When run with the multiprocess test runner, the getchar() trick doesn't work, so ninja check-lldb would fail on this test, but running the test directly worked fine.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19035
llvm-svn: 266145
(lldb) b ~Foo
(lldb) b Foo::~Foo
(lldb) b Bar::Foo::~Foo
Improved out C++ breakpoint locations tests as well to cover this issue.
<rdar://problem/25577252>
llvm-svn: 266139
The result variables aren't useful, and if you have a breakpoint on a
common function you can generate a lot of these. So I changed the
code that checks the condition to set ResultVariableIsInternal in the
EvaluateExpressionOptions that we pass to the execution.
Unfortunately, the check for this variable was done in the wrong place
(the static UserExpression::Evaluate) which is not how breakpoint
conditions execute expressions (UserExpression::Execute). So I moved
the check to UserExpression::Execute (which Evaluate also calls) and made the
overridden method DoExecute.
llvm-svn: 266093
this test was unintentionally XFAILed due to a change in the behavior of the expectedFailure
decorator. Fix that. Also, mark the test as debug-info independent while I'm in there.
llvm-svn: 266072
-thread-info in lldbmi does not conform to protocol. Should end with
current thread id as described here:
https://sourceware.org/gdb/onlinedocs/gdb/GDB_002fMI-Thread-Commands.html#GDB_002fMI-Thread-Commands
When printing all threads, the current thread id should be printed
afterwards.
Example:
-thread-info
^done,threads=[
{id="2",target-id="Thread 0xb7e14b90 (LWP 21257)",
frame={level="0",addr="0xffffe410",func="__kernel_vsyscall",
args=[]},state="running"},
{id="1",target-id="Thread 0xb7e156b0 (LWP 21254)",
frame={level="0",addr="0x0804891f",func="foo",
args=[{name="i",value="10"}],
file="/tmp/a.c",fullname="/tmp/a.c",line="158"},
state="running"}],
current-thread-id="1"
(gdb)
Patch from jacdavis@microsoft.com
Reviewers: zturner, chuckr
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/differential/revision/edit/18880/
llvm-svn: 265858
This test sets the compiler optimization level to -O1 and
makes some assumptions about how local frame vars will be
stored (i.e. in registers). These assumptions are not always
true.
I did a first-pass set of improvements that:
(1) no longer assumes that every one of the target locations has
every variable in a register. Sometimes the compiler
is even smarter and skips the register entirely.
(2) simply expects one of the 5 or so variables it checks
to be in a register.
This test probably passes on a whole lot more systems than it
used to now. This is certainly true on OS X.
llvm-svn: 265498
Summary:
The '-p' option for dotest.py was ignored in multiprocess mode,
as the -p argument to the inferior would overwrite the -p argument
passed on the command line.
Reviewers: zturner, tfiala
Subscribers: lldb-commits, sas
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18779
Change by Francis Ricci <fjricci@fb.com>
llvm-svn: 265422
Previously we had 3 different method to run shell commands on the
target and 4 copy of code waiting until a given file appears on the
target device (used for syncronization). This CL merges these methods
to 1 run_platform_command and 1 wait_for_file_on_target functions
located in some utility classes.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18789
llvm-svn: 265398
Summary:
There was a bug in linux core file handling, where if there was a running process with the same
process id as the id in the core file, the core file debugging would fail, as we would pull some
pieces of information (ProcessInfo structure) from the running process instead of the core file.
I fix this by routing the ProcessInfo requests through the Process class and overriding it in
ProcessElfCore to return correct data.
A (slightly convoluted) test is included.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18697
llvm-svn: 265391
Teach LLDB that different shells have different characters they are sensitive to, and use that knowledge to do shell-aware escaping
This helps solve a class of problems on OS X where LLDB would try to launch via sh, and run into problems if the command line being passed to the inferior contained such special markers (hint: the shell would error out and we'd fail to launch)
This makes those launch scenarios work transparently via shell expansion
Slightly improve the error message when this kind of failure occurs to at least suggest that the user try going through 'process launch' directly
Fixes rdar://problem/22749408
llvm-svn: 265357
This addresses the same problem as r264846 (the test not expecting the situation when two thread
hit the watchpoint simultaneously), but for a different test.
llvm-svn: 265294
Enrico has a bug on him to make this work across older libcxx list
and newer libcxx list simultaneously. Needed in preparation of
getting the OS X public CI to run the TSAN tests.
tracked by:
rdar://25499635
llvm-svn: 265188
Summary:
Debug info is used only by the client and lldb-server tests do not even have the client component
running, as they communicate with the server directly. Therefore, running the tests for each
debug info type is unnecessarry.
This adds general ability to mark a test class as not dependent on debug info, and marks all
lldb-server tests as such.
Reviewers: tberghammer, tfiala
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18598
llvm-svn: 265017
Summary:
the inferior in the test deliberately does not lock a mutex when accessing the watched variable.
The reason for that is unclear as, based on the logs, the original intention of the test was to
check whether watchpoints get propagated to newly created threads, which should work fine even
with a mutex. Furthermore, in the unlikely event (which I have still observed happening from time
to time) that two threads do manage the execute the "critical section" simultaneously, the test
will fail, as it is expecting the watchpoint "hit count" to be 1, but in this case it will be 2.
Given this, I have simply chose to lock the mutex always, so that we have more predictible
behavior. Watchpoints being hit simultaneously is still (and correctly!) tested by
TestConcurrentEvents.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18558
llvm-svn: 264846
1 - If you plan on looking for the "(lldb) " prompt as a regular expression, look for "\(lldb\) " so you don't just find "lldb".
2 - Make sure to not use colors (specify --no-use-colors as an option to lldb when launching it) as our editline will print:
"(lldb) <color junk>(lldb) "
where "<color junk>" is a work around that is used to allow us to colorize our prompts. The bad thing is this will make pexepct code like this not execute as you would expect:
prompt = "\(lldb\) "
self.child.sendline("breakpoint set ...", prompt)
self.child.sendline("breakpoint clear ...", prompt)
The problem is the first "sendline" will create two lldb prompts and will match both the first and second prompts and you output will get off. So be sure to disable colors if you need to.
Fixed a case where "TestCommandScriptImmediateOutput.py" would fail if you have spaces in your directory names. I modified custom_command.py to use shlex to parse arguments and I quoted the file path we sent down to the custom_command.write_file function.
llvm-svn: 264810
quietly apply fixits for those who really trust clang's fixits.
Also, moved the retry into ClangUserExpression::Evaluate, where I can make a whole new ClangUserExpression
to do the work. Reusing any of the parts of a UserExpression in situ isn't supported at present.
<rdar://problem/25351938>
llvm-svn: 264793
Top-level Clang expressions are expressions that act as new translation units,
and define their own symbols. They do not have function wrappers like regular
expressions do, and declarations are persistent regardless of use of the dollar
sign in identifiers. Names defined by these are given priority over all other
symbol lookups.
This patch adds a new expression option, '-p' or '--top-level,' which controls
whether the expression is treated this way. It also adds a flag controlling
this to SBExpressionOptions so that this API is usable externally. It also adds
a test that validates that this works. (The test requires a fix to the Clang
AST importer which I will be committing shortly.)
<rdar://problem/22864976>
llvm-svn: 264662
This feature is controlled by an expression command option, a target property and the
SBExpressionOptions setting. FixIt's are only applied to UserExpressions, not UtilityFunctions,
those you have to get right when you make them.
This is just a first stage. At present the fixits are applied silently. The next step
is to tell the user about the applied fixit.
<rdar://problem/25351938>
llvm-svn: 264379
Summary:
Fixes SBCommandReturnObject::SetImmediateOutputFile() and
SBCommandReturnObject::SetImmediateOutputFile() for files opened
with "a" or "a+" by resolving inconsistencies between File and
our Python parsing of file objects.
Reviewers: granata.enrico, Eugene.Zelenko, jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, sas
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18228
Change by Francis Ricci <fjricci@fb.com>
llvm-svn: 264351
It would be fun to make it provide suggestions (e.g. 'can't find NString, did you mean NSString instead?'), but this worries me a little bit on the account of just how thorough of a type system scan it would have to do
llvm-svn: 264343
This patch adds ThreadSanitizer support into LLDB:
- Adding a new InstrumentationRuntime plugin, ThreadSanitizerRuntime, in the same way ASan is implemented.
- A breakpoint stops in `__tsan_on_report`, then we extract all sorts of information by evaluating an expression. We then populate this into StopReasonExtendedInfo.
- SBThread gets a new API, SBThread::GetStopReasonExtendedBacktraces(), which returns TSan’s backtraces in the form of regular SBThreads. Non-TSan stop reasons return an empty collection.
- Added some test cases.
Reviewed by Greg Clayton.
llvm-svn: 264162
This solves issues such as 'apropos foo' returning valid matches just because syntax examples happen to use 'foo' as a placeholder token
Fixes rdar://9043025
llvm-svn: 264123
Win32 API calls that are Unicode aware require wide character
strings, but LLDB uses UTF8 everywhere. This patch does conversions
wherever necessary when passing strings into and out of Win32 API
calls.
Patch by Cameron
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17107
Reviewed By: zturner, amccarth
llvm-svn: 264074
We want to do a better job presenting errors that occur when evaluating
expressions. Key to this effort is getting away from a model where all
errors are spat out onto a stream where the client has to take or leave
all of them.
To this end, this patch adds a new class, DiagnosticManager, which
contains errors produced by the compiler or by LLDB as an expression
is created. The DiagnosticManager can dump itself to a log as well as
to a string. Clients will (in the future) be able to filter out the
errors they're interested in by ID or present subsets of these errors
to the user.
This patch is not intended to change the *users* of errors - only to
thread DiagnosticManagers to all the places where streams are used. I
also attempt to standardize our use of errors a bit, removing trailing
newlines and making clients omit 'error:', 'warning:' etc. and instead
pass the Severity flag.
The patch is testsuite-neutral, with modifications to one part of the
MI tests because it relied on "error: error:" being erroneously
printed. This patch fixes the MI variable handling and the testcase.
<rdar://problem/22864976>
llvm-svn: 263859
the main reason is that our decorator contains extra fluff to "expect" crashes (which seem to
happen occasionaly on the android buildbot).
llvm-svn: 263633
Summary:
Some tests (Hc_then_Csignal_signals_correct_thread, at least) were sending a "continue" packet in
one expect_gdbremote_sequence invocation, and "expecting" the stop-reply in another call. This
posed a problem, because the were packets were not persisted between the two invocations, and if
the stub was exceptionally fast to respond, the packet would be received in the first invocation
(where it would be ignored) and then the second invocation would fail because it could not find
the packet.
Since doing matching in two invocations seems like a reasonable use of the packet pump, instead
of fixing the test, I make sure the packet_pump supports this usage by making the list of
captured packets persistent.
Reviewers: tfiala
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18140
llvm-svn: 263629
Summary:
This also adds a basic smoke test for linux core file reading. I'm checking in the core files as
well, so that the tests can run on all platforms. With some tricks I was able to produce
reasonably-sized core files (~40K).
This fixes the first part of pr26322.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18176
llvm-svn: 263628
This can cause differences in which bit patterns end up meaning YES or NO. In general, however, 0 == NO and 1 == YES.
To keep it simple, LLDB will now show "YES" and "NO" only for 1 and 0 respectively, and format other values as the plain numeric value instead.
Fixes rdar://24809994
llvm-svn: 263604
In r262970 this was changed from xfail Clang < 3.5 to > 3.5, but it
still fails on FreeBSD 10's system Clang 3.4.1 so assume it fails on
all versions.
llvm.org/pr26937
llvm-svn: 263467
Summary:
Normally, when the remote stub is not ready, we will get ECONNREFUSED during the connect()
attempt. However, due to the way how ADB forwarding works, on android targets the connect() will
always be successful, but the connection will be immediately dropped if ADB could not connect on
the remote side. This commit tries to detect this situation, and report it as "connection
refused" so that the upper test layers attempt the connection again.
Reviewers: tfiala, tberghammer
Subscribers: tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18146
llvm-svn: 263439
When the parent of an expression is anonymous, skip adding '.' or '->' before the expression name.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18005
llvm-svn: 263166
Nobody seems to know what purpose these files serve, yet they were accumulating by the thousands in the test traces directory. I'm proposing we delete them.
Creating these files accounted for about 2.5% of the time to run ninja check-lldb on my machine, which isn't a lot, but it's something.
llvm-svn: 263122
Summary:
GCC does not emit DW_AT_data_member_location for members of a union.
Starting with a 0 value for member locations helps is reading union types
in such cases.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: ldrumm, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18008
llvm-svn: 263085
self.expect() had two problems:
- If there was a substrs argument, then it overwrote the variable containing
the command to run with the last substr. That meant nonsense command text in
testsuite errors.
- The actual output is not printed, which makes fixing testsuite failures a bit
annoying (you end up having to use the -tv arguments to dotest).
This fixes both of these issues. We could do even better, pretty-printing the
criteria for "correct" output, but this at least makes dealing with errors a bit
better.
llvm-svn: 262950
The System-V x86_64 ABI requires floating point values to be passed
in 128-but SSE vector registers (xmm0, ...). When printing such a
variable this currently yields an <invalid load address>.
This patch makes LLDB's DWARF expression evaluator accept 128-bit
registers as scalars. It also relaxes the check that the size of the
result of the DWARF expression be equal to the size of the variable to a
greater-than. DWARF defers to the ABI how smaller values are being placed
in a larger register.
Implementation note: I found the code in Value::SetContext() that changes
the m_value_type after the fact to be questionable. I added a sanity check
that the Value's memory buffer has indeed been written to (this is
necessary, because we may have a scalar value in a vector register), but
really I feel like this is the wrong place to be setting it.
Reviewed by Greg Clayton.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D17897
rdar://problem/24944340
llvm-svn: 262947
to each other. This should remove some infrequent teardown crashes when the
listener is not the debugger's listener.
Processes now need to take a ListenerSP, not a Listener&.
This required changing over the Process plugin class constructors to take a ListenerSP, instead
of a Listener&. Other than that there should be no functional change.
<rdar://problem/24580184> CrashTracer: [USER] Xcode at …ework: lldb_private::Listener::BroadcasterWillDestruct + 39
llvm-svn: 262863
The problem with the original patch (and my first attempt to fix) was that the value debug
monitor flags could persist from one test to another. Resetting the value in the setUp() function
fixes the problem.
llvm-svn: 262713
LLDB can remap a source file to a new directory based on the
"target.sorce-map" to handle the usecase when the source code moved
between the compliation and the debugging. Previously the remapping
was only used to display the content of the file. This CL fixes the
scenario when a breakpoint is set based on the new an absolute path
with adding an inverse remapping step before looking up the breakpoint
location.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17848
llvm-svn: 262711
Summary:
this enables download of remote log files for llgs and debugserver tests (previously we were just
passing the host file name which obviously did not work). Note this also changes the debugserver
logging to work only when logging has been requested on the command line, whereas previously it
would log unconditionally. I can change it back if anyone is relying on this, but I thought I'd
make this consistent.
Reviewers: tfiala
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17798
llvm-svn: 262597
This is useful in cases such as, e.g.
(lldb) help NSString
(the user meant type lookup)
or
(lldb) help kill
(the user is looking for process kill)
Fixes rdar://24868537
llvm-svn: 262271
The inlining semantics for C and C++ are different, which affects the test's expectation of the number of times the function should appear in the binary. In the case of this test, C semantics means there should be three instances of inner_inline, while C++ semantics means there should be only two.
On Windows, clang uses C++ inline semantics even for C code, and there doesn't seem to be a combination of compiler flags to avoid this.
So, for consistency, I've recast the test to use C++ everywhere. Since the test resided under lang/c, it seemed appropriate to move it to lang/cpp.
This does not address the other XFAIL for this test on Linux/gcc. See https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=26710
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17650
llvm-svn: 262255
This partially reverts commit r262218.
The commit added additional checks to a test case. The test case is too big so it's not feasible
to XFAIL it completely. Suggest to implement the checks as a separate test case, which can then
be XFAILed more surgically.
llvm-svn: 262223
Patch by Nitesh Jain.
Summary: The debug version of libc.so is require for backtracing which may not be available on all platforms.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg
Subscribers: zturner, lldb-commits, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, bhushan, jaydeep
Differential: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17131
llvm-svn: 262011
to allow you to step through a complex calling sequence into a particular function that may span multiple lines. Also some
test cases for this and the --step-target feature.
llvm-svn: 261953
32-bit processes on 64-bit Windows run in a layer called WoW64 (Windows-on-Windows64). If you capture a mini dump of such a process from a 32-bit debugger, you end up with a register context for the 64-bit WoW64 process rather than the 32-bit one you probably care about.
This detects WoW64 by looking to see if there's a module named wow64.dll loaded. For such processes, it then looks in the 64-bit Thread Environment Block (TEB) to locate a copy of the 32-bit CONTEXT record that the plugin needs for the register context.
Added some rudimentary tests. I'd like to improve these later once we figure out how to get the exception information from these mini dumps.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17465
llvm-svn: 261808
There are two tests in this file. One which only runs on Windows
and tests that you can set a breakpoint with mismatched case. And
another that only runs on non-Windows and tests that you cannot set
a breakpoint with mismatched case. This latter test is failing on
non Windows platforms for some reason. It could be that the test
is just written incorrectly, as I think the actual functionality
actually works correctly on non-Windows platforms.
llvm-svn: 261800
Paths on Windows are not case-sensitive. Because of this, if a file
is called main.cpp, you should be able to set a breakpoint on it
by using the name Main.cpp. In an ideal world, you could just
tell people to match the case, but in practice this can be a real
problem as it requires you to know whether the person who compiled
the program ran "clang++ main.cpp" or "clang++ Main.cpp", both of
which would work, regardless of what the file was actually called.
This fixes http://llvm.org/pr22667
Patch by Petr Hons
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17492
Reviewed by: zturner
llvm-svn: 261771
There is a report in the PR from several months ago that it failed
intermittently, but it is passing consistently for me on FreeBSD 10
and 11. We can re-add a decorator if further testing shows it is
still flakey.
llvm.org/pr17214
llvm-svn: 261340
Both Linux and FreeBSD had a comment "This needs to be root-caused."
It looks like the failure has been fixed on both, and the Linux XFAIL
decorator was removed in r233716 (Mar 2015).
llvm-svn: 261333
on attach uses the architecture it has figured out, rather than the Target's
architecture, which may not have been updated to the correct value yet.
<rdar://problem/24632895>
llvm-svn: 261279
The race condition/use after free involved in setting long prompts
appears to be fixed now (although I do not know which commit fixed it).
llvm.org/pr22611
llvm-svn: 261266
The test fails very rarely. I suspect this is simply because the inferior does not have enough
time to create the file under heavy load.
llvm-svn: 260951
Summary: This is the form on other libc++ tests.
Reviewers: sivachandra
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17230
llvm-svn: 260793
On libc++ std::atomic is a fairly simple data type (layout wise, at least), wrapping actual contents in a member variable named "__a_"
All the formatters are doing is "peel away" this intermediate layer and exposing user data as direct children or values of the std::atomic root variable
Fixes rdar://24329405
llvm-svn: 260752
Summary:
This does not yet give us a clean testsuite run but it does help with:
1. Actually building on linux
2. Run the testsuite with over 70% tests passing on linux.
Reviewers: tfiala, labath, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17182
llvm-svn: 260721
However, they also contain fallback logic that - in cases where LLDB can't recognize the specific subclass - actually does run code in order to inspect those objects.
The argument for this logic was that these data types are critical enough that the risk of getting it wrong is outweighed by the advantage of always providing accurate child information.
Practical experience however shows that "po" - a code running data-inspection command - is quite frequently used, and not considered burdensome by users.
As such, this makes the code-running fallback in the data formatters a risk that carries very little actual reward. Also, unlike the time this code was originally written, we now have accurate class information for Objective-C, and thus we are less likely to improperly identify classes.
This commit removes support for the code-running fallback, and aligns the data formatters for NSArray, NSDictionary and NSSet to the general no-code-running behavior of other data formatters.
While it is possible for us to add support for some subclasses that are now no longer covered by static inspection alone, this is beyond the scope of this commit.
llvm-svn: 260664
clearing the map ended up calling back into the TypeSystemMap to do lookups.
Not a good idea, and in this case it would cause a deadlock.
You would only see this when replacing the target contents after an exec, and only if you
had stopped before the exec, evaluated an expression, then continued
on to the point where you did the exec.
Fixed this by making sure the TypeSystemMap::Clear tears down the TypeSystems in the map before clearing the map.
I also add an expression before exec to the TestExec.py so that we'll catch this
issue if it crops up again in the future.
<rdar://problem/24554920>
llvm-svn: 260624
The explicit APIs on SBValue obviously remain if one wants to be explicit in intent, or override this guess, but since __int__() has to pick one, an educated guess is definitely better than than always going to signed regardless
Fixes rdar://24556976
llvm-svn: 260349
CFLAGS is now being set correctly to pass -flimit-debug-info or
-fno-limit-debug-info on FreeBSD. I'm not sure which change is
responsible for the fix, though.
llvm.org/pr25626
llvm-svn: 260330
This removes the following decorators:
* skipIfI386
* expectedFailureI386
* expectedFailurex86_64
* skipIfArch
* skipUnlessArch
* skipUnlessI386
And other related decorators. All code using those decorators
is updated to use expectedFailureAll and skipIf
llvm-svn: 260178
* Change the `not_in` function to be called `no_match`. This makes
it clear that keyword arguments can be more than just lists.
* Change the name of `_check_list_or_lambda` to
`_match_decorator_property`. Again clarifying that decorator params
are not always lists.
* Always use a regex match when matching strings. This allows automatic
support for regex matching on all decorator properties. Also support
compiled regex values.
* Fix a bug in the compiler check used by _decorateTest. The two
arguments were reversed, the condition was always wrong.
* Change one test that uses skipUnlessArch to use skipIf, to
demonstrate that skipIf can now handle more scenarios.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16938
llvm-svn: 260135
expectedFailureWindows is equivalent to using the general
expectedFailureAll decorator with oslist="windows". Additionally,
by moving towards these common decorators we can solve the issue
of having to support decorators that can be called with or without
arguments. Once all decorators are always called with arguments,
and this is enforced by design (because you can't specify the condition
you're decorating for without passing an argument) the implementation
of the decorators can become much simpler
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16936
llvm-svn: 260134
Obviously, if the original Debugger goes away, those commands are holding on to now stale memory, which has the potential to cause crashes
Fixes rdar://24460882
llvm-svn: 259964
Summary:
This reverts commit 8af14b5f9af68c31ac80945e5b5d56f0a14b38e4.
Reverting as it breaks a few tests on Mac.
Reviewers: spyffe
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16895
llvm-svn: 259823
Summary:
While evaluating expressions when stopped in a class method, there was a
problem of member variables hiding local variables. This was happening
because, in the context of a method, clang already knew about member
variables with their name and assumed that they were the only variables
with those names in scope. Consequently, clang never checks with LLDB
about the possibility of local variables with the same name and goes
wrong. This change addresses the problem by using an artificial
namespace "$__lldb_local_vars". All local variables in scope are
declared in the "$__lldb_expr" method as follows:
using $__lldb_local_vars::<local var 1>;
using $__lldb_local_vars::<local var 2>;
...
This hides the member variables with the same name and forces clang to
enquire about the variables which it thinks are declared in
$__lldb_local_vars. When LLDB notices that clang is enquiring about
variables in $__lldb_local_vars, it looks up local vars and conveys
their information if found. This way, member variables do not hide local
variables, leading to correct evaluation of expressions.
A point to keep in mind is that the above solution does not solve the
problem for one specific case:
namespace N
{
int a;
}
class A
{
public:
void Method();
int a;
};
void
A::Method()
{
using N::a;
...
// Since the above solution only touches locals, it does not
// force clang to enquire about "a" coming from namespace N.
}
Reviewers: clayborg, spyffe
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16746
llvm-svn: 259810
This doesn't attempt to move every decorator. The reason for
this is that it requires touching every single test file to import
decorators.py. I would like to do this in a followup patch, but
in the interest of keeping the patches as bite-sized as possible,
I've only attempted to move the underlying common decorators first.
A few tests call these directly, so those tests are updated as part
of this patch.
llvm-svn: 259807
previously, I have marked only one test as flaky, but now I noticed another test failing with the
same error. I am going to assume all of them are flaky.
llvm-svn: 259775
Summary:
gdb-remote tests are not able to use the same logging mechanisms as the rest of our tests, and
currently we get no host logs from them, even though the tests themselves have logging
capability. This commit changes that. When user specifies that he would like to log the
gdb-remote channel (--channel gdb-remote argument to dotest.py), we write detailed logs to the
<TEST_ID>-host.log file, just like we would in the case of regular tests. If this argument is not
specified, we only log the serious messages to stderr, which matches the existing behaviour.
Reviewers: tfiala, tberghammer
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16858
llvm-svn: 259774
reason to None when we stop due to a trace, then noticed that
we were on a breakpoint that was not valid for the current thread.
That should actually have set it back to trace.
This was pr26441 (<rdar://problem/24470203>)
llvm-svn: 259684
My eventual goal is to move all of the test decorators to their
own module such as `decorators.py`. But some of the decorators
use existing functions in `lldbtest.py` and conceptually the
functions are probably more appropriately placed in lldbplatformutil.
Moreover, lldbtest.py is a huge file with a ton of random utility
functions scattered around, so this patch also workds toward the
goal of reducing the footprint of this one module to a more
reasonable size.
So this patch moves some of them over to lldbplatformutil with the
eventual goal of moving decorators over to their own module.
Reviewed By: Tamas Berghammer, Pavel Labath
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16830
llvm-svn: 259680
This decorator was used in only one test, and it's behaviour was quite complicated. It skipped
if:
- test was remote
- platform was *not* android
I am not aware of anyone running tests with this configuration (and even then, I am not aware of
a reason why the test should not pass), but if TestLoadUnload starts breaking for you after this
commit, please disable the test with
@expectedFailureAll(remote=True, oslist=[YOUR_PLATFORM])
llvm-svn: 259642
Previously we were returning a tuple of (bool, skip_reason) from
the tuple function. This makes for some awkward code, especially
since a value of True for the first argument implies that the
second argument is None, and a value of False implies that the
second argument is not None. So it was basically redundant, and
with this patch we simply return the skip reason or None directly.
llvm-svn: 259590
This should be no functional change, just a refactoring of the
skip decorators to all centralize on a single function,
`skipTestIfFn` that does all the logic. This allows easier
maintenance of the decorators and also centralizes all the
hard-to-understand logic in one place.
Reviewed by: Pavel Labath
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16741
llvm-svn: 259543
After recent changes, test_thread_state_is_stopped has become equivalent to test_step_in, as the
function exit_during_step_base was not using the "test_thread_state" parameter. As test was
XFAILed on all platforms anyway, and we have other tests for the bug which it (used to) test, I
am simply removing the function.
llvm-svn: 259517
Summary:
r259344 introduced a bug, where we fail to perform a single step, when the instruction we are
stepping onto contains a breakpoint which is not valid for this thread. This fixes the problem
and add a test case.
Reviewers: tberghammer, emaste
Subscribers: abhishek.aggarwal, lldb-commits, emaste
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16767
llvm-svn: 259488
r259433 introduced a regression, where if a compiler is specified without a path (e.g., CC=clang,
relying on the fact that clang is in $PATH), then the test suite would fail (at the compiler
version detection step) because realpath would interpret this as a path relative to cwd). The fix
is to perform the $PATH expansion (via `which`) before the realpath step.
llvm-svn: 259484
Summary:
Checks using the result of getCompiler() will fail to identify the compiler
correctly if CC is a symlink path (ie /usr/bin/cc).
Reviewers: zturner, emaste
Subscribers: llvm-commits, sas
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16488
Change by Francis Ricci <fjricci@fb.com>
llvm-svn: 259433
This patch attempts to solve the Python 2 / Python 3 incompatibilities by
introducing a new `encoded_file` abstraction that we use instead of
`io.open()`. The problem with the builtin implementation of `io.open` is
that `read` and `write` accept and return `unicode` objects, which are not
always convenient to work with in Python 2. We solve this by making
`encoded_file.open()` return the same object returned by `io.open()` but
with hooked `read()` and `write()` methods. These hooked methods will
accept binary or text data, and conditionally convert what it gets to a
`unicode` object using the correct encoding. When calling `read()` it
also does any conversion necessary to convert the output back into the
native `string` type of the running python version.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16736
llvm-svn: 259379
Summary:
- The patch solves Bug 23478 and Bug 19311. Resolving
Bug 23478 also resolves Bug 23039.
Correct ThreadStopInfo is set for Linux and FreeBSD
platforms.
- Summary:
When a trace event is reported, we need to check
whether the trace event lands at a breakpoint site.
If it lands at a breakpoint site then set the thread's
StopInfo with the reason 'breakpoint'. Else, set the reason
to be 'Trace'.
Change-Id: I0af9765e782fd74bc0cead41548486009f8abb87
Signed-off-by: Abhishek Aggarwal <abhishek.a.aggarwal@intel.com>
Reviewers: jingham, emaste, lldb-commits, clayborg, ovyalov
Subscribers: emaste
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16720
llvm-svn: 259344
Instead of opening the file in unicode mode, we need only encode
data which potentially has non-ASCII characters as UTF8 before
writing. This should work across both Python versions, and is
also far simpler than anything else discussed.
llvm-svn: 258969
* basestring is not a thing anymore. Must use `six.string_types`.
* Must use from __future__ import print_function in every new test
file.
llvm-svn: 258967
Previously the logic of skipIf and expectedFailure were 99%
the same, but they took different sets of arguments since they
were maintained separately, and had slightly differences in
their behavior. This makes everything consistent, there is now
only one real implementation, and the previous ones are changed
to use the single master implementation.
llvm-svn: 258966
Since pexpect doesn't exist on Windows, tests which are xfail'ed
are not being run at all because they are failing when the file
is imported due to the `import pexpect`. This puts the import
behind a conditional and makes an empty base class in the case
where pexpect is not present.
llvm-svn: 258965
SUMMARY:
Get the load address for the address given by symbol and function.
Earlier, this was done for function only, this patch does it for symbol too.
This patch also adds TestAvoidBreakpointInDelaySlot.py to test this change.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: labath, zturner, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, jaydeep, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16049
llvm-svn: 258919
This is another example of a test that was looking for the thread
at index 0 instead of requesting the thread that was stopped at
the created breakpoint. This assumption isn't true on Windows 10.
llvm-svn: 258764
lldbinline tests previously did not run correctly unless there was already a
Makefile for them. This was because the syntax of the emitted Makefile made the
default make rule be the "cleanup" rule, which is pretty unhelpful. Now the
default rule is the one included from Makefile.rules, which is much better.
llvm-svn: 258763
Previously we were writing in the default encoding, which depends
on the operating system and is not guaranteed to be unicode aware.
On Python 3, this would lead to a situation where writing unicode
text to the log file generates an exception. The fix here is to
write session logs using the proper encoding, which incidentally
fixes another test, so xfail is removed from that.
llvm-svn: 258759
In Python 3, whitespace inconsistences are errors. This synthetic
provider had mixed tabs and spaces, as well as inconsistent
indentation widths. This led to the file not being imported,
and naturally the test failing. No functional change here, just
whitespace.
llvm-svn: 258751
SBProcess::ReadMemory and other related functions such as
WriteMemory are returning Python string() objects. This means
that in Python 3 that are returning Unicode objects. In reality
they should be returning bytes objects which is the same as a string
in Python 2, but different in Python 3. This patch updates the
generated SWIG code to return Python bytes objects for all
memory related functions.
One quirk of this patch is that the C++ signature of ReadCStringFromMemory
has it writing c-string data into a void*. This confuses our swig
typemaps which expect that a void* means byte data. So I hacked up
a custom typemap which maps this specific function to treat the
void* as string data instead of byte data.
llvm-svn: 258743
Python 3.5 is picky about writing strings to binary files, so we now open the
file in text mode, and we explicitly set the newline mode to avoid re-writing
it with CR+LF on Windows (which causes git to think the file had changed).
llvm-svn: 258704
Patch by Nitesh Jain.
Summary: The thread_start function in libc doesn't contain any epilogue and prologue instructions. Hence unwinding fail when we are stopped in thread_start.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, bhushan, jaydeep
Differential: reviews.llvm.org/D16136
llvm-svn: 258685
Patch by Nitesh Jain.
Summary: When incorrect type used for 'char' then (at least) one of the expression evaluates to incorrect value. Please refer to bug llvm.org/pr23069
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, bhushan, jaydeep
Differential: reviews.llvm.org/D16132
llvm-svn: 258684
This is hitting an assert in clang when evaluating the
module load. I am seeing it locally on Xcode 7.3 public Beta 1
and on the llvm.org Green Dragon buildbot supposedly running
Xcode 7.0.
Tracked by:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=26267
llvm-svn: 258602
Since Unicode support is different in Py2 and Py3, Py3 was throwing
exceptions about being unable to decode the file with the default
encoding.
llvm-svn: 258588
The Windows 10 loader spawns threads at startup, so
tests which count threads or assume that a given user
thread will be at a specific index are incorrect in
this case. The fix here is to use the standard mechanisms
for getting the stopped thread (which is all we are
really interested in anyway) and correlating them with
the breakpoints that were set, and doing checks against
those things.
This fixes about 6 tests on Windows 10.
llvm-svn: 258586
Unfortunately, this turns out not to be working on the lldb-server tests, as there the server is
started in a different way. Since this was a bit of a hack to start with, I am removing it until
I can solve the problem more holistically.
llvm-svn: 258501
Starting with Windows 10, the Windows loader is itself multi-threaded,
meaning that the loader spins up a few threads to do process
initialization before it executes main. Windows delivers these
notifications asynchronously and they can come out of order, so
we can't be sure that the first thread we get a notification about
is actually the zero'th thread.
This patch fixes this by requesting the thread stopped at the
breakpoint that was specified, rather than getting thread 0 and
verifying that it is stopped at a breakpoint.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16247
llvm-svn: 258432
Summary:
We already have the ability to collect the server logs when doing local debugging. This enables
the collection of remote logs as well. This relies on specifying a relative path "server.log" for
LLDB_DEBUGSERVER_LOG_FILE when starting remote platform. Since we always set the platform working
directory to a fresh folder to avoid conflicts, the actual file path will always be different and
we can pick the logs up from there.
Reviewers: tfiala
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16322
llvm-svn: 258414
This patch marks some known failures and puts on expectedFailureLinux decorator to have testsuite xfail them.
Affected tests are:
test/functionalities/watchpoint/step_over_watchpoint.py
test/functionalities/watchpoint/watchpoint_set_command/TestWatchLocationWithWatchSet.py
test/tools/lldb-server/TestGdbRemoteSingleStep.py
test/tools/lldb-server/TestGdbRemote_vCont.py
llvm-svn: 258315
Summary:
The issue arises because LLDB is not
able to read the vdso library correctly.
The fix adds memory allocation callbacks
to allocate sufficient memory in case the
requested offsets don't fit in the memory
buffer allocated for the ELF.
Reviewers: lldb-commits, clayborg, deepak2427, ovyalov, labath, tberghammer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16107
llvm-svn: 258122
TestHelloWorld seems to be passing now as far as I can tell. TestExitDuringStep is still hanging.
I have marked the relevant tests as flaky, which should handle the timeouts now as well. I'll be
monitoring the buildbots for fallout.
llvm-svn: 258114
This does not work and causes the class to be silently skipped, which is a bad idea. This makes
sure it cannot happen accidentaly. I've played with the idea of actually making the decorator
work at class level, but it proved too magic to do at this moment.
llvm-svn: 258048
TestConcurrentEvents was marked with a XFAIL decorator at class level, which actually does not
work, and causes the class to be silently skipped everywhere. It seems that making it work at
class level is quite a difficult task, so I will just move it to the individual test methods. I
will follow this up with a commit which makes the decorator blow up in case someone tries to
apply it to a class in the future.
llvm-svn: 257901
There were a number of problems preventing this from working:
1. The SWIG typemaps for converting Python lists to and from C++
arrays were not updated for Python 3. So they were doing things
like PyString_Check instead of using the PythonString from
PythonDataObjects.
2. ProcessLauncherWindows was ignoring the environment completely.
So any test that involved launching an inferior with any kind
of environment variable would have failed.
3. The test itself was using process.GetSTDOUT(), which isn't
implemented on Windows. So this was changed to save the
value of the environment variable in a local variable and
have the debugger look at the value of the variable.
llvm-svn: 257669
The system can create threads for a system threadpool, so there is
no guarantee that the thread that is stopped is thread 1. So use
a more robust check.
llvm-svn: 257513
Summary:
The testcase TestNoreturnUnwind.py was failing
because the unwind from the vdso library was not
successful for clang compiler while it was passing
for gcc. It was passing for gcc since the unwind plan
used was the assembly plan and the ebp register was
set by the main function in case of gcc and was not
used by the functions in the call flow to the vdso, whereas
clang did not emit assembly prologue for main and so
the assembly unwind was failing. Normally in case of
failure of assembly unwind, lldb switches to EH CFI frame
based unwinding, but this was not happening for
the first frame. This patch tries to fix this behaviour by
falling to EH CFI frame based unwinding in case of assembly
unwind failure even for the first frame.
The test is still marked as XFAIL since it relys on the fix
of another bug.
Reviewers: lldb-commits, jingham, zturner, tberghammer, jasonmolenda
Subscribers: jasonmolenda
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15046
llvm-svn: 257465
Updated expectedFailureLinux decorator to reflect architecture
Marked some triaged failures as xfails on arm with updated expectedFailureLinux decorator
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15893
llvm-svn: 257405
-gsplit-dwarf is not implemented by clang on Windows. As such,
all the dwo tests are having the -gsplit-dwarf command line option
completely ignored, and the result is you get regular dwarf debug
information, and it's just running the exact same tests twice,
doubling the length of the test suite for no good reason.
llvm-svn: 257363
Summary:
Similar to rL256704 and rL256707, fix a few text files which were
accidentally checked in with DOS line endings, or mixed line endings.
Reviewers: jingham, emaste
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16027
llvm-svn: 257361
The test hangs/crashes/fails because it does not use the listener API in a way that LLDB expects.
I don't really know if this is the fault of LLDB of the test...
llvm-svn: 257323
Summary:
On linux we need the process to give us special permissions before we can attach to it.
Previously, the code for this was copied into every file that needed it. This moves the code to a
central place to reduce code duplication.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15992
llvm-svn: 257319
I prefer to use "-p" over using line_number and then setting by line because it's makes it possible
to see what the breakpoint is at the site where you make the breakpoint. So I switched
it back to -p but specified the source file as well, which is an "all within lldb" way of doing
what Pavel's fix did.
llvm-svn: 257235
gcc by default does not accept for loop declarations in C files (one must choose C99 mode first,
which we don't). Place the declaration outside the loop, to make this code more conformant.
llvm-svn: 257166
On locked down systems (such as our buildbot) one needs to do a special dance to allow attaching
to processes. This commit adds this code to the TestBatchMode inferior.
llvm-svn: 257165
New test introduced in r257120 was failing on linux. The reason for that the regex for setting
the breakpoint was being applied to the "default file", which in this case was the asm file
containing the definition of the sleep() syscall (because after attach, we are stopped in the
sleep function). I have changed this use the more customary way of setting the breakpoint and
specifying the source file name explicitly.
llvm-svn: 257160
Batch mode is supposed to stop execution and return control to the user when an
exceptional stop occurs (crash, signal or instrumentation). But attach always stops
with a SIGSTOP on OSX (maybe on Linux too?) which would short circuit the rest of the
commands given.
This change allows a command result object to indicate that it expected to leave the
process stopped with an exceptional stop reason, and it is okay for batch mode to keep going.
<rdar://problem/22243143>
llvm-svn: 257120
The lldbinline inline-test mechanism will create a Makefile
if one does not exist in the test directory. This Makefile
and its *.d files were not getting cleaned up after a test run,
leaving trash in the source tree.
llvm-svn: 256961
The logic for skipping over the stop-and-restart events was incorrect as it was also skipping the
expectations. Implement it properly. No test is affected by this as they were not encountering
these events, but I encountered this issue when trying to use this function in a new test.
llvm-svn: 256928
This patch adds support the command 'source info' as follows:
(lldb) help source info
Display source line information (as specified) based on the current executable's
debug info.
Syntax: source info <cmd-options>
Command Options Usage:
source info [-c <count>] [-s <shlib-name>] [-f <filename>] [-l <linenum>] [-e <linenum>]
source info [-c <count>] [-s <shlib-name>] [-n <symbol>]
source info [-c <count>] [-a <address-expression>]
-a <address-expression> ( --address <address-expression> )
Lookup the address and display the source information for the corresponding
file and line.
-c <count> ( --count <count> )
The number of line entries to display.
-e <linenum> ( --end-line <linenum> )
The line number at which to stop displaying lines.
-f <filename> ( --file <filename> )
The file from which to display source.
-l <linenum> ( --line <linenum> )
The line number at which to start the displaying lines.
-n <symbol> ( --name <symbol> )
The name of a function whose source to display.
-s <shlib-name> ( --shlib <shlib-name> )
Look up the source in the given module or shared library (can be specified
more than once).
For example:
(lldb) source info --file x.h
Lines for file x.h in compilation unit x.cpp in `x
[0x0000000100000d00-0x0000000100000d10): /Users/dawn/tmp/./x.h:10
[0x0000000100000d10-0x0000000100000d1b): /Users/dawn/tmp/./x.h:10
The new options are used to fix the MI command:
-symbol-list-lines <file>
which didn't work for header files because it called:
target modules dump line-table <file>
which only dumps line tables for a compilation unit.
The patch also fixes a bug in the error reporting when no files were supplied to the command. Previously you'd get:
(lldb) target modules dump line-table
error:
Syntax:
error: no source filenames matched any command arguments
Now you get:
error: file option must be specified.
Reviewed by: clayborg, jingham, ki.stfu
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15593
llvm-svn: 256863
I'm getting rid of the expected timeouts. I'll XFAIL/skip any tests that show up as failing after
this (I haven't seen any when running locally, but maybe the buildbot will disagree).
llvm-svn: 256827
Summary:
This removes the old logic for rerunning flaky tests. The new test runners will take care of
rerunning failing tests.
Reviewers: tfiala
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15855
llvm-svn: 256824
I think it was timing out because of the attach deadlocks, which are now fixed. In any case, it
has passed last 200 buildbot runs, so I am enabling it.
llvm-svn: 256748
I believe the cause for this was the attach lockup fixed in r246756. I will enable this tests and
observe the buildbots for signs of problems.
llvm-svn: 256744
This is generating a SIGSEGV somewhere around 1 in 10 runs on OS X.
Skip the whole test to avoid testbot noise until we can get the
SIGSEGV addressed.
Tracking with:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25924
llvm-svn: 256257
Summary: Also xfailed for GCC as there is an problem with debug info generation.
Reviewers: granata.enrico
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15657
llvm-svn: 256067
This patch adds support for printing global static const variables which are given a DW_AT_const_value DWARF tag by clang.
Fix for bug https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25653
Reviewers: clayborg, tberghammer
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15576
llvm-svn: 255887
We've now seen the rerun test phase hang in a few
scenarios. Eliminate the serial test runner (which
is not exercised nearly as much as the others), by
using a multi-worker test runner strategy with a single
worker. This should rule out whether this is related
to the serial test runner strategy.
llvm-svn: 255880
Summary:
This adds ability to mark test that do not complete due to hangs, crashes, etc., as "expected",
to avoid flagging the build red for a known problem. Functionally, this extends the scope of the
existing expectedFailureXXX decorators to cover these states as well. Once this is in, I will
start replacing the magic list of failing tests in dosep.py with our regular annotations which
should hopefully make code simpler.
Reviewers: tfiala
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15530
llvm-svn: 255763
This is meant to reduce the typing that one needs to do to get from the test subdirectory to actual test cases. Now one can just do
$ ./dotest.py ./testcases/<yaddayaddayadda>
llvm-svn: 255741
Summary:
DWARF 5 proposes a reinvented .debug_macro section. This change follows
that spec.
Currently, only GCC produces the .debug_macro section and hence
the added test is annottated with expectedFailureClang.
Reviewers: spyffe, clayborg, tberghammer
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15437
llvm-svn: 255729
Both of these markers are used in the test suit for annotating when a
test needs multi threaded support. Previously they had slightly
different meening but they converged to the point where they are used
interchangably. This CL removes the ENABLE_STD_THREADS one to simplify
the test suite and avoid some confusion.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15498
llvm-svn: 255641
This is the listener's spawned connection, not the listener itself.
(i.e. this is the test runner's receiving side of test event sockets).
A standard socket.error will just issue an INFO statement and continue.
Something other than a socket.error will get an ERROR: printed (and
also continue).
Hopefully this gets us more info and also handles the completely
to-be-expected scenario that the test inferior might go down at
any point.
llvm-svn: 255581
Use of --rerun-all-issues will enable any test method failure, not just
test methods marked with the flakey decorator, to rerun.
Currently this does not change the flakey logic's immediate rerun
attempt. I want to make sure this doesn't cause any significant issues
before changing that part.
The rerun reporting is only known to work properly with the
default (new) BasicResultsFormatter reporting. Once we work out
any issues, I'll go back and make sure the curses output handles
it properly as well.
llvm-svn: 255543
Summary:
Previously the add_test_categories would simply overwrite the current set of categories for a
method. This change makes the decorator truly "add" categories, by extending the current set of
categories instead of replacing it.
To do this, I have:
- replaced the getCategories() property on a method (which was itself a method), with a simple
list property "categories". This makes add_test_categories easier to implement, and test
categories isn't something which should change between calls anyway.
- rewritten the getCategoriesForTest function to merge method categories with the categories of
the test case. Previously, it would just use the method categories if they were present. I have
also greatly simplified this method. Originally, it would use a lot of introspection to enable
it being called on various types of objects. Based on my tests, it was only ever being called
on a test case. The new function uses much less introspection then the preivous one, so we
should easily catch any stray uses, if there are any, as they will generate exceptions now.
Reviewers: zturner, tfiala, tberghammer
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15451
llvm-svn: 255493
When multiple functions are found by name, lldb removes duplicate entries of
functions with the same type, so the first function in the symbol context list
is chosen, even if it isn't in scope. This patch uses the declaration context
of the execution context to select the function which is in scope.
This fixes cases like the following:
int func();
namespace ns {
int func();
void here() {
// Run to BP here and eval 'p func()';
// lldb used to find ::func(), now finds ns::func().
}
}
Reviewed by: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15312
llvm-svn: 255439
Also adds full path info for exceptional exits and timeouts when
no test method is currently running.
Adds --rerun-all-issues command line arg. If specified, all
test issues are eligible for rerun. If not specified, only tests
marked flakey are eligible for rerun.
The actual rerunning will occur in an upcoming change. This
change just handles tha accounting of what should be rerun.
llvm-svn: 255438
This will be used in a future change to support rerunning flakey tests
that hit a test result isue in a low-load, single worker test runner phase.
This is implemented as an additive-style event rather than being
evaluated and added to the start_test event because the decorator code
only runs after the start_test event is created and sent. i.e.
LLDBTestResult.startTest() runs before the test method decorators run.
llvm-svn: 255351
LLDB don't detect the loading of a shared object file linked against the
main executable before the static initializers are executed for the
given module. Because of this it is not possible to get breakpoint hits
in these static initializers and to display proper debug info in case of
a crash in these codes.
llvm-svn: 255342
The new test summary formatter does not honor the "expected timeout" markings, which makes our
buildbots all red. I'm switching it off by default until we figure out a way to make this work.
llvm-svn: 255335
Summary: NetBSD is like FreeBSD and Linux in these routines.
Reviewers: clay.chang, tfiala, emaste, joerg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, emaste
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15374
llvm-svn: 255308
Also adds enable.py/disable.py script to simplify turning on and off
the issue_verification tests helpful for testing a results formatter.
llvm-svn: 255161
This was an option to display a graphical progress bar. Nobody
is using this, and it doesn't work correctly anyway with the new
result formatter.
llvm-svn: 255153
This removes the failfast command line option as part of an effort
to simplify dotest and remove unused command line options. You can
still Ctrl+C any time you want to exit early.
llvm-svn: 255150
The main dotest.py should exit with a system return code of 1 on any
issue. This change fixes a place where I omitted counting the
exceptional exit value to determine if we should return 1 when using the
new summary results.
This change also puts a banner around the Issue Details section that comes
before the Test Result Summary.
llvm-svn: 255138
This change is a trial balloon to verify that the default test summary
output sends the right output for the buildbot issue detection script.
The effect of this change will be reverted after verifying the testbot
behavior. This change will not stay in as is and will knowingly create
noise, see this thread:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/lldb-dev/2015-December/009048.html
llvm-svn: 255131
The results formatter system is now fed timeouts and exceptional process
exits (i.e. inferior dotest.py process that exited by signal on POSIX
systems).
If a timeout or exceptional exit happens while a test method is running
on the worker queue, the timeout or exceptional exit is charged and
reported against that test method. Otherwise, if no test method was
running at the time of the timeout or exceptional exit, only the test
filename will be reported as the TIMEOUT or ERROR.
Implements:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24830https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25703
In support of:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25450
llvm-svn: 255097
This seems to be a legacy relic from days gone by where the
remote test suite runner operated completely differently than it
does today. git blames and comments traced this functionality
back to about 2012, and nobody seems to know anything about it
now.
llvm-svn: 255060
This removes the option to exclude a single directory. This is
part of an effort to remove unused options and cleanup the interface
to the test suite.
llvm-svn: 255048
The standard remote debugging workflow with gdb is to start the
application on the remote host under gdbserver (e.g.: gdbserver :5039
a.out) and then connect to it with gdb.
The same workflow is supported by debugserver/lldb-gdbserver with a very
similar syntax but to access all features of lldb we need to be
connected also to an lldb-platform instance running on the target.
Before this change this had to be done manually with starting a separate
lldb-platform on the target machine and then connecting to it with lldb
before connecting to the process.
This change modifies the behavior of "platform connect" with
automatically connecting to the process instance if it was started by
the remote platform. With this command replacing gdbserver in a gdb
based worflow is usually as simple as replacing the command to execute
gdbserver with executing lldb-platform.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14952
llvm-svn: 255016
This change introduce 3 different working mode for Platform::LoadImage
depending on the file specs specified.
* If only a remote file is specified then the remote file is loaded on
the target (same behavior as before)
* If only a local file is specified then the local file is installed to
the current working directory and then loaded from there.
* If both local and remote file is specified then the local file is
installed to the specified location and then loaded from there.
The same options are exposed on the SB API with a new method LoadImage
method while the old signature presers its meaning.
On the command line the installation of the shared library can be specified
with the "--install" option of "process load".
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15152
llvm-svn: 255014
This moves all the global variables into a separate module called
`configuration`. This has a number of advantages:
1. Configuration data is centrally maintained so it's easy to get
a high level overview of what configuration data the test suite
makes use of.
2. The method of sharing configuration data among different parts
of the test suite becomes standardized. Previously we would
put some things into the `lldb` module, some things into the
`lldbtest_config` module, and some things would not get shared.
Now everything is shared through one module and is available to
the entire test suite.
3. It opens the door to moving some of the initialization code into
the `configuration` module, simplifying the implementation of
`dotest.py`.
There are a few stragglers that didn't get converted over to using
the `configuration` module in this patch, because it would have grown
the size of the patch unnecessarily. This includes everything
currently in the `lldbtest_config` module, as well as the
`lldb.remote_platform` variable. We can address these in the future.
llvm-svn: 254982
It was previously reverted due to issues that showed up only on linux. I was able to reproduce these issues and fix the underlying cause.
So this is the same patch as 254476 with the following two fixes:
- Fix not trying to complete classes that don't have external sources
- Fix ClangASTSource::CompleteType() to check the decl context of types that it finds by basename to ensure we don't complete a type "S" with a type like "std::S". Before this fix ClangASTSource::CompleteType() would accept _any_ type that had a matching basename and copy it into the other type.
<rdar://problem/22992457>
llvm-svn: 254980
This cleans up dotest.py and is a pre-step for getting
the test inferior runner to send post-inferior run events
to the events collector, as this code needs to be accessed
from within dosep.py.
llvm-svn: 254979
Summary:
The base make(1) on NetBSD is BSD make.
In the default installation of NetBSD GNU make comes via pkgsrc under the gmake name.
Reviewers: emaste, tfiala, clayborg
Subscribers: joerg, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15261
llvm-svn: 254947
There is already a class called LLDBTestResults which I would like
to move into a separate file, but the most appropriate filename
was taken.
llvm-svn: 254946
Summary:
The getwd() and getcwd() functions conform to IEEE Std 1003.1-1990
(POSIX.1). The IEEE Std 1003.1-2004 (POSIX.1) revision marked
getwd() as legacy and recommended the use of getcwd() instead. The IEEE
Std 1003.1-2008 (``POSIX.1'') revision removed getwd() from the
specification.
The ability to specify a NULL pointer and have getcwd() allocate memory
as necessary is an extension.
The getwd() function appeared in 4.0BSD.
Reviewers: emaste, tfiala, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, joerg
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15260
llvm-svn: 254944
Allow both '-var-list-children var0' and '-var-list-children "var0"' to be used with the -var-list-children command. GDB MI allows for this and it is necessary if the variable name contains spaces, such as var5.std::_Vector_base<std::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> >, std::allocator<std::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<cahr> > > >.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15168
llvm-svn: 254941
This is a resubmit of r254403, see that commit's message for context. This fixes an issue in the
original commit, where we would incorrectly interrupt the process if the interrupt request came
just as we were about to send the stopped event to the public.
llvm-svn: 254902
Summary:
Because of the large number of XFAILs TestThreadStates has decayed quite a bit. This commit does
the following:
- removes the "breakpoint list" expectations. Most tests have been failing on this, because the
command output changed quite a while back. I remove it, because run_break_set_by_file_and_line
already does a decent amount of checking
- fixup test_state_after_expression: this was calling the wrong function by mistake. As now the
function actually tests something (which we know is broken), I needed to XFAIL it as well.
- replaces the sleep() with a proper wait-for-event functionality in parts which use async mode,
to stabilize the one function that actually tests something.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15233
llvm-svn: 254901
Test summary counts now show at the end, with issue details
above.
Issue details now print "ISSUE_TYPE: test method (relative path)".
Relative paths are relative to the
packages/Python/lldbsuite/test directory.
Sample output:
test/dotest.py --executable `pwd`/build/Debug/lldb --results-formatter lldbsuite.test.basic_results_formatter.BasicResultsFormatter --threads 12
Testing: 415 test suites, 12 threads
415 out of 415 test suites processed - TestLldbGdbServer.py
Test Results
Total Test Methods Run (excluding reruns): 2470
Test Method rerun count: 0
Details:
UNEXPECTED SUCCESS: test_symbol_name_dsym (functionalities/completion/TestCompletion.py)
UNEXPECTED SUCCESS: test_symbol_name_dwarf (functionalities/completion/TestCompletion.py)
===================
Test Result Summary
===================
Success: 1329
Expected Failure: 79
Failure: 0
Error: 0
Unexpected Success: 2
Skip: 1060
llvm-svn: 254890
Summary: This is used in tests.
Reviewers: emaste, tfiala, clayborg
Subscribers: zturner, lldb-commits, joerg
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15065
llvm-svn: 254853
Patch by Nitesh Jain.
Summary: There is no debug information generated for variable index with –O3 optimization flag. The DW_AT_location tag in DWARF debug_info section is empty.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, bhushan, jaydeep
Differential: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15224
llvm-svn: 254850
This test would fail before if conditional breakpoints weren't
working correctly, and the nature of the test (spinning up 10
threads, etc) opens the door to raciness.
This patch vastly simplifies the test, removes the need for relying
on conditional expression evaluation, and as a result makes the
correctness of the test vastly easier to reason about and reduces
flakiness.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15241
Reviewed By: Jim Ingham
llvm-svn: 254792
SUMMARY:
Marked TestCrashDuringStep.py as XFAIL for MIPS. The test generates IO error due to breakpoint at invalid address.
Reviewers: clayborg, labath
Subscribers: nitesh.jain, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, bhushan and lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15182
llvm-svn: 254710
Previously we used sys.os.path for appending target pathes what failed
when cased dlopen to fail on the target because of the '\'.
The fix won't work for local Windows tests but dlopen don't available
on Windows anyway so the test don't make sense in that context.
llvm-svn: 254602
Also cleans up some usages of strings where symbolic names
were safer and made more sense.
Try a test run with something like this to check out the new
basic results formatter (not used by default):
time test/dotest.py --executable `pwd`/build/Debug/lldb --results-formatter lldbsuite.test.basic_results_formatter.BasicResultsFormatter --results-file stdout
This will yield something like:
Testing: 1 test suites, 8 threads
1 out of 1 test suites processed - TestHelp.py
Test Results
Total Test Methods Run (excluding reruns): 13
Test Method rerun count: 0
===================
Test Result Summary
===================
Success: 13
Expected Failure: 0
Failure: 0
Error: 0
Unexpected Success: 0
Skip: 0
Whereas something with a bit of error will look more like this:
42 out of 42 test suites processed - TestSymbolTable.py
Test Results
Total Test Methods Run (excluding reruns): 166
Test Method rerun count: 0
===================
Test Result Summary
===================
Success: 93
Expected Failure: 10
Failure: 2
Error: 2
Unexpected Success: 0
Skip: 59
Details:
FAIL:
TestModulesInlineFunctions.ModulesInlineFunctionsTestCase.test_expr_dsym
(/Users/tfiala/work/lldb-tot/git-svn/lldb/packages/Python/lldbsuite/test/lang/objc/modules-inline-functions/TestModulesInlineFunctions.py)
FAIL:
TestModulesInlineFunctions.ModulesInlineFunctionsTestCase.test_expr_dwarf
(/Users/tfiala/work/lldb-tot/git-svn/lldb/packages/Python/lldbsuite/test/lang/objc/modules-inline-functions/TestModulesInlineFunctions.py)
ERROR: TestObjCCheckers.ObjCCheckerTestCase.test_objc_checker_dsym
(/Users/tfiala/work/lldb-tot/git-svn/lldb/packages/Python/lldbsuite/test/lang/objc/objc-checker/TestObjCCheckers.py)
ERROR: TestObjCCheckers.ObjCCheckerTestCase.test_objc_checker_dwarf
(/Users/tfiala/work/lldb-tot/git-svn/lldb/packages/Python/lldbsuite/test/lang/objc/objc-checker/TestObjCCheckers.py)
The Details header only prints if there are any issues to report. The
Details section has tags that should get picked up using the normal
issue text scrapers (e.g. buildbot).
Test numbers reported are strictly test method runs.
The rerun bit at the top is in support of the multi-pass test
runner code (to run the low-load, single worker test pass for
tests that failed the first run), which I'll be able to put up
for review after this.
ResultsFormatters now have the ability to indicate they replace
the legacy summary, as this one does.
Once we come to agreement on the exact format, I will switch
us over to using this by default.
llvm-svn: 254530
On android the symbols exposed by libdl (dlopen, dlclose, dlerror)
prefixed by "__dl_". This change moves the handling of process
load/unload to the platform object and override it for android to
handle the special prefix.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11465
llvm-svn: 254504
Summary:
- Problem occurs when:
-- 32-bit inferiors run on x86_32 machine and
the architecture doesn't have AVX feature
-- This causes FPRType to be set to eFPRTypeFXSAVE
-- PTRACE_GETFPREGS was being used to read FXSAVE area
-- For 32-bit inferiors running on x86_32 machine,
PTRACE_GETFPREGS reads FSAVE area and not FXSAVE area
- Changed ptrace API to PTRACE_GETREGSET for 32-bit inferiors
-- This reads FPR data in FXSAVE format.
-- For 64-bit inferiors, no change has been made.
- Modified XFAIL for TestReturnValue.py
-- Earlier, this test was passing for Linux OS
-- Now, it passes for Android OS as well
Change-Id: Ieed72bc969b79516fc7b263b32493aa1e7a1a2ac
Signed-off-by: Abhishek Aggarwal <abhishek.a.aggarwal@intel.com>
Reviewers: ovyalov, jingham, lldb-commits, tberghammer, labath
Subscribers: jevinskie, labath, tberghammer, danalbert
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15042
llvm-svn: 254499
This is done by finding the types that are forward declarations that come from a module, and loading that module's debug info in a separate lldb_private::Module, and copying the type over into the current module using a ClangASTImporter object. ClangASTImporter objects are already used to copy types from on clang::ASTContext to another for expressions so the type copying code has been around for a while.
A new FindTypes variant was added to SymbolVendor and SymbolFile:
size_t
SymbolVendor::FindTypes (const std::vector<CompilerContext> &context, bool append, TypeMap& types);
size_t
SymbolVendor::FindTypes (const std::vector<CompilerContext> &context, bool append, TypeMap& types);
The CompilerContext is a way to represent the exact context of a type and pass it through an agnostic API boundary so that we can find that exact context elsewhere in another file. This was required here because we can have a module that has submodules, both of which have a "foo" type.
I am not able to add tests for this yet as we currently don't build our C/C++/ObjC binaries with the clang binary that we build. There are some driver issues where it can't find the header files for the C and C++ standard library which makes compiling these tests hard. We can't also guarantee that if we are building with clang that it supporst the exact format of -gmodule debugging that we are trying to test. We have had other versions of clang that had a different implementation of -gmodule debugging that we are no longer supporting, so we can't enable tests if we are building with clang without compiling something and looking at the structure of the DWARF that was generated to ensure that it is the format we can actually use.
llvm-svn: 254476
Summary:
The following situation was occuring in TestAttachResume:
- we did a "continue" from a breakpoint (which involves a private start-stop to step over the
breakpoint)
- after receiving the stop-reply from the step-over, we issue a "detach" (which requires a
process interrupt)
- at this moment, the public state is "running", private state is "about-to-be-stopped" (the
stopped event was broadcast, but it was not received yet)
- StopForDestroyOrDetach (public thread) notes the public state is running, sends an interrupt
request to the private thread
- private thread gets the eBroadcastBitInterrupt (before the eStateStopped message), and asks the
process plugin to stop (via Halt())
- process plugin says it has nothing to do as the process is already stopped
- private thread shrugs and carries on. receives the stop event, restores the breakpoint and
resumes the process.
- after a while, the public thread times out and says it failed to stop the process
This patch does the following:
- splits Halt() into two functions, private and public, their usage depends on the context
- public Halt(): sends eBroadcastBitInterrupt to the private thread and waits for the Stop
event
- HaltPrivate(): asks the plugin to stop and makes a note that the halt was requested. When the
next stop event comes it sets the interrupt flag on it.
- removes HijackPrivateProcessEvents(), as the only user (old Halt()) has gone away
- removes the m_currently_handling_event hack, as the new Halt() does not need it
- adds a use_run_lock parameter to public Halt() and WaitForProcessToStop(). This was needed
because RunThreadPlan uses Halt() while holding the run lock and we don't want Halt() to take
it away from him.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14989
llvm-svn: 254403
SUMMARY:
For MIPS, ARCH is specified without m.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: nitesh.jain, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, bhushan and lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14978
llvm-svn: 254376
These tests were fixed by r253026 but they was failing on the linux
build bot because of a system setup problem. Remove xfail from them
after we fixed the build bot.
llvm-svn: 254163
With this patch, the client will package up all the required
inputs into a compressed zip file, establish a connection to the
server, send the input to the server, and wait for the server to
send a response (in this case the response is just echoed back to
the client).
This gets the network communication in place, and in a subsequent
patch I will follow up with the code that actually runs swig on
the server and sends back the output instead of echoing back the
input.
llvm-svn: 254023
This test was already expectedFlakeyLinux for occasional failures on the
Linux buildbot. It seems the new FreeBSD buildbot fails the same way on
occasion.
llvm.org/pr25172
llvm-svn: 254002
This passes on my FreeBSD stable/10 desktop and my new FreeBSD
11-current buildbot (which is not yet hooked up to the buildmaster).
llvm.org/pr18190
llvm-svn: 254000
Summary:
This reverts commit 251965377bdfb6227eea42c12a792c059e4e8a4b
as a test marked "skipIf(compiler='gcc')" runs when testing with GCC.
Reviewers: amccarth
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14852
llvm-svn: 253631
-fms-compatibility-version defaults to VS 2013. When using
VS 2015, this will lead to compilation failures of the test
inferiors in the C++ standard library for language conformance
reasons.
The fix here is to simply pass -fms-compatibility-version=19.0 when
we detect that a VS 2015 compiler is present. Even though we're
actually using clang to do the compilation, clang uses this same
detection algorithm to determine the location of the standard
library. So this check is tantanmount to saying "If clang is going
to find MSVC 2015's standard library, then pass 19.0 for
-fms-compatibility-version.
llvm-svn: 253589
This patch fixes two issues:
1) Popen needs to be used with universal_newlines=True by default.
This elicits automatic decoding from bytes -> string in Py3,
and has no negative effects in other Py versions.
2) The swig typemaps for converting between string and (char*, int)
did not work correctly when the length of the string was 0,
indicating an error. In this case we would try to construct a
string from uninitialized data.
3) Ironically, the bug mentioned in #2 led to a test passing on
Windows that was actually broken, because the test was written
such that the assertion was never even getting checked, so it
passed by default. So we additionally fix this test to also
fail if the method errors. By fixing this test it's now broken
on Windows, so we also xfail it.
llvm-svn: 253487
Patch by Nitesh Jain
Summary: The self.getArchitecture() returns the architecture based on the value of -A flag passed to dotest.py script.
There are many possible values for MIPS to this option (like mips32r2, mips32r6, mips64, mips64r2,.... ).
This patch uses re.match(mips,arch) to check if architecture string starts with mips.
Subscribers: lldb-commits, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, bhushan, jaydeep
Reviewers: clayborg, ovyalov
Differential: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14493
llvm-svn: 253444
breakpoint as "file address" so that the address breakpoint will track that
module even if it gets loaded in a different place. Also fixed the Address
breakpoint resolver so that it handles this tracking correctly.
llvm-svn: 253308
Current versions of SWIG have a bug with Python 3 that causes
Python to assert when iterating over a generator. This patch
skips the test for the right combination of Python version and
SWIG version. I'm attempting to upstream a patch to SWIG to
fix this in a subsequent as-of-yet unreleased version, but
I don't know how long that will take.
llvm-svn: 253273
Change Test-rdar-12481949.py to expect GetValueAsUnsigned() to return
0xffffffff if the variable is an int32_t (signed, 4 byte integer) with
value of -1. The previous expectation where we expected the value to be
0xffffffffffffffff doesn't make sense as nothing explains why we would
treat it as an 8 byte value.
This CL also removes a hack from Scalar::ULongLong what was most likely
added to get this test passing as it only worked in case the value of
the variable is -1 and didn't make any sense even in that case.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14611
llvm-svn: 253027
Summary:
- Reason of both bugs:
1. For the very first frame, Unwinder doesn't check the validity
of Full UnwindPlan before creating StackFrame from it:
When 'process launch' command is run after setting a breakpoint
in inferior, the Unwinder runs and saves only Frame 0 (the frame
in which breakpoint was set) in thread's StackFrameList i.e.
m_curr_frames_sp. However, it doesn't check the validity of the
Full UnwindPlan for this frame by unwinding 2 more frames further.
2. Unwinder doesn't update the CFA value of Cursor when Full UnwindPlan
fails and FallBack UnwindPlan succeeds in providing valid CFA values
for frames:
Sometimes during unwinding of stack frames, the Full UnwindPlan
inside the RegisterContextLLDB object may fail to provide valid
CFA values for these frames. Then the Fallback UnwindPlan is used
to unwind the frames.
If the Fallback UnwindPlan succeeds, then it provides a valid new
CFA value. The RegisterContextLLDB::m_cfa field of Cursor object
is updated during the Fallback UnwindPlan execution. However,
UnwindLLDB misses the implementation to update the 'cfa' field
of this Cursor with this valid new CFA value.
- This patch fixes both these issues.
- Remove XFAIL in test files corresponding to these 2 Bugs
Change-Id: I932ea407545ceee2d628f946ecc61a4806d4cc86
Signed-off-by: Abhishek Aggarwal <abhishek.a.aggarwal@intel.com>
Reviewers: jingham, lldb-commits, jasonmolenda
Subscribers: lldb-commits, ovyalov, tberghammer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14226
llvm-svn: 253026
This test fails most of the time when run under heavy load. The dsym
variant doesn't seem to be failing.
Tracking XFAIL marker with:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25485
llvm-svn: 252702
They get treated as special RLE encoding symbols and packets get
corrupted. Most other packet types already know about this apparently,
but QEnvironment missed these two.
Should fix PR25300.
llvm-svn: 252521
For language that support such a thing, this API allows to ask whether a type is anonymous (i.e. has been given no name)
Comes with test case
llvm-svn: 252390
This is unsupported in Python 3. This could also have been fixed
by using "wb" instead of "w", but it doesn't seem like writing the
session log absolutely *needs* to be unbuffered.
llvm-svn: 252381
instance:
break set -l c++ -r Name
will only break on C++ symbols that match Name, not ObjC or plain C symbols. This also works
for "break set -n" and there are SB API's to pass this as well.
llvm-svn: 252356
`sets.Set` has been deprecated in favor of `set` since 2.6, and
`string.maketrans` has to be special cased. In Python 3 there
is `str.maketrans`, `bytes.maketrans`, and `bytearray.maketrans`
and you have to choose the correct one. So we need to introduce
a runtime version check at this site.
llvm-svn: 252348
We tried implementing something akin to a conditionalExpectedFailure
decorator for unittest2. We did this by making use of some
implementation details of the unittest2 module. In an effort to make
this work with unittest, this patch removes the reliance on the
implementation details. I have a hard time wrapping my head around
how this all works with the deeply nested decorators, but the spirit
of the patch here is to do do the following: If the condition function
is true, use the original unittest2.expectedFailure decorator. Otherwise
don't use any decorator, just call the test function.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14406
Reviewed By: tberghammer, labath
llvm-svn: 252326
We still see "Too many file handles" errors on Windows even with
lower numbers of cores. It's not clear what the right balance is,
and the bar seems to move as more tests get added. So just use
the strategy that works until we can investigate more deeply.
llvm-svn: 252325
Absolute imports were introduced in Python 2.5 as a feature
(e.g. from __future__ import absolute_import), and made default
in Python 3.
When absolute imports are enabled, the import system changes in
a couple of ways:
1) The `import foo` syntax will *only* search sys.path. If `foo`
isn't in sys.path, it won't be found. Period. Without absolute
imports, the import system will also search the same directory
that the importing file resides in, so that you can easily
import from the same folder.
2) From inside a package, you can use a dot syntax to refer to higher
levels of the current package. For example, if you are in the
package lldbsuite.test.utility, then ..foo refers to
lldbsuite.test.foo. You can use this notation with the
`from X import Y` syntax to write intra-package references. For
example, using the previous locationa s a starting point, writing
`from ..support import seven` would import lldbsuite.support.seven
Since this is now the default behavior in Python 3, this means that
importing from the same directory with `import foo` *no longer works*.
As a result, the only way to have portable code is to force absolute
imports for all versions of Python.
See PEP 0328 [https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0328/] for more
information about absolute and relative imports.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14342
Reviewed By: Todd Fiala
llvm-svn: 252191
It was deprecated even in 2.7, but not removed until 3.x. os.walk
provides all of the same functionality and is the correct way to
do this now.
llvm-svn: 252127
This follows the spirit of a previous patch which did essentially
the same thing. In Python 3, when you use Popen.communicate(),
you get back a bytes object which cannot normally be treated as
a string. We could decode this manually, but universal_newlines=True
does this automatically, and there's no disadvantage to doing so
even on Python 2. So just enable it always.
llvm-svn: 252126
This allows for command-line debugging of iOS simulator binaries (as long as UI is not required, or a full UI simulator has previously been otherwise launched), as well as execution of the LLDB test suite on the iOS simulator
This is known to compile on OSX 10.11 GM - feedback from people on other platforms and/or older versions of OSX as to the buildability of this code is greatly appreciated
llvm-svn: 252112
Python 3 introduces the `timeout` keyword argument on Popen.wait().
If our patched version doesn't support keyword arguments, then when
the internal Python implementation attempts to call wait() with the
keyword argument, things will explode.
Such as my head, after I finally figured out what was happening.
llvm-svn: 252092
By default in Python 3, check_output() returns a program's output as
an encoded byte sequence. This means it returns a Py3 `bytes` object,
which cannot be compared to a string since it's a different fundamental
type.
Although it might not be correct from a purist standpoint, from a
practical one we can assume that all output is encoded in the default
locale, in which case using universal_newlines=True will decode it
according to the current locale. Anyway, universal_newlines also
has the nice behavior that it converts \r\n to \n on Windows platforms
so this makes parsing code easier, should we need that. So it seems
like a win/win.
llvm-svn: 252025
This module was originally intended to be imported by top-level
scripts to be able to find the LLDB packages and third party
libraries. Packages themselves shouldn't need to import it,
because by the time it gets into the package, the top-level
script should have already done this. Indeed, it was just
adding the same values to sys.path multiple times, so this
patch is essentially no functional change.
To make sure it doesn't get re-introduced, we also delete the
`use_lldb_suite` module from `lldbsuite/test`, although the
original copy still remains in `lldb/test`
llvm-svn: 251963
The `commands` module was deprecated in 2.7 and removed in 3.x.
As a workaround, we introduce a new module `seven` in
lldbsuite.support, and write helper functions in there that delegate
to the commands module if it is available, and re-implement their
functionality for cases where it is not available.
llvm-svn: 251959
Summary:
The code which was preventing the usage of the OS plugin while detach is in
progress also prevented us to update the thread list correctly. This resulted
in an empty thread list, which confused the detaching logic. Change the
condition do only do what it says (disable the usage of the OS plugin).
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14201
llvm-svn: 251932
Summary:
The solution to bug 24074,rL249673 needed
to parse the function information from the Dwarf in order
to set the SymbolContext. For that, GetFunction was called
for the parent in GetTypeForDIE, which parses the
ChildParameters and in the flow, GetTypeForDIE was called
for one of the sibling die and so an infinite
loop was triggered by calling GetFunction repeatedly for the
same function.
The changes in this revision modify the GetTypeForDIE to only
resolve the function context in the Type Lookup flow and so
prevent the infinite loop.
A testcase has also been added to check for regression in the
future and a test vector had been added to the testcase of
24074.
Reviewers: jingham, tberghammer, clayborg
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14202
llvm-svn: 251917
For convenience, we had added the folder that dotest.py was in
to sys.path, so that we could easily write things like
`import lldbutil` from anywhere and any test. This introduces
a subtle problem when using Python's package system, because when
unittest2 imports a particular test suite, the test suite is detached
from the package. Thus, writing "import lldbutil" from dotest imports
it as part of the package, and writing the same line from a test
does a fresh import since the importing module was not part of
the same package.
The real way to fix this is to use absolute imports everywhere. Instead
of writing "import lldbutil", we need to write "import
lldbsuite.test.util". This patch fixes up that and all other similar
cases, and additionally removes the script directory from sys.path
to ensure that this can't happen again.
llvm-svn: 251886
I think the underlying problem was fixed by r251819, but I can't
reproduce the problem. So this is to check whether it does in
fact fix the problem.
llvm-svn: 251822
packages/Python/lldbsuite is now a Python package, and it relies
on its __init__.py being called to do package-level initialization.
If you exec packages/Python/lldbsuite/dotest.py directly, you won't
get this package level initialization, and things will fail. But
without this patch, this is exactly what dosep itself does. To
launch the multi-processing fork, it was hardcoding a path to
dotest.py and exec'ing it from inside the package.
The fix here is to get the path of the top-level script, and
then exec'ing that instead. A more robust solution would involve
refactoring the code so that dosep execs some internal script that
imports lldbsuite, but that's a bit more involved.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14157
Reviewed by: Todd Fiala
llvm-svn: 251819
Summary:
As per the following link, the "--" separator can appear between the options
and parameters of any MI command. Previously this separator was only
handled by the `-data-disassemble` MI command. I have moved the relevant
code into `CMICmdBase` so that any MI command can handle the
aforementioned separator.
https://sourceware.org/gdb/onlinedocs/gdb/GDB_002fMI-Input-Syntax.html#GDB_002fMI-Input-Syntax
Reviewers: ki.stfu
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14197
llvm-svn: 251793
I don't think anything has changed recently - the test was always flaky, but
only very rarely. Still, it is causing noise in the buildbots.
llvm-svn: 251699
It turns out that lldbtest_config was being imported locally to "lldbsuite.test" instead of globally, so when the test cases got individually brought by a global import via __import__ by unittest2, they did not see the lldbtest_config import, and ended up importing a new separate copy of it, with lldbExec unset
This is a simple hackaround that brings lldbtest_config to global visibility and makes sure the configuration data is correctly shared
llvm-svn: 251678
Summary:
I observed that eclipse was passing --thread-group for many other commands
then we are currently handling. Looking at the MI documentation, the
following link states that each MI command accept the --thread and
--frame option. Looking at the GDB implementation, it seems that apart
from these 2, --thread-group is also handled the same way.
https://sourceware.org/gdb/onlinedocs/gdb/Context-management.html#Context-management
So instead of handling those arguments in every comamnds, I have moved
them into the base class and removed them from elsewhere. Now any command
can use these arguments. The patch seems big but most of the changes are
mechanical.
Reviewers: ki.stfu
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14177
llvm-svn: 251636
The test was verifying that the pid of the child is not equal to its process
group by searching for text substrings. This failed in the rare cases when the
pid actually *was* a substring of the process group (even though they were not
equal).
Change the test to use SB API and do proper numeric comparisons.
llvm-svn: 251626
This is the conclusion of an effort to get LLDB's Python code
structured into a bona-fide Python package. This has a number
of benefits, but most notably the ability to more easily share
Python code between different but related pieces of LLDB's Python
infrastructure (for example, `scripts` can now share code with
`test`).
llvm-svn: 251532
The idea behind this patch is to expose the meat of
LLDB's Python infrastructure (test suite, scripts, etc)
as a single package. This makes reusability and code
sharing among sub-packages easy.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14131
llvm-svn: 251460