Commit Graph

100 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Zachary Turner b3b8922cad Revert "I had recently added a new SBFrame::GetVariables() overload with yet another bool argument"
This reverts commit r228975.  It was causing link errors
on the Windows bots, since last Thursday.

http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/lldb-x86-win7-msvc/builds/725

Conflicts:
	lldb.xcodeproj/project.pbxproj

llvm-svn: 229514
2015-02-17 17:42:05 +00:00
Enrico Granata e0d951db44 I had recently added a new SBFrame::GetVariables() overload with yet another bool argument
We talked about it internally - and came to the conclusion that it's time to have an options class

This commit adds an SBVariablesOptions class and goes through all the required dance

llvm-svn: 228975
2015-02-12 23:09:17 +00:00
Enrico Granata 560558eb7c Introduce the notion of "runtime support values"
A runtime support value is a ValueObject whose only purpose is to support some language runtime's operation, but it does not directly provide any user-visible benefit
As such, unless the user is working on the runtime support, it is mostly safe for them not to see such a value when debugging

It is a language runtime's job to check whether a ValueObject is a support value, and that - in conjunction with a target setting - is used by frame variable and target variable
SBFrame::GetVariables gets a new overload with yet another flag to dictate whether to return those support values to the caller - that which defaults to the setting's value

rdar://problem/15539930

llvm-svn: 228791
2015-02-11 02:35:39 +00:00
Jim Ingham 8646d3c164 Rename eExecution*** to eExpression*** to be consistent with the result type.
llvm-svn: 207945
2014-05-05 02:47:44 +00:00
Jim Ingham 1624a2d3c8 Make the Expression Execution result enum available to the SB API layer.
Add a callback that will allow an expression to be cancelled between the
expression evaluation stages (for the ClangUserExpressions.)

<rdar://problem/16790467>, <rdar://problem/16573440>

llvm-svn: 207944
2014-05-05 02:26:40 +00:00
Saleem Abdulrasool 324a103619 sweep up -Wformat warnings from gcc
This is a purely mechanical change explicitly casting any parameters for printf
style conversion.  This cleans up the warnings emitted by gcc 4.8 on Linux.

llvm-svn: 205607
2014-04-04 04:06:10 +00:00
Enrico Granata 8a2a0dfba5 Restore the ability of SBFrame::FindValue() to look for file global variables
This should clean up the new test failures caused by r201614

llvm-svn: 201710
2014-02-19 19:35:13 +00:00
Enrico Granata 08a04327a9 <rdar://problem/15960553>
Fix a bug where calling SBFrame::FindValue() would cause a copy of all variables in the block to be inserted in the frame's variable list, regardless of whether those same variables were there or not - which means one could end up with a frame with lots of duplicate copies of the same variables

llvm-svn: 201614
2014-02-18 23:48:11 +00:00
Greg Clayton fb6621ef4b Add a setting to allow users to enable expressions that crash LLDB to show up in crash logs.
<rdar://problem/11549320> 

llvm-svn: 196613
2013-12-06 21:59:52 +00:00
Jason Molenda b57e4a1bc6 Roll back the changes I made in r193907 which created a new Frame
pure virtual base class and made StackFrame a subclass of that.  As
I started to build on top of that arrangement today, I found that it
wasn't working out like I intended.  Instead I'll try sticking with
the single StackFrame class -- there's too much code duplication to
make a more complicated class hierarchy sensible I think.

llvm-svn: 193983
2013-11-04 09:33:30 +00:00
Jason Molenda f23bf7432c Add a new base class, Frame. It is a pure virtual function which
defines a protocol that all subclasses will implement.  StackFrame
is currently the only subclass and the methods that Frame vends are
nearly identical to StackFrame's old methods.

Update all callers to use Frame*/Frame& instead of pointers to
StackFrames.

This is almost entirely a mechanical change that touches a lot of
the code base so I'm committing it alone.  No new functionality is
added with this patch, no new subclasses of Frame exist yet.

I'll probably need to tweak some of the separation, possibly moving
some of StackFrame's methods up in to Frame, but this is a good
starting point.

<rdar://problem/15314068>

llvm-svn: 193907
2013-11-02 02:23:02 +00:00
Jason Molenda 5d35384292 Fix the logging messages for SBFrame::FindRegister().
llvm-svn: 187264
2013-07-26 22:52:30 +00:00
Jason Molenda ad9a53c510 Add an SBFrame::FindRegister() method to make it a little
easier to retrieve a register value.

llvm-svn: 187184
2013-07-26 02:08:48 +00:00
Jim Ingham 5c42d8a87c Fixed a few obvious errors pointed out by the static analyzer.
llvm-svn: 181911
2013-05-15 18:27:08 +00:00
Greg Clayton 5160ce5c72 <rdar://problem/13521159>
LLDB is crashing when logging is enabled from lldb-perf-clang. This has to do with the global destructor chain as the process and its threads are being torn down.

All logging channels now make one and only one instance that is kept in a global pointer which is never freed. This guarantees that logging can correctly continue as the process tears itself down.

llvm-svn: 178191
2013-03-27 23:08:40 +00:00
Enrico Granata 08ec0b6117 Renaming SBValueList::get() to
opaque_ptr since it returns a void* instead of an usable object.

llvm-svn: 174673
2013-02-07 22:57:46 +00:00
Enrico Granata d96f0682e5 Correct logging for function calls that return SBValueList
llvm-svn: 174670
2013-02-07 22:22:27 +00:00
Enrico Granata 85425d77b8 <rdar://problem/13107151>
SBValueList was backed by a ValueObjectList. This caused us to lose track of the additional metadata in the ValueImpl that backs SBValue.
This checkin fixes that by backing SBValueList with ValueListImpl (that essentially wraps a vector<SBValue>).

llvm-svn: 174638
2013-02-07 18:23:56 +00:00
Daniel Malea d01b2953fa Resolve printf formatting warnings on Linux:
- use macros from inttypes.h for format strings instead of OS-specific types

Patch from Matt Kopec!

llvm-svn: 168945
2012-11-29 21:49:15 +00:00
Jim Ingham 7730b9a47a Tighten up how we acquire the underlying frame in the SBFrame methods. We were getting
the frame and then getting the run lock.  Which means that our frame could have gotten
invalidated by stopping between the time we got the frame and assured the the target was
stopped.  Now we get the run lock first, and THEN resolve the underlying frame object.

<rdar://problem/12621607>

llvm-svn: 168838
2012-11-29 00:26:19 +00:00
Enrico Granata e3e91517ff <rdar://problem/12437442>
Given our implementation of ValueObjects we could have a scenario where a ValueObject has a dynamic type of Foo* at one point, and then its dynamic type changes to Bar*
If Bar* has synthetic children enabled, by the time we figure that out, our public API is already vending SBValues wrapping a DynamicVO, instead of a SyntheticVO and there was
no trivial way for us to change the SP inside an SBValue on the fly
This checkin reimplements SBValue in terms of a wrapper, ValueImpl, that allows this substitutions on-the-fly by overriding GetSP() to do The Right Thing (TM)
As an additional bonus, GetNonSyntheticValue() now works, and we can get rid of the ForceDisableSyntheticChildren idiom in ScriptInterpreterPython
Lastly, this checkin makes sure the synthetic VOs get the correct m_value and m_data from their parents (prevented summaries from working in some cases)

llvm-svn: 166426
2012-10-22 18:18:36 +00:00
Greg Clayton cced1566e2 API cleanup.
llvm-svn: 166070
2012-10-16 22:58:25 +00:00
Jim Ingham 35e1bda695 Add the ability to set timeout & "run all threads" options both from the "expr" command and from
the SB API's that evaluate expressions.

<rdar://problem/12457211>

llvm-svn: 166062
2012-10-16 21:41:58 +00:00
Enrico Granata d4439aa9ed Implementing an Options class for EvaluateExpression() in order to make the signature more compact and make it easy to 'just run an expression'
llvm-svn: 163239
2012-09-05 20:41:26 +00:00
Greg Clayton 1f7460716b <rdar://problem/11757916>
Make breakpoint setting by file and line much more efficient by only looking for inlined breakpoint locations if we are setting a breakpoint in anything but a source implementation file. Implementing this complex for a many reasons. Turns out that parsing compile units lazily had some issues with respect to how we need to do things with DWARF in .o files. So the fixes in the checkin for this makes these changes:
- Add a new setting called "target.inline-breakpoint-strategy" which can be set to "never", "always", or "headers". "never" will never try and set any inlined breakpoints (fastest). "always" always looks for inlined breakpoint locations (slowest, but most accurate). "headers", which is the default setting, will only look for inlined breakpoint locations if the breakpoint is set in what are consudered to be header files, which is realy defined as "not in an implementation source file". 
- modify the breakpoint setting by file and line to check the current "target.inline-breakpoint-strategy" setting and act accordingly
- Modify compile units to be able to get their language and other info lazily. This allows us to create compile units from the debug map and not have to fill all of the details in, and then lazily discover this information as we go on debuggging. This is needed to avoid parsing all .o files when setting breakpoints in implementation only files (no inlines). Otherwise we would need to parse the .o file, the object file (mach-o in our case) and the symbol file (DWARF in the object file) just to see what the compile unit was.
- modify the "SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap" to subclass lldb_private::Module so that the virtual "GetObjectFile()" and "GetSymbolVendor()" functions can be intercepted when the .o file contenst are later lazilly needed. Prior to this fix, when we first instantiated the "SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap" class, we would also make modules, object files and symbol files for every .o file in the debug map because we needed to fix up the sections in the .o files with information that is in the executable debug map. Now we lazily do this in the DebugMapModule::GetObjectFile()

Cleaned up header includes a bit as well.

llvm-svn: 162860
2012-08-29 21:13:06 +00:00
Jim Ingham 4fc6cb9c76 Rework how the API mutex is acquired when filling out an ExecutionContext from an ExecutionContextRef,
particularly in the SBThread & SBFrame interfaces.  Instead of filling the whole context & then getting
the API mutex, we now get only the target, acquire the API mutex from it, then fill out the rest of the
context.  This removes a race condition where you get a ThreadSP, then wait on the API mutex while another
command Destroy's the Thread you've just gotten.
Also fixed the ExecutionContextRef::Get*SP calls so they don't return invalid objects.
Also fixed the ExecutionContext::Has*Scope calls so they don't claim to have a scope if the object representing
that scope has been destroyed.
Also fixed a think-o in Thread::IsValid which was causing it to return the opposite of the desired value.

<rdar://problem/11995490>

llvm-svn: 162401
2012-08-22 21:34:33 +00:00
Greg Clayton 23f59509a8 Ran the static analyzer on the codebase and found a few things.
llvm-svn: 160338
2012-07-17 03:23:13 +00:00
Greg Clayton 685c88c5a8 <rdar://problem/11870357>
Allow "frame variable" to find ivars without the need for "this->" or "self->".  

llvm-svn: 160211
2012-07-14 00:53:55 +00:00
Enrico Granata de4ca5b789 rdar://problem/10996978 - Fixing an issue where crash reports for the expression parser might include symbols from the user's application
llvm-svn: 157631
2012-05-29 18:06:49 +00:00
Jim Ingham 7ba6e99158 Found one more place where the OkayToDiscard needs to be consulted.
Also changed the defaults for SBThread::Step* to not delete extant plans.
Also added some test cases to test more complex stepping scenarios.

llvm-svn: 156667
2012-05-11 23:47:32 +00:00
Jim Ingham 1f628f4e8f We take the API mutex first and the stop mutex second in general, so do it here as well.
llvm-svn: 155077
2012-04-19 00:14:53 +00:00
Jim Ingham d846f1f2b1 The API lock was getting dropped too soon in GetVariables. GetValueObjectForFrameVariable could run the target (to get dynamic values) and that requires the target lock.
llvm-svn: 154711
2012-04-13 23:29:44 +00:00
Greg Clayton af2589ea09 Fixed an issue that happens in LLDB versions after SBFrame switched to using a lldb::ExecutionContextRefSP where we might segfault due to using a shared pointer with NULL in it. The SBFrame object should always have a valid lldb::ExecutionContextRefSP in it. The SBFrame::Clear() method was doing the wrong thing and is now fixed.
llvm-svn: 154614
2012-04-12 20:58:26 +00:00
Greg Clayton c9858e4d05 Added logging when API calls try to do something that shouldn't be done when the process is stopped by having logging calls that end with "error: process is running".
Also test for the process to be stopped when many SBValue API calls are made to make sure it is safe to evaluate values, children of values and much more.

llvm-svn: 154160
2012-04-06 02:17:47 +00:00
Greg Clayton 7fdf9ef15d Added a new Host class: ReadWriteLock
This abstracts read/write locks on the current host system. It is currently backed by pthread_rwlock_t objects so it should work on all unix systems.

We also need a way to control multi-threaded access to the process through the public API when it is running. For example it isn't a good idea to try and get stack frames while the process is running. To implement this, the lldb_private::Process class now contains a ReadWriteLock member variable named m_run_lock which is used to control the public process state. The public process state represents the state of the process as the client knows it. The private is used to control the actual current process state. So the public state of the process can be stopped, yet the private state can be running when evaluating an expression for example. 

Adding the read/write lock where readers are clients that want the process to stay stopped, and writers are clients that run the process, allows us to accurately control multi-threaded access to the process.

Switched the SBThread and SBFrame over to us shared pointers to the ExecutionContextRef class instead of making their own class to track this. This fixed an issue with assigning on SBFrame to another and will also centralize the code that tracks weak references to execution context objects into one location.

llvm-svn: 154099
2012-04-05 16:12:35 +00:00
Johnny Chen 35e2ab6039 rdar://problem/10976649
Add SBFrame::IsEqual(const SBFrame &that) method and export it to the Python binding.
Alos add a test case test_frame_api_IsEqual() to TestFrames.py file.

llvm-svn: 152050
2012-03-05 19:53:24 +00:00
Jason Molenda cf7e2dc09a Patch Enrico's changes from r150558 on 2012-02-14 to build even if Python
is not available (LLDB_DISABLE_PYTHON is defined).

Change build-swig-Python.sh to emit an empty LLDBPythonWrap.cpp file if 
this build is LLDB_DISABLE_PYTHON.

Change the "Copy to Xcode.app" shell script phase in the lldb.xcodeproj
to only do this copying for Mac native builds.

llvm-svn: 151035
2012-02-21 05:33:55 +00:00
Greg Clayton d9e416c0ea The second part in thread hardening the internals of LLDB where we make
the lldb_private::StackFrame objects hold onto a weak pointer to the thread
object. The lldb_private::StackFrame objects the the most volatile objects
we have as when we are doing single stepping, frames can often get lost or
thrown away, only to be re-created as another object that still refers to the
same frame. We have another bug tracking that. But we need to be able to 
have frames no longer be able to get the thread when they are not part of
a thread anymore, and this is the first step (this fix makes that possible
but doesn't implement it yet).

Also changed lldb_private::ExecutionContextScope to return shared pointers to
all objects in the execution context to further thread harden the internals.

llvm-svn: 150871
2012-02-18 05:35:26 +00:00
Greg Clayton 5569e64ea7 Removed all of the "#ifndef SWIG" from the SB header files since we are using
interface (.i) files for each class.

Changed the FindFunction class from:

uint32_t
SBTarget::FindFunctions (const char *name, 
                         uint32_t name_type_mask, 
                         bool append, 
                         lldb::SBSymbolContextList& sc_list)

uint32_t
SBModule::FindFunctions (const char *name, 
                         uint32_t name_type_mask, 
                         bool append, 
                         lldb::SBSymbolContextList& sc_list)

To:

lldb::SBSymbolContextList
SBTarget::FindFunctions (const char *name, 
                         uint32_t name_type_mask = lldb::eFunctionNameTypeAny);

lldb::SBSymbolContextList
SBModule::FindFunctions (const char *name,
                         uint32_t name_type_mask = lldb::eFunctionNameTypeAny);

This makes the API easier to use from python. Also added the ability to
append a SBSymbolContext or a SBSymbolContextList to a SBSymbolContextList.

Exposed properties for lldb.SBSymbolContextList in python:

lldb.SBSymbolContextList.modules => list() or all lldb.SBModule objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.compile_units => list() or all lldb.SBCompileUnits objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.functions => list() or all lldb.SBFunction objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.blocks => list() or all lldb.SBBlock objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.line_entries => list() or all lldb.SBLineEntry objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.symbols => list() or all lldb.SBSymbol objects in the list

This allows a call to the SBTarget::FindFunctions(...) and SBModule::FindFunctions(...)
and then the result can be used to extract the desired information:

sc_list = lldb.target.FindFunctions("erase")

for function in sc_list.functions:
    print function
for symbol in sc_list.symbols:
    print symbol

Exposed properties for the lldb.SBSymbolContext objects in python:

lldb.SBSymbolContext.module => lldb.SBModule
lldb.SBSymbolContext.compile_unit => lldb.SBCompileUnit
lldb.SBSymbolContext.function => lldb.SBFunction
lldb.SBSymbolContext.block => lldb.SBBlock
lldb.SBSymbolContext.line_entry => lldb.SBLineEntry
lldb.SBSymbolContext.symbol => lldb.SBSymbol


Exposed properties for the lldb.SBBlock objects in python:

lldb.SBBlock.parent => lldb.SBBlock for the parent block that contains
lldb.SBBlock.sibling => lldb.SBBlock for the sibling block to the current block
lldb.SBBlock.first_child => lldb.SBBlock for the first child block to the current block
lldb.SBBlock.call_site => for inline functions, return a lldb.declaration object that gives the call site file, line and column
lldb.SBBlock.name => for inline functions this is the name of the inline function that this block represents
lldb.SBBlock.inlined_block => returns the inlined function block that contains this block (might return itself if the current block is an inlined block)
lldb.SBBlock.range[int] => access the address ranges for a block by index, a list() with start and end address is returned
lldb.SBBlock.ranges => an array or all address ranges for this block
lldb.SBBlock.num_ranges => the number of address ranges for this blcok

SBFunction objects can now get the SBType and the SBBlock that represents the
top scope of the function.

SBBlock objects can now get the variable list from the current block. The value
list returned allows varaibles to be viewed prior with no process if code
wants to check the variables in a function. There are two ways to get a variable
list from a SBBlock:

lldb::SBValueList
SBBlock::GetVariables (lldb::SBFrame& frame,
                       bool arguments,
                       bool locals,
                       bool statics,
                       lldb::DynamicValueType use_dynamic);

lldb::SBValueList
SBBlock::GetVariables (lldb::SBTarget& target,
                       bool arguments,
                       bool locals,
                       bool statics);

When a SBFrame is used, the values returned will be locked down to the frame
and the values will be evaluated in the context of that frame.

When a SBTarget is used, global an static variables can be viewed without a
running process.

llvm-svn: 149853
2012-02-06 01:44:54 +00:00
Greg Clayton 81e871ed76 Convert all python objects in our API to use overload the __str__ method
instead of the __repr__. __repr__ is a function that should return an
expression that can be used to recreate an python object and we were using
it to just return a human readable string.

Fixed a crasher when using the new implementation of SBValue::Cast(SBType).

Thread hardened lldb::SBValue and lldb::SBWatchpoint and did other general
improvements to the API.

Fixed a crasher in lldb::SBValue::GetChildMemberWithName() where we didn't
correctly handle not having a target.

llvm-svn: 149743
2012-02-04 02:27:34 +00:00
Greg Clayton 7edbdfc97c Expose more convenience functionality in the python classes.
lldb.SBValueList now exposes the len() method and also allows item access:

lldb.SBValueList[<int>] - where <int> is an integer index into the list, returns a single lldb.SBValue which might be empty if the index is out of range
lldb.SBValueList[<str>] - where <str> is the name to look for, returns a list() of lldb.SBValue objects with any matching values (the list might be empty if nothing matches)
lldb.SBValueList[<re>]  - where <re> is a compiles regular expression, returns a list of lldb.SBValue objects for containing any matches or a empty list if nothing matches

lldb.SBFrame now exposes:

lldb.SBFrame.variables => SBValueList of all variables that are in scope
lldb.SBFrame.vars => see lldb.SBFrame.variables
lldb.SBFrame.locals => SBValueList of all variables that are locals in the current frame
lldb.SBFrame.arguments => SBValueList of all variables that are arguments in the current frame
lldb.SBFrame.args => see lldb.SBFrame.arguments
lldb.SBFrame.statics => SBValueList of all static variables
lldb.SBFrame.registers => SBValueList of all registers for the current frame
lldb.SBFrame.regs => see lldb.SBFrame.registers

Combine any of the above properties with the new lldb.SBValueList functionality
and now you can do:

y = lldb.frame.vars['rect.origin.y']

or

vars = lldb.frame.vars
for i in range len(vars):
  print vars[i]

Also expose "lldb.SBFrame.var(<str>)" where <str> can be en expression path
for any variable or child within the variable. This makes it easier to get a
value from the current frame like "rect.origin.y". The resulting value is also
not a constant result as expressions will return, but a live value that will
continue to track the current value for the variable expression path.

lldb.SBValue now exposes:

lldb.SBValue.unsigned => unsigned integer for the value
lldb.SBValue.signed => a signed integer for the value

llvm-svn: 149684
2012-02-03 07:02:37 +00:00
Greg Clayton acdbe81637 lldb::SBTarget and lldb::SBProcess are now thread hardened. They both still
contain shared pointers to the lldb_private::Target and lldb_private::Process
objects respectively as we won't want the target or process just going away.

Also cleaned up the lldb::SBModule to remove dangerous pointer accessors.

For any code the public API files, we should always be grabbing shared 
pointers to any objects for the current class, and any other classes prior
to running code with them.

llvm-svn: 149238
2012-01-30 09:04:36 +00:00
Greg Clayton b9556acc9e SBFrame is now threadsafe using some extra tricks. One issue is that stack
frames might go away (the object itself, not the actual logical frame) when
we are single stepping due to the way we currently sometimes end up flushing
frames when stepping in/out/over. They later will come back to life 
represented by another object yet they have the same StackID. Now when you get
a lldb::SBFrame object, it will track the frame it is initialized with until 
the thread goes away or the StackID no longer exists in the stack for the 
thread it was created on. It uses a weak_ptr to both the frame and thread and
also stores the StackID. These three items allow us to determine when the
stack frame object has gone away (the weak_ptr will be NULL) and allows us to
find the correct frame again. In our test suite we had such cases where we
were just getting lucky when something like this happened:

1 - stop at breakpoint
2 - get first frame in thread where we stopped
3 - run an expression that causes the program to JIT and run code
4 - run more expressions on the frame from step 2 which was very very luckily
    still around inside a shared pointer, yet, not part of the current 
    thread (a new stack frame object had appeared with the same stack ID and
    depth). 
    
We now avoid all such issues and properly keep up to date, or we start 
returning errors when the frame doesn't exist and always responds with
invalid answers.

Also fixed the UserSettingsController  (not going to rewrite this just yet)
so that it doesn't crash on shutdown. Using weak_ptr's came in real handy to
track when the master controller has already gone away and this allowed me to
pull out the previous NotifyOwnerIsShuttingDown() patch as it is no longer 
needed.

llvm-svn: 149231
2012-01-30 07:41:31 +00:00
Greg Clayton 17a6ad05c1 Removed the "lldb-forward-rtti.h" header file as it was designed to contain
all RTTI types, and since we don't use RTTI anymore since clang and llvm don't
we don't really need this header file. All shared pointer definitions have
been moved into "lldb-forward.h".

Defined std::tr1::weak_ptr definitions for all of the types that inherit from
enable_shared_from_this() in "lldb-forward.h" in preparation for thread
hardening our public API.

The first in the thread hardening check-ins. First we start with SBThread.
We have issues in our lldb::SB API right now where if you have one object
that is being used by two threads we have a race condition. Consider the
following code:

 1    int
 2    SBThread::SomeFunction()
 3    {
 4        int result = -1;
 5        if (m_opaque_sp)
 6        {
 7            result = m_opaque_sp->DoSomething();
 8        }
 9        return result;
10    }

And now this happens:

Thread 1 enters any SBThread function and checks its m_opaque_sp and is about
to execute the code on line 7 but hasn't yet
Thread 2 gets to run and class sb_thread.Clear() which calls m_opaque_sp.clear()
and clears the contents of the shared pointer member
Thread 1 now crashes when it resumes.

The solution is to use std::tr1::weak_ptr. Now the SBThread class contains a
lldb::ThreadWP (weak pointer to our lldb_private::Thread class) and this 
function would look like:

 1    int
 2    SBThread::SomeFunction()
 3    {
 4        int result = -1;
 5        ThreadSP thread_sp(m_opaque_wp.lock());
 6        if (thread_sp)
 7        {
 8            result = m_opaque_sp->DoSomething();
 9        }
10        return result;
11    }

Now we have a solid thread safe API where we get a local copy of our thread
shared pointer from our weak_ptr and then we are guaranteed it can't go away
during our function.

So lldb::SBThread has been thread hardened, more checkins to follow shortly.

llvm-svn: 149218
2012-01-30 02:53:15 +00:00
Greg Clayton e1cd1be6d6 Switching back to using std::tr1::shared_ptr. We originally switched away
due to RTTI worries since llvm and clang don't use RTTI, but I was able to 
switch back with no issues as far as I can tell. Once the RTTI issue wasn't
an issue, we were looking for a way to properly track weak pointers to objects
to solve some of the threading issues we have been running into which naturally
led us back to std::tr1::weak_ptr. We also wanted the ability to make a shared 
pointer from just a pointer, which is also easily solved using the 
std::tr1::enable_shared_from_this class. 

The main reason for this move back is so we can start properly having weak
references to objects. Currently a lldb_private::Thread class has a refrence
to its parent lldb_private::Process. This doesn't work well when we now hand
out a SBThread object that contains a shared pointer to a lldb_private::Thread
as this SBThread can be held onto by external clients and if they end up
using one of these objects we can easily crash.

So the next task is to start adopting std::tr1::weak_ptr where ever it makes
sense which we can do with lldb_private::Debugger, lldb_private::Target,
lldb_private::Process, lldb_private::Thread, lldb_private::StackFrame, and
many more objects now that they are no longer using intrusive ref counted
pointer objects (you can't do std::tr1::weak_ptr functionality with intrusive
pointers).

llvm-svn: 149207
2012-01-29 20:56:30 +00:00
Sean Callanan 20bb3aa53a The "desired result type" code in the expression
parser has hitherto been an implementation waiting
for a use.  I have now tied the '-o' option for
the expression command -- which indicates that the
result is an Objective-C object and needs to be
printed -- to the ExpressionParser, which
communicates the desired type to Clang.

Now, if the result of an expression is determined
by an Objective-C method call for which there is
no type information, that result is implicitly
cast to id if and only if the -o option is passed
to the expression command.  (Otherwise if there
is no explicit cast Clang will issue an error.
This behavior is identical to what happened before
r146756.)

Also added a testcase for -o enabled and disabled.

llvm-svn: 147099
2011-12-21 22:22:58 +00:00
Greg Clayton da7bc7d000 <rdar://problem/10126482>
Fixed an issues with the SBType and SBTypeMember classes:
- Fixed SBType to be able to dump itself from python
- Fixed SBType::GetNumberOfFields() to return the correct value for objective C interfaces
- Fixed SBTypeMember to be able to dump itself from python
- Fixed the SBTypeMember ability to get a field offset in bytes (the value
  being returned was wrong)
- Added the SBTypeMember ability to get a field offset in bits


Cleaned up a lot of the Stream usage in the SB API files.

llvm-svn: 144493
2011-11-13 06:57:31 +00:00
Greg Clayton f49e65ae7c Made the Host::SetCrashDescription(const char *) function copy the incoming
string to avoid possible later crashes.

Modified the locations that do set the crash description to NULL out the 
string when they are done doing their tasks.

llvm-svn: 144297
2011-11-10 18:31:53 +00:00
Johnny Chen 01a678603a SBValue::Watch() and SBValue::WatchPointee() are now the official API for creating
a watchpoint for either the variable encapsulated by SBValue (Watch) or the pointee
encapsulated by SBValue (WatchPointee).

Removed SBFrame::WatchValue() and SBFrame::WatchLocation() API as a result of that.

Modified the watchpoint related test suite to reflect the change.

Plus replacing WatchpointLocation with Watchpoint throughout the code base.

There are still cleanups to be dome.  This patch passes the whole test suite.
Check it in so that we aggressively catch regressions.

llvm-svn: 141925
2011-10-14 00:42:25 +00:00
Johnny Chen b49b7b53b1 Add SBFrame.WatchLocation() to find and watch the location pointed to by
a variable usng the frame as the scope.

Add TestSetWatchpoint.py to exercise this API.  Also fix some SWIG Python
docstrings.

llvm-svn: 140914
2011-10-01 01:19:45 +00:00