Used hand merge to apply the diffs. I did not apply the diffs for FormatManager.h and
the diffs for memberwise initialization for ValueObject.cpp because they changed since.
I will ask my colleague to apply them later.
llvm-svn: 135508
pointers. Some of the spots are obviously initialized
later, but it's better just to NULL the pointers out
at initialization to make the code more robust when
exposed to later changes.
llvm-svn: 134670
searching for variables and symbols in the target
more robust. These checks prevent variables from
being reported as existing if they cannot actually
be evaluated in the current context.
llvm-svn: 134656
objective C or C++ methods when "self" or "this" were in scope, but had
invalid locations in a DWARF location list. The lack of a valid value caused
us to use an invalid type value and then we tried to import that invalid
value and we would crash.
llvm-svn: 134518
inspection of namespaces in the expression parser.
ClangExpressionDeclMap hitherto reported that namespaces had
been completely imported, even though the namespaces are
returned empty. To deal with this situation, ClangASTSource
was recently extended with an API to complete incomplete type
definitions, and, for greater efficiency, to complete these
definitions partially, returning only those objects that have
a given name.
This commit supports these APIs on LLDB's side, and uses it
to provide information on types resident in namespaces.
Namespaces are now imported as they were -- that is to say,
empty -- but with minimal import mode on. This means that
Clang will come back and request their contents by name as
needed. We now respond with information on the contained
types; this will be followed soon by information on functions
and variables.
llvm-svn: 133852
of duplicated code from appearing all over LLDB:
lldb::addr_t
Process::ReadPointerFromMemory (lldb::addr_t vm_addr, Error &error);
bool
Process::WritePointerToMemory (lldb::addr_t vm_addr, lldb::addr_t ptr_value, Error &error);
size_t
Process::ReadScalarIntegerFromMemory (lldb::addr_t addr, uint32_t byte_size, bool is_signed, Scalar &scalar, Error &error);
size_t
Process::WriteScalarToMemory (lldb::addr_t vm_addr, const Scalar &scalar, uint32_t size, Error &error);
in lldb_private::Process the following functions were renamed:
From:
uint64_t
Process::ReadUnsignedInteger (lldb::addr_t load_addr,
size_t byte_size,
Error &error);
To:
uint64_t
Process::ReadUnsignedIntegerFromMemory (lldb::addr_t load_addr,
size_t byte_size,
uint64_t fail_value,
Error &error);
Cleaned up a lot of code that was manually doing what the above functions do
to use the functions listed above.
Added the ability to get a scalar value as a buffer that can be written down
to a process (byte swapping the Scalar value if needed):
uint32_t
Scalar::GetAsMemoryData (void *dst,
uint32_t dst_len,
lldb::ByteOrder dst_byte_order,
Error &error) const;
The "dst_len" can be smaller that the size of the scalar and the least
significant bytes will be written. "dst_len" can also be larger and the
most significant bytes will be padded with zeroes.
Centralized the code that adds or removes address bits for callable and opcode
addresses into lldb_private::Target:
lldb::addr_t
Target::GetCallableLoadAddress (lldb::addr_t load_addr, AddressClass addr_class) const;
lldb::addr_t
Target::GetOpcodeLoadAddress (lldb::addr_t load_addr, AddressClass addr_class) const;
All necessary lldb_private::Address functions now use the target versions so
changes should only need to happen in one place if anything needs updating.
Fixed up a lot of places that were calling :
addr_t
Address::GetLoadAddress(Target*);
to call the Address::GetCallableLoadAddress() or Address::GetOpcodeLoadAddress()
as needed. There were many places in the breakpoint code where things could
go wrong for ARM if these weren't used.
llvm-svn: 131878
addr_t
Address::GetCallableLoadAddress (Target *target) const;
This will resolve the load address in the Address object and optionally
decorate the address up to be able to be called. For all non ARM targets, this
just essentially returns the result of "Address::GetLoadAddress (target)". But
for ARM targets, it checks if the address is Thumb, and if so, it returns
an address with bit zero set to indicate a mode switch to Thumb. This is how
we need function pointers to be for return addresses and when resolving
function addresses for the JIT. It is also nice to centralize this in one spot
to avoid having multiple copies of this code.
llvm-svn: 131588
as non-const in the debug information, added a fallback
to GetFunctionAddress, adding the const qualifier after
the fact and searching again.
llvm-svn: 131299
representing variables whose type must be inferred
from the way they are used. Functions without debug
information now return UnknownAnyTy and must be cast.
Variables with no debug information are not yet using
UnknownAnyTy; instead they are assumed to be void*.
Support for variables of unknown type is coming (and,
in fact, some relevant support functions are included
in this commit) but will take a bit of extra effort.
The testsuite has also been updated to reflect the new
requirement that the result of printf be cast, i.e.
expr (int) printf("Hello world!")
llvm-svn: 131263
treated as being permanently resident in target
memory. In fact, since the expression's stack frame
is deleted and potentially re-used after the
expression completes, the variables need to be treated
as being freeze-dried.
llvm-svn: 131104
into some cleanup I have been wanting to do when reading/writing registers.
Previously all RegisterContext subclasses would need to implement:
virtual bool
ReadRegisterBytes (uint32_t reg, DataExtractor &data);
virtual bool
WriteRegisterBytes (uint32_t reg, DataExtractor &data, uint32_t data_offset = 0);
There is now a new class specifically designed to hold register values:
lldb_private::RegisterValue
The new register context calls that subclasses must implement are:
virtual bool
ReadRegister (const RegisterInfo *reg_info, RegisterValue ®_value) = 0;
virtual bool
WriteRegister (const RegisterInfo *reg_info, const RegisterValue ®_value) = 0;
The RegisterValue class must be big enough to handle any register value. The
class contains an enumeration for the value type, and then a union for the
data value. Any integer/float values are stored directly in an appropriate
host integer/float. Anything bigger is stored in a byte buffer that has a length
and byte order. The RegisterValue class also knows how to copy register value
bytes into in a buffer with a specified byte order which can be used to write
the register value down into memory, and this does the right thing when not
all bytes from the register values are needed (getting a uint8 from a uint32
register value..).
All RegiterContext and other sources have been switched over to using the new
regiter value class.
llvm-svn: 131096
variables be evaluated statically.
Also fixed a bug that caused the results of
statically-evaluated expressions to be materialized
improperly.
This bug also removes some duplicate code.
llvm-svn: 131042
pointer to a ValueObject or any of its dependent ValueObjects, and the whole cluster will
stay around as long as that shared pointer stays around.
llvm-svn: 130035
expressions that are simple enough to get passed to the "frame var" underpinnings. The parser code will
have to be changed to also query for the dynamic types & offsets as it is looking up variables.
The behavior of "frame var" is controlled in two ways. You can pass "-d {true/false} to the frame var
command to get the dynamic or static value of the variables you are printing.
There's also a general setting:
target.prefer-dynamic-value (boolean) = 'true'
which is consulted if you call "frame var" without supplying a value for the -d option.
llvm-svn: 129623
public types and public enums. This was done to keep the SWIG stuff from
parsing all sorts of enums and types that weren't needed, and allows us to
abstract our API better.
llvm-svn: 128239
clang_type_t
GetClangFullType(); // Get a completely defined clang type
clang_type_t
GetClangLayoutType(); // Get a clang type that can be used for type layout
clang_type_t
GetClangForwardType(); // A type that can be completed if needed, but is more efficient.
llvm-svn: 125691
diagnostics of Clang AST classes for the purpose of
debugging the types LLDB produces for DWARF objects.
The ASTDumper is currently only used in log output
if you enable verbose mode in the expression log:
log enable -v lldb expr
Its output then appears in the log for external
variables used by the expr command.
llvm-svn: 124703
lldb_private::Function objects. Previously the SymbolFileSymtab subclass
would return lldb_private::Symbol objects when it was asked to find functions.
The Module::FindFunctions (...) now take a boolean "bool include_symbols" so
that the module can track down functions and symbols, yet functions are found
by the SymbolFile plug-ins (through the SymbolVendor class), and symbols are
gotten through the ObjectFile plug-ins.
Fixed and issue where the DWARF parser might run into incomplete class member
function defintions which would make clang mad when we tried to make certain
member functions with invalid number of parameters (such as an operator=
operator that had no parameters). Now we just avoid and don't complete these
incomplete functions.
llvm-svn: 124359
the way LLDB lazily gets complete definitions for types within the debug info.
When we run across a class/struct/union definition in the DWARF, we will only
parse the full definition if we need to. This works fine for top level types
that are assigned directly to variables and arguments, but when we have a
variable with a class, lets say "A" for this example, that has a member:
"B *m_b". Initially we don't need to hunt down a definition for this class
unless we are ever asked to do something with it ("expr m_b->getDecl()" for
example). With my previous approach to lazy type completion, we would be able
to take a "A *a" and get a complete type for it, but we wouldn't be able to
then do an "a->m_b->getDecl()" unless we always expanded all types within a
class prior to handing out the type. Expanding everything is very costly and
it would be great if there were a better way.
A few months ago I worked with the llvm/clang folks to have the
ExternalASTSource class be able to complete classes if there weren't completed
yet:
class ExternalASTSource {
....
virtual void
CompleteType (clang::TagDecl *Tag);
virtual void
CompleteType (clang::ObjCInterfaceDecl *Class);
};
This was great, because we can now have the class that is producing the AST
(SymbolFileDWARF and SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap) sign up as external AST sources
and the object that creates the forward declaration types can now also
complete them anywhere within the clang type system.
This patch makes a few major changes:
- lldb_private::Module classes now own the AST context. Previously the TypeList
objects did.
- The DWARF parsers now sign up as an external AST sources so they can complete
types.
- All of the pure clang type system wrapper code we have in LLDB (ClangASTContext,
ClangASTType, and more) can now be iterating through children of any type,
and if a class/union/struct type (clang::RecordType or ObjC interface)
is found that is incomplete, we can ask the AST to get the definition.
- The SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap class now will create and use a single AST that
all child SymbolFileDWARF classes will share (much like what happens when
we have a complete linked DWARF for an executable).
We will need to modify some of the ClangUserExpression code to take more
advantage of this completion ability in the near future. Meanwhile we should
be better off now that we can be accessing any children of variables through
pointers and always be able to resolve the clang type if needed.
llvm-svn: 123613
by LLDB. Instead of being materialized into the input structure
passed to the expression, variables are left in place and pointers
to them are materialzied into the structure. Variables not resident
in memory (notably, registers) get temporary memory regions allocated
for them.
Persistent variables are the most complex part of this, because they
are made in various ways and there are different expectations about
their lifetime. Persistent variables now have flags indicating their
status and what the expectations for longevity are. They can be
marked as residing in target memory permanently -- this is the
default for result variables from expressions entered on the command
line and for explicitly declared persistent variables (but more on
that below). Other result variables have their memory freed.
Some major improvements resulting from this include being able to
properly take the address of variables, better and cleaner support
for functions that return references, and cleaner C++ support in
general. One problem that remains is the problem of explicitly
declared persistent variables; I have not yet implemented the code
that makes references to them into indirect references, so currently
materialization and dematerialization of these variables is broken.
llvm-svn: 123371
a method:
void RegisterContext::InvalidateIfNeeded (bool force);
Each time this function is called, when "force" is false, it will only call
the pure virtual "virtual void RegisterContext::InvalideAllRegisters()" if
the register context's stop ID doesn't match that of the process. When the
stop ID doesn't match, or "force" is true, the base class will clear its
cached registers and the RegisterContext will update its stop ID to match
that of the process. This helps make it easier to correctly flush the register
context (possibly from multiple locations depending on when and where new
registers are availabe) without inadvertently clearing the register cache
when it doesn't need to be.
Modified the ProcessGDBRemote plug-in to be much more efficient when it comes
to:
- caching the expedited registers in the stop reply packets (we were ignoring
these before and it was causing us to read at least three registers every
time we stopped that were already supplied in the stop reply packet).
- When a thread has no stop reason, don't keep asking for the thread stopped
info. Prior to this fix we would continually send a qThreadStopInfo packet
over and over when any thread stop info was requested. We now note the stop
ID that the stop info was requested for and avoid multiple requests.
Cleaned up some of the expression code to not look for ClangExpressionVariable
objects up by name since they are now shared pointers and we can just look for
the exact pointer match and avoid possible errors.
Fixed an bug in the ValueObject code that would cause children to not be
displayed.
llvm-svn: 123127
can avoid running the code in the target if the
expression's result is known and the expression
has no side effects.
Right now this feature is quite conservative in
its guess about side effects, and it only computes
integer results, but the machinery to make it more
sophisticated is there.
llvm-svn: 121952
values or persistent expression variables. Now if an expression consists of
a value that is a child of a variable, or of a persistent variable only, we
will create a value object for it and make a ValueObjectConstResult from it to
freeze the value (for program variables only, not persistent variables) and
avoid running JITed code. For everything else we still parse up and JIT code
and run it in the inferior.
There was also a lot of clean up in the expression code. I made the
ClangExpressionVariables be stored in collections of shared pointers instead
of in collections of objects. This will help stop a lot of copy constructors on
these large objects and also cleans up the code considerably. The persistent
clang expression variables were moved over to the Target to ensure they persist
across process executions.
Added the ability for lldb_private::Target objects to evaluate expressions.
We want to evaluate expressions at the target level in case we aren't running
yet, or we have just completed running. We still want to be able to access the
persistent expression variables between runs, and also evaluate constant
expressions.
Added extra logging to the dynamic loader plug-in for MacOSX. ModuleList objects
can now dump their contents with the UUID, arch and full paths being logged with
appropriate prefix values.
Thread hardened the Communication class a bit by making the connection auto_ptr
member into a shared pointer member and then making a local copy of the shared
pointer in each method that uses it to make sure another thread can't nuke the
connection object while it is being used by another thread.
Added a new file to the lldb/test/load_unload test that causes the test a.out file
to link to the libd.dylib file all the time. This will allow us to test using
the DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable after moving libd.dylib somewhere else.
llvm-svn: 121745
the code to pass the _cmd pointer has been improved, and _cmd
is now set to the value of _cmd for the current context, as
opposed to being simply NULL.
llvm-svn: 121739
access to the members of the Objective-C self object.
The approach we take is to generate the method as a
@category on top of the self object, and to pass the
"self" pointer to it. (_cmd is currently NULL.)
Most changes are in ClangExpressionDeclMap, but the
change that adds support to the ABIs to pass _cmd
touches a fair amount of code.
llvm-svn: 121722
LLDB expression execution.
We also now print the argument structure after execution,
to allow us to verify that the expression did indeed
execute correctly.
llvm-svn: 121126
so that it is not referring to potentially stale
state during IR execution.
This was done by introducing modular state (like
ClangExpressionVariable) where groups of state
variables have well-defined lifetimes:
- m_parser_vars are specific to parsing, and only
exist between calls to WillParse() and DidParse().
- m_struct_vars survive for the entire execution
of the ClangExpressionDeclMap because they
provide the template for a materialized set of
expression variables.
- m_material_vars are specific to a single
instance of materialization, and only exist
between calls to Materialize() and
Dematerialize().
I also removed unnecessary references to long-
lived state that really didn't need to be referred
to at all, and also introduced several assert()s
that helped me diagnose a few bugs (fixed too).
llvm-svn: 120778
RegisterContext* - normally this is retrieved from the ExecutionContext's
StackFrame but when we need to evaluate an expression while creating
the stack frame list this can be a little tricky.
Add DW_OP_deref_size, needed for the _sigtramp FDE expression.
Add support for processing DWARF expressions in RegisterContextLLDB.
Update callers to DWARFExpression::Evaluate.
llvm-svn: 119885
perform recursive type lookups, because these are not
required for full type fidelity. We also make the
SelectorTable last for the full lifetime of the Clang
compiler; this was the source of many bugs.
llvm-svn: 119835
can too. So now the lldb_private::Variable class has support for this.
Variables now have support for having a basename ("i"), and a mangled name
("_ZN12_GLOBAL__N_11iE"), and a demangled name ("(anonymous namespace)::i").
Nowwhen searching for a variable by name, users might enter the fully qualified
name, or just the basename. So new test functions were added to the Variable
and Mangled classes as:
bool NameMatches (const ConstString &name);
bool NameMatches (const RegularExpression ®ex);
I also modified "ClangExpressionDeclMap::FindVariableInScope" to also search
for global variables that are not in the current file scope by first starting
with the current module, then moving on to all modules.
Fixed an issue in the DWARF parser that could cause a varaible to get parsed
more than once. Now, once we have parsed a VariableSP for a DIE, we cache
the result even if a variable wasn't made so we don't do any re-parsing. Some
DW_TAG_variable DIEs don't have locations, or are missing vital info that
stops a debugger from being able to display anything for it, we parse a NULL
variable shared pointer for these DIEs so we don't keep trying to reparse it.
llvm-svn: 119085
expression. This currently takes waaaayyyyy too much time to evaluate. We will
need to look at the expression parser and find ways to optimize the info we
provide and get this to evaluate quicker. I believe the performance issue is
currently related to us always providing a complete C++ class type when asked
about a C++ class which can cause a lot of information to be pulled since all
classes will be fully created (methods, base classes, members, all their
types). We will need to give the classes back the parser and mark them as
having external sources and get parser (Sema) to query us when it needs more
info. This should bring things up to an acceptable level.
llvm-svn: 118979
cases when getting the clang type:
- need only a forward declaration
- need a clang type that can be used for layout (members and args/return types)
- need a full clang type
This allows us to partially parse the clang types and be as lazy as possible.
The first case is when we just need to declare a type and we will complete it
later. The forward declaration happens only for class/union/structs and enums.
The layout type allows us to resolve the full clang type _except_ if we have
any modifiers on a pointer or reference (both R and L value). In this case
when we are adding members or function args or return types, we only need to
know how the type will be laid out and we can defer completing the pointee
type until we later need it. The last type means we need a full definition for
the clang type.
Did some renaming of some enumerations to get rid of the old "DC" prefix (which
stands for DebugCore which is no longer around).
Modified the clang namespace support to be almost ready to be fed to the
expression parser. I made a new ClangNamespaceDecl class that can carry around
the AST and the namespace decl so we can copy it into the expression AST. I
modified the symbol vendor and symbol file plug-ins to use this new class.
llvm-svn: 118976
Fixed the DWARF plug-in such that when it gets all attributes for a DIE, that
it omits the DW_AT_sibling and DW_AT_declaration when getting attributes
from a DW_AT_abstract_origin or DW_AT_specification DIE.
llvm-svn: 118654
to not get resolved.
Fixed the "void **isa_ptr" variable inside the objective C verifier to start
with a '$' character so we don't go looking for it in our program.
Moved the lookup for "$__lldb_class" into the part that knows we are looking
for internal types that start with a '$'.
llvm-svn: 118488
don't crash if we disable logging when some code already has a copy of the
logger. Prior to this fix, logs were handed out as pointers and if they were
held onto while a log got disabled, then it could cause a crash. Now all logs
are handed out as shared pointers so this problem shouldn't happen anymore.
We are also using our new shared pointers that put the shared pointer count
and the object into the same allocation for a tad better performance.
llvm-svn: 118319
statement. Now when ClangExpressionDeclMap returns
a variable for a name, it pretty-prints that
variable to the log instead of printing a (fairly
useless) NamedDecl pointer.
llvm-svn: 117972
Changed all of our synthesized "___clang" functions, types and variables
that get used in expressions over to have a prefix of "$_lldb". Now when we
do name lookups we can easily switch off of the first '$' character to know
if we should look through only our internal (when first char is '$') stuff,
or when we should look through program variables, functions and types.
Converted all of the clang expression code over to using "const ConstString&"
values for names instead of "const char *" since there were many places that
were converting the "const char *" names into ConstString names and them
throwing them away. We now avoid making a lot of ConstString conversions and
benefit from the quick comparisons in a few extra spots.
Converted a lot of code from LLVM coding conventions into LLDB coding
conventions.
llvm-svn: 116634
debug information and you evaluated an expression, a crash would occur as a
result of an unchecked pointer.
Added the ability to get the expression path for a ValueObject. For a rectangle
point child "x" the expression path would be something like: "rect.top_left.x".
This will allow GUI and command lines to get ahold of the expression path for
a value object without having to explicitly know about the hierarchy. This
means the ValueObject base class now has a "ValueObject *m_parent;" member.
All ValueObject subclasses now correctly track their lineage and are able
to provide value expression paths as well.
Added a new "--flat" option to the "frame variable" to allow for flat variable
output. An example of the current and new outputs:
(lldb) frame variable
argc = 1
argv = 0x00007fff5fbffe80
pt = {
x = 2
y = 3
}
rect = {
bottom_left = {
x = 1
y = 2
}
top_right = {
x = 3
y = 4
}
}
(lldb) frame variable --flat
argc = 1
argv = 0x00007fff5fbffe80
pt.x = 2
pt.y = 3
rect.bottom_left.x = 1
rect.bottom_left.y = 2
rect.top_right.x = 3
rect.top_right.y = 4
As you can see when there is a lot of hierarchy it can help flatten things out.
Also if you want to use a member in an expression, you can copy the text from
the "--flat" output and not have to piece it together manually. This can help
when you want to use parts of the STL in expressions:
(lldb) frame variable --flat
argc = 1
argv = 0x00007fff5fbffea8
hello_world._M_dataplus._M_p = 0x0000000000000000
(lldb) expr hello_world._M_dataplus._M_p[0] == '\0'
llvm-svn: 116532
results. The clang opaque type for the expression result will be added to the
Target's ASTContext, and the bytes will be stored in a DataBuffer inside
the new object. The class is named: ValueObjectConstResult
Now after an expression is evaluated, we can get a ValueObjectSP back that
contains a ValueObjectConstResult object.
Relocated the value object dumping code into a static function within
the ValueObject class instead of being in the CommandObjectFrame.cpp file
which is what contained the code to dump variables ("frame variables").
llvm-svn: 115578
adding methods to C++ and objective C classes. In order to make methods, we
need the function prototype which means we need the arguments. Parsing these
could cause a circular reference that caused an assertion.
Added a new typedef for the clang opaque types which are just void pointers:
lldb::clang_type_t. This appears in lldb-types.h.
This was fixed by enabling struct, union, class, and enum types to only get
a forward declaration when we make the clang opaque qual type for these
types. When they need to actually be resolved, lldb_private::Type will call
a new function in the SymbolFile protocol to resolve a clang type when it is
not fully defined (clang::TagDecl::getDefinition() returns NULL). This allows
us to be a lot more lazy when parsing clang types and keeps down the amount
of data that gets parsed into the ASTContext for each module.
Getting the clang type from a "lldb_private::Type" object now takes a boolean
that indicates if a forward declaration is ok:
clang_type_t lldb_private::Type::GetClangType (bool forward_decl_is_ok);
So function prototypes that define parameters that are "const T&" can now just
parse the forward declaration for type 'T' and we avoid circular references in
the type system.
llvm-svn: 115012
interface in ClangASTContext. Also added two bool returning functions that
indicated if an opaque clang qual type is a CXX class type, and if it is an
ObjC class type.
Objective C classes now will get their methods added lazily as they are
encountered. The reason for this is currently, unlike C++, the
DW_TAG_structure_type and owns the ivars, doesn't not also contain the
member functions. This means when we parse the objective C class interface
we either need to find all functions whose names start with "+[CLASS_NAME"
or "-[CLASS_NAME" and add them all to the class, or when we parse each objective
C function, we slowly add it to the class interface definition. Since objective
C's class doesn't change internal bits according to whether it has certain types
of member functions (like C++ does if it has virtual functions, or if it has
user ctors/dtors), I currently chose to lazily populate the class when each
functions is parsed. Another issue we run into with ObjC method declarations
is the "self" and "_cmd" implicit args are not marked as artificial in the
DWARF (DW_AT_artifical), so we currently have to look for the parameters by
name if we are trying to omit artificial function args if the language of the
compile unit is ObjC or ObjC++.
llvm-svn: 114722
- Sema is now exported (and there was much rejoicing.)
- Storage classes are now centrally defined.
Also fixed some bugs that the new LLVM picked up.
llvm-svn: 114622
for C++ classes. Replaced it with a less hacky approach:
- If an expression is defined in the context of a
method of class A, then that expression is wrapped as
___clang_class::___clang_expr(void*) { ... }
instead of ___clang_expr(void*) { ... }.
- ___clang_class is resolved as the type of the target
of the "this" pointer in the method the expression
is defined in.
- When reporting the type of ___clang_class, a method
with the signature ___clang_expr(void*) is added to
that class, so that Clang doesn't complain about a
method being defined without a corresponding
declaration.
- Whenever the expression gets called, "this" gets
looked up, type-checked, and then passed in as the
first argument.
This required the following changes:
- The ABIs were changed to support passing of the "this"
pointer as part of trivial calls.
- ThreadPlanCallFunction and ClangFunction were changed
to support passing of an optional "this" pointer.
- ClangUserExpression was extended to perform the
wrapping described above.
- ClangASTSource was changed to revert the changes
required by the hack.
- ClangExpressionParser, IRForTarget, and
ClangExpressionDeclMap were changed to handle
different manglings of ___clang_expr flexibly. This
meant no longer searching for a function called
___clang_expr, but rather looking for a function whose
name *contains* ___clang_expr.
- ClangExpressionParser and ClangExpressionDeclMap now
remember whether "this" is required, and know how to
look it up as necessary.
A few inheritance bugs remain, and I'm trying to resolve
these. But it is now possible to use "this" as well as
refer implicitly to member variables, when in the proper
context.
llvm-svn: 114384
expressions. This involved three main changes:
- In ClangUserExpression::ClangUserExpression(),
we now insert the following lines into the
expression:
#define this ___clang_this
#define self ___clang_self
- In ClangExpressionDeclMap::GetDecls(), we
special-case ___clang_(this|self) and instead
look up "this" or "self"
- In ClangASTSource, we introduce the capability
to generate Decls with a different, overridden,
name from the one that was requested, e.g.
this for ___clang_this.
llvm-svn: 113866
debug map showed that the location lists in the .o files needed some
refactoring in order to work. The case that was failing was where a function
that was in the "__TEXT.__textcoal_nt" in the .o file, and in the
"__TEXT.__text" section in the main executable. This made symbol lookup fail
due to the way we were finding a real address in the debug map which was
by finding the section that the function was in in the .o file and trying to
find this in the main executable. Now the section list supports finding a
linked address in a section or any child sections. After fixing this, we ran
into issue that were due to DWARF and how it represents locations lists.
DWARF makes a list of address ranges and expressions that go along with those
address ranges. The location addresses are expressed in terms of a compile
unit address + offset. This works fine as long as nothing moves around. When
stuff moves around and offsets change between the remapped compile unit base
address and the new function address, then we can run into trouble. To deal
with this, we now store supply a location list slide amount to any location
list expressions that will allow us to make the location list addresses into
zero based offsets from the object that owns the location list (always a
function in our case).
With these fixes we can now re-link random address ranges inside the debugger
for use with our DWARF + debug map, incremental linking, and more.
Another issue that arose when doing the DWARF in the .o files was that GCC
4.2 emits a ".debug_aranges" that only mentions functions that are externally
visible. This makes .debug_aranges useless to us and we now generate a real
address range lookup table in the DWARF parser at the same time as we index
the name tables (that are needed because .debug_pubnames is just as useless).
llvm-gcc doesn't generate a .debug_aranges section, though this could be
fixed, we aren't going to rely upon it.
Renamed a bunch of "UINT_MAX" to "UINT32_MAX".
llvm-svn: 113829
- If you put a semicolon at the end of an expression,
this no longer causes the expression parser to
error out. This was a two-part fix: first,
ClangExpressionDeclMap::Materialize now handles
an empty struct (such as when there is no return
value); second, ASTResultSynthesizer walks backward
from the end of the ASTs until it reaches something
that's not a NullStmt.
- ClangExpressionVariable now properly byte-swaps when
printing itself.
- ClangUtilityFunction now cleans up after itself when
it's done compiling itself.
- Utility functions can now use external functions just
like user expressions.
- If you end your expression with a statement that does
not return a value, the expression now runs correctly
anyway.
Also, added the beginnings of an Objective-C object
validator function, which is neither installed nor used
as yet.
llvm-svn: 113789
with the Clang parser that prevents us from passing
Objective-C types to functions that expect C types.
This quick hack keeps us in business until that
interaction is fixed.
llvm-svn: 113429
symbols with the same name and no debug information.
Also improved the way functions are called so we
don't automatically define them as variadic functions
in the IR.
llvm-svn: 113290
persistent variables were staying around too long.
This caused the following problem:
- A persistent result variable is created for the
result of an expression. The pointer to the
corresponding Decl is stored in the variable.
- The persistent variable is looked up during
struct generation (correctly) using its Decl.
- Another expression defines a new result variable
which happens to have a Decl in the same place
as the original result variable.
- The persistent variable is looked up during
struct generation using its Decl, but the old
result variable appears first in the list and
has the same Decl pointer.
The fix is to destroy parser-specific data when
it is no longer valid.
Also improved some logging as I diagnosed the
bug.
llvm-svn: 112540
ClangExpressionVariables for found external variables
as well as for struct members, replacing the Tuple
and StructMember data structures.
llvm-svn: 111859
to spawn a thread for each process that is being monitored. Previously
LLDB would spawn a single thread that would wait for any child process which
isn't ok to do as a shared library (LLDB.framework on Mac OSX, or lldb.so on
linux). The old single thread used to call wait4() with a pid of -1 which
could cause it to reap child processes that it shouldn't have.
Re-wrote the way Function blocks are handles. Previously I attempted to keep
all blocks in a single memory allocation (in a std::vector). This made the
code somewhat efficient, but hard to work with. I got rid of the old BlockList
class, and went to a straight parent with children relationship. This new
approach will allow for partial parsing of the blocks within a function.
llvm-svn: 111706
expression parser. There shouldn't be four separate
classes encapsulating a variable.
ClangExpressionVariable is now meant to be the
container for all variable information. It has
several optional components that hold data for
different subsystems.
ClangPersistentVariable has been removed; we now
use ClangExpressionVariable instead.
llvm-svn: 111600
expression. It is now possible to do things like this:
(lldb) expr int $i = 5; $i + 1
$0 = (int) 6
(lldb) expr $i + 3
$1 = (int) 8
(lldb) expr $1 + $0
$2 = (int) 14
As a bonus, this allowed us to move printing of
expression results into the ClangPersistentVariable
class. This code needs a bit of refactoring -- in
particular, ClangExpressionDeclMap has eaten one too
many bacteria and needs to undergo mitosis -- but the
infrastructure appears to be holding up nicely.
llvm-svn: 110896
expression parser. It is now possible to type:
(lldb) expr int $i = 5; $i + 1
(int) 6
(lldb) expr $i + 2
(int) 7
The skeleton for automatic result variables is
also implemented. The changes affect:
- the process, which now contains a
ClangPersistentVariables object that holds
persistent variables associated with it
- the expression parser, which now uses
the persistent variables during variable
lookup
- TaggedASTType, where I loaded some commonly
used tags into a header so that they are
interchangeable between different clients of
the class
llvm-svn: 110777
made IR-based expression evaluation the default.
Also added a new class to hold persistent variables.
The class is empty as yet while I write up a design
document for what it will do. Also the place where
it is currently created (by the Expression command)
is certainly wrong.
llvm-svn: 110415
including superclass members. This involved ensuring
that access control was ignored, and ensuring that
the operands of BitCasts were properly scanned for
variables that needed importing.
Also laid the groundwork for declaring objects of
custom types; however, this functionality is disabled
for now because of a potential loop in ASTImporter.
llvm-svn: 110174
involved watching for the objective C built-in types in DWARF and making sure
when we convert the DWARF types into clang types that we use the appropriate
ASTContext types.
Added a way to find and dump types in lldb (something equivalent to gdb's
"ptype" command):
image lookup --type <TYPENAME>
This only works for looking up types by name and won't work with variables.
It also currently dumps out verbose internal information. I will modify it
to dump more appropriate user level info in my next submission.
Hookup up the "FindTypes()" functions in the SymbolFile and SymbolVendor so
we can lookup types by name in one or more images.
Fixed "image lookup --address <ADDRESS>" to be able to correctly show all
symbol context information, but it will only show this extra information when
the new "--verbose" flag is used.
Updated to latest LLVM to get a few needed fixes.
llvm-svn: 110089
call Objective-C methods from expressions. Also added
some more logging to the function-calling thread plan
so that we can see the registers when a function
finishes.
Also documented things maybe a bit better.
llvm-svn: 109938
Right now we mock up the function as a variadic
function when generating the IR for the call; we need
to eventually make the function be the right type if
the type is available.
llvm-svn: 109543
it returns a list of functions as a SymbolContextList.
Rewrote the clients of SymbolContext to use this
SymbolContextList.
Rewrote some of the providers of the data to SymbolContext
to make them respect preferences as to whether the list
should be cleared first; propagated that change out.
ClangExpressionDeclMap and ClangASTSource use this new
function list to properly generate function definitions -
even for functions that don't have a prototype in the
debug information.
llvm-svn: 109476
spurious guard variables on expression statics.
Updated the AST result synthesizer to eliminate the
unneeded result pointer.
Very rudimentary expressions now evaluate correctly
in the target using the new JIT-based mechanism.
llvm-svn: 109317
- When we JIT an expression, we print the disassembly
of the generated code
- When we put the structure into the target, we print
the individual entries in the structure byte for
byte.
llvm-svn: 109278
and moved it to its own header file for cleanliness.
Added more logging to ClangFunction so that we can
diagnose crashes in the executing expression.
Added code to extract the result of the expression
from the struct that is passed to the JIT-compiled
code.
llvm-svn: 109199
defines that are in "llvm/Support/MachO.h". This should allow ObjectFileMachO
and ObjectContainerUniversalMachO to be able to be cross compiled in Linux.
Also did some cleanup on the ASTType by renaming it to ClangASTType and
renaming the header file. Moved a lot of "AST * + opaque clang type *"
functionality from lldb_private::Type over into ClangASTType.
llvm-svn: 109046
used by the JIT compiled expression, including the
result of the expression.
Also added a new class, ASTType, which encapsulates an
opaque Clang type and its associated AST context.
Refactored ClangExpressionDeclMap to use ASTTypes,
significantly reducing the possibility of mixups of
types from different AST contexts.
llvm-svn: 108965