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
This also hooks up the new C++14 language constant to be treated
the same as the other C++ language constants.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7429
llvm-svn: 228386
and/or one or more addresses (with -a) and until will stop at the first one of thesepoints it hits,
or on exit from the function if you leave the function before hitting any of these stop points.
<rdar://problem/12438270>
llvm-svn: 228370
redirecting output to a path that will work well on host or target.
copying file from output location to location on local host that
test will read from
llvm-svn: 228217
number of bytes to write into the inferior process, the "default byte size" will be 1.
In that case, we want to copy the entire file into memory. The code was looking for
a default byte size of 0 to indicate that the user had not provided a specific # of
bytes to copy; adjust that to 1 to match the actual default value.
<rdar://problem/18074973>
llvm-svn: 228067
./dotest.py -A x86_64 -C clang -v -t -f TestImageListMultiArchitecture.test_image_list_shows_multiple_architectures
The problem was that if the platform wasn't compatible with the current file in the "target create" command, it wasn't finding a platform that was like it used to.
Also, the currently selected platform was being used upload the file _before_ the target was created which was incorrect as "target create a.out" might switch platforms if its architecture doesn't match, so I moved the uploading to happen after the target was created so we use the right platform (the one in the target, not the selected one).
llvm-svn: 227380
This is necessary because the byte size of an ObjC class type is not reliably statically knowable (e.g. because superclasses sit deep in frameworks that we have no debug info for)
The lack of reliable size info is a problem when trying to freeze-dry an ObjC instance (not the pointer, the pointee)
This commit lays the foundation for having language runtimes help in figuring out byte sizes, and having ClangASTType ask for runtime help
No feature change as no runtime actually implements the logic, and nowhere is an ExecutionContext passed in yet
llvm-svn: 227274
Make sure the selected platform is always used
Make sure that the host uses the connect://hostname to connect to both
the lldb-platform and the lldb-gdbserver rather than what the platform
reports as the hostname of the lldb-gdbserver
Make sure that lldb-platform uses the IP address on it's connection
back to the host instead of the hostname that the host sends to it
when launching lldb-gdbserver with the remote host information
Tested on OSX and Linux
llvm-svn: 226712
The refactor was motivated by some comments that Greg made
http://reviews.llvm.org/D6918
and also to break a dependency cascade that caused functions linking
in string->int conversion functions to pull in most of lldb
llvm-svn: 226199
This is done by adding a "Variable *" to SymbolContext and allowing SymbolFile::ResolveSymbolContext() so if an address is resolved into a symbol context, we can include the global or static variable for that address.
This means you can now find global variables that are merged globals when doing a "image lookup --verbose --address 0x1230000". Previously we would resolve a symbol and show "_MergedGlobals123 + 1234". But now we can show the global variable name.
The eSymbolContextEverything purposely does not include the new eSymbolContextVariable in its lookup since stack frame code does many lookups and we don't want it triggering the global variable lookups.
<rdar://problem/18945678>
llvm-svn: 226084
The default help display now shows the alias collection by default, and hides commands whose named begin with an underscore. Help is primarily useful to those unfamiliar with LLDB and should aim to answer typical questions while still being able to provide more esoteric answers when required. To that latter end an argument to include the hidden commands in help has been added, and instead of having a help flag to show aliases there is now one to hide them. This final change might be controversial as it repurposes the -a shorthand as the opposite of its original meaning.
The previous implementation of OutputFormattedHelpText was easily confused by embedded newlines. The new algorithm correctly breaks on the FIRST newline or LAST space/tab before the target column count rather than treating all whitespace interchangeably.
Command interpreters now have the ability to specify help prologue text and a command prefix string. Neither are used in the current LLDB sources but are required to support REPL-like extensions where LLDB commands must be prefixed and additional help text is required to explain how to access traditional debugging commands.
<rdar://problem/17751929>
<rdar://problem/16953815>
<rdar://problem/16953841>
<rdar://problem/16930173>
<rdar://problem/16879028>
llvm-svn: 226068
We now verify that the debugger's input file is a valid terminal file descriptor before allowing the "gui" command to try to run.
Xcode would crash if you typed "gui" at the command line prior to this fix.
<rdar://problem/18775851>
llvm-svn: 226027
step through the complete function looking for any epilogue
instructions. If we find an epilogue sequence, re-instate
the correct unwind instructions if there is more code past
that epilogue -- this will correctly handle an x86 function
with multiple epilogues in it.
NB there is still a bug with the "eh_frame augmented"
UnwindPlans and mid-function epilogues. Looking at that next.
<rdar://problem/18863406>
llvm-svn: 225770
Variable was being declared as signed, but treated as unsigned at
every point of use.
Patch by Dan Sinclair
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6897
llvm-svn: 225540
This new command will delete user defined regular commands, but not aliases. We still have "command unalias" to remove aliases as they are currently in different buckets. Appropriate error messages are displayed to inform the user when "command unalias" is used on removable user defined commands that points users to the "command delete" command.
Added a test to verify we can remove user defined commands and also verify that "command unalias" fails when used on a user defined command.
<rdar://problem/18248300>
llvm-svn: 225535
names can then be used in place of breakpoint id's or breakpoint id
ranges in all the commands that operate on breakpoints.
<rdar://problem/10103959>
llvm-svn: 224392
Summary:
If a stream contains an empty string, no need to append it to the output
(otherwise we end up with a blank line). Also, no need to print a status
message when the state changes to connected, as this string brings no
information -- "Process 0" does not mean anything to the user, and the
process being connected has no meaning either.
Test Plan:
Connect to a remote linux platform mode daemon with `platform select
remote-linux` followed by `platform connect ...`, create a target and
run it, observe the output. Also, run the full test suite (dosep.py).
Before:
(lldb) [...] connect, etc.
(lldb) r
Process 0 connected
Process 5635 launched: '/Users/sas/Source/test' (x86_64)
Process 5635 stopped
After:
(lldb) [...] connect, etc.
(lldb) r
Process 5635 launched: '/Users/sas/Source/test' (x86_64)
Process 5635 stopped
Reviewers: tfiala, vharron, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6593
llvm-svn: 224188
section for x86_64 and i386 targets on Darwin systems. Currently only the
compact unwind encoding for normal frame-using functions is supported but it
will be easy handle frameless functions when I have a bit more free time to
test it. The LSDA and personality routines for functions are also retrieved
correctly for functions from the compact unwind section.
This new code is very fresh -- it passes the lldb testsuite and I've done
by-hand inspection of many functions and am getting correct behavior for all
of them. There may need to be some bug fixing over the next couple weeks as
I exercise and test it further. But I think it's fine right now so I'm
committing it.
<rdar://problem/13220837>
llvm-svn: 223625
in the "dummy-target". The dummy target breakpoints prime all future
targets. Breakpoints set before any target is created (e.g. breakpoints
in ~/.lldbinit) automatically get set in the dummy target. You can also
list, add & delete breakpoints from the dummy target using the "-D" flag,
which is supported by most of the breakpoint commands.
This removes a long-standing wart in lldb...
<rdar://problem/10881487>
llvm-svn: 223565
type format info
type summary info
type synthetic info
These commands all take an expression, evaluate it, and show which of the respective formatter (if any) applies to the result of the expression
Fixes rdar://12059317
llvm-svn: 223511
(e.g. breakpoints, stop-hooks) before we have any targets - for instance in
your ~/.lldbinit file. These will then get copied over to any new targets
that get created. So far, you can only make stop-hooks.
Breakpoints will have to learn to move themselves from target to target for
us to get them from no-target to new-target.
We should also make a command & SB API way to prime this ur-target.
llvm-svn: 222600
is treated as a string instead of a FileSpec.
OptionValueFileSpec::SetValueFromCString() passes the c string to
FileSpec::SetFile(str, true /* resolve */) - and with Zachary's
changes to FileSpec we're using llvm::sys::fs::make_absolute() to
do that "resolve" action now, where we used to use realpath().
One important difference between llvm::sys::fs::make_absolute and
realpath is that when they're handed a filename (no directory),
realpath prepends the current working directory *and if the file exists*,
returns that full path. If that file doesn't exist, the caller
uses the basename only.
llvm::sys::fs::make_absolute prepends the current working directory
regardless of whether it exists or not.
I considered having FileSpec::SetFile save the initial pathname,
call FileSpec::Resolve, and then check to see if the Resolve return
path exists - and if not, go back to the original one.
But instead I just went with changing 'target modules load' to treat its
filename argument as a string instead of a FileSpec. This brings it
in line with how 'target modules list' works.
<rdar://problem/18955416>
llvm-svn: 222498
Fixed the prompt to not include non-printable characters as it was hosing up the prompt when you ran "command regex foo" and entered multi-line editing mode.
Fixed error strings to include more complete descriptions when bad regular expressions are entered.
Removed the old IOHandlerLinesUpdated function as it is no longer needed (inheriting from IOHandlerDelegateMultiline takes care of what this function used to do).
llvm-svn: 222207
Fixed include:
- Change Platform::ResolveExecutable(...) to take a ModuleSpec instead of a FileSpec + ArchSpec to help resolve executables correctly when we have just a path + UUID (no arch).
- Add the ability to set the listener in SBLaunchInfo and SBAttachInfo in case you don't want to use the debugger as the default listener.
- Modified all places that use the SBLaunchInfo/SBAttachInfo and the internal ProcessLaunchInfo/ProcessAttachInfo to not take a listener as a parameter since it is in the launch/attach info now
- Load a module's sections by default when removing a module from a target. Since we create JIT modules for expressions and helper functions, we could end up with stale data in the section load list if a module was removed from the target as the section load list would still have entries for the unloaded module. Target now has the following functions to help unload all sections a single or multiple modules:
size_t
Target::UnloadModuleSections (const ModuleList &module_list);
size_t
Target::UnloadModuleSections (const lldb::ModuleSP &module_sp);
llvm-svn: 222167
Improvements include:
* Use of libedit's wide character support, which is imperfect but a distinct improvement over ASCII-only
* Fallback for ASCII editing path
* Support for a "faint" prompt clearly distinguished from input
* Breaking lines and insert new lines in the middle of a batch by simply pressing return
* Joining lines with forward and backward character deletion
* Detection of paste to suppress automatic formatting and statement completion tests
* Correctly reformatting when lines grow or shrink to occupy different numbers of rows
* Saving multi-line history, and correctly preserving the "tip" of history during editing
* Displaying visible ^C and ^D indications when interrupting input or sending EOF
* Fledgling VI support for multi-line editing
* General correctness and reliability improvements
llvm-svn: 222163
There were many issues with synchronous mode that we discovered when started to try and add a "batch" mode. There was a race condition where the event handling thread might consume events when in sync mode and other times the Process::WaitForProcessToStop() would consume them. This also led to places where the Process IO handler might or might not get popped when it needed to be.
llvm-svn: 220254
do that (RunCommandInterpreter, HandleCommands, HandleCommandsFromFile) to gather
the options into an options class. Also expose that to the SB API's.
Change the way the "-o" options to the lldb driver are processed so:
1) They are run synchronously - didn't really make any sense to run the asynchronously.
2) The stop on error
3) "quit" in one of the -o commands will not quit lldb - not the command interpreter
that was running the -o commands.
I added an entry to the run options to stop-on-crash, but I haven't implemented that yet.
llvm-svn: 219553
Reviewed at http://reviews.llvm.org/D5592
This patch gives LLDB some ability to interact with AddressSanitizer runtime library, on top of what we already have (historical memory stack traces provided by ASan). Namely, that's the ability to stop on an error caught by ASan, and access the report information that are associated with it. The report information is also exposed into SB API.
More precisely this patch...
adds a new plugin type, InstrumentationRuntime, which should serve as a generic superclass for other instrumentation runtime libraries, these plugins get notified when modules are loaded, so they get a chance to "activate" when a specific dynamic library is loaded
an instance of this plugin type, AddressSanitizerRuntime, which activates itself when it sees the ASan dynamic library or founds ASan statically linked in the executable
adds a collection of these plugins into the Process class
AddressSanitizerRuntime sets an internal breakpoint on __asan::AsanDie(), and when this breakpoint gets hit, it retrieves the report information from ASan
this breakpoint is then exposed as a new StopReason, eStopReasonInstrumentation, with a new StopInfo subclass, InstrumentationRuntimeStopInfo
the StopInfo superclass is extended with a m_extended_info field (it's a StructuredData::ObjectSP), that can hold arbitrary JSON-like data, which is the way the new plugin provides the report data
the "thread info" command now accepts a "-s" flag that prints out the JSON data of a stop reason (same way the "-j" flag works now)
SBThread has a new API, GetStopReasonExtendedInfoAsJSON, which dumps the JSON string into a SBStream
adds a test case for all of this
I plan to also get rid of the original ASan plugin (memory history stack traces) and use an instance of AddressSanitizerRuntime for that purpose.
Kuba
llvm-svn: 219546
output style can be customized. Change the built-in default to be
more similar to gdb's disassembly formatting.
The disassembly-format for a gdb-like output is
${addr-file-or-load} <${function.name-without-args}${function.concrete-only-addr-offset-no-padding}>:
The disassembly-format for the lldb style output is
{${function.initial-function}{${module.file.basename}`}{${function.name-without-args}}:\n}{${function.changed}\n{${module.file.basename}`}{${function.name-without-args}}:\n}{${current-pc-arrow} }{${addr-file-or-load}}:
The two backticks in the lldb style formatter triggers the sub-expression evaluation in
CommandInterpreter::PreprocessCommand() so you can't use that one as-is ... changing to
use ' characters instead of ` would work around that.
<rdar://problem/9885398>
llvm-svn: 219544
the user level. It adds the ability to invent new stepping modes implemented by python classes,
and to view the current thread plan stack and to some extent alter it.
I haven't gotten to documentation or tests yet. But this should not cause any behavior changes
if you don't use it, so its safe to check it in now and work on it incrementally.
llvm-svn: 218642
works, as do breakpoints, run and pause, display zeroth frame.
See
http://reviews.llvm.org/D5503
for a fuller description of the changes in this commit.
llvm-svn: 218596
Changes include:
- fix it so you can select the "host" platform using "platform select host"
- change all callbacks that create platforms to returns shared pointers
- fix TestImageListMultiArchitecture.py to restore the "host" platform by running "platform select host"
- Add a new "PlatformSP Platform::Find(const ConstString &name)" method to get a cached platform
- cache platforms that are created and re-use them instead of always creating a new one
llvm-svn: 218145
Also, in case they don't define any, change the default from "Run Python function <blah>" into "For more information run help <blah>"
The core issue here is that Python only allows one docstring per function, so we can't really attach both a short and a long help to the same command easily
There are alternatives but this is not a pressing enough concern to go through the motions quite yet
Fixes rdar://18322737
llvm-svn: 217795
We decided to use assmbly profiler instead of eh_frame for frame 0 because for compiler generated code, eh_frame is usually synchronous(a.k.a. only valid at call site); and we have no way to tell if it's asynchronous or not.
But for x86 & x86_64 compiler generated code:
1. clang & GCC describes all prologue instructions in eh_frame;
2. mid-function stack pointer altering instructions can be easily detected.
So we can grab eh_frame, and use assembly profiler to augment it into asynchronous unwind table.
This change also benefits hand-written assembly; eh_frame for hand-written assembly is often asynchronous,so we have a much better chance to successfully unwind through them.
Change by Tong Shen.
llvm-svn: 216406
This change modifies the 'process launch' --disable-aslr option to take a boolean argument. If the user directly specifies --disable-aslr {true,false}, that setting will control whether the process is launched with ASLR disabled accordingly. In the event that the setting is not explicitly made on the process launch command line, then the value is retrieved from the target.disable-aslr setting (i.e. settings show target.disable-aslr).
llvm-svn: 215996
Fixes include:
1 - added new FileSpec method: bool FileSpec::Readable()
2 - detect when an executable is not readable and give an appropriate error for:
(lldb) file /tmp/unreadablefile
3 - detect when a core file is not readable and give an appropriate error
4 - detect when a specified core file doesn't exist and give an appropriate error
<rdar://problem/17727734>
llvm-svn: 215741
This reverses out the options validators changes. We'll get these
back in once the changes to the output can be resolved.
Restores broken tests on FreeBSD, Linux, MacOSX.
Changes reverted: r212500, r212317, r212290.
llvm-svn: 212543
Windows uses a different process security model and does not have
a concept of process UID or GID. This patch makes these options
invalid on Windows. Attempting to specify these options when the
current platform is Windows will generate an error.
Reviewed by: Jim Ingham
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4373
llvm-svn: 212500
The purpose of the OptionValidator is to determine, based on some
arbitrary set of conditions, whether or not a command option is
valid for a given debugger state. An example of this might be
to selectively disable or enable certain command options that
don't apply to a particular platform.
This patch contains no functional change, and does not actually
make use of an OptionValidator for any purpose yet. A follow-up
patch will begin to add the logic and users of OptionValidator.
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton, Jim Ingham
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4369
llvm-svn: 212290
Replace adhoc inline implementation of llvm::array_lengthof in favour of the
implementation in LLVM. This is simply a cleanup change, no functional change
intended.
llvm-svn: 211868
lldb support. I'll be doing more testing & cleanup but I wanted to
get the initial checkin done.
This adds a new SBExpressionOptions::SetLanguage API for selecting a
language of an expression.
I added adds a new SBThread::GetInfoItemByPathString for retriving
information about a thread from that thread's StructuredData.
I added a new StructuredData class for representing
key-value/array/dictionary information (e.g. JSON formatted data).
Helper functions to read JSON and create a StructuredData object,
and to print a StructuredData object in JSON format are included.
A few Cocoa / Cocoa Touch data formatters were updated by Enrico
to track changes in iOS 8 / Yosemite.
Before we query a thread's extended information, the system runtime may
provide hints to the remote debug stub that it will use to retrieve values
out of runtime structures. I added a new SystemRuntime method
AddThreadExtendedInfoPacketHints which allows the SystemRuntime to add
key-value type data to the initial request that we send to the remote stub.
The thread-format formatter string can now retrieve values out of a thread's
extended info structured data. The default thread-format string picks up
two of these - thread.info.activity.name and thread.info.trace_messages.
I added a new "jThreadExtendedInfo" packet in debugserver; I will
add documentation to the lldb-gdb-remote.txt doc soon. It accepts
JSON formatted arguments (most importantly, "thread":threadnum) and
it returns a variety of information regarding the thread to lldb
in JSON format. This JSON return is scanned into a StructuredData
object that is associated with the thread; UI layers can query the
thread's StructuredData to see if key-values are present, and if
so, show them to the user. These key-values are likely to be
specific to different targets with some commonality among many
targets. For instance, many targets will be able to advertise the
pthread_t value for a thread.
I added an initial rough cut of "thread info" command which will print
the information about a thread from the jThreadExtendedInfo result.
I need to do more work to make this format reasonably.
Han Ming added calls into the pmenergy and pmsample libraries if
debugserver is run on Mac OS X Yosemite to get information about the
inferior's power use.
I added support to debugserver for gathering the Genealogy information
about threads, if it exists, and returning it in the jThreadExtendedInfo
JSON result.
llvm-svn: 210874
(lldb) file /bin/ls
(lldb) b malloc
(lldb) run
(lldb) process save-core /tmp/ls.core
Each ObjectFile plug-in now has the option to save core files by registering a new static callback.
llvm-svn: 210864
This fixes a number of trivial warnings in the Windows build. This is part of a larger effort to make the Windows build warning-free.
See http://reviews.llvm.org/D3914 for more details.
Change by Zachary Turner
llvm-svn: 209749
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
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
This is a mechanical change addressing the various sign comparison warnings that
are identified by both clang and gcc. This helps cleanup some of the warning
spew that occurs during builds.
llvm-svn: 205390
You can either provide the function name, or function body text.
Also propagate the compilation error up from where it is checked so we can report compilation errors.
<rdar://problem/9898371>
llvm-svn: 205380
When there was no process, the expression options were set to not ignore breakpoints. This causes debug info to be generated and causes errors when evaluating simple expressions.
llvm-svn: 204745
(lldb) b puts
(lldb) expr -g -i0 -- (int)puts("hello")
First we will stop at the entry point of the expression before it runs, then we can step over a few times and hit the breakpoint in "puts", then we can continue and finishing stepping and fininsh the expression.
Main features:
- New ObjectFileJIT class that can be easily created for JIT functions
- debug info can now be enabled when parsing expressions
- source for any function that is run throught the JIT is now saved in LLDB process specific temp directory and cleaned up on exit
- "expr -g --" allows you to single step through your expression function with source code
<rdar://problem/16382881>
llvm-svn: 204682
This is a mechanical cleanup of unused functions. In the case where the
functions are referenced (in comment form), I've simply commented out the
functions. A second pass to clean that up is warranted.
The functions which are otherwise unused have been removed. Some of these were
introduced in the initial commit and not in use prior to that point!
NFC
llvm-svn: 204310
Multichar constants are not portable as the byte order is undefined. Use a
constant value instead. This avoids a warning when compiling with gcc 4.8+
(-Wmultichar) and makes the code more portable.
llvm-svn: 204110
for customizing "step-in" behavior (e.g. step-in doesn't step into code with no debug info), but also
the behavior of step-in/step-out and step-over when they step out of the frame they started in.
I also added as a proof of concept of this reworking a mode for stepping where stepping out of a frame
into a frame with no debug information will continue stepping out till it arrives at a frame that does
have debug information. This is useful when you are debugging callback based code where the callbacks
are separated from the code that initiated them by some library glue you don't care about, among other
things.
llvm-svn: 203747
ObjectFile::SetLoadAddress (Target &target,
lldb::addr_t value,
bool value_is_offset);
Now "value" is a slide if "value_is_offset" is true, and "value" is an image base address otherwise. All previous usage of this API was using slides.
Updated the ObjectFileELF and ObjectFileMachO SetLoadAddress methods to do the right thing.
Also updated the ObjectFileMachO::SetLoadAddress() function to not load __LINKEDIT when it isn't needed and to only load sections that belong to the executable object file.
llvm-svn: 201003
When a user says
type formatter add ... unsigned int
he most probably means to deal with the "unsigned int" type. However, given how the LLDB command parser works, that command will try to add the formatter to the TWO types 'unsigned' AND 'int'
Since this is unlikely to be what the user wants, warn about it, and suggest they can use quotes to override the debugger's understanding
llvm-svn: 200996
Also emit the "Executing commands" message so it properly only comes out when desired and so it comes out in the right place.
<rdar://problem/15992208>
llvm-svn: 200875
- empty lines in init files would repeat previous command and cause errors to be displayed
- all options to control showing the command, its output, if it should stop on error or continue, weren't being obeyed.
llvm-svn: 200860
The many many benefits include:
1 - Input/Output/Error streams are now handled as real streams not a push style input
2 - auto completion in python embedded interpreter
3 - multi-line input for "script" and "expression" commands now allow you to edit previous/next lines using up and down arrow keys and this makes multi-line input actually a viable thing to use
4 - it is now possible to use curses to drive LLDB (please try the "gui" command)
We will need to deal with and fix any buildbot failures and tests and arise now that input/output and error are correctly hooked up in all cases.
llvm-svn: 200263
The "type format add" command gets a new flag --type (-t). If you pass -t <sometype>, upon fetching the value for an object of your type,
LLDB will display it as-if it was of enumeration type <sometype>
This is useful in cases of non-contiguous enums where there are empty gaps of unspecified values, and as such one cannot type their variables as the enum type,
but users would still like to see them as-if they were of the enum type (e.g. DWARF field types with their user-reserved ranges)
The SB API has also been improved to handle both types of formats, and a test case is added
llvm-svn: 198105
So, rename the class for what it truly is: a FormattersContainer
Also do a bunch of related text substitutions in the interest of overall naming clarity
llvm-svn: 197795
While investigating test suite failures when running the test suite remotely, I noticed we had 3 copies of code that launched a process:
1 - in "process launch" command
2 - SBTarget::Launch() with args
3 - SBTarget::Launch() with SBLaunchInfo
"process launch" was launching through the platform if it was supported (this is needed for remote debugging) and the 2 and 3 were not.
Now all code is in one place.
llvm-svn: 197247
<rdar://problem/15314403>
This patch adds a new lldb_private::SectionLoadHistory class that tracks what shared libraries were loaded given a process stop ID. This allows us to keep a history of the sections that were loaded for a time T. Many items in history objects will rely upon the process stop ID in the future.
llvm-svn: 196557
lldb_private::Debugger was #including some "lldb/API" header files which causes tools (lldb-platform and lldb-gdbserver) that link against the internals only (no API layer) to fail to link depending on which calls were being used.
Also fixed the current working directory so that it gets set correctly for remote test suite runs. Now the remote working directory is set to: "ARCH/TESTNUM/..." where ARCH is the current architecture name and "TESTNUM" is the current test number.
Fixed the "lldb-platform" and "lldb-gdbserver" to not warn about mismatched visibility settings by having each have their own exports file which contains nothing. This forces all symbols to not be exported, and also quiets the linker warnings.
llvm-svn: 196141
Example code:
remote_platform = lldb.SBPlatform("remote-macosx");
remote_platform.SetWorkingDirectory("/private/tmp")
debugger.SetSelectedPlatform(remote_platform)
connect_options = lldb.SBPlatformConnectOptions("connect://localhost:1111");
err = remote_platform.ConnectRemote(connect_options)
if err.Success():
print >> result, 'Connected to remote platform:'
print >> result, 'hostname: %s' % (remote_platform.GetHostname())
src = lldb.SBFileSpec("/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/SharedFrameworks/LLDB.framework", False)
dst = lldb.SBFileSpec()
# copy src to platform working directory since "dst" is empty
err = remote_platform.Install(src, dst);
if err.Success():
print >> result, '%s installed successfully' % (src)
else:
print >> result, 'error: failed to install "%s": %s' % (src, err)
Implemented many calls needed in lldb-platform to be able to install a directory that contains symlinks, file and directories.
The remote lldb-platform can now launch GDB servers on the remote system so that remote debugging can be spawned through the remote platform when connected to a remote platform.
The API in SBPlatform is subject to change and will be getting many new functions.
llvm-svn: 195273
Remove the --do-read option, and always provide a small dump of memory at each match spot
Add a --dump-offset (-o) option, to specify a byte offset from which to start dumping relative to the matching address
The real solution is to actually provide the format options found on "memory read" and use those as the key to actually printing memory upon each find
That, however, requires a little refactoring work, so put this in for now until I get a chance to do the required shuffling around of moving parts
llvm-svn: 194600
Implement a "memory find" command for LLDB
This is still fairly rough around the edges but works well enough for simple scenarios where a chunk of text or a number are to be found within a certain range of memory, as in
mem find `buffer` `buffer+0x1000` -s "me" -c 5 -r
llvm-svn: 194544
It completes the job of using EvaluateExpressionOptions consistently throughout
the inferior function calling mechanism in lldb begun in Greg's patch r194009.
It removes a handful of alternate calls into the ClangUserExpression/ClangFunction/ThreadPlanCallFunction which
were there for convenience. Using the EvaluateExpressionOptions removes the need for them.
Using that it gets the --debug option from Greg's patch to work cleanly.
It also adds another EvaluateExpressionOption to not trap exceptions when running expressions. You shouldn't
use this option unless you KNOW your expression can't throw beyond itself. This is:
<rdar://problem/15374885>
At present this is only available through the SB API's or python.
It fixes a bug where function calls would unset the ObjC & C++ exception breakpoints without checking whether
they were set by somebody else already.
llvm-svn: 194182
iterators for LLDB's container data structures.
Iterable abstracts over the backing data structure,
ignoring keys for maps for example. It also provides
locking as a service so that the code
for (ThreadSP thread_sp : process->Threads())
{
// ... use thread_sp
}
takes the appropriate locks once, without having to
do anything else.
The salient advantages of this system are:
- Much simpler and idiomatic loop code
- Lock once instead of each time an element is fetched
- Less boilerplate to produce the iterators
The intent is that Iterable will replace Get...AtIndex
in most places, and that ForEach(), which solves the
same problem in a less-idiomatic way, be phased out in
favor of this approach.
I've added Iterables to ThreadList, TypeList, and
Process (which is really just forwarding to ThreadList).
llvm-svn: 194159
Cleaned up ClangUserExpression::Evaluate() to have only one variant that takes a "const EvaluateExpressionOptions& options" instead of taking many arguments.
The "--debug" option is designed to allow you to debug your expression by stopping at the first instruction (it enables --ignore-breakpoints=true and --unwind-on-error=false) and allowing you to step through your JIT code. It needs to be more integrated with the thread plan, so I am checking this in so Jim Ingham can make it happen.
llvm-svn: 194009
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
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
In almost all cases, the misuse is about "%lu" being used instead of the correct "%zu" (even though these are compatible on 64-bit platforms in practice). There are even a couple of cases where "%ld" (ie., signed int) is used instead of "%zu", and one where "%lu" is used instead of "%" PRIu64.
Fixes bug #17551.
Patch by "/dev/humancontroller"
llvm-svn: 193832
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
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
- 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
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
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
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
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
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