FreeBSD includes the elftoolchain project's demangler in the base system.
It does not handle some unusual mangled names, so use the inlined
libcxxabi one.
llvm-svn: 193776
User-vended by-type formatters still would prevail on these hardcoded ones
For the time being, while the infrastructure is there, no such formatters exist
This can be useful for cases such as expanding vtables for C++ class pointers, when there is no clear cut notion of a typename matching, and the feature is low-level enough that it makes sense for the debugger core to be vending it
llvm-svn: 193724
Fixed the expression parser to be able to iterate across all function name matches that it finds when it is looking for the address of a function that the IR is looking for. Also taught it to deal with reexported symbols.
llvm-svn: 193716
Inlined a copy of cxa_demangle.cpp from:
http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/libcxxabi/trunk/src/cxa_demangle.cpp
For systems that don't have demangling built into the system, and for systems that don't want to use the version that is installed. Defining LLDB_USE_BUILTIN_DEMANGLER in your build system allows you to use the built in demangler. This setting is curently automatically enabled for Windows builds.
llvm-svn: 193708
Fixing a problem where ValueObject::GetPointeeData() would not accept "partial" valid reads (i.e. asking for 10 items and getting only 5 back)
While suboptimal, this situation is not a flat-out failure and could well be caused by legit scenarios, such as hitting a page boundary
Among others, this allows data formatters to print char* buffers allocated under libgmalloc
llvm-svn: 193704
One of the things that dynamic typing affects is the count of children a type has
Clear out the flag that makes us blindly believe the children count when a dynamic type change is detected
llvm-svn: 193663
Fix a crasher that would occur if one tried to read memory as characters of some size != 1, e.g.
x -f c -s 10 buffer
This commit tries to do the right thing and uses the byte-size as the number of elements, unless both are specified and the number of elements is != 1
In this latter case (e.g. x -f c -s 10 -c 3 buffer) one could multiply the two and read 30 characters, but it seems a stretch in mind reading.
llvm-svn: 193659
This commit reimplements the TypeImpl class (the class that backs SBType) in terms of a static,dynamic type pair
This is useful for those cases when the dynamic type of an ObjC variable can only be obtained in terms of an "hollow" type with no ivars
In that case, we could either go with the static type (+iVar information) or with the dynamic type (+inheritance chain)
With the new TypeImpl implementation, we try to combine these two sources of information in order to extract as much information as possible
This should improve the functionality of tools that are using the SBType API to do extensive dynamic type inspection
llvm-svn: 193564
Introduce a new boolean setting enable-auto-oneliner
This setting if set to false will force LLDB to not use the new compact one-line display
By default, one-line mode stays on, at least until we can be confident it works.
But now if it seriously impedes your workflow while it evolves/it works wonders but you still hate it, there's a way to turn it off
llvm-svn: 193450
Added a new key that we understand for the "qHostInfo" packet: "default_packet_timeout:T;" where T is a default packet timeout in seconds.
This allows GDB servers with known slow packet response times to increase the default timeout to a value that makes sense for the connection.
llvm-svn: 193425
Some versions of the GNU MIPS toolchain generate 64-Bit DWARF (even though
it isn't really necessary). This change adds support for the 64-Bit DWARF
format, but is not actually tested with >4GB of debug data.
Similar changes are in progress for llvm's version of DWARFDebugLine, in
review D1988.
llvm-svn: 193242
This check was overly strict. Relax it.
While one could conceivably want nested one-lining:
(Foo) aFoo = (x = 1, y = (t = 3, q = “Hello), z = 3.14)
the spirit of this feature is mostly to make *SMALL LINEAR* structs come out more compact.
Aggregates with children and no summary for now just disable the one-lining. Define a one-liner summary to override :)
llvm-svn: 193218
Fixed an issue with reexported symbols on MacOSX by adding support for symbols re-exporting symbols. There is now a new symbol type eSymbolTypeReExported which contains a new name for the re-exported symbol and the new shared library. These symbols are only used when a symbol is re-exported as a symbol under a different name.
Modified the expression parser to be able to deal with finding the re-exported symbols and track down the actual symbol it refers to.
llvm-svn: 193101
Removing Host/Atomic.h
This header file was not being copied as part of our public API headers and this in turn was causing any plugin to link against LLDB.framework, since SharingPtr.h depends on it
Out of several possible options to fix this issue, the cleanest one is to revert LLDB to use std::atomic<>, as we are a C++11 project and should take advantage of it
The original rationale for going from std::atomic to Host/Atomic.h was that MSVC++ fails to link in CLR mode when std::atomic is used
This is a very Visual Studio/.net specific issue, which hopefully will be fixed
Until them, to allow Windows development to proceed, we are going with a targeted solution where we #ifdef include the Windows specific calls, and let everyone else use the
proper atomic support, as should be
If there is an unavoidable need for a LLDB-specific atomic header, the right way to go at it would be to make an API/lldb-atomic.h header and #ifdef the Windows dependency there
The FormatManager should not need to conditionalize use of std::atomic<>, as other parts of the LLDB internals are successfully using atomic (Address and IRExecutionUnit), so this
Win-specific hack is limited to SharingPtr
llvm-svn: 192993
This commit adds an example python file that can be used with 'target-definition-file' setting for Linux gdbserver.
This file has an extra key 'breakpoint-pc-offset' that LLDB uses to determine how much to change the PC
after hitting the breakpoint.
llvm-svn: 192962
queue name out of ProcessGDBRemote and in to the Platform
plugin, specifically PlatformDarwin.
Also add a Platform method to translate a dispatch_quaddr
to a QueueID, and a Thread::GetQueueID().
I'll add an SBThread::GetQueueID() next.
llvm-svn: 192949
::Fork already does this internally, so this was simply leaking file handles.
This fixes the problem where the test suite would occasionally run out of file handles.
llvm-svn: 192929
To make this work this patch extends LLDB to:
- Explicitly track the link_map address for each module. This is effectively the module handle, not sure why it wasn't already being stored off anywhere. As an extension later, it would be nice if someone were to add support for printing this as part of the modules list.
- Allow reading the per-thread data pointer via ptrace. I have added support for Linux here. I'll be happy to add support for FreeBSD once this is reviewed. OS X does not appear to have __thread variables, so maybe we don't need it there. Windows support should eventually be workable along the same lines.
- Make DWARF expressions track which module they originated from.
- Add support for the DW_OP_GNU_push_tls_address DWARF opcode, as generated by gcc and recent versions of clang. Earlier versions of clang (such as 3.2, which is default on Ubuntu right now) do not generate TLS debug info correctly so can not be supported here.
- Understand the format of the pthread DTV block. This is where it gets tricky. We have three basic options here:
1) Call "dlinfo" or "__tls_get_addr" on the inferior and ask it directly. However this won't work on core dumps, and generally speaking it's not a good idea for the debugger to call functions itself, as it has the potential to not work depending on the state of the target.
2) Use libthread_db. This is what GDB does. However this option requires having a version of libthread_db on the host cross-compiled for each potential target. This places a large burden on the user, and would make it very hard to cross-debug from Windows to Linux, for example. Trying to build a library intended exclusively for one OS on a different one is not pleasant. GDB sidesteps the problem and asks the user to figure it out.
3) Parse the DTV structure ourselves. On initial inspection this seems to be a bad option, as the DTV structure (the format used by the runtime to manage TLS data) is not in fact a kernel data structure, it is implemented entirely in useerland in libc. Therefore the layout of it's fields are version and OS dependent, and are not standardized.
However, it turns out not to be such a problem. All OSes use basically the same algorithm (a per-module lookup table) as detailed in Ulrich Drepper's TLS ELF ABI document, so we can easily write code to decode it ourselves. The only question therefore is the exact field layouts required. Happily, the implementors of libpthread expose the structure of the DTV via metadata exported as symbols from the .so itself, designed exactly for this kind of thing. So this patch simply reads that metadata in, and re-implements libthread_db's algorithm itself. We thereby get cross-platform TLS lookup without either requiring third-party libraries, while still being independent of the version of libpthread being used.
Test case included.
llvm-svn: 192922
- Made the dynamic register context for the GDB remote plug-in inherit from the generic DynamicRegisterInfo to avoid code duplication
- Finished up the target definition python setting stuff.
- Added a new "slice" key/value pair that can specify that a register is part of another register:
{ 'name':'eax', 'set':0, 'bitsize':32, 'encoding':eEncodingUint, 'format':eFormatHex, 'slice': 'rax[31:0]' },
- Added a new "composite" key/value pair that can specify that a register is made up of two or more registers:
{ 'name':'d0', 'set':0, 'bitsize':64 , 'encoding':eEncodingIEEE754, 'format':eFormatFloat, 'composite': ['s1', 's0'] },
- Added a new "invalidate-regs" key/value pair for when a register is modified, it can invalidate other registers:
{ 'name':'cpsr', 'set':0, 'bitsize':32 , 'encoding':eEncodingUint, 'format':eFormatHex, 'invalidate-regs': ['r8', 'r9', 'r10', 'r11', 'r12', 'r13', 'r14', 'r15']},
This now completes the feature that allows a GDB remote target to completely describe itself.
llvm-svn: 192858
Extend DummySyntheticProvider to actually use debug-info vended children as the source of information
Make Python synthetic children either be valid, or fallback to the dummy, like their C++ counterparts
This allows LLDB to actually stop bailing out upon encountering an invalid synthetic children provider front-end, and still displaying the non synthetized ivar info
llvm-svn: 192741
When debugging with the GDB remote in LLDB, LLDB uses special packets to discover the
registers on the remote server. When those packets aren't supported, LLDB doesn't
know what the registers look like. This checkin implements a setting that can be used
to specify a python file that contains the registers definitions. The setting is:
(lldb) settings set plugin.process.gdb-remote.target-definition-file /path/to/module.py
Inside module there should be a function:
def get_dynamic_setting(target, setting_name):
This dynamic setting function is handed the "target" which is a SBTarget, and the
"setting_name", which is the name of the dynamic setting to retrieve. For the GDB
remote target definition the setting name is 'gdb-server-target-definition'. The
return value is a dictionary that follows the same format as the OperatingSystem
plugins follow. I have checked in an example file that implements the x86_64 GDB
register set for people to see:
examples/python/x86_64_target_definition.py
This allows LLDB to debug to any archticture that is support and allows users to
define the registers contexts when the discovery packets (qRegisterInfo, qHostInfo)
are not supported by the remote GDB server.
A few benefits of doing this in Python:
1 - The dynamic register context was already supported in the OperatingSystem plug-in
2 - Register contexts can use all of the LLDB enumerations and definitions for things
like lldb::Format, lldb::Encoding, generic register numbers, invalid registers
numbers, etc.
3 - The code that generates the register context can use the program to calculate the
register context contents (like offsets, register numbers, and more)
4 - True dynamic detection could be used where variables and types could be read from
the target program itself in order to determine which registers are available since
the target is passed into the python function.
This is designed to be used instead of XML since it is more dynamic and code flow and
functions can be used to make the dictionary.
llvm-svn: 192646
This is implemented by means of a get_dynamic_setting(target, setting_name) function vended by the Python module, which can respond to arbitrary string names with dynamically constructed
settings objects (most likely, some of those that PythonDataObjects supports) for LLDB to parse
This needs to be hooked up to the debugger via some setting to allow users to specify which module will vend the information they want to supply
llvm-svn: 192628
gdb-format a (as in p/a) would fail as it needed to set a byte size (unsurprisingly enough)
This should be acknowledged by the condition check and not cause a failure
llvm-svn: 192511
Fixed Module::ResolveSymbolContextForAddress() to be able to also look in the SymbolVendor's SymbolFile's ObjectFile for a more meaningful symbol when a symbol lookup finds a synthetic symbol from the main object file. This will help lookups on MacOSX as the main executable might be stripped, but the dSYM file always has a full symbol table.
llvm-svn: 192510
Added a way to set hardware breakpoints from the "breakpoint set" command with the new "--hardware" option. Hardware breakpoints are not a request, they currently are a requirement. So when breakpoints are specified as hardware breakpoints, they might fail to be set when they are able to be resolved and should be used sparingly. This is currently hooked up for GDB remote debugging.
Linux and FreeBSD should quickly enable this feature if possible, or return an error for any breakpoints that are hardware breakpoint sites in the "virtual Error Process::EnableBreakpointSite (BreakpointSite *bp_site);" function.
llvm-svn: 192491
Just pass a Target* into ObjectFileELF::GetImageInfoAddress so that
it can do the extra dereference necessary on MIPS, instead of passing
a flag back to the caller.
Review: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1899
llvm-svn: 192469
MIPS's .dyanamic section is read-only. Instead of using DT_DEBUG for
the pointer to dyld information it uses a separate tag DT_MIPS_RLD_MAP
which points to storage in the read-write .rld_map section, which in
turn points to the dyld information.
Review: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1890
llvm-svn: 192408
Fixed an issue where environment variables that contained special characters '$' and '#' would hose up the GDB server packet. We now use the QEnvironmentHexEncoded packet that has existed for a long time when we need to. Also added code that will stop sending the QEnvironmentHexEncoded and QEnvironment packets if they aren't supported.
llvm-svn: 192373
On at least FreeBSD and NetBSD there is an extra field in the dyld link
map struct. I've left an assert for other OSes (i.e., Linux/mips) until
it's determined if they do the same.
llvm-svn: 192358
Based on the POSIX x86_64 register context. This is sufficient for opening
a mips64 (big endian) core file. Subsequent changes will connect the
disassembler, dynamic loader support, ABI, etc.
Review: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1873
(Missed "svn add" on this file in r192335)
llvm-svn: 192336
Based on the POSIX x86_64 register context. This is sufficient for opening
a mips64 (big endian) core file. Subsequent changes will connect the
disassembler, dynamic loader support, ABI, etc.
Review: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1873
llvm-svn: 192335
ObjectFile::CopyData is used to copy a block of target memory to the
caller's buffer (e.g. for "memory read"). This should be a straight
memcpy, and not byte-swapped if the target and host have different
endianness.
Add a new DataExtractor::CopyData() method that performs this straight
copy and use it in ObjectFile::CopyData().
llvm-svn: 192323
- By default, the above function will wait for at least one event
- Set wait_always=false to make the function return immediately if the process is already stopped
llvm-svn: 192301
Use 32-bit register enums without gaps on 64-bit hosts.
Don't show 64-bit registers when debugging 32-bit targets.
Add psuedo gpr registers (ax, ah, al, etc.)
Add mmx registers.
Fix TestRegisters.py to not read ymm15 register on 32-bit targets.
Fill out and move gcc/dwarf/gdb register enums to RegisterContext_x86.h
llvm-svn: 192263
Constant ValueObjects should clear their description as well as their summary. Rationale being that both can depend on deeper-than-constified data
so both are subject to changes in "unpredictable" ways
To see this consider repeatedly po'ing a persistent variable of a type whose -description result changes at each invocation
llvm-svn: 192259
Implement SBTarget::CreateValueFromAddress() with a behavior equivalent to SBValue::CreateValueFromAddress()
(but without the need to grab an SBValue first just as a starting point to make up another SBValue out of whole cloth)
llvm-svn: 192239
Formats (as in "type format") are now included in categories
The only bit missing is caching formats along with synthetic children and summaries, which might be now desirable
llvm-svn: 192217
This radar extends the notion of one-liner summaries to automagically apply in a few interesting cases
More specifically, this checkin changes the printout of ValueObjects to print on one-line (as if type summary add -c had been applied) iff:
this ValueObject does not have a summary
its children have no synthetic children
its children are not a non-empty base class without a summary
its children do not have a summary that asks for children to show up
the aggregate length of all the names of all the children is <= 50 characters
you did not ask to see the types during a printout
your pointer depth is 0
This is meant to simplify the way LLDB shows data on screen for small structs and similarly compact data types (e.g. std::pair<int,int> anyone?)
Feedback is especially welcome on how the feature feels and corner cases where we should apply this printout and don't (or viceversa, we are applying it when we shouldn't be)
llvm-svn: 191996
that all clients use them explicitly. This will hopefully
prevent any future confusion where things get cast to types
we don't expect.
<rdar://problem/15146458>
llvm-svn: 191984
to be explicit, to prevent horrid things like
std::string a = ConstString("foo")
from taking the path ConstString -> bool -> char
-> std::string.
This fixes, among other things, ClangFunction.
<rdar://problem/15137989>
llvm-svn: 191934
DumpValueObject() 2.0
This checkin restores pre-Xcode5 functionality to the "po" (expr -O) command:
- expr now has a new --description-verbosity (-v) argument, which takes either compact or full as a value (-v is the same as -vfull)
When the full mode is on, "po" will show the extended output with type name, persistent variable name and value, as in
(lldb) expr -O -v -- foo
(id) $0 = 0x000000010010baf0 {
1 = 2;
2 = 3;
}
When -v is omitted, or -vcompact is passed, the Xcode5-style output will be shown, as in
(lldb) expr -O -- foo
{
1 = 2;
2 = 3;
}
- for a non-ObjectiveC object, LLDB will still try to retrieve a summary and/or value to display
(lldb) po 5
5
-v also works in this mode
(lldb) expr -O -vfull -- 5
(int) $4 = 5
On top of that, this is a major refactoring of the ValueObject printing code. The functionality is now factored into a ValueObjectPrinter class for easier maintenance in the future
DumpValueObject() was turned into an instance method ValueObject::Dump() which simply calls through to the printer code, Dump_Impl has been removed
Test case to follow
llvm-svn: 191694
scan-build was complaining about:
The return value from the call to 'setgid' is not checked. If an error occurs in 'setgid', the following code may execute with unexpected privileges
llvm-svn: 191618
line breakpoints past the prologue of functions so it can be shared between the
file & line breakpoint resolver, and the source pattern breakpoint resolver,
and then share it.
llvm-svn: 191478
not have breakpoints set on it inserted into code that does have a valid line number. So allow
that line number, and the ThreadPlanStepRange should just continue stepping over 0 line ranges
as if they had the same line number as whatever we were previously stepping through.
llvm-svn: 191477
- Removes the block in UnwindLLDB::AddOneMoreFrame that tests for a bad stack setup,
since it is neither correct (tests the FP GPR), complete (doesn't consider multi-frame
cycles), nor reachable (the construction of RegisterContextLLDB will fail in the case
where either of the two (why just two?) previous frames have the same canonical frame
address as the frame that we propose adding to the stack).
llvm-svn: 191430
Now that SBValues can be setup to ignore synthetic values, this is no longer necessary, and so m_suppress_synthetic_value can go away
Another Hack Bites the Dust
llvm-svn: 191338
to build out the symbol table as addresses are used, and implements
the mechanism for ELF to add stripped symbols from eh_frame.
Uses this mechanism to allow disassembly for addresses corresponding
to stripped symbols for ELF, and provide hooks to implement this for
PE COFF.
Also removes eSymbolContextTailCall in favor of an option for
ResolveSymbolContextForAddress for consistency with the documentation
for eSymbolContextEverything. Essentially, this is just an option for
interpreting the so_addr.
llvm-svn: 191307
the CFA instructions when it was profiling an -fomit-frame-pointer function
and a "volatile" register was saved on the stack (e.g. an argument register).
<rdar://problem/15036546>
llvm-svn: 191267
default-at-first-instruction UnwindPlan if we're at the beginning of a function and
the ABI can provide us with an UnwindPlan to get out of there before falling back
to the generic architectural default UnwindPlan (which usually assumes that the stack
has already been set up.)
Update the FuncUnwinders methods to gracefully handle the case where an assembly
profiler may not be available.
Fix a bug where FuncUnwinders::GetUnwindPlanArchitectureDefaultAtFunctionEntry was
returning the wrong UnwindPlan to its caller.
llvm-svn: 191262
Specifically, allows the unwinder to handle the case where sc.function
gets resolved with a pc that is one past the address range of the function
(consistent with a tail call). However, there is no matching symbol.
Adds eSymbolContextTailCall to provide callers with control over the scope
of symbol resolution and to allow ResolveSymbolContextForAddress to handle
tail calls since this routine is common to unwind and disassembly.
llvm-svn: 191102
Targets and hosts today are little-endian (arm, x86), so this change
should be a no-op as they will not encounter the byte swapping cases.
Byte swapping will happen when cross debugging of big endian-targets
(e.g. MIPS, PPC) on a little-endian host (x86). Register- or word-
sized data copies need to be swapped, but calls to ExtractBytes or
CopyByteOrderedData that would invoke the swapping case are presumably
in error.
llvm-svn: 191005
platforms and called in lldb.cpp while it is built only on some, excluding OSX.
There is no reason to not build it then by default on all platforms.
This fixes build on OSX using llvm configure & make scripts.
Patch (2 of 2) by Adam Strzelecki!
llvm-svn: 190945
We cannot use "GetMaxU64Bitfield" for non-power-of-two sizes, so just use
the same code that handles N > 8 for these.
Review: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1699
llvm-svn: 190873
- searches frames beginning from the current frame, stops when an equivalent context is found
- not using GetStackFrameCount() for performance reasons
- fixes TestInlineStepping (clang/gcc buildbots)
llvm-svn: 190868
- ProcessMonitor::[Do|Serve]Operation no longer depend on file descriptors!
- removed unused member functions CloseFD and EnableIPC
- add semaphores to signal when an Operation is ready to be processed/complete.
This commit fixes a bug that was identified under stress-testing (i.e. build
LLVM while running tests) that led to LLDB becoming unresponsive because the
read/write operations on file descriptors in ProcessMonitor were not checked.
Other test runner improvement/convenience:
- pickup environment variables LLDB_LINUX_LOG and LLDB_LINUX_LOG_OPTIONS to
enable (Linux) logging when running the test suite. Example usage:
$ LLDB_LINUX_LOG="mylog.txt" LLDB_LINUX_LOG_OPTIONS="process thread" python dotest.py
llvm-svn: 190820
for the frame is one past the address range of the calling function.
- Lowers the fix from RegisterContextLLDB for use with disassembly
- Fixes one of three issues in the disassembly test in TestInferiorAssert.py
Also adds documentation that explains the resolution depths and interface.
Note: This change affects the resolution scope for eSymbolContextFunction
without impacting the performance of eSymbolContextSymbol.
Thanks to Matt Kopec for his review.
llvm-svn: 190812
Fixed an issue with the lldb/test/lang/cpp/virtual test case had a virtual class that had a DW_TAG_inheritance child that was virtual and had a DW_AT_data_member_location of:
DW_AT_data_member_location( DW_OP_dup, DW_OP_deref, DW_OP_constu(0x00000018), DW_OP_minus, DW_OP_deref, DW_OP_plus )
We failed to evaluate this and then we were passing the incorrect offset back to clang and clang would crash. The AST external source has a function named LayoutRecordType which allows us to supply the virtual base class offsets, but that really doesn't make sense to do as clang will lay them out correctly. So we must ignore virtual base classes when doing layout.
llvm-svn: 190811
and a mach kernel in all the pages of the core file. If it finds
a user-process dyld binary, assume this is a user process that had
a copy of the mach kernel in memory when it crashed (e.g. lldb doing
kernel debugging) even though we found the kernel binary first.
Also, change the error messages about sections extending past the end
of the file to be warnings and make the messages sound less severe.
Most user process core files have one section that isn't included in
the file and there's no reason to worry people about that.
<rdar://problem/14473235>
llvm-svn: 190741
1. existing breakpoints weren't being re-resolved after the sections of a library were loaded (ie. through dlopen).
2. loaded sections weren't being removed after a shared library had been unloaded.
llvm-svn: 190727
single-quote and double-quotemarks from around file paths specified to
settings like target.expr-prefix or target.process.python-os-plugin-path.
<rdar://problem/14970457>
llvm-svn: 190654
with prefer_file_cache == false. This is what we want to do when
the user is doing a disassemble command -- show the actual memory
contents in case the memory has been corrupted or something -- but
when we're profiling functions for stepping or unwinding
(ThreadPlanStepRange::GetInstructionsForAddress,
UnwindAssemblyInstEmulation::GetNonCallSiteUnwindP) we can read
__TEXT instructions directly out of the file, if it exists.
<rdar://problem/14397491>
llvm-svn: 190638
This allows the PC to be directly changed to a different line.
It's similar to the example python script in examples/python/jump.py, except implemented as a builtin.
Also this version will track the current function correctly even if the target line resolves to multiple addresses. (e.g. debugging a templated function)
llvm-svn: 190572
communication, connection, host, module, mmap, os. Add those. Also
sort the entries so they come in alphabetical order, to make it a
little easier to scan down the list for a specific channel.
llvm-svn: 190570
SVN r189964 provided a sample Python script to inspect unordered(multi){set|map} with synthetic children, contribued by Jared Grubb
This checkin converts that sample script to a C++ provider built into LLDB
A test case is also provided
llvm-svn: 190564
setting of the environment variable COMMAND_MODE. Changed the Platform::GetResumeCountForShell
to Platform::GetResumeCountForLaunchInfo, and check both the shell and in the case of
/bin/sh the environment as well.
llvm-svn: 190538
that /bin/sh re-exec's itself to /bin/bash, so it needs one more resume when you
are using it as the shell than /bin/bash did or you will stop at the start of your
program, rather than running it.
So I added a Platform API to get the number of resumes needed when launching with
a particular shell, and set the right values for Mac OS X.
<rdar://problem/14935282>
llvm-svn: 190381
"coalesce the line ranges for a file & line breakpoint to the first range in each block". We were still setting a silly number
of independent breakpoints sometimes, and until we get a compiler that emits trustworthy is_stmt flags in the line table, we
need to do something to reduce the noise.
<rdar://problem/14920404>
llvm-svn: 190380
From Jim's post on the lldb-dev mailing list:
This code is there as a backstop for when the unwinder drops a frame at
the beginning of new function/trampoline or whatever.
In the (older_ctx_is_equivalent == false) case we will see if we are at
a trampoline function that somebody knows how to get out of, and
otherwise we will stop.
llvm-svn: 190149
have a certain name, not just the first. This
is useful if a class method and an instance
method have the same name.
<rdar://problem/14872081>
llvm-svn: 190008
by appending the thread ID to the test packet when
debugserver requires it.
This allows register writing (and, by extension,
expressions) to work on Mac OS X.
llvm-svn: 190007
Instead of directly manipulating the thread list in Launch and Attach,
just rely on RefreshStateAfterStop to populate the initial list.
Review: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1565
llvm-svn: 189889
/bin/sh is more portable, and all systems with /bin/bash are expected to
have /bin/sh as well, even if only a link to bash.
Review: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1576
llvm-svn: 189879
On Linux there is no separate notion of a process (vs. a thread) for
ptrace(); each thread needs to be individually detached. On FreeBSD
we have a separate process context, and we detach just it.
Review: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1418
llvm-svn: 189666
Testing shows it works for at least trivial cases, while the
USE_STANDARD_JIT case does not even work for those. Thus, don't define
USE_STANDARD_JIT on FreeBSD.
I've left the #if block choosing the appropriate #include in case it's
useful for testing.
llvm-svn: 189611
Some stubs only support g/G packets for registers.
This change makes sure that we check if remote stub supports 'p' packet before using it.
llvm-svn: 189576
- add default timeout of 10s (unil qPlatform_RunCommand supports timeout packets and CommandObjectPlatform is updated to read a timeout flag/setting)
- add a few tests for platform shell
llvm-svn: 189405
- move LaunchProcessPosixSpawn() and Host::LaunchProcess() from freebsd host plugin to common (linux/freebsd section)
- modify MonitorChildProcessThreadFunction to use pid_t from sys/types.h to avoid Linux/FreeBSD/Mac warnings when calling waitpid()
llvm-svn: 189404
- mode_t is defined in <sys/types.h>
- reorganized S_* user rights into win32.h
- Use Host::Kill instead of kill
- Currently #ifdef functions using pread/pwrite.
llvm-svn: 189364