Summary:
This should solve the issue of sending denormalized paths over gdb-remote
if we stick to GetPath(false) in GDBRemoteCommunicationClient, and let the
server handle any denormalization.
Reviewers: ovyalov, zturner, vharron, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: tberghammer, emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9728
llvm-svn: 238604
Summary:
Previously, we reported inferior receiving SIGSEGV (or SIGILL, SIGFPE, SIGBUS) as an "exception"
to LLDB, presumably to match OSX behaviour. Beside the fact that we were basically lying to the
user, this was also causing problems with inferiors which handle SIGSEGV by themselves, since
LLDB was unable to reinject this signal back into the inferior.
This commit changes LLGS to report SIGSEGV as a signal. This has necessitated some changes in the
test-suite, which had previously used eStopReasonException to locate threads that crashed. Now it
uses platform-specific logic, which in the case of linux searches for eStopReasonSignaled with
signal=SIGSEGV.
I have also added the ability to set the description of StopInfoUnixSignal using the description
field of the gdb-remote packet. The linux stub uses this to display additional information about
the segfault (invalid address, address access protected, etc.).
Test Plan: All tests pass on linux and osx.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg, emaste
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10057
llvm-svn: 238549
it an extern "C" function instead of a C++ function
so that Clang doesn't emit a mangled function reference.
Also removed the hack in ClangExpressionDeclMap that
works around this.
llvm-svn: 238476
Summary:
LLDB on Windows should now be able to demangle Linux/Android symbols.
Also updated CxaDemangle.cpp to be compatible with MSVC.
Depends on D9949, D9954, D10048.
Reviewers: zturner, emaste, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: tberghammer, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10040
llvm-svn: 238460
Summary: In preparation for some changes to make this compatible with MSVC.
Reviewers: emaste, zturner, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9949
llvm-svn: 238459
lldb::addr_t SBFrame::GetCFA();
This gets the CFA (call frame address) of the frame so it allows us to take an address that is on the stack and figure out which thread it comes from.
Also modified the heap.py module to be able to find out which variable in a frame's stack frame contains an address. This way when ptr_refs finds a match on the stack, it get then report which variable contains the pointer.
llvm-svn: 238393
expr_options = lldb.SBExpressionOptions()
expr_options.SetPrefix('''
struct Foo {
int a;
int b;
int c;
}
'''
expr_result = frame.EvaluateExpression ("Foo foo = { 1, 2, 3}; foo", expr_options)
This fixed a current issue with ptr_refs, cstr_refs and malloc_info so that they can work. If expressions define their own types and then return expression results that use those types, those types get copied into the target's AST context so they persist and the expression results can be still printed and used in future expressions. Code was added to the expression parser to copy the context in which types are defined if they are used as the expression results. So in the case of types defined by expressions, they get defined in a lldb_expr function and that function and _all_ of its statements get copied. Many types of statements are not supported in this copy (array subscript, lambdas, etc) so this causes expressions to fail as they can't copy the result types. To work around this issue I have added code that allows expressions to specify an expression specific prefix. Then when you evaluate the expression you can pass the "expr_options" and have types that can be correctly copied out into the target. I added this as a way to work around an issue, but I also think it is nice to be allowed to specify an expression prefix that can be reused by many expressions, so this feature is very useful.
<rdar://problem/21130675>
llvm-svn: 238365
This change also get rid of an unused Debugger instance in
GDBRemoteCommunicationServerLLGS and the command interpreter from
lldb-platform what was used only for enabling logging.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9876
llvm-svn: 238319
Summary:
There is an issue in lldb where the command prompt can appear at the wrong time. The partial fix
we have in for this is not working all the time and is introducing unnecessary delays. This
change does:
- Change Process:SyncIOHandler to use integer start id's for synchronization to avoid it being
confused by quick start-stop cycles. I picked this up from a suggested patch by Greg to
lldb-dev.
- coordinates printing of asynchronous text with the iohandlers. This is also based on a
(different) Greg's patch, but I have added stronger synchronization to it to avoid races.
Together, these changes solve the prompt problem for me on linux (both with and without libedit).
I think they should behave similarly on Mac and FreeBSD and I think they will not make matters
worse for windows.
Test Plan: Prompt comes out alright. All tests still pass on linux.
Reviewers: clayborg, emaste, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9823
llvm-svn: 238313
This works for Python commands defined via a class (implement get_flags on your class) and C++ plugin commands (which can call SBCommand::GetFlags()/SetFlags())
Flags allow features such as not letting the command run if there's no target, or if the process is not stopped, ...
Commands could always check for these things themselves, but having these accessible via flags makes custom commands more consistent with built-in ones
llvm-svn: 238286
We know have on API we should use for all XML within LLDB in XML.h. This API will be easy back the XML parsing by different libraries in case libxml2 doesn't work on all platforms. It also allows the only place for #ifdef ...XML... to be in XML.h and XML.cpp. The API is designed so it will still compile with or without XML support and there is a static function "bool XMLDocument::XMLEnabled()" that can be called to see if XML is currently supported. All APIs will return errors, false, or nothing when XML isn't enabled.
Converted all locations that used XML over to using the host XML implementation.
Added target.xml support to debugserver. Extended the XML register format to work for LLDB by including extra attributes and elements where needed. This allows the target.xml to replace the qRegisterInfo packets and allows us to fetch all register info in a single packet.
<rdar://problem/21090173>
llvm-svn: 238224
If binding to port 0 is selected, the actual port is printed.
This improves the reliability of platform startup by ensuring that
a free port can be found.
TEST PLAN
./lldb-server platform --listen *:0
Listening for a connection from <port-number>...
Will appear on stdout (with other stuff potentially)
llvm-svn: 238173
It turns out, child values also need similar provisions
This patch simplifies things a bit allowing ValueObject subclasses to just declare whether they can accept an invalid context at update time, and letting the update machinery in the EvaluationPoint to the rest
Also, this lets ValueObjectChild proclaim that its parent chooses whether such blank-slate updates are possible
llvm-svn: 237714
This patch initially was committed in r237460 but later it was reverted (r237479) due to 4 new failures:
* TestExitDuringStep.py
* TestNumThreads.py
* TestThreadExit.py
* TestThreadStates.py
This patch also fixes these tests.
llvm-svn: 237566
And they also do not have a thread/frame attached to them
That makes dynamic and synthetic values attached to them impossible to update - which, among other things, makes it impossible to properly display persistent variables of types that could have such dynamic/persistent values
Fix this by making it so that a ValueObject can control its constantness (hint: dynamic and synthetic values cannot be constant) and whether it wants to let itself be updated when an invalid thread is around
llvm-svn: 237504
Summary:
This option forces to only set a source line breakpoint when there is an exact-match
This patch includes the following commits:
# Add the -m/--exact-match option in "breakpoint set" command
## Add exact_match arg in BreakpointResolverFileLine ctor
## Add m_exact_match field in BreakpointResolverFileLine
## Add exact_match arg in BreakpointResolverFileRegex ctor
## Add m_exact_match field in BreakpointResolverFileRegex
## Add exact_match arg in Target::CreateSourceRegexBreakpoint
## Add exact_match arg in Target::CreateBreakpoint
## Add -m/--exact-match option in "breakpoint set" command
# Add target.exact-match option to skip BP if source line doesn't match
## Add target.exact-match global option
## Add Target::GetExactMatch
## Refactor Target::CreateSourceRegexBreakpoint to accept LazyBool exact_match (was bool)
## Refactor Target::CreateBreakpoint to accept LazyBool exact_match (was bool)
# Add target.exact-match test in SettingsCommandTestCase
# Add BreakpointOptionsTestCase tests to test --skip-prologue/--exact-match options
# Fix a few typos in lldbutil.check_breakpoint_result func
# Rename --exact-match/m_exact_match/exact_match/GetExactMatch to --move-to-nearest-code/m_move_to_nearest_code/move_to_nearest_code/GetMoveToNearestCode
# Add exact_match field in BreakpointResolverFileLine::GetDescription and BreakpointResolverFileRegex::GetDescription, for example:
was:
```
1: file = '/Users/IliaK/p/llvm/tools/lldb/test/functionalities/breakpoint/breakpoint_command/main.c', line = 12, locations = 1, resolved = 1, hit count = 2
1.1: where = a.out`main + 20 at main.c:12, address = 0x0000000100000eb4, resolved, hit count = 2
```
now:
```
1: file = '/Users/IliaK/p/llvm/tools/lldb/test/functionalities/breakpoint/breakpoint_command/main.c', line = 12, exact_match = 0, locations = 1, resolved = 1, hit count = 2
1.1: where = a.out`main + 20 at main.c:12, address = 0x0000000100000eb4, resolved, hit count = 2
```
Test Plan:
./dotest.py -v --executable $BUILDDIR/bin/lldb functionalities/breakpoint/
./dotest.py -v --executable $BUILDDIR/bin/lldb settings/
./dotest.py -v --executable $BUILDDIR/bin/lldb tools/lldb-mi/breakpoint/
Reviewers: jingham, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, clayborg, jingham
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9273
llvm-svn: 237460
There were two versions of DoAttachToprocessWithId. One that takes
a pid_t, and the other which takes a pid_t and a ProcessAttachInfo.
There were no callers of the former version, and all of the
implementations of this version were simply forwarding calls to
one version or the other.
llvm-svn: 237281
Summary:
This patch is the beginnings of support for Non-stop mode in the remote protocol. Letting a user examine stopped threads, while other threads execute freely.
Non-stop mode is enabled using the setting target.non-stop-mode, which sends a QNonStop packet when establishing the remote connection.
Changes are also made to treat the '?' stop reply packet differently in non-stop mode, according to spec https://sourceware.org/gdb/current/onlinedocs/gdb/Remote-Non_002dStop.html#Remote-Non_002dStop.
A setting for querying the remote for default thread on setup is also included.
Handling of '%' async notification packets will be added next.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, ADodds, ted, deepak2427
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9656
llvm-svn: 237239
Removed some unused variables, added some consts, changed some casts
to const_cast. I don't think any of these changes are very
controversial.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9674
llvm-svn: 237218
Summary:
GetCurrentDirectory() returns the number of characters copied; 0 is a failure, not a success.
Add implementation for chdir().
Reviewers: zturner
Reviewed By: zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9300
llvm-svn: 237162
Summary:
Hexagon is a VLIW processor. It can execute multiple instructions at once, called a packet. Breakpoints need to be alone in a packet. This patch will make sure that temporary breakpoints used for stepping are set at the start of a packet, which will put the breakpoint in a packet by itself.
Patch by Deepak Panickal of CodePlay and Ted Woodward of Qualcomm.
Reviewers: deepak2427, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9437
llvm-svn: 237047
Converts the MAP_PRIVATE and MAP_ANON options to the target platform constants
(on which the call runs) rather than using those of the compiled host.
Test Plan:
Run test suite, the following tests requiring memory allocation / JIT support
begin passing when running mac -> linux:
Test11588.py
TestAnonymous.py
TestBreakpointConditions.py
TestCPPStaticMethods.py
TestCStrings.py
TestCallStdStringFunction.py
TestDataFormatterCpp.py
TestDataFormatterStdList.py
TestExprDoesntBlock.py
TestExprHelpExamples.py
TestFunctionTypes.py
TestPrintfAfterUp.py
TestSBValuePersist.py
TestSetValues.py
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9511
llvm-svn: 236933
If no temp directory specified by the user on android then fall back
to /data/local/tmp what is always present on the device. It removes
the dependency of specifying TMPDIR for executing platform commands
on android.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9569
llvm-svn: 236843
Summary:
This changes lldb_assert to accept bool expressions as the parameter, this is because some
objects (such as std::shared_ptr) are convertible to bool, but are not convertible to int, which
leads to surprising errors.
Reviewers: granata.enrico, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9565
llvm-svn: 236819
__attribute__(format(print...)) requires a function which takes
variadic arguments (... style), not a function which takes a va_list.
So following the same thing that VAPrintf does, just remove the
__attribute__ from this function.
llvm-svn: 236788
Summary:
GetEHFrameAugmentedUnwindPlan duplicated the work of GetEHFrameUnwindPlan in getting the original
plan from DWARF CFI. This changes the function to call GetEHFrameUnwindPlan instead of doing all
the work itself. A copy constructor is added to UnwindPlan to enable plan copying.
Test Plan: No regressions on linux test suite.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9369
llvm-svn: 236607
(including inline functions) from modules in the
expression parser. We now have to retain a reference
to the code generator in ClangExpressionDeclMap so
that any imported function bodies can be appropriately
sent to that code generator.
<rdar://problem/19883002>
llvm-svn: 236297
Based on list discussions, a different approach is desired for
reducing the visual impact of logging statements on the
readability of the code. Another mechanism will be added in
a followup patch, but for now, since NullLog is unreferenced,
this patch just removes it.
This patch does *not* remove the other half of r236174, which was
to delete some dead code surrounding logging flags.
llvm-svn: 236259
The purpose of this class is so that GetLogIfAllCategoriesSet
can always return an instance of some class, whether it be a real
logging class or a "null" class, which ignores messages. Code
that is littered with if statements that only log if the pointer
is non-null can get very unwieldy very quickly, so this should
help code readability in such circumstances.
Since I'm in this code anyway, I'm also deleting the
PrintfWithFlags methods, as well as all the flags, since they
appear to be dead code that have been superceded by newer
mechanisms and all the flags are simply ignored.
llvm-svn: 236174
Summary:
NativeProcessProtocol uses ReadMemory internally for setting/checking
breakpoints but also for generic memory reads (Handle_m), this change adds a
ReadMemoryWithoutTrap for that purpose. Also fixes a bunch of misuses of addr_t
as size/length.
Test Plan: `disassemble` no longer shows the trap code.
Reviewers: jingham, vharron, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9330
llvm-svn: 236132
Summary:
Currently, launching lldb-gdbserver from platform on Android requires root for
mkfifo() and an explicit TMPDIR variable. This should remove both requirements.
Test Plan: Successfully launched lldb-gdbserver on a non-rooted Android device.
Reviewers: tberghammer, vharron, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: tberghammer, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9307
llvm-svn: 235940
Patch by Jaydeep Patil
Added MIPS32 and MIPS64 core revisions. This would be followed by register context and emulate-instruction for MIPS32.
DYLDRendezvous.cpp:
On Linux link map struct does not contain extra load offset field.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: bhushan, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, lldb-commits.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9190
llvm-svn: 235574
breakpoints, for instance on the class of the thrown object.
This change doesn't actually make that work, the part where we
extract the thrown object type from the throw site isn't done yet.
This provides a general programmatic "precondition" that you can add
to breakpoints to give them the ability to do filtering on the LLDB
side before we pass the stop on to the user-provided conditions &
callbacks.
llvm-svn: 235538
module-loading support for the expression parser.
- It adds support for auto-loading modules referred
to by a compile unit. These references are
currently in the form of empty translation units.
This functionality is gated by the setting
target.auto-import-clang-modules (boolean) = false
- It improves and corrects support for loading
macros from modules, currently by textually
pasting all #defines into the user's expression.
The improvements center around including only those
modules that are relevant to the current context -
hand-loaded modules and the modules that are imported
from the current compile unit.
- It adds an "opt-in" mechanism for all of this
functionality. Modules have to be explicitly
imported (via @import) or auto-loaded (by enabling
the above setting) to enable any of this
functionality.
It also adds support to the compile unit and symbol
file code to deal with empty translation units that
indicate module imports, and plumbs this through to
the CompileUnit interface.
Finally, it makes the following changes to the test
suite:
- It adds a testcase that verifies that modules are
automatically loaded when the appropriate setting
is enabled (lang/objc/modules-auto-import); and
- It modifies lanb/objc/modules-incomplete to test
the case where a module #undefs something that is
#defined in another module.
<rdar://problem/20299554>
llvm-svn: 235313
the changes in r233255/r233258. Normally if lldb attaches to
a running process, when we call Process::Destroy, we want to detach
from the process. If lldb launched the process itself, ::Destroy
should kill it.
However, if we attach to a process and the driver calls SBProcess::Kill()
(which calls Destroy), we need to kill it even if we didn't launch it
originally.
The force_kill param allows for the SBProcess::Kill method to force the
behavior of Destroy.
<rdar://problem/20424439>
llvm-svn: 235158
virtual void
LanguageRuntime::ModulesDidLoad (const ModuleList &module_list);
Then reorganized how the objective C plug-in is notified so it will work for all LanguageRuntime subclasses.
llvm-svn: 235118
all the macros from the modules the user has loaded.
These macros are currently imported textually into
the expression's source code, which turns out not to
impose the horrific string processing overhead that
I thought it would, but I still plan to look into
performance improvements.
Also modified TestCModules to test that this works.
llvm-svn: 234922
Summary:
This fixes an issue with GCC generated binaries wherein an expression
with method invocations on std::string variables was failing. Such use
cases are tested in TestSTL (albeit, in a test marked with
@unittest2.expectedFailure because of other reasons).
The reason for this particular failure with GCC is that the generated
DWARF for std::basic_string<...> is incomplete, which makes clang not
to use the alternate mangling scheme. GCC correctly generates the name
of basic_string<...>:
DW_AT_name "basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> >"
It also lists the template parameters of basic_string correctly:
DW_TAG_template_type_parameter
DW_AT_name "_CharT"
DW_AT_type <0x0000009c>
DW_TAG_template_type_parameter
DW_AT_name "_Traits"
DW_AT_type <0x00000609>
DW_TAG_template_type_parameter
DW_AT_name "_Alloc"
DW_AT_type <0x000007fb>
However, it does not list the template parameters of std::char_traits<>.
This makes Clang feel (while parsing the expression) that the string
variable is not actually a basic_string instance, and consequently does
not use the alternate mangling scheme.
Test Plan:
dotest.py -C gcc -p TestSTL
-- See it go past the "for" loop expression successfully.
Reviewers: clayborg, spyffe
Reviewed By: clayborg, spyffe
Subscribers: tberghammer, zturner, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8846
llvm-svn: 234522
Summary:
Previously the Debugger::HandleProcessEvent hid a top IOHandler if the
process's IOHandler was inactive and later refreshed it. Usually the
IOHandler.Refresh() prints the (lldb) prompt. The problem was in case of
iOS remote platform when trying to execute 'command source' command.
On this platform the process's IOHandler is empty, therefore the
Debugger::HandleProcessEvent hid a top IOHandler and later refreshed it.
So that the (lldb) prompt was printed with a program output in mixed
order:
was:
```
longlonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglong
longlonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglon(lldb)
glonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglong string
```
now:
```
longlonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglong
longlonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglonglong
longlonglonglonglonglonglonglonglong string
```
Reviewers: zturner, jingham, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, jingham, zturner, clayborg
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8929
llvm-svn: 234517
Previously, users on Windows had to manually specify PYTHONPATH
to point to the site-packages directory before running LLDB.
The reason for this was because sys.path was being initialized
with a path containing unescaped backslashes, causing escape
sequences to end up in the paths.
llvm-svn: 234516
Summary:
If a struct type S has a member T that has a member that is a function that
returns a typedef of S* the respective field would be duplicated, which caused
an assert down the line in RecordLayoutBuilder. This patch adds a check that
removes the possibility of trying to resolve the same type twice within the
same callstack.
This commit also adds unit tests for these failures.
Fixes https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=20486.
Patch by Cristian Hancila.
Test Plan: Run unit tests.
Reviewers: clayborg spyffe
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8561
llvm-svn: 234441
The OperatingSystem plug-ins allow code to detect threads in memory and then say "memory thread 0x11111" is backed by the actual thread 1.
You can then single step these virtual threads. A problem arose when thread specific breakpoints were used during thread plans where we would say "set a breakpoint on thread 0x11111" and we would hit the breakpoint on the real thread 1 and the thread IDs wouldn't match and we would get rid of the "stopped at breakpoint" stop info due to this mismatch. Code was added to ensure these events get forwarded and thus allow single stepping a memory thread to work correctly.
Added a test case for this as well.
<rdar://problem/19211770>
llvm-svn: 234364
verifying that the types from that module don't
override types from DWARF. Also added a target setting
to LLDB so we can tell Clang where to look for these
local modules.
<rdar://problem/18805055>
llvm-svn: 234016
There were a couple of real bugs here regarding error checking and
signed/unsigned comparisons, but mostly these were just noise.
There was one class of bugs fixed here which is particularly
annoying, dealing with MSVC's non-standard behavior regarding
the underlying type of enums. See the comment in
lldb-enumerations.h for details. In short, from now on please use
FLAGS_ENUM and FLAGS_ANONYMOUS_ENUM when defining enums which
contain values larger than can fit into a signed integer.
llvm-svn: 233943
Guard against this by setting a new "m_finalizing" flag that lets us know we are in the process of finalizing.
<rdar://problem/20369152>
llvm-svn: 233935
In an effort to reduce binary size for components not wishing to
link against all of LLDB, as well as a parallel effort to reduce
link dependencies on Python, this patch splits out the notion of
LLDB initialization into "full" and "common" initialization.
All code related to initializing the full LLDB suite lives directly
in API now. Previously it was only referenced from API, but because
it was defined in lldbCore, it would get implicitly linked against
by everything including lldb-server, causing a considerable
increase in binary size.
By moving this to the API layer, it also creates a better layering
for the ongoing effort to make the embedded interpreter replacable
with one from a different language (or even be completely removeable).
One semantic change necessary to get this all working was to remove
the notion of a shared debugger refcount. The debugger is either
initialized or uninitialized now, and calling Initialize() multiple
times will simply have no effect, while the first Terminate() will
now shut it down no matter how many times Initialize() was called.
This behaves nicely with all of our supported usage patterns though,
and allows us to fix a number of nasty hacks from before.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8462
llvm-svn: 233758
I am fixing this by:
1 - make sure we aren't trying to set the symbol file for a module to the same thing it already has and leaving it alone if it is the same
2 - keep all old symbol files around in the module in case there are any outstanding type references
<rdar://problem/18029116>
llvm-svn: 233757
A char can have signed and unsigned encoding but previously lldb always
assumed it is signed. This CL adds a logic to detect the encoding of
'char' types based on the default encoding on the target architecture.
It fixes variable printing and expression evaluation on architectures
where 'char' is signed by default.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8636
llvm-svn: 233682
lldb-platform's listener socket only had a backlog of one connection.
That means that if more than one client connected simultaneously, the
connection would be refused. The test suite can be run remotely with
dozens of threads connecting simultaneously. Raised this limit to 100
to effectively eliminate lost connections.
Test Plan:
run tests against a remote target
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8696
llvm-svn: 233652
Adds the --server argument to lldb-server platform which when specified will allow multiple simultaneous connections by forking off to handle each individual connection. This will allow us to run the remote tests in parallel.
Test Plan:
Run: lldb-server platform --listen *:1234 --server
Connect from multiple lldb clients simultaneously.
I will also test running the test suite remotely with multiple simultaneous jobs.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8452
llvm-svn: 233185
Summary:
Fixes http://reviews.llvm.org/D8511
The original method of using dladdr() could return the incorrect relative
path if not dynamically linked against liblldb and the working directory
has changed. This is not a problem when built with python, since
ScriptInterpreterPython::InitializePrivate calls
HostInfo::GetLLDBPath(ePathTypeLLDBShlibDir, ...) and caches the
correct path before any changes to the working directory.
The /proc/self/exe approach fails if run using Python, but works for all other
cases (including for android, which doesn't have dladdr()).
So if we combine the two, we should reasonably cover all corner cases.
Reviewers: vharron, ovyalov, clayborg
Reviewed By: ovyalov, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8570
llvm-svn: 233129
Since ClangASTSource::layoutRecordType() was overriding a virtual
function in the base, this was inadvertently causing a new method
to be introduced rather than an override. To fix this all method
signatures are changed back to taking DenseMaps, and the `override`
keyword is added to make sure this type of error doesn't happen
again.
To keep the original fix intact, which is that fields and bases
must be added in offset order, the ImportOffsetMap() function
now copies the DenseMap into a vector and then sorts the vector
on the value type (e.g. the offset) before iterating over the
sorted vector and inserting the items.
llvm-svn: 233099
Summary:
This commit adds this alternate route only when parsing variable dies
corresponding to global or static variables. The motivation for this is that GCC
does not emit linkage names for functions and variables declared/defined in
anonymous namespaces. Having this alternate route fixes one part of
TestNamespace which fails when the test case is compiled with GCC.
An alternate route to get fully qualified names of functions whose linkage names
are missing will be added with a followup change. With that, the other failing
part of TestNamespace will also be fixed.
Test Plan: dotest.py -C gcc -p TestNamespace
Reviewers: clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8569
llvm-svn: 233098
Prior to this patch, we would try to synthesize class types by
iterating over a DenseMap of FieldDecls and adding each one to
a CXXRecordDecl. Since a DenseMap doesn't provide a deterministic
ordering of the elements, this would not add the fields in
FieldOffset order, but rather in some random order determined by
the memory layout of the DenseMap.
This patch fixes the issue by changing DenseMaps to vectors. The
ability to lookup a value in the DenseMap was hardly being used,
and where it is sufficient to do a vector lookup.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8512
llvm-svn: 233090
Previously the remote module sepcification was fetched only from the
remote platform. With this CL if we have a remote process then we ask it
if it have any information from a given module. It is required because
on android the dynamic linker only reports the name of the SO file and
the platform can't always find it without a full path (the process can
do it based on /proc/<pid>/maps).
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8547
llvm-svn: 233061
Summary:
Previously lldb-mi contains a stub for that but it didn't work and all CommanInterpreter's events were ignored.
This commit adds a handling of CommandInterpreter's events in lldb-mi.
Steps:
# Fix CMICmnLLDBDebugger::InitSBListener
# Add SBCommandInterpreter::EventIsCommandInterpreterEvent
# Exit on lldb::SBCommandInterpreter::eBroadcastBitQuitCommandReceived
All tests pass on OS X.
In further we can remove "quit" hack in lldb-mi.
Test Plan:
# Create start_script file:
```
target create ~/p/hello
b main
r
quit
```
# Run lldb-mi --interpreter
# Execute start_script file by following command:
```
-interpreter-exec console "command source start_script"
```
Log:
```
$ bin/lldb-mi --interpreter
(gdb)
-interpreter-exec console "command source start_script"
Executing commands in '/Users/IliaK/p/llvm/build_ninja/start_script'.
(lldb) target create ~/p/hello
Current executable set to '~/p/hello' (x86_64).
(lldb) b main
Breakpoint 1: where = hello`main + 29 at hello.cpp:12, address = 0x0000000100000e2d
(lldb) r
Process 1582 launched: '/Users/IliaK/p/hello' (x86_64)
(lldb) quit
^done
(gdb)
=thread-created,id="1",group-id="i1"
=thread-selected,id="1"
(gdb)
=shlibs-added,shlib-info=[num="1",name="hello",dyld-addr="-",reason="dyld",path="/Users/IliaK/p/hello",loaded_addr="-",dsym-objpath="/Users/IliaK/p/hello.dSYM/Contents/Resources/DWARF/hello"]
...
=shlibs-added,shlib-info=[num="132",name="libDiagnosticMessagesClient.dylib",dyld-addr="0x7fff91705000",reason="dyld",path="/usr/lib/libDiagnosticMessagesClient.dylib",loaded_addr="0x7fff91705000"]
(gdb)
*stopped,reason="breakpoint-hit",disp="del",bkptno="1",frame={addr="0x100000e2d",func="main",args=[{name="argc",value="1"},{name="argv",value="0x00007fff5fbffc88"}],file="hello.cpp",fullname="/Users/IliaK/p/hello.cpp",line="12"},thread-id="1",stopped-threads="all"
(gdb)<press Enter>
MI: Program exited OK
```
Reviewers: abidh, clayborg
Reviewed By: abidh
Subscribers: jingham, lldb-commits, clayborg, abidh
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8382
llvm-svn: 232891
Summary:
ComputeSupportExeDirectory relied on ComputeSharedLibraryDirectory which was
not always reliable. Using procfs seems to be the best way to deal with it on
Linux (since it's already done on Android, might as well merge it).
Reviewers: ovyalov
Reviewed By: ovyalov
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8511
llvm-svn: 232883
Summary:
Presently, if a log file already exists, lldb simply starts overwriting bits of it, without
truncating or anything. This patch makes it use eFileOptionFileTruncate by default. It also adds
an --append option, which will append to the file without truncating. A test is included.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8450
llvm-svn: 232801
This creates a new top-level folder called Initialization which
is intended to hold code specific to LLDB system initialization.
Currently this holds the Initialize() and Terminate() functions,
as well as the fatal error handler.
This provides a means to break the massive dependency cycle which
is caused by the fact that Debugger depends on Initialize and
Terminate which then depends on the entire LLDB project. With
this structure, it will be possible for applications to invoke
lldb_private::Initialize() directly, and have that invoke
Debugger::Initialize.
llvm-svn: 232768
Specifically, there were some functions for converting enums
to strings and a function for matching a string using a specific
matching algorithm. This moves those functions to more appropriate
headers in lldb/Utility and updates references to include the
new headers.
llvm-svn: 232673
So that we don't have to update every single #include in the entire
codebase to #include this new header (which used to get included by
lldb-private-log.h, we automatically #include "Logging.h" from
within "Log.h".
llvm-svn: 232653
Summary:
The existing formatter in C++ has been removed as it was not being used.
The associated test TestDataFormatterStdVBool.py has been enabled for
both Clang and GCC on Linux.
Test Plan: dotest.py -p TestDataFormatterStdVBool
Reviewers: vharron, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8390
llvm-svn: 232548
This removes ScriptInterpreterObject from the codebase completely.
Places that used to rely on ScriptInterpreterObject now use
StructuredData::Object and its derived classes. To support this,
a new type of StructuredData object is introduced, called
StructuredData::Generic, which stores a void*. Internally within
the python library, StructuredPythonObject subclasses this
StructuredData::Generic class so that it can addref and decref
the python object on construction and destruction.
Additionally, all of the classes in PythonDataObjects.h such
as PythonList, PythonDictionary, etc now provide a method to
create an instance of the corresponding StructuredData type. For
example, there is PythonDictionary::CreateStructuredDictionary.
To eliminate dependencies on PythonDataObjects for external
callers, all ScriptInterpreter methods now return only
StructuredData classes
The rest of the changes in this CL are focused on fixing up
users of PythonDataObjects classes to use the new StructuredData
classes.
llvm-svn: 232534
Some linux kernel reports a watchpoint hit after single stepping even
when no watchpoint was hit. This CL looks for a watchpoint which was hit
and reports a stop by trace if it haven't found any.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8081
llvm-svn: 232482
Summary:
Also, change its return type to size_t to match the return types of
its callers.
With this change, std::vector and std::list data formatter tests
pass on Linux (when using libstdc++) with clang as well as with gcc.
These tests have also been enabled in this patch.
Test Plan: dotest.py -p <TestDataFormatterStdVector|TestDataFormatterStdList>
Reviewers: vharron, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: zturner, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8337
llvm-svn: 232399
The file path is currently required on android because the executables
only contain the name of the system libraries without their path. This
CL add an extra field to the qModuleInfo packet to return the full path
of a modul and add logic to locate a shared module on android.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8221
llvm-svn: 232156
Previously it was fetched only if the architecture isn't valid, but the
architecture can be valid without containing all information about the
current target (e.g. missing os).
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8057
llvm-svn: 232153
This works by creating a command backed by a class whose interface should - at least - include
def __init__(self, debugger, session_dict)
def __call__(self, args, return_obj, exe_ctx)
What works:
- adding a command via command script add --class
- calling a thusly created command
What is missing:
- support for custom help
- test cases
The missing parts will follow over the next couple of days
This is an improvement over the existing system as:
a) it provides an obvious location for commands to provide help strings (i.e. methods)
b) it allows commands to store state in an obvious fashion
c) it allows us to easily add features to script commands over time (option parsing and subcommands registration, I am looking at you :-)
llvm-svn: 232136
Summary:
There was a race condition regarding the output of the inferior process. The reading of the
output is performed on a separate thread, and there was no guarantee that the output will get
eventually consumed. Because of that, it was happening that calling Process::GetSTDOUT was not
returning anything even though the process was terminated and would definitely not produce any
further output. This was usually happening only under very heavy system load, but it can be
reproduced by placing an usleep in the stdio thread (Process::STDIOReadThreadBytesReceived).
This patch addresses this by adding synchronization capabilities to the Communication thread.
After calling Communication::SynchronizeWithReadThread one can be sure that all pending input has
been processed by the read thread. This function is then called after every public event which
stops the process to obtain the entire process output.
Test Plan: TestProcessIO.py should now succeed every time instead of flaking in and out.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8246
llvm-svn: 232023
After http://reviews.llvm.org/D8133 landed as r231550 process launch on remote platform stopped working.
This adds Debugger::InitializeForLLGS and tracks whether one or both of Initialize and InitializeForLLGS have been called, calling only the corresponding lldb_private::Terminate* methods as necessary. Since lldb_private::Terminate calls lldb_private::TerminateForLLGS, the latter method may be called twice if Initialize was called for both however the terminate methods ensure they are only called once after being initialized.
This still maintains the reduced binary size, though it does now technically link in lldb_private::Terminate on lldb-server even though this should never be called.
This should resolve the issue raised in http://reviews.llvm.org/D8133 where Debugger::Terminate assumed that there were 0 references to debugger and terminated early.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8183
llvm-svn: 231808
Summary:
Fix a comment for ValueObject::GetValueDidChange after r231526.
This fix was requested by @jingham.
Reviewers: jingham, ki.stfu
Reviewed By: ki.stfu
Subscribers: lldb-commits, jingham
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8206
llvm-svn: 231804
This means you can set an expression prefix file with:
(lldb) settings set target.expr-prefix /tmp/to/prefix.txt
And you can run an expression and modify your expression prefix file in another editor without having to type:
(lldb) settings set target.expr-prefix /tmp/to/prefix.txt
again...
<rdar://problem/12155942>
llvm-svn: 231535
Summary: This patch adds a few comments for GetValueDidChange and contains improvements for TestValueVarUpdate.py test which checks ValueObject::GetValueDidChange for complex types.
Reviewers: zturner, granata.enrico, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: jingham, lldb-commits, granata.enrico, zturner, clayborg
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8103
llvm-svn: 231526
This removes Host::Backtrace from the codebase, and changes all
call sites to use llvm::sys::PrintStackTrace(). This makes the
functionality available for all platforms, and even for platforms
which currently had a supported implementation of Host::Backtrace,
this patch should enable richer information in stack traces, such
as file and line number information, as well as giving it the
ability to unwind through inlined functions.
llvm-svn: 231511
Unlike GDB, we tackle the problem of representing vector types in different styles by having a synthetic child provider that recognizes the format you're trying to apply to the variable, and coming up with the right type and number of child values to match that format
This makes for a more compact representation and less visual noise
Fixes rdar://5429347
llvm-svn: 231449
We would like it if LLDB never crashed, especially if we never caused LLDB to crash
On the other hand, having assertions can sometimes be useful
lldbassert(x) is the best of both worlds:
- in debug builds, it turns into a regular assert, which is fine because we don't mind debug LLDB to crash on development machines
- in non-debug builds, it emits a message formatted just like assert(x) would, but then instead of crashing, it dumps a backtrace, suggests filing a bug, and keeps running
llvm-svn: 231310
Summary:
Symbols in ELF files can be versioned, but LLDB currently does not understand these. This problem
becomes apparent once one loads glibc with debug info. Here (in the .symtab section) the versions
are embedded in the name (name@VERSION), which causes issues when evaluating expressions
referencing memcpy for example (current glibc contains memcpy@@GLIBC_2.14 and
memcpy@GLIBC_2.2.5).
This problem was not evident without debug symbols as the .dynsym section
stores the bare names and the actual versions are present in a separate section (.gnu.version_d),
which LLDB ignores. This resulted in two definitions of memcpy in the symbol table.
This patch adds support for storing annotated names to the Symbol class. If
Symbol.m_contains_linker_annotations is true then this symbol is annotated. Unannotated name can
be obtained by calling StripLinkerAnnotations on the corresponding ObjectFile. ObjectFileELF
implements this to strip @VERSION suffixes when requested. Symtab uses this function to add the
bare name as well as the annotated name to the name lookup table.
To preserve the size of the Symbol class, I had to steal one bit from the m_type field.
Test Plan:
This fixes TestExprHelpExamples.py when run with a glibc with debug symbols. Writing
an environment agnostic test case would require building a custom shared library with symbol
versions and testing symbol resolution against that, which is somewhat challenging.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8036
llvm-svn: 231228
Debugger.h is a huge file that gets included everywhere, and
FormatManager.h brings in a ton of unnecessary stuff and doesn't
even use anything from it in the header.
llvm-svn: 231161
This continues the effort to reduce header footprint and improve
build speed by removing clang and other unnecessary headers
from Target.h. In one case, some headers were included solely
for the purpose of declaring a nested class in Target, which was
not needed by anybody outside the class. In this case the
definition and implementation of the nested class were isolated
in the .cpp file so the header could be removed.
llvm-svn: 231107
This is part of a larger effort to reduce header file footprints.
Combined, these patches reduce the build time of LLDB locally by
over 30%. However, they touch many files and make many changes,
so will be submitted in small incremental pieces.
Reviewed By: Greg Clayton
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8022
llvm-svn: 231097
* Add missing functionality to the process launcher
* Fixup PATH environment variable to workaround an OS bug
* Add default shell path to the host info structure
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8009
llvm-svn: 231065
Separate out the necessary component initialization for lldb-server such that the linker can greatly reduce the binary size. With this patch the size of lldb-server on my 64 bit linux release build drops from 46MB to 26MB.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7880
llvm-svn: 230963
Summary:
Presently Args::SetCommandString allows quotes to be escaped with backslash. However, the
backslash itself is not removed from the argument, nor there is a way to escape the backslash
itself. This leads to surprising results:
"a b" c" -> 'a b', 'c' # Here we actually have an unterminated quote, but that is ignored
"a b\" c" -> 'a b\" c' # We try to escape the quote. That works but the backslash is not removed.
"a b\\" c" -> 'a b\\" c' # Escaping the backslash has no effect.
This change changes quote handling to be more shell-like:
- single quotes and backquotes are literal and there is no way to escape the closing quote or
anything else inside;
- inside double quotes you can use backslash to escape the closing quote and another backslash
- outside any quotes, you can use backslash to escape quotes, spaces and itself.
This makes the parsing more consistent with what the user is familiar and increases the
probability that pasting the command line from shell to the "process launch" command "just work".
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7855
llvm-svn: 230955
Summary:
The code for GetSyntheticArrayMemberFromPointer and
GetSyntheticArrayMemberFromArray was identical, so just collapse the
the methods into one.
Reviewers: granata.enrico, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7911
llvm-svn: 230708
When we have a debug map we have an executable with a bunch of STAB symbols and each source file has a N_SO symbol which scopes a bunch of symbols inside of it. We can use this to our advantage here when looking for the complete definition of an objective C class by looking for a symbol whose name matches the class name and whose type is eSymbolTypeObjCClass. If we find one, that symbol will be contained within a N_SO symbol. This symbol gets turned into a symbol whose type is eSymbolTypeSourceFile and that symbol will contain the eSymbolTypeObjCClass which helps us to locate the correct .o file and allows us to only look in that file.
To further accelerate things, if we are looking for the implementation, we can avoid looking at all .o files if we don't find a matching symbol because we have a debug map, which means the objective C symbol for the class can't have been stripped, so we can safely not search all remaining .o files. This will save us lots of time when trying to look for "NSObject" and any other AppKit and Foundation classes that we never have implementation definitions for.
<rdar://problem/19234225>
llvm-svn: 230562
Earlier this week I was able to get clang-cl on Windows to be
able to self host. This opened the door to being able to
get a whole new slew of warnings for the Windows build.
This patch fixes all of the warnings, many of which were real
bugs.
llvm-svn: 230522
This is implemented by making a new FileSystem function:
bool
FileSystem::IsLocal(const FileSpec &spec)
Then using this in a new function:
DataBufferSP
FileSpec::MemoryMapFileContentsIfLocal(off_t file_offset, size_t file_size) const;
This function only mmaps data if the file is a local file since that means we can reliably page in data. We were experiencing crashes where people would use debug info files on network mounted file systems and that mount would go away and cause the next access to a page that wasn't paged in to crash LLDB.
We now avoid this by just copying the data into a heap buffer and keeping a permanent copy to avoid the crash. Updated all previous users of FileSpec::MemoryMapFileContentsIfLocal() in ObjectFile subclasses over to use the new FileSpec::MemoryMapFileContentsIfLocal() function.
<rdar://problem/19470249>
llvm-svn: 230283
Summary:
This change refactors UnwindPlan::Row to be able to store the fact that the CFA is value is set
by evaluating a dwarf expression (DW_CFA_def_cfa_expression). This is achieved by creating a new
class CFAValue and moving all CFA setting/getting code there. Note that code using the new
CFAValue::isDWARFExpression is not yet present and will be added in a follow-up patch. Therefore,
this patch should not change the functionality in any way.
Test Plan: Ran tests on Mac and Linux. No regressions detected.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7755
llvm-svn: 230210
const, there was never a need for lookup_const_result. Now that vestigal
type is gone, so switch LLDB to lookup_result and to use the
DeclContextLookupResult rather than the Const variant.
llvm-svn: 230126
- Add Host::GlobArguments() to perform local-globbing
I implemented this on OSX and Windows in terms of argdumper (Windows implementation is essentially the same as the OSX version + a change in binary name and some string magic)
Other platforms did not specifically chime in, so I left it unimplemented for them for the time being. Please feel free to fill in the blanks
- Add Platform::GlobArguments() to support remote-globbing
For now, no feature change here - but now we have infrastructure to help GDBRemote targets to support globbing - and patches to that effect will follow
No visible feature change
llvm-svn: 230065
target.error-path (and output-path) were getting resolved on the
local file system, which doesn't make any sense for remote targets
So this patch prevents file paths from being resolved on the host
system.
llvm-svn: 229763
CopyContext is necessary to safely get the XState, but LLDB doesn't currently
use the XState. CopyContext is available as of Windows 7 SP1, so it can't be
used on Vista. Furthermore, it requires the Windows 8 SDK it compile,
making the baseline for compiling and running LLDB higher than necessary.
Patch by: Adrian McCarthy
Reviewed by: Zachary Turner
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7572
llvm-svn: 229710
Previously the CMake had a lot of duplication for the public API
due to some differences regarding how we link on Windows. This
fixes the issue, so making changes to the public API should be
much easier now.
llvm-svn: 229568
You cannot export a class from a DLL without this on
Windows, so it was causing lldb-mi to fail to link
after recent changes.
Please make sure to include this at the start of every
public type in the future.
llvm-svn: 229523
Reverting this commit led to other failures which I did not see at
first. This turned out to be an easy problem to fix, so I added
SBVariablesOptions.cpp to the CMakeLists.txt. In the future please
try to make sure new files are added to CMake.
llvm-svn: 229516
changing it was in r219544 - after living on that for a few
months, I wanted to take another crack at this.
The disassembly-format setting still exists and the old format
can be user specified with a setting like
${current-pc-arrow}${addr-file-or-load}{ <${function.name-without-args}${function.concrete-only-addr-offset-no-padding}>}:
This patch was discussed in http://reviews.llvm.org/D7578
<rdar://problem/19726421>
llvm-svn: 229186
Summary:
This patch adds -exec-arguments command for lldb-mi. -exec-arguments command allows to specify arguments for executable file in MI mode. Also it contains tests for that command.
Btw, new added files was formatted by clang-format.
Reviewers: abidh, zturner, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: zturner, emaste, clayborg, jingham, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6965
llvm-svn: 229110
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
Platform holds a smart pointer to each platform object created in a
static variable what cause the platform destructors called only on
program exit when other static variables are not availables. With this
change the destructors are called on lldb_private::Terminate()
+ Fix DebuggerRefCount handling in ScriptInterpreterPython
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7590
llvm-svn: 228944
* Create new platform plugin for lldb
* Create HostInfo class for android
* Create ProcessLauncher for android
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7584
llvm-svn: 228943
SBTarget::BreakpointCreateBySourceRegex that takes file spec lists to the Python interface,
and add a test for this.
<rdar://problem/19805037>
llvm-svn: 228938
There was a test in the test suite that was triggering the backtrace logging output that requested that the client pass an execution context. Sometimes we need the process for Objective C types because our static notion of the type might not align with the reality when being run in a live runtime.
Switched from an "ExecutionContext *" to an "ExecutionContextScope *" for greater ease of use.
llvm-svn: 228892
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
Because types are not reliably protected against the death of their owners, having ValueObjects lurking around like that past the useful lifetime of their owner processes is a potential source of crashes
That is - in itself - worth fixing at some point, but for this case, watchpoints holding on to old values don't offer enough value to make the larger fix worth
Fixes rdar://19788756
llvm-svn: 228777
We want to forward stdin when stdio is not disabled and when we're not
redirecting stdin from a file.
renamed m_stdio_disable to m_stdin_forward and inverted value because
that's what we want to remember.
There was previously a bug that if you redirected stdin from a file,
stdout and stderr would also be redirected to /dev/null
Adds support for remote target to TestProcessIO.py
Fixes ProcessIOTestCase.test_stdin_redirection_with_dwarf for remote
Linux targets
llvm-svn: 228744
only execute thumb instructions, force the arch triple string to
be "thumbv..." instead of "armv..." so we do the right thing by
default when disassembling arbitrary chunks of code.
<rdar://problem/15126397>
llvm-svn: 228486
Processes running on a remote target can already send $O messages
to send stdout but there is no way to send stdin to a remote
inferior.
This allows processes using the API to pump stdin into a remote
inferior process.
It fixes a hang in TestProcessIO.py when running against a remote
target.
llvm-svn: 228419
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
Summary:
This commit adds a new open flag File::eOpenOptionCloseOnExec (i.e., O_CLOEXEC), and adds it to
the list of flags when opening log files (#ifndef windows). A regression test is included.
Reviewers: vharron, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7412
llvm-svn: 228310
Background: dyld binaries often have extra symbols in their symbol table like "malloc" and "free" for the early bringup of dyld and we often don't want to set breakpoints in dynamic linker binaries. We also don't want to call the "malloc" or "free" function in dyld when a user writes an expression like "(void *)malloc(123)" so we need to avoid doing name lookups in dyld. We mark Modules as being dynamic link editors and this helps do correct lookups for breakpoints by name and function lookups.
<rdar://problem/19716267>
llvm-svn: 228261
Why? Debugger::FormatPrompt() would run through the format prompt every time and parse it and emit it piece by piece. It also did formatting differently depending on which key/value pair it was parsing.
The new code improves on this with the following features:
1 - Allow format strings to be parsed into a FormatEntity::Entry which can contain multiple child FormatEntity::Entry objects. This FormatEntity::Entry is a parsed version of what was previously always done in Debugger::FormatPrompt() so it is more efficient to emit formatted strings using the new parsed FormatEntity::Entry.
2 - Allows errors in format strings to be shown immediately when setting the settings (frame-format, thread-format, disassembly-format
3 - Allows auto completion by implementing a new OptionValueFormatEntity and switching frame-format, thread-format, and disassembly-format settings over to using it.
4 - The FormatEntity::Entry for each of the frame-format, thread-format, disassembly-format settings only replaces the old one if the format parses correctly
5 - Combines all consecutive string values together for efficient output. This means all "${ansi.*}" keys and all desensitized characters like "\n" "\t" "\0721" "\x23" will get combined with their previous strings
6 - ${*.script:} (like "${var.script:mymodule.my_var_function}") have all been switched over to use ${script.*:} "${script.var:mymodule.my_var_function}") to make the format easier to parse as I don't believe anyone was using these format string power user features.
7 - All key values pairs are defined in simple C arrays of entries so it is much easier to add new entries.
These changes pave the way for subsequent modifications where we can modify formats to do more (like control the width of value strings can do more and add more functionality more easily like string formatting to control the width, printf formats and more).
llvm-svn: 228207
The change was made so we could re-use a platform if one was already created instead of creating a new one, but it would fail in the above case. To fix this, if we have a selected platform, we verify that the platform matches the current platform before we try to re-use it. We do this by asking the OptionGroupPlatform if the platform matches. If so, it returns true and we don't create a new platform, else we do.
llvm-svn: 227288
Namely, this commit provides an actual implementation of how to retrieve the byte size in a sane way for an ObjC class, by scanning ivar offsets and byte sizes, figuring out the farthest-from-base ivar, and adding its byte size to that
Still NFC
llvm-svn: 227277
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
it does call, and implementing it so that we once again look up external symbols in the JIT.
Also juked the error reporting from the JIT a little bit.
This resolves:
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=22314
llvm-svn: 227217
Without this overload, attempts to edit the value of a variable with synthetic children enabled would change the value inside the synthetic ValueObject, but not propagate the changes to the underlying storage, hence resulting in no write for any meaningful purpose
Comes with a test case, and fixes rdar://19586311
llvm-svn: 227120
This patch fixes TestRegisters on Linux with LLGS
Introduce GetUserRegisterCount on RegisterInfoInterface to distinguish
lldb internal registers (e.g.: DR0-DR7) during register counting.
Update GDBRemoteCommunicationServer to skip lldb internal registers on
read/write register and on discover register.
Submitted for Tamas Berghammer
llvm-svn: 226959
When you create a target, it tries to look for the platform's list
of supported architectures for a match. The match it finds can
contain specific triples, like i386-pc-windows-msvc. Later, we
overwrite this value with the most generic triple that can apply
to any platform with COFF support, causing some of the fields of
the triple to get overwritten.
This patch changes the behavior to only merge in values from the COFF
triple if the fields of the matching triple were unknown/unspecified
to begin with.
This fixes load address resolution on Windows, since it enables the
DynamicLoaderWindows to be used instead of DynamicLoaderStatic.
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7120
llvm-svn: 226849
Since REG_ENHANCED is available on MacOSX, this allow the use of \d (digits) \b (word boundaries) and much more without affecting other systems.
<rdar://problem/12082562>
llvm-svn: 226704
Most of the time, we can use context information just fine to choose a language (i.e. the language of the frame that the root object was defined in, if any); but in some cases, synthetic children may be fabricated as root frame-less entities, and then we wouldn't know any better
This patch allows (internal) synthetic child providers to set a display language on the children they generate, should they so choose
llvm-svn: 226634
lldb::pid_t
Host::LaunchApplication (const FileSpec &app_file_spec);
This had use of a function FSPathMakeRef(const UInt8*, FSRef *, ...) that was deprecated in 10.8.
Removing this fucntion since it wasn't used and was causing warnings.
llvm-svn: 226608
CommandInterpreter's execution context AFTER the process had started running
and before it initially stopped. Also fixed one test case that was implicitly
using this (and an abuse of the async mode) to accidentally succeed.
<rdar://problem/16814726>
llvm-svn: 226528
This function returns a URI of the resource that the connection is connected to. This is especially important for connections established by accepting a connection from a remote host.
Also added implementations for ConnectionMachPort, ConnectionSharedMemory,
Also fixed up some documentation in Connection::Write
Renamed ConnectionFileDescriptorPosix::SocketListen to ConnectionFileDescriptorPosix::SocketListenAndAccept
Fixed a log message in Socket.cpp
Differential Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7026
llvm-svn: 226362
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 hit count is not updated.
Also, keep the hit count for the breakpoint in the breakpoint. We were
using just the sum of the location's hit counts, but that was wrong since if a shared library is
unloaded, and the location goes away, the breakpoint hit count should not suddenly drop
by the number of hits there were on that location.
llvm-svn: 226074
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
This is currently controlled by a setting:
(lldb) settings set target.process.python-os-plugin-path <path>
Or clearing it with:
(lldb) settings clear target.process.python-os-plugin-path
The process will now reload the OperatingSystem plug-in.
This was implemented by:
- adding the ability to set a notify callback for when an option value is changed
- added the ability for the process plug-in to load the operating system plug-in on the fly
- fixed bugs in the Process::GetStatus() so all threads are displayed if their thread IDs are larger than 32 bits
- adding a callback in ProcessProperties to tell when the "python-os-plugin-path" is changed by the user
- fixing a crasher in ProcessMachCore that happens when updating the thread list when the OS plugin is reloaded
llvm-svn: 225831
which will verify if the eh_frame instructions include details about
the prologue or not. Both clang and gcc include prologue instructions
but there's no requirement for them to do so -- and I'm sure we'll
have to interoperate with a compiler that doesn't generate prologue
info at some point.
I don't have any compilers that omit the prologue instructions so the
testing was of the "makre sure augmented unwind info is still created".
With an eh_frame without prologue, this code should reject the
augmentation scheme altogether and we should fall back to using assembly
instruction profiling.
llvm-svn: 225771
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
This will allow, in a subsequent patch, the addition of a global
setting that allows the user to specify a single character that
LLDB will recognize as an escape character when processing arg
strings to accomodate differences in Windows/non-Windows path
handling.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6887
Reviewed by: Jim Ingham
llvm-svn: 225694
I have been seeing a few crashes where LLDB tries to acquire a cached synthetic child by index, and crashes in the ClusterManager obtaining a shared_ptr for that ValueObject
That kind of crash most often means that I am holding on to a raw pointer to a ValueObject that was let go from the cluster
The main way that could happen is that the synthetic provider is being updated at the same time that some child is being accessed from the previous provider state
This fixes the problem by making the children be stored in a thread-safe map
Fixes rdar://18627964
llvm-svn: 225538
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
Most of the changes are to the FuncUnwinders class -- as we've added
more types of unwind information, the way this class was written was
making it a mess to maintain. Instead of trying to keep one
"non-call site" unwind plan and one "call site" unwind plan, track
all the different types of unwind plans we can possibly retrieve for
each function and have the call-site/non-call-site accessor methods
retrieve those.
Add a real "fast unwind plan" for x86_64 / i386 -- when doing an
unwind through a function, this only has to read the first 4 bytes
to tell if the function has a standard prologue sequence. If so,
we can use the architecture default unwind plan to backtrace
through this function. If we try to retrieve the save location for
other registers later on, a real unwind plan will be used. This
one is just for doing fast backtraces.
Change the compact unwind plan importer to fill in the valid address
range it is valid for.
Compact unwind, in theory, may have multiple entries for a single
function. The FuncUnwinders rewrite includes the start of supporting
this correctly. In practice compact unwind encodings are used for
the entire range of the function today -- in fact, sometimes the same
encoding is used for multiple functions that have the same unwind
rules. But I want to handle a single function that has multiple
different compact unwind UnwindPlans eventually.
llvm-svn: 224689
When lldb has a binary with protected section contents,
don't use the on-disk representation of that compact
uwnind -- read it only out of live memory where it has
been decrypted.
llvm-svn: 224670
For some reason MSVC ICEs when trying to index into a map using
a temporary object. Work around this by separating out the call
into multiple lines.
Patch by Aidan Dodds
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6702
Reviewed by: Zachary Turner, Greg Clayton
llvm-svn: 224443
This patch makes a number of improvements to the Pipe interface.
1) An interface (PipeBase) is provided which exposes pure virtual
methods for any implementation of Pipe to override. While not
strictly necessary, this helps catch errors where the interfaces
are out of sync.
2) All methods return lldb_private::Error instead of returning bool
or void. This allows richer error information to be propagated
up to LLDB.
3) A new ReadWithTimeout() method is exposed in the base class and
implemented on Windows.
4) Support for both named and anonymous pipes is exposed through the
base interface and implemented on Windows. For creating a new
pipe, both named and anonymous pipes are supported, and for
opening an existing pipe, only named pipes are supported.
New methods described in points #3 and #4 are stubbed out on posix,
but fully implemented on Windows. These should be implemented by
someone on the linux / mac / bsd side.
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton, Oleksiy Vyalov
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6686
llvm-svn: 224442
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
Fix PR21802 by correcting the destruction order of
`ClangExpressionParser` and `IRExecutionUnit` in `ClangFunction`. The
former has hooks into the latter -- i.e., `clang::CGDebugInfo` points at
the `LLVMContext` -- so it needs to be torn down first.
This was exposed by r223802 in LLVM, which started doing work in the
`CGDebugInfo` teardown.
llvm-svn: 223916
Function pointers had a summary generated for them bypassing formatters, directly as part of the ValueObject subsystem
This patch transitions that code into a hardcoded summary
llvm-svn: 223906
The issue with Thumb IT (if/then) instructions is the IT instruction preceeds up to four instructions that are made conditional. If a breakpoint is placed on one of the conditional instructions, the instruction either needs to match the thumb opcode size (2 or 4 bytes) or a BKPT instruction needs to be used as these are always unconditional (even in a IT instruction). If BKPT instructions are used, then we might end up stopping on an instruction that won't get executed. So if we do stop at a BKPT instruction, we need to continue if the condition is not true.
When using the BKPT isntructions are easy in that you don't need to detect the size of the breakpoint that needs to be used when setting a breakpoint even in a thumb IT instruction. The bad part is you will now always stop at the opcode location and let LLDB determine if it should auto-continue. If the BKPT instruction is used, the BKPT that is used for ARM code should be something that also triggers the BKPT instruction in Thumb in case you set a breakpoint in the middle of code and the code is actually Thumb code. A value of 0xE120BE70 will work since the lower 16 bits being 0xBE70 happens to be a Thumb BKPT instruction.
The alternative is to use trap or illegal instructions that the kernel will translate into breakpoint hits. On Mac this was 0xE7FFDEFE for ARM and 0xDEFE for Thumb. The darwin kernel currently doesn't recognize any 32 bit Thumb instruction as a instruction that will get turned into a breakpoint exception (EXC_BREAKPOINT), so we had to use the BKPT instruction on Mac. The linux kernel recognizes a 16 and a 32 bit instruction as valid thumb breakpoint opcodes. The benefit of using 16 or 32 bit instructions is you don't stop on opcodes in a IT block when the condition doesn't match.
To further complicate things, single stepping on ARM is often implemented by modifying the BCR/BVR registers and setting the processor to stop when the PC is not equal to the current value. This means single stepping is another way the ARM target can stop on instructions that won't get executed.
This patch does the following:
1 - Fix the internal debugserver for Apple to use the BKPT instruction for ARM and Thumb
2 - Fix LLDB to catch when we stop in the middle of a Thumb IT instruction and continue if we stop at an instruction that won't execute
3 - Fixes this in a way that will work for any target on any platform as long as it is ARM/Thumb
4 - Adds a patch for ignoring conditions that don't match when in ARM mode (see below)
This patch also provides the code that implements the same thing for ARM instructions, though it is disabled for now. The ARM patch will check the condition of the instruction in ARM mode and continue if the condition isn't true (and therefore the instruction would not be executed). Again, this is not enable, but the code for it has been added.
<rdar://problem/19145455>
llvm-svn: 223851
track of the checksum of the object so we can
track if it is modified. This fixes a testcase
(test/expression_command/issue_11588) on OS X.
Patch by Enrico Granata.
llvm-svn: 223830
- adds a new flag to mark ValueObjects as "synthetic children generated"
- vends new Create functions as part of the SyntheticChildrenFrontEnd that set the flag automatically
- moves synthetic child providers over to using these new functions
No visible feature change, but preparatory work for feature change
llvm-svn: 223819
Such a persisted version is equivalent to evaluating the value via the expression evaluator, and holding on to the $n result of the expression, except this API can be used on SBValues that do not obviously come from an expression (e.g. are the result of a memory lookup)
Expose this via SBValue::Persist() in our public API layer, and ValueObject::Persist() in the lldb_private layer
Includes testcase
Fixes rdar://19136664
llvm-svn: 223711
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
encounter clang::ExternalASTSources that are not instances
of ClangExternalASTSourceCommon. We used to blithely
assume that all are, and so we could use static_cast<>.
That's no longer the case, so we have to have these AST
sources register themselves.
llvm-svn: 223560
support to LLDB. It includes the following:
- Changed DeclVendor to TypeVendor.
- Made the ObjCLanguageRuntime provide a DeclVendor
rather than a TypeVendor.
- Changed the consumers of TypeVendors to use
DeclVendors instead.
- Provided a few convenience functions on
ClangASTContext to make that easier.
llvm-svn: 223433
like tgmath.h and stdarg.h into the LLDB installation,
and then finding them through the Host infrastructure.
Also add a script to actually do this on Mac OS X.
llvm-svn: 223430
% lldb /bin/nonono
(lldb) target create "/bin/nonono"
error: unable to find executable for '/usr/bin/nonono'
<deadlock>
The problem was the initial commands 'target create "/bin/nonono"' were put into a pipe and the command interpreter was being run with:
void
CommandInterpreter::RunCommandInterpreter(bool auto_handle_events,
bool spawn_thread,
CommandInterpreterRunOptions &options)
{
// Always re-create the command intepreter when we run it in case
// any file handles have changed.
bool force_create = true;
m_debugger.PushIOHandler(GetIOHandler(force_create, &options));
m_stopped_for_crash = false;
if (auto_handle_events)
m_debugger.StartEventHandlerThread();
if (spawn_thread)
{
m_debugger.StartIOHandlerThread();
}
else
{
m_debugger.ExecuteIOHanders();
if (auto_handle_events)
m_debugger.StopEventHandlerThread();
}
}
If "auto_handle_events" was set to true and "spawn_thread" was false, we would execute:
m_debugger.StartEventHandlerThread();
m_debugger.ExecuteIOHanders();
m_debugger.StopEventHandlerThread();
The problem was there was no synchonization in Debugger::StartEventHandlerThread() to ensure the event handler was listening to events and the the call to "m_debugger.StopEventHandlerThread()" would do:
void
Debugger::StopEventHandlerThread()
{
if (m_event_handler_thread.IsJoinable())
{
GetCommandInterpreter().BroadcastEvent(CommandInterpreter::eBroadcastBitQuitCommandReceived);
m_event_handler_thread.Join(nullptr);
}
}
The problem was that the event thread might not be listening for the CommandInterpreter::eBroadcastBitQuitCommandReceived event yet.
The solution is to make sure the Debugger::DefaultEventHandler() is listening to events before we return from Debugger::StartEventHandlerThread(). Once we have this synchonization we remove the race condition.
This fixes radar:
<rdar://problem/19041192>
llvm-svn: 223083
In the initialization list of IOHandlerConfirm, *this is basically casting
IOHandlerConfirm to its base IOHandlerDelegate and passing it to constructor of
IOHandlerEditline which uses it and crashes as constructor of IOHandlerDelegate
is still not called. Re-ordering the base classes makes sure that constructor of
IOHandlerDelegate runs first.
It would be good to have a test case for this case too.
llvm-svn: 222816
(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
retrieves the personality routine addr and the
LSDA addr. Don't bother checking with the
"non-call site" unwind plan - this kind of
information is only going to come from the
call site unwind plan.
llvm-svn: 222226
deadlocking when we have the base Unwind class and the HistoryUnwind
subclass both trying to acquire the lock on the same thread to clear
their respective ivar state.
<rdar://problem/18986350>
llvm-svn: 222221
eh_frame data. These two pieces of information are used in the
process of exception handler unwinding on SysV ABI systems.
This patch reads the data from the eh_frame section
(DWARFCallFrameInfo.cpp), allows for it to be saved & read out
of a given UnwindPlan (UnwindPlan.h, UnwindPlan.cpp) - as well
as printing the information in the UnwindPlan::Dump method - and
adds methods to the FuncUnwinders object so that higher levels
can query if a given function has an LSDA / personality routine
defined.
It's only lightly tested, but seems to be working correctly as long
as your have this information in eh_frame. Does not address getting
this information from compact unwind yet on Darwin systems.
<rdar://problem/18742797>
llvm-svn: 222214
Previously using HostThread::GetNativeThread() required an ugly
cast to most-derived type. This solves the issue by simply returning
the derived type directly.
llvm-svn: 222185
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
This creates a TargetThreadWindows class and updates the thread
list of the Process with the main thread. Additionally, we
fill out a few more overrides of Process base class methods. We
do not yet update the thread list as threads are created and/or
destroyed, and we do not yet propagate stop reasons to threads as
their states change.
llvm-svn: 222148
relative paths, like:
/whatever/llvm/lib/Sema/../../include/llvm/Sema/
That causes problems with our type uniquing, since we use the declaration file
and line as one component of the uniquing, and different ways of getting to the
same file will have different directory spellings, though they are functionally
equivalent. We end up with two copies of the exact same type because of this,
and that makes the expression parser give "duplicate type" errors.
I added a method to resolve paths with ../ in them and used that in the FileSpec::Equals,
for comparing Declarations and for doing Breakpoint compares as well, since they also
suffer from this if you specify breakpoints by full path (since nobody knows what
../'s to insert...)
<rdar://problem/18765814>
llvm-svn: 222075
RegisterContextLLDB. I have core files of half a dozen tricky
unwind situations on x86/arm and they're all working pretty much
correctly at this point, but we'll need to keep an eye out for
unwinder regressions for a little while; it's tricky to get these
heuristics completely correct in all unwind situations.
<rdar://problem/18937193>
llvm-svn: 221866
Summary:
PowerPC handles the stack chain with the current stack pointer being a pointer
to the backchain (CFA). LLDB currently has no way of handling this, so this
adds a "CFA is dereferenced from a register" type.
Discussed with Jason Molenda, who also provided the initial patch for this.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda
Reviewed By: jasonmolenda
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6182
llvm-svn: 221788
out we only want to roll back text that was in the
buffer to begin with, so it's not necessary to
provide a pushback stack.
I'm going to use this slightly cleaner API to perform
lookahead for the Objective-C runtime type parser.
llvm-svn: 221640
MSVC warns that not all control paths return a value when a switch
doesn't have a default case handler. Changed explicit value checks
to a default check.
Also, it caught a case where bitwise AND was being used instead of
logical AND. I'm not sure what this fixes, but presumably it is
not covered by any kind of test case.
llvm-svn: 221636
Two flags are introduced:
- preferred display language (as in, ObjC vs. C++)
- summary capping (as in, should a limit be put to the amount of data retrieved)
The meaning - if any - of these options is for individual formatters to establish
The topic of a subsequent commit will be to actually wire these through to individual data formatters
llvm-svn: 221482
This was done by using regular expressions on any basename we find to ensure it is valid.
This fixed setting breakpoints by name with values like '[J]com.robovm.debug.server.apps.SleepLoop.startingUp()V'. This was previously triggering the C++ method name class to identify the string as C++ with a basename of '[J]com.robovm.debug.server.apps.SleepLoop.startingUp' which was obviously incorrect.
The changes also fixed errors in templated function names like "void foo<int>(...)" where "void foo<int>" was being identified incorrectly as the basename. We also handle more C++ operators correctly now.
llvm-svn: 221416
In the llgs world, ProcessWindows will eventually go away and
we'll implement a different protocol. This patch decouples
ProcessWindows from the core debug loop so that this transition
will not be more difficult than it needs to be.
llvm-svn: 221405
The recent StringPrinter changes made this behavior the default, and the setting defaults to yes
If you want to change this behavior and see non-printables unescaped (e.g. "a\tb" as "a b"), set it to false
Fixes rdar://12969594
llvm-svn: 221399
let's let lldb try the arch default unwind every time but not destructively --
it doesn't permanently replace the main unwind method for that function from
now on.
This fix is for <rdar://problem/18683658>.
I tested it against Ryan Brown's go program test case and also a
collection of core files of tricky unwind scenarios
<rdar://problem/15664282> <rdar://problem/15835846>
<rdar://problem/15982682> <rdar://problem/16099440>
<rdar://problem/17364005> <rdar://problem/18556719>
that I've fixed over the last 6-9 months.
llvm-svn: 221238
When processes are launched for debugging on Windows now, LLDB
will detect changes such as DLL loads and unloads, breakpoints,
thread creation and deletion, etc.
These notifications are not yet propagated to LLDB in a way that
LLDB understands what is happening with the process. This only
picks up the notifications from the OS in a way that they can be
sent to LLDB with subsequent patches.
Reviewed by: Scott Graham
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6037
llvm-svn: 221207
to indicate that we're doing stuff for the expression
parser.
- When for_expression is true, look through @s and find
the actual class rather than just returning id.
- Rename BuildObjCObjectType to BuildObjCObjectPointerType
since it's actually returning an object *pointer* type.
llvm-svn: 220979
This works similarly to the {thread/frame/process/target.script:...} feature - you write a summary string, part of which is
${var.script:someFuncName}
someFuncName is expected to be declared as
def someFuncName(SBValue,otherArgument) - essentially the same as a summary function
Since . -> [] are the only allowed separators, and % is used for custom formatting, .script: would not be a legitimate symbol anyway, which makes this non-ambiguous
llvm-svn: 220821
New functions to give client applications to tools to discover target byte sizes
for addresses prior to ReadMemory. Also added GetPlatform and ReadMemory to the
SBTarget class, since they seemed to be useful utilities to have.
Each new API has had a test case added.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D5867
llvm-svn: 220372
BreakpointLocation::ShouldStop. That worked but wasn't really right,
since there's nothing to guarantee that won't get called more than
once. So this change moves that responsibility to the StopInfoBreakpoint
directly, and then it uses the BreakpointSite to actually do the bumping.
Also fix a test case that was assuming if you had many threads running some
code with a breakpoint in it, the hit count when you stopped would always be
1. Many of the threads could have hit it at the same time...
<rdar://problem/18577603>
llvm-svn: 220358
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
This implements Host::LaunchProcess for windows, and in doing so
does some minor refactor to move towards a more modular process
launching design.
The original motivation for this is that launching processes on
windows needs some very windows specific code, which would live
most appropriately in source/Host/windows somewhere. However,
there is already some common code that all platforms use when
launching a process before delegating to the platform specific
stuff, which lives in source/Host/common/Host.cpp which would
be nice to reuse without duplicating.
This commonality has been abstracted into MonitoringProcessLauncher,
a class which abstracts out the notion of launching a process using
an arbitrary algorithm, and then monitoring it for state changes.
The windows specific launching code lives in ProcessLauncherWindows,
and the posix specific launching code lives in ProcessLauncherPosix.
When launching a process MonitoringProcessLauncher is created, and
then an appropriate delegate launcher is created and given to the
MonitoringProcessLauncher.
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5781
llvm-svn: 219731
after all the commands have been executed except if one of the commands was an execution control
command that stopped because of a signal or exception.
Also adds a variant of SBCommandInterpreter::HandleCommand that takes an SBExecutionContext. That
way you can run an lldb command targeted at a particular target, thread or process w/o having to
select same before running the command.
Also exposes CommandInterpreter::HandleCommandsFromFile to the SBCommandInterpreter API, since that
seemed generally useful.
llvm-svn: 219654
Reviewed at http://reviews.llvm.org/D5738
This adds an SB API into SBProcess:
bool SBProcess::IsInstrumentationRuntimePresent(InstrumentationRuntimeType type);
which simply tells whether a particular InstrumentationRuntime (read "ASan") plugin is present and active.
llvm-svn: 219560
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
See http://reviews.llvm.org/D5695 for details.
This change does the following:
Enable lldb-gdbserver (llgs) usage for local-process Linux debugging.
To turn on local llgs debugging support, which is disabled by default, enable this setting:
(lldb) settings set platform.plugin.linux.use-llgs-for-local true
Adds a stream-based Dump() function to FileAction.
Pushes some platform methods that Linux (and FreeBSD) will want to share with MacOSX from PlatformDarwin into PlatformPOSIX.
Reviewed by Greg Clayton.
llvm-svn: 219457