb
ignores the offset for the bss sections, and uses the "data" offset
instead. So, until the we need more of this packet, I think it's best
to stick to the simplest solution possible. This patch simply rejects
replies with non-uniform offsets.
Reviewers: clayborg, jasonmolenda
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74598
Updated the patch to only fetch $pc on a Return Address-using
target only if we're in a trap frame *and* if there is a saved
location for $pc in the trap frame's unwind rules. If not,
we fall back to fetching the Return Address register (eg $lr).
Original commit msg:
Unwind past an interrupt handler correctly on arm or at pc==0
Fix RegisterContextLLDB::InitializeNonZerothFrame so that it
will fetch a FullUnwindPlan instead of falling back to the
architectural default unwind plan -- GetFullUnwindPlan knows
how to spot a jmp 0x0 that results in a fault, which may be
the case when we see a trap handler on the stack.
Fix RegisterContextLLDB::SavedLocationForRegister so that when
the pc value is requested from a trap handler frame, where we
have a complete register context available to us, don't provide
the Return Address register (lr) instead of the pc. We have
an actual pc value here, and it's pointing to the instruction
that faulted.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75007
<rdar://problem/59416588>
The debugserver profile thread used to suspend itself between samples with
a usleep. When you detach or kill, MachProcess::Clear would delay replying
to the incoming packet until pthread_join of the profile thread returned.
If you are unlucky or the suspend delay is long, it could take longer than
the packet timeout for pthread_join to return. Then you would get an error
about detach not succeeding from lldb - even though in fact the detach was
successful...
I replaced the usleep with PThreadEvents entity. Then we just call a timed
WaitForEventBits, and when debugserver wants to stop the profile thread, it
can set the event bit, and the sleep will exit immediately.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75004
AVR usually uses two byte addresses. By making DataExtractor deal with
this, it is possible to load AVR binaries that don't have debug info
associated with them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73969
This member is for some reason initialized in ClangASTSource::FindExternalVisibleDecls
so all other functions using this member dereference a nullptr unless we
call this function before that. Let's just initialize this in the constructor.
This should be NFC as the only side effect is that we don't reset the namespace map
when calling ClangASTSource::FindExternalVisibleDecls multiple times (and we never
call this function multiple times for one NameSearchContext from what I can see).
The size of NameSearchContext isn't important as we never store it and rarely
allocate more than a few. This way we also don't have to use the memset to
initialize these fields to zero.
These can come out nondeterministically for two reasons:
- sorting based on ConstStringified pointer values
- different relative speeds of the indexing threads
Making these nondeterministic without incurring performance penalties is
hard, so I just make the test expect them in any order (the order is not
important in this test anyway.
Seems like this code raised some alarm bells as it looks like an ArrayRef
to a temporary initializer list, but it's actually just calling the ArrayRef(T*, T*)
constructor. Let's clarify this and directly call the right ArrayRef constructor here.
Fixes rdar://problem/59176052
Summary:
I added an `abort()` call to some code and noticed that the test suite was still passing and it just marked my test as "UNSUPPORTED".
It seems the reason for that is that we expect failing tests to print "FAIL:" which doesn't happen when we crash. If we then also
have an unsupported because we skipped some debug information in the output, we just mark the test passing because it is unsupported
on the current platform.
This patch marks any test that has a non-zero exit code as failing even if it doesn't print "FAIL:" (e.g., because it crashed).
Reviewers: labath, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: labath, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: aprantl, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75031
These are technically text files, but the object file layer treats them
as binary, and the relevant tests verify the parsed contents byte for
byte. Git's crlf conversion can make those tests fail. Marking the files
as non-text disables that.
Order of evaluation of the operands of any C++ operator [...] is
unspecified. This patch fixes the issue in Stream::Indent by calling the
function consecutively.
On my Windows setup, TestSettings.py fails because the function prints
the value first, followed by the indentation.
Expected result:
MY_FILE=this is a file name with spaces.txt
Actual result:
MY_FILE =this is a file name with spaces.txt
The aarcht64-ubuntu bot is showing a test failure in TestHandleAbort.py
with this patch. Adding some logging to that file, it looks like
the saved register context above the trap handler does not have
save state for $pc, but it does have it for $lr on that platform.
I need to fall back to looking for $lr if the $pc cannot be retrieved.
I'll update the patch and re-commit once that's fixed.
This reverts commit edc4f4c9c9.
Fix RegisterContextLLDB::InitializeNonZerothFrame so that it
will fetch a FullUnwindPlan instead of falling back to the
architectural default unwind plan -- GetFullUnwindPlan knows
how to spot a jmp 0x0 that results in a fault, which may be
the case when we see a trap handler on the stack.
Fix RegisterContextLLDB::SavedLocationForRegister so that when
the pc value is requested from a trap handler frame, where we
have a complete register context available to us, don't provide
the Return Address register (lr) instead of the pc. We have
an actual pc value here, and it's pointing to the instruction
that faulted.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75007
<rdar://problem/59416588>
Highlight the color marker similar to what we do for the column marker.
The default color matches the color of the current PC marker (->) in the
default disassembly format.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75070
This patch moves the SB API method GetExtendedCrashInformation from
SBTarget to SBProcess since it only makes sense to call this method on a
sane process which might not be the case on a SBTarget object.
It also addresses some feedbacks received after landing the first patch
for the 'crash-info' feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75049
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
The convention is that the dwp file name is derived from the name of the
file holding the executable code, even if the linked portion of the
debug info is elsewhere (objcopy --only-keep-debug).
Summary:
Currently the test suite runs with enabled automatically applied Clang fix-its for expressions.
This is causing that sometimes incorrect expressions in tests are still evaluated even though they
are actually incorrect. Let's disable this feature in the test suite so that we know when expressions
are wrong and leave the fix-it testing to the dedicated tests for that feature.
Also updates the `lang/cpp/operators/` test as it seems Clang needs the `struct` keywords
before C and would otherwise fail without fixits.
Reviewers: jingham, JDevlieghere, shafik
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere, shafik
Subscribers: shafik, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74957
Explicit dynsym/dynstr sections were added in a6370d5 to compensate for
a yaml2obj change D74764. This test doesn't need those sections, so
instead I just delete the explicit section blocks, and also the
"DynamicSymbols" block, which triggers their implicit generation.
Summary:
When we added support for type units in dwo files, we changed the
"manual" dwarf index to index _all_ dwarf units in the dwo file instead
of just the split unit belonging to our skeleton unit. This was fine for
dwo files, as they contain only a single compile units and type units do
not have a split type unit which would point to them.
However, this does not work for dwp files because, these files do
contain multiple split compile units, and the current approach means
that each unit gets indexed multiple times (once for each split unit =>
n^2 complexity).
This patch teaches the manual dwarf index to treat dwp files specially.
Any type units in the dwp file added to the main list of compile units
and indexed with them in a single batch. Split compile units in dwp
files are still indexed as a part of their skeleton unit -- this is done
because we need the DW_AT_language attribute from the skeleton unit to
index them properly.
Handling of dwo files remains unchanged -- all units (type and skeleton)
are indexed when we reach the dwo file through the split unit.
Reviewers: clayborg, JDevlieghere, aprantl
Subscribers: arphaman, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74964
Summary:
We have a lot of code in our lookup code to pass around `current_id` counters which end up in our logs like this:
```
AOCTV::FT [234] Found XYZ
```
This patch removes all of this code because:
* I'm splitting up all humongous functions, so I need to write more and more boilerplate to pass around these ids.
* I never saw any similar counters in the LLDB/LLVM code base.
* They're essentially globals and the last thing we need in LLDB is even more global state.
* They're not really useful when readings logs. It doesn't help that there isn't just 1 or 2 counters, but 12 (!) unique counters. I always thought that if I see two identical counter values in those brackets it's the same lookup request, but it seems that's only true by accident (and you can't know which of the 12 counters is actually printed without reading the code). The only time I know I can trust the counters is when it's obvious from the log that it's the same counter like in the log below, but then why have the counters in the first place?
```
LayoutRecordType[28] on (ASTContext*)0x00007FFA1C840200 'scratch ASTContext' for (RecordDecl*)0x00007FFA0AAE8CF0 [name = '__tree']
LRT[28] returned:
LRT[28] Original = (RecordDecl*)%p
LRT[28] Size = %lld
LRT[28] Alignment = %lld
LRT[28] Fields:
LRT[28] (FieldDecl*)0x00007FFA1A13B1D0, Name = '__begin_node_', Offset = 0 bits
LRT[28] (FieldDecl*)0x00007FFA1C08FD30, Name = '__pair1_', Offset = 64 bits
LRT[28] (FieldDecl*)0x00007FFA1C061210, Name = '__pair3_', Offset = 128 bits
LRT[28] Bases:
```
Reviewers: labath, shafik, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: labath, shafik, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: abidh, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74951
D74764 (https://reviews.llvm.org/rG31f2ad9c368d47721508cbd0d120d626f9041715)
changed the behavior of the yaml2obj. Now it assigns virtual addresses
for allocatable sections.
SymbolFile/Breakpad/symtab.test started to fail after this change:
(http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/lldb-x86_64-debian/builds/5520/steps/test/logs/stdio)
Command Output (stderr):
--
/home/worker/lldb-x86_64-debian/lldb-x86_64-debian/llvm-project/lldb/test/Shell/SymbolFile/Breakpad/symtab.test:6:10: error: CHECK: expected string not found in input
# CHECK: Symtab, file = {{.*}}symtab.out, num_symbols = 5:
^
<stdin>:15:1: note: scanning from here
Symtab, file = /home/worker/lldb-x86_64-debian/lldb-x86_64-debian/build/tools/lldb/test/SymbolFile/Breakpad/Output/symtab.out, num_symbols = 6:
^
<stdin>:15:99: note: possible intended match here
Symtab, file = /home/worker/lldb-x86_64-debian/lldb-x86_64-debian/build/tools/lldb/test/SymbolFile/Breakpad/Output/symtab.out, num_symbols = 6:
For now I've updated the basic-elf.yaml so that now it produce the same layout as before D74764.
Breakpad/symtab.test should be updated it seems.
Summary:
This is another attempt of 0bb90628b5.
The difference is that g_python_home is not declared as const. Since
some versions of python do not expect that.
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74998
On Apple platforms, is __arm__ isn't defined and we're not on Intel, we use an
alternate std::string layout. I.e., the libcxx string test fails on phones
because the hand-crafted "garbage" string structs are actually valid strings.
See:
```
// _LIBCPP_ALTERNATE_STRING_LAYOUT is an old name for
// _LIBCPP_ABI_ALTERNATE_STRING_LAYOUT left here for backward compatibility.
#if (defined(__APPLE__) && !defined(__i386__) && !defined(__x86_64__) && \
(!defined(__arm__) || __ARM_ARCH_7K__ >= 2)) || \
defined(_LIBCPP_ALTERNATE_STRING_LAYOUT)
#define _LIBCPP_ABI_ALTERNATE_STRING_LAYOUT
#endif
```
Disable inspection of the garbage structs on Apple+ARM devices.
Currently, in macOS, when a process crashes, lldb halts inside the
implementation disassembly without yielding any useful information.
The only way to get more information is to detach from the process, then wait
for ReportCrash to generate a report, find the report, then see what error
message was included in it. Instead of waiting for this to happen, lldb could
locate the error_string and make it available to the user.
This patch addresses this issue by enabling the user to fetch extended
crash information for crashed processes using `process status --verbose`.
Depending on the platform, this will try to gather different crash information
into an structured data dictionnary. This dictionnary is generic and extensible,
as it contains an array for each different type of crash information.
On Darwin Platforms, lldb will iterate over each of the target's images,
extract their `__crash_info` section and generated a StructuredData::Array
containing, in each entry, the module spec, its UUID, the crash messages
and the abort cause. The array will be inserted into the platform's
`m_extended_crash_info` dictionnary and `FetchExtendedCrashInformation` will
return its JSON representation like this:
```
{
"crash-info annotations": [
{
"abort-cause": 0,
"image": "/usr/lib/system/libsystem_malloc.dylib",
"message": "main(76483,0x1000cedc0) malloc: *** error for object 0x1003040a0: pointer being freed was not allocated",
"message2": "",
"uuid": "5747D0C9-900D-3306-8D70-1E2EA4B7E821"
},
...
],
...
}
```
This crash information can also be fetched using the SB API or lldb-rpc protocol
using SBTarget::GetExtendedCrashInformation().
rdar://37736535
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74657
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
Since the `platform process` commamnd has more tests now, this commits
separates each of the `platform process` subcommand's test in its own directory.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74836
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
Summary:
This change allows a hard coded relative PYTHONHOME setting. So that
python can easily be packaged together with lldb.
The change includes:
1. Extend LLDB_RELOCATABLE_PYTHON to all platforms. It defaults to ON
for platforms other than Windows, to keep the behavior compatible.
2. Allows to customize LLDB_PYTHON_HOME. But still defaults to
PYTHON_HOME.
3. LLDB_PYTHON_HOME can be a path relative to liblldb. If it is
relative, we will resolve it before send it to Py_DecodeLocale.
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74727
Summary:
The purpose of this patch is to make identifying missing dependencies clearer to the user.
`find_package` will report if a package is not found, that output, combined with the exiting
status message, is clearer than not having the additional verbosity.
If the SWIG dependency is required {LLDB_ENABLE_PYTHON, LLDB_ENABLE_LUA}
and SWIG is not available, fail the configuration step. Terminate the
configure early rather than later with a clear error message.
We could possibly modify:
`llvm-project/lldb/cmake/modules/FindPythonInterpAndLibs.cmake`
However, the patch here seems clear in my opinion.
Reviewers: aadsm, hhb, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Subscribers: labath, jrm, mgorny, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74917
This change will bring lldb-vscode in line with how several other llvm
tools process command line arguments and make it easier to add future
options.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74798
Summary:
lldb's format string (line one) is:
`lldb version $clang_version ($lldb_repo revision $lldb_revision)`
When only using $lldb_revision and not $lldb_repo, this might look like:
`lldb version 11 ( revision 12345)`
which looks pretty ugly.
Aside: I'm not sure we really need all the different versions since we've moved to the monorepo layout -- I don't think anyone is using different llvm/clang/lldb revisions, are they? We could likely tidy this up further if we knew how people consumed the output of lldb --version.
Reviewers: labath, JDevlieghere, friss
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74859
Summary:
Requesting registers one by one takes a while in our project.
We want to get rid of it by using target.xml.
Reviewers: jarin, labath, omjavaid
Reviewed By: labath, omjavaid
Subscribers: omjavaid, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74217
Summary: The logic of the sentence made more sense when "with" is replaced with "without".
Reviewers: labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74895
Change the return value of SymbolFileDWARF::DebugInfo from a pointer to
a reference, and remove all null checks.
Previously, we were not constructing the DebugInfo object when the
debug_info section was empty. Now we always construct the object but
it will return an empty list of dwarf units (a thing which it already
supported).
Summary:
Around a third of our test sources have LLVM license headers. This patch removes those headers from all test
sources and also fixes any tests that depended on the length of the license header.
The reasons for this are:
* A few tests verify line numbers and will start failing if the number of lines in the LLVM license header changes. Once I landed my patch for valid SourceLocations in debug info we will probably have even more tests that verify line numbers.
* No other LLVM project is putting license headers in its test files to my knowledge.
* They make the test sources much more verbose than they have to be. Several tests have longer license headers than the actual test source.
For the record, the following tests had their line numbers changed to pass with the removal of the license header:
lldb-api :: functionalities/breakpoint/breakpoint_by_line_and_column/TestBreakpointByLineAndColumn.py
lldb-shell :: Reproducer/TestGDBRemoteRepro.test
lldb-shell :: Reproducer/TestMultipleTargets.test
lldb-shell :: Reproducer/TestReuseDirectory.test
lldb-shell :: ExecControl/StopHook/stop-hook-threads.test
lldb-shell :: ExecControl/StopHook/stop-hook.test
lldb-api :: lang/objc/exceptions/TestObjCExceptions.py
Reviewers: #lldb, espindola, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: #lldb, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: emaste, aprantl, arphaman, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74839
TestCPPAuto was only failing on windows due to the std::string
copying (which was not related at all to 'auto' functionality).
TestStepTarget is now also passing but that seems more that we
now have by accident the right behavior in Windows. I'll remove
the x-fail just to make the bot green again.
The only thing needed was to account for the offset from the
debug_cu_index section when searching for the location list.
This patch also fixes a bug in the Module::ParseAllDebugSymbols
function, which meant that we would only parse the variables of the
first compile unit in the module. This function is only used from
lldb-test, so this does not fix any real issue, besides preventing me
from writing a test for this patch.
Comparing those two `const char *` values relies on the assumption that both
strings were created by a ConstString. Let's check that assumption with an
assert as otherwise this code silently does nothing and that's not great.
This should use -> instead of '.', but the fix-it functionality of
the expression evaluator saved us here. Let's use the proper syntax
in the first place as we don't want to test fix-its here.
This directory escaped the modularization effort it seems. Just adding
this to the Host module along with the other common headers, which should
make this code less likely to break under modules and speed up compilation.
Summary:
Currently when printing data types we include implicit scopes such as inline namespaces or anonymous namespaces.
This leads to command output like this (for `std::set<X>` with X being in an anonymous namespace):
```
(lldb) print my_set
(std::__1::set<(anonymous namespace)::X, std::__1::less<(anonymous namespace)::X>, std::__1::allocator<(anonymous namespace)::X> >) $0 = size=0 {}
```
This patch removes all the implicit scopes when printing type names in TypeSystemClang::GetDisplayTypeName
so that our output now looks like this:
```
(lldb) print my_set
(std::set<X, std::less<X>, std::allocator<X> >) $0 = size=0 {}
```
As previously GetDisplayTypeName and GetTypeName had the same output we actually often used the
two as if they are the same method (they were in fact using the same implementation), so this patch also
fixes the places where we actually want the display type name and not the actual type name.
Note that this doesn't touch the `GetTypeName` class that for example the data formatters use, so this patch
is only changes the way we display types to the user. The full type name can also still be found when passing
'-R' to see the raw output of a variable in case someone is somehow interested in that.
Partly fixes rdar://problem/59292534
Reviewers: shafik, jingham
Reviewed By: shafik
Subscribers: christof, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74478
All calls to operator new in this test fail for me with:
```
expression --show-types -- *(new foo(47))`
Error output:
error: Execution was interrupted, reason: internal c++ exception breakpoint(-6)..
The process has been returned to the state before expression evaluation.
```
As calling operator new isn't the idea of this test, this patch moves that
logic to the binary with some new_* utility functions and explicitly tests
this logic in the constructor test (where we can isolate the failures and
skip them on Linux).
The PluginManager contains a lot of duplicate code. I already removed a
bunch of it by introducing the templated PluginInstance class, and this
is the next step. The PluginInstances class combines the mutex and the
vector and implements the common operations.
To accommodate plugin instances with additional members it is possible
to access the underlying vector and mutex. The methods to query these
fields make use of that.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74816
This patch changes the way we initialize and terminate the plugins in
the system initializer. It uses an approach similar to LLVM's
TARGETS_TO_BUILD with a def file that enumerates the plugins.
Previous attempts to land this failed on the Windows bot because there's
a dependency between the different process plugins. Apparently
ProcessWindowsCommon needs to be initialized after all other process
plugins but before ProcessGDBRemote.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73067
The plugin manager had dedicated Get*PluginCreateCallbackForPluginName
methods for each type of plugin, and only a small subset of those were
used. This removes the dead duplicated code.
The WASM and Hexagon plugin check the ArchType rather than the OSType,
so explicitly reject those in the DynamicLoaderStatic.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74780
Generate the LLDB_PLUGIN_DECLARE macros with CMake and a def file. I'm
landing D73067 in pieces so I can bisect what exactly is breaking the
Windows bot.
Other plugins depend on DynamicLoaderDarwinKernel and which means we
cannot conditionally enable/build this plugin based on the target
platform. This means that it will be past of the list of plugins
initialized once that's autogenerated.
The two classes are equivalent, except:
- the former uses a llvm::SmallVector (with a configurable size), while
the latter uses std::vector.
- the former has a typo in one of the functions name
This patch just leaves one class, using llvm::SmallVector, and defaults
the small size to zero. This is the same thing we did with the
RangeDataVector class in D56170.
This patch enables the debug entry values feature.
- Remove the (CC1) experimental -femit-debug-entry-values option
- Enable it for x86, arm and aarch64 targets
- Resolve the test failures
- Leave the llc experimental option for targets that do not
support the CallSiteInfo yet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73534
Summary:
Follow up to an issue pointed out in the review of D73808. We shouldn't just pass in a nullptr TypeSourceInfo
in case Clang decided to access it.
Reviewers: shafik, vsk
Reviewed By: shafik, vsk
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73946
Pass TargetSP to filters' CreateFromStructuredData, don't let them guess
whether target object is managed by a shared_ptr.
Make Breakpoint sure that m_target.shared_from_this() is safe by passing TargetSP
to all its static Create*** member-functions. This should be enough, since Breakpoint's
constructors are private/protected and never called directly (except by Target itself).
Since f9568a9549 this function takes a
CompilerDeclContext reference instead of a pointer. It overlooked this function
when I fixed the compilation for FindTypes.
Summary:
Currently the data formatter is treating `std::atomic` variables as transparent wrappers
around their underlying value type. This causes that when printing `std::atomic<A *>`, the data
formatter will forward all requests for the children of the atomic variable to the `A *` pointer type
which will then return the respective members of `A`. If `A` in turn has a member that contains
the original atomic variable, this causes LLDB to infinitely recurse when printing an object with
such a `std::atomic` pointer member.
We could implement a workaround similar to whatever we do for pointer values but this patch
just implements the `std::atomic` formatter in the same way as we already implement other
formatters (e.g. smart pointers or `std::optional`) that just model the contents of the as a child
"Value". This way LLDB knows when it actually prints a pointer and can just use its normal
workaround if "Value" is a recursive pointer.
Fixes rdar://59189235
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, jingham, shafik
Reviewed By: shafik
Subscribers: shafik, christof, jfb, abidh, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74310
Summary:
In dwp files a constant (from the debug_cu_index section) needs to be
added to each reference into the debug_str_offsets section.
I've tried to implement this to roughly match the llvm flow: I've
changed the DWARFormValue to stop resolving the indirect string
references directly -- instead, it calls into DWARFUnit, which resolves
this for it (similar to how it already resolves indirect range and
location list references). I've also done a small refactor of the string
offset base computation code in DWARFUnit in order to make it easier to
access the debug_cu_index base offset.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74723
This should be just the enum type but that's a larger refactoring, so document that
this is not just an integer until we can make this just the type of the enum.
Summary:
All of our lookup APIs either use `CompilerDeclContext &` or `CompilerDeclContext *` semi-randomly it seems.
This leads to us constantly converting between those two types (and doing nullptr checks when going from
pointer to reference). It also leads to the confusing situation where we have two possible ways to express
that we don't have a CompilerDeclContex: either a nullptr or an invalid CompilerDeclContext (aka a default
constructed CompilerDeclContext).
This moves all APIs to use references and gets rid of all the nullptr checks and conversions.
Reviewers: labath, mib, shafik
Reviewed By: labath, shafik
Subscribers: shafik, arphaman, abidh, JDevlieghere, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74607
LLDB has a few different styles of header guards and they're not very
consistent because things get moved around or copy/pasted. This patch
unifies the header guards across LLDB and converts everything to match
LLVM's style.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74743
Use LLDB_PLUGIN_DEFINE_ADV to make the name of the generated initializer
match the name of the plugin. This is a step towards generating the
initializers with a def file. I'm landing this change in pieces so I can
narrow down what exactly breaks the Windows bot.
This patch changes the way we initialize and terminate the plugins in
the system initializer. It uses an approach similar to LLVM's
TARGETS_TO_BUILD with a def file that enumerates the plugins.
The previously landed patch got reverted because it was lacking:
(1) A plugin definition for the Objective-C language runtime,
(2) The dependency between the Static and WASM dynamic loader,
(3) Explicit initialization of ScriptInterpreterNone for lldb-test.
All issues have been addressed in this patch.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73067
This patch changes the way we initialize and terminate the plugins in
the system initializer. It uses an approach similar to LLVM's
TARGETS_TO_BUILD with a def file that enumerates the plugins.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73067
As discussed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D73206#1871895 there is both
`DIERef` and `user_id_t` and sometimes (for DWZ) we need to encode Main
CU into them and sometimes we cannot as it is unavailable at that point
and at the same time not even needed.
I have also noticed `DIERef` and `user_id_t` in fact contain the same
information which can be seen in SymbolFileDWARF::GetUID.
SB* API/ABI is already using `user_id_t` and it needs to encode Main CU
for DWZ. Therefore what about making `DIERef` the identifier not
containing Main CU and `user_id_t` the identifier containing Main CU?
It is sort of a revert of D63322.
I find this patch as a NFC cleanup to the codebase - to satisfy a new
premise `user_id_t` is used as little as possible and thus only for
external interfaces which must not deal with MainCU in any way.
Its larger goal is to satisfy a plan to implement DWZ support.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74637