Summary: I was building lldb using cross mingw-w64 toolchain on Linux and observed some issues. This is first patch in the series to fix that build. It mostly corrects the case of include files and adjusts some #ifdefs from _MSC_VER to _WIN32 and vice versa. I built lldb on windows with VS after applying this patch to make sure it does not break the build there.
Reviewers: zturner, labath, abidh
Subscribers: ki.stfu, mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27759
llvm-svn: 289821
This diff
1. Adds a comment to ObjectFileELF.cpp about the current
approach to determining the OS.
2. Replaces the check in SymbolFileDWARF.cpp with a more robust one.
Test plan:
Built (on Linux) a test binary linked to a c++ shared library
which contains just an implementation of a function TestFunction,
the library (the binary itself) doesn't contain ELF notes
and EI_OSABI is set to System V.
Checked in lldb that now "p TestFunction()" works fine
(and doesn't work without this patch).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27380
llvm-svn: 288687
This is a large API change that removes the two functions from
StreamString that return a std::string& and a const std::string&,
and instead provide one function which returns a StringRef.
Direct access to the underlying buffer violates the concept of
a "stream" which is intended to provide forward only access,
and makes porting to llvm::raw_ostream more difficult in the
future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26698
llvm-svn: 287152
We shouldn't access past the end of an array, even if we think that the
layout of the struct containing the array is always what we expect. The
compiler is free to optimize away the stores as undefined behavior, and
in fact, GCC 6.2.1 claims it will do exactly this.
llvm-svn: 286093
Summary:
.. handling for windows path was completely broken because the function was
expecting \ as path separators, but we were passing it normalized file paths,
where these have been replaced by forward slashes. Apart from this, the function
was incorrect for posix paths as well in some corner cases, as well as being
generally hard to follow.
The corner cases were:
- /../bar -> should be same as /bar
- /bar/.. -> should be same as / (slightly dodgy as the former depends on /bar actually
existing, but since we're doing it in an abstract way, I think the
transformation is reasonable)
I rewrite the function to fix these corner cases and handle windows paths more
correctly. The function should now handle the posix paths (modulo symlinks, but
we cannot really do anything about that without a real filesystem). For windows
paths, there are a couple of corner cases left, mostly to do with drive letter
handling, which cannot be fixed until the rest of the class understands drive
letters better.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26081
llvm-svn: 285593
Summary:
When the local lldb doesn't have access to a copy of the modules in the target, e.g. winphone, with this change now we read these modules from memory.
There are mainly 2 changes:
1. create pecoff object files from memory
2. read from memory when the local file is not available
Reviewers: sas, fjricci, zturner
Subscribers: #lldb
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24284
llvm-svn: 284422
Summary:
ObjectFileELF::RefineModuleDetailsFromNote() identifies Linux core dumps by searching for
library paths starting with /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu or /lib/i386-linux-gnu. This change widens the
test to allow for linux installations which have addition directories in the path.
Reviewers: ted, hhellyer, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25179
llvm-svn: 284114
Summary:
It fixes the following compile warnings:
1. '0' flag ignored with precision and ‘%d’ gnu_printf format
2. enumeral and non-enumeral type in conditional expression
3. format ‘%d’ expects argument of type ‘int’, but argument 4 has type ...
4. enumeration value ‘...’ not handled in switch
5. cast from type ‘const uint64_t* {aka ...}’ to type ‘int64_t* {aka ...}’ casts away qualifiers
6. extra ‘;’
7. comparison between signed and unsigned integer expressions
8. variable ‘register_operand’ set but not used
9. control reaches end of non-void function
Reviewers: jingham, emaste, zturner, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24331
llvm-svn: 281191
*** to conform to clang-format’s LLVM style. This kind of mass change has
*** two obvious implications:
Firstly, merging this particular commit into a downstream fork may be a huge
effort. Alternatively, it may be worth merging all changes up to this commit,
performing the same reformatting operation locally, and then discarding the
merge for this particular commit. The commands used to accomplish this
reformatting were as follows (with current working directory as the root of
the repository):
find . \( -iname "*.c" -or -iname "*.cpp" -or -iname "*.h" -or -iname "*.mm" \) -exec clang-format -i {} +
find . -iname "*.py" -exec autopep8 --in-place --aggressive --aggressive {} + ;
The version of clang-format used was 3.9.0, and autopep8 was 1.2.4.
Secondly, “blame” style tools will generally point to this commit instead of
a meaningful prior commit. There are alternatives available that will attempt
to look through this change and find the appropriate prior commit. YMMV.
llvm-svn: 280751
and we couldn't find a dyld binary on the debug system, override
that setting and read dyld out of memory - we need to put an
internal breakpoint on dyld to register binaries being loaded or
unloaded; the debugger won't work right without dyld symbols.
<rdar://problem/27857025>
llvm-svn: 279704
It's always hard to remember when to include this file, and
when you do include it it's hard to remember what preprocessor
check it needs to be behind, and then you further have to remember
whether it's windows.h or win32.h which you need to include.
This patch changes the name to PosixApi.h, which is more appropriately
named, and makes it independent of any preprocessor setting.
There's still the issue of people not knowing when to include this,
because there's not a well-defined set of things it exposes other
than "whatever is missing on Windows", but at least this should
make it less painful to fix when problems arise.
This patch depends on LLVM revision r278170.
llvm-svn: 278177
Summary:
There were places in the code, assuming(hardcoding) offsets
and types that were only valid for the x86_64 elf core file format.
The NT_PRSTATUS and NT_PRPSINFO structures are with the 64 bit layout.
I have reused them and parse i386 files manually, and fill them in the
same struct.
Also added some error handling during parsing that checks if the
available bytes in the buffer are enough to fill the structures.
The i386 core file test case now passes.
For reference on the structures layout, I generally used the
source of binutils (bfd, readelf)
Bug: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=26947
Reviewers: labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22917
llvm-svn: 277140
cache from ObjectFileMachO (very wrong place) to the DynamicLoader
plugins (better place). Not much change to the code itself, although
the old ObjectFileMachO method would try both the new dyld SPI and
reading the dyld_all_image_infos structure. In the new methods,
I've separated those into the appropriate DynamicLoader plugins.
llvm-svn: 277088
debugserver jGetSharedCacheInfo packet instead of reading
the dyld internal data structures directly. This code is
(currently) only used for ios native lldb's - I should really
move this ObjectFileMachO::GetProcessSharedCacheUUID method
somewhere else, it makes less and less sense being in the
file reader.
<rdar://problem/25251243>
llvm-svn: 276369
These are artifical symbols inside android oat files without any value
for the user while causing a significant perfoamce hit inside the
unwinder. We were already ignoring it inside system@framework@boot.oat
bot they have to be ignored in every oat file. Considering that oat
files are only used on android this have no effect on any other
platfrom.
llvm-svn: 274500
for TestNamespaceLookup.py; didn't see anything obviously wrong so I'll
need to look at this more closely before re-committing. (passed OK on
macOS ;)
llvm-svn: 273531
There's uses of "macosx" that will be more tricky to
change, like in triples (e.g. "x86_64-apple-macosx10.11") -
for now I'm just updating source comments and strings printed
for humans.
llvm-svn: 273524
In order to make this happen, I have added permissions to sections so that we can know what the permissions are for a given section, and modified both core file plug-ins to override Process::GetMemoryRegionInfo() and answer things correctly.
llvm-svn: 272276
which looks for binaries missing an LC_FUNCTION_STARTS section because
it was stripped/not emitted. If we see a normal user process binary
(executable, dylib, framework, bundle) without LC_FUNCTION_STARTS, that
is unusual and we should disallow instruction emulation because that
binary has likely been stripped a lot.
If this is a non-user process binary -- a kernel, a standalone bare-board
binary, a kernel extension (kext) -- and there is no LC_FUNCTION_STARTS,
we should not assume anything about the binary and allow instruction
emulation as we would normally do.
<rdar://problem/26453952>
llvm-svn: 270818
missing an LC_FUNCTION_STARTS section, we assume it has been
aggressively stripped (it is *very* unusual for anyone to strip
LC_FUNCTION_STARTS) so we disable assembly instruction unwind plan
creation.
Kernel extensions (kexts) don't have LC_FUNCTION_STARTS, but we
almost always have good symbol bounds just with the linker symbols.
So add an exception to allow assembly instruction unwind plan
creation for kexts even though they lack LC_FUNCTION_STARTS.
<rdar://problem/26453952>
llvm-svn: 270618
Patch by Nitesh Jain.
Summary: These patch fix thread step-out for hard and soft float.
Reviewers: jaydeep, bhushan, clayborg
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20416
llvm-svn: 270564
The CL causes a build breakage on platforms where sizeof(double) == sizeof(long double)
and it incorrectly assumes that sizeof(double) and sizeof(long double) is the same
on the host and the target.
llvm-svn: 270214
This is a pretty straightforward first pass over removing a number of uses of
Mutex in favor of std::mutex or std::recursive_mutex. The problem is that there
are interfaces which take Mutex::Locker & to lock internal locks. This patch
cleans up most of the easy cases. The only non-trivial change is in
CommandObjectTarget.cpp where a Mutex::Locker was split into two.
llvm-svn: 269877
Patch by Nitesh Jain.
Summary: The ArchSpec::m_flags will be set based on ELF flag ABI.
Reviewers: ovyalov, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, jaydeep, bhushan
Differential: D18858
llvm-svn: 269181
should not be used for this module -- for use when an ObjectFile
knows that it does not have meaningful or accurate function start
addresses.
More commonly, it is not clear that function start addresses are
missing in a module. There are certain cases on Mac OS X where we
can tell that a Mach-O binary has been stripped of this essential
information, and the unwinder can end up emulating many megabytes
of instructions for a single "function" in the binary.
When a Mach-O binary is missing both an LC_FUNCTION_STARTS load
command (very unusual) and an eh_frame section, then we will assume
it has also been stripped of symbols and that instruction emulation
will not be useful on this module.
<rdar://problem/25988067>
llvm-svn: 268475
Remove case handling elf arm attribute Tag_THUMB_ISA_use and setting architecture to thumb.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19520
llvm-svn: 267550
Make sure we figure out correct plt entry field in case linker has generated a small value below realistic entry size like 4 bytes or below.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19252
llvm-svn: 267405
RegisterContextLLDB::InitializeNonZerothFrame already has code to attempt
to detect and handle the case where the PC points beyond the end of a
function, but there are certain cases where this doesn't work correctly.
In fact, there are *two* different places where this detection is attempted,
and the failure is in fact a result of an unfortunate interaction between
those two separate attempts.
First, the ResolveSymbolContextForAddress routine is called with the
resolve_tail_call_address flag set to true. This causes the routine
to internally accept a PC pointing beyond the end of a function, and
still resolving the PC to that function symbol.
Second, the InitializeNonZerothFrame routine itself maintains a
"decr_pc_and_recompute_addr_range" flag and, if that turns out to
be true, itself decrements the PC by one and searches again for
a symbol at that new PC value.
Both approaches correctly identify the symbol associated with the PC.
However, the problem is now that later on, we also need to find the
DWARF CFI record associated with the PC. This is done in the
RegisterContextLLDB::GetFullUnwindPlanForFrame routine, and uses
the "m_current_offset_backed_up_one" member variable.
However, that variable only actually contains the PC "backed up by
one" if the *second* approach above was taken. If the function was
already identified via the first approach above, that member variable
is *not* backed up by one but simply points to the original PC.
This in turn causes GetEHFrameUnwindPlan to not correctly identify
the DWARF CFI record associated with the PC.
Now, in many cases, if the first method had to back up the PC by one,
we *still* use the second method too, because of this piece of code:
// Or if we're in the middle of the stack (and not "above" an asynchronous event like sigtramp),
// and our "current" pc is the start of a function...
if (m_sym_ctx_valid
&& GetNextFrame()->m_frame_type != eTrapHandlerFrame
&& GetNextFrame()->m_frame_type != eDebuggerFrame
&& addr_range.GetBaseAddress().IsValid()
&& addr_range.GetBaseAddress().GetSection() == m_current_pc.GetSection()
&& addr_range.GetBaseAddress().GetOffset() == m_current_pc.GetOffset())
{
decr_pc_and_recompute_addr_range = true;
}
In many cases, when the PC is one beyond the end of the current function,
it will indeed then be exactly at the start of the next function. But this
is not always the case, e.g. if there happens to be alignment padding
between the end of one function and the start of the next.
In those cases, we may sucessfully look up the function symbol via
ResolveSymbolContextForAddress, but *not* set decr_pc_and_recompute_addr_range,
and therefore fail to find the correct DWARF CFI record.
A very simple fix for this problem is to just never use the first method.
Call ResolveSymbolContextForAddress with resolve_tail_call_address set
to false, which will cause it to fail if the PC is beyond the end of
the current function; or else, identify the next function if the PC
is also at the start of the next function. In either case, we will
then set the decr_pc_and_recompute_addr_range variable and back up the
PC anyway, but this time also find the correct DWARF CFI.
A related problem is that the ResolveSymbolContextForAddress sometimes
returns a "symbol" with empty name. This turns out to be an ELF section
symbol. Now, usually those get type eSymbolTypeInvalid. However, there
is code in ObjectFileELF::ParseSymbols that tries to change the type of
invalid symbols to eSymbolTypeCode or eSymbolTypeData if the symbol
lies within the code or data section.
Unfortunately, this check also hits the symbol for the code section
itself, which is then marked as eSymbolTypeCode. While the size of
the section symbol is 0 according to the ELF file, LLDB considers
this size invalid and attempts to figure out the "correct" size.
Depending on how this goes, we may end up with a symbol that overlays
part of the code section, even outside areas covered by real function
symbols.
Therefore, if we call ResolveSymbolContextForAddress with PC pointing
beyond the end of a function, we may get this bogus section symbol.
This again means InitializeNonZerothFrame thinks we have a valid PC,
but then we don't find any unwind info for it.
The fix for this problem is me to simply always leave ELF section
symbols as type eSymbolTypeInvalid.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18975
llvm-svn: 267363
This adds basic parsing of the EABI attributes section. This section contains
additional information about the target for which the file was built. Attempt
to infer additional architecture information from that section.
llvm-svn: 267291
Code in ObjectFileELF::ParseTrampolineSymbols assumes that the sh_info
field of the .rel(a).plt section identifies the .plt section.
However, with recent GNU ld this is no longer true. As a result of this:
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=18169
in object files generated with current linkers the sh_info field of
.rel(a).plt now points to the .got.plt section (or .got on some targets).
This causes LLDB to fail to identify any PLT stubs, causing a number of
test case failures.
This patch changes LLDB to simply always look for the .plt section by
name. This should be safe across all linkers and targets.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18973
llvm-svn: 266316
This patch adds support for Linux on SystemZ:
- A new ArchSpec value of eCore_s390x_generic
- A new directory Plugins/ABI/SysV-s390x providing an ABI implementation
- Register context support
- Native Linux support including watchpoint support
- ELF core file support
- Misc. support throughout the code base (e.g. breakpoint opcodes)
- Test case updates to support the platform
This should provide complete support for debugging the SystemZ platform.
Not yet supported are optional features like transaction support (zEC12)
or SIMD vector support (z13).
There is no instruction emulation, since our ABI requires that all code
provide correct DWARF CFI at all PC locations in .eh_frame to support
unwinding (i.e. -fasynchronous-unwind-tables is on by default).
The implementation follows existing platforms in a mostly straightforward
manner. A couple of things that are different:
- We do not use PTRACE_PEEKUSER / PTRACE_POKEUSER to access single registers,
since some registers (access register) reside at offsets in the user area
that are multiples of 4, but the PTRACE_PEEKUSER interface only allows
accessing aligned 8-byte blocks in the user area. Instead, we use a s390
specific ptrace interface PTRACE_PEEKUSR_AREA / PTRACE_POKEUSR_AREA that
allows accessing a whole block of the user area in one go, so in effect
allowing to treat parts of the user area as register sets.
- SystemZ hardware does not provide any means to implement read watchpoints,
only write watchpoints. In fact, we can only support a *single* write
watchpoint (but this can span a range of arbitrary size). In LLDB this
means we support only a single watchpoint. I've set all test cases that
require read watchpoints (or multiple watchpoints) to expected failure
on the platform. [ Note that there were two test cases that install
a read/write watchpoint even though they nowhere rely on the "read"
property. I've changed those to simply use plain write watchpoints. ]
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18978
llvm-svn: 266308
Build-id support is being added to lld and by default it may produce a
64-bit build-id.
Prior to this change lldb would reject such a build-id. However, it then
falls back to a 4-byte crc32, which is a poorer quality identifier.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18096
llvm-svn: 263432
Most address represented in lldb as section plus offset and handling of
absolute addresses is problematic in several location because of lack
of necessary information (e.g. Target) or because of performance issues.
This CL change the way ObjectFileELF handle the absolute symbols with
creating a pseudo section for each symbol. With this change all existing
code designed to work with addresses in the form of section plus offset
will work with absolute symbols as well.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17450
llvm-svn: 261859
* Generate artificial symbol names from eh_fame during symbol parsing
so these symbols are already present when we calcualte the size of
the symbols where 0 is specified.
* Fix symbol size calculation for the last symbol in the file where
it have to last until the end of the parent section.
This is the re-commit of the original change after fixing some test
failures on OSX.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16996
llvm-svn: 261205
the xcode project file to catch switch statements that have a
case that falls through unintentionally.
Define LLVM_FALLTHROUGH to indicate instances where a case has code
and intends to fall through. This should be in llvm/Support/Compiler.h;
Peter Collingbourne originally checked in there (r237766), then
reverted (r237941) because he didn't have time to mark up all the
'case' statements that were intended to fall through. I put together
a patch to get this back in llvm http://reviews.llvm.org/D17063 but
it hasn't been approved in the past week. I added a new
lldb-private-defines.h to hold the definition for now.
Every place in lldb where there is a comment that the fall-through
is intentional, I added LLVM_FALLTHROUGH to silence the warning.
I haven't tried to identify whether the fallthrough is a bug or
not in the other places.
I haven't tried to add this to the cmake option build flags.
This warning will only work for clang.
This build cleanly (with some new warnings) on macosx with clang
under xcodebuild, but if this causes problems for people on other
configurations, I'll back it out.
llvm-svn: 260930
* Generate artificial symbol names from eh_fame during symbol parsing
so these symbols are already present when we calcualte the size of
the symbols where 0 is specified.
* Fix symbol size calculation for the last symbol in the file where
it have to last until the end of the parent section.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16996
llvm-svn: 260369
This patch adds logic to detect if underlying binary is using arm hard float abi and use that information while handling return values in ABISysV_arm.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16627
llvm-svn: 259885
The file contained very similar 4 implementation of the same data
structure with a lot of duplicated code and some minor API differences.
This CL refactor the class to eliminate the duplicated codes and to
unify the APIs.
RangeMap.h also contained a class called AddressDataArray what have very
little added functionality over an std::vector and used only by
ObjectFileMacO The CL moves the class to ObjectFileMachO.cpp as it isn't
belongs into RangeMap.h and shouldn't be used in new places anyway
because of the little added functionality.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16769
llvm-svn: 259538
This fixes the regression of several tests on Windows after rL258621.
The root problem is that ObjectFilePECOFF was not setting type information for the symbols, and the new CL rejects symbols without type information, breaking functionality like thread step-over.
The fix sets the type information for functions (and creates a TODO for other types).
Along the way, I fixed some typos and formatting that made the code I was debugging harder to understand.
In the long run, we should consider replacing most of ObjectFilePECOFF with the COFF parsing code from LLVM.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16563
llvm-svn: 258758
This fixes the `thread step-over` regression exposed by http://reviews.llvm.org/D16186 , which depends on the symbols having actual sizes. Nine tests on Windows had started failing as a result. They all work again with this fix.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16415
llvm-svn: 258429
set the triple's "vendor" field to Apple.
We don't want to assume a vendor of Apple for all Mach-O files -
this breaks x86_64 EFI debugging where they put non-Apple binaries
in a Mach-O format for ease of handling.
But on armv7, Apple's ABI always uses r7 as the frame pointer
register; if we don't set the Vendor field to Apple, we can pick
up a generic armv7 ABI where the fp is r11 (or r7 for thumb) which
breaks backtracing altogether.
Greg is reluctant for us to make any assumptions about the Vendor
here, but we'll see how this shakes out. It's such a big problem
on armv7 if we don't know this is using the Apple ABI that it's worth
trying this approach.
<rdar://problem/22137561>
llvm-svn: 258387
register set indicated by ARM_THREAD_STATE32 (value 9) instead of
the old ARM_THREAD_STATE (value 1); this patch changes lldb to
accept either register set flavor code.
<rdar://problem/24246257>
llvm-svn: 258289
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
The ELF symbol table always contain the size of the symbols so we
don't have to try to guess them based on the address of the next
symbol (it is needed for mach-o).
The change fixes an issue when a symbol is removed after a 0 size
symbol (e.g. because the second one is not public) what previously
caused the symbol lookup algorithm to end up with showing the 0 size
symbol even for the later addresses (what are not part of any symbol).
That symbol lookup error can confuse the user and also confuses the
current stack unwinder.
Re-commit this CL after fixing the issue with gcc-4.9.2 on i386 Linux.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16186
llvm-svn: 258113
The ELF symbol table always contain the size of the symbols so we
don't have to try to guess them based on the address of the next
symbol (it is needed for mach-o).
The change fixes an issue when a symbol is removed after a 0 size
symbol (e.g. because the second one is not public) what previously
caused the symbol lookup algorithm to end up with showing the 0 size
symbol even for the later addresses (what are not part of any symbol).
That symbol lookup error can confuse the user and also confuses the
current stack unwinder.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16186
llvm-svn: 258040
Summary:
This was used with the old ARM vs. Thumb detection code but is not
required anymore.
Reviewers: tberghammer, clayborg
Subscribers: fjricci, aemerson, lldb-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16099
llvm-svn: 257429
(There are changes in the copies of these four files in the FreeBSD base
system, and I've changed these ones to reduce gratuitous diffs in future
imports.)
llvm-svn: 256723
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
Summary:
Since this is within the lldb namespace, the compiler tries to
export a symbol for it. Unfortunately, since it is inlined, the
symbol is hidden and this results in a mess of warnings when
building on OS X with cmake.
Moving it to the lldb_private namespace eliminates that problem.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14417
llvm-svn: 252396
To do this I added a few new ways to determine the OS from PT_NOTE notes in the ELF file:
1 - Look for "LINUX" notes which indicate "linux" should be the OS
2 - Look through the "CORE" notes with NT_FILE as the type and sniff data from the paths listed in this section. On Ubuntu they contain "/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu" which has the triple and allows us to set "linux" as the OS in the architecture returned from ObjectFileELF::GetArchitecture().
Setting the OS correctly allows us to get the triple correct so we can extract registers without asserting and killing LLDB.
Also use the data from the NT_FILE to set the main executable if one isn't set in ProcessElfCore::DoLoadCore().
llvm-svn: 251537
* Remove an unneccessary re-computaion on arch spec from the ELF file
* Use a local cache to optimize name based section lookups in symtab
parsing
* Optimize C++ method basename validation with replacing a regex with
hand written code
These modifications reduce the time required to parse the symtab from
large applications by ~25% (tested with LLDB as inferior)
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14088
llvm-svn: 251402
* ArchSpec::MergeFrom() would erroneously promote an unspecified
unknown to a specified unknown when both the ArchSpec and the merged
in ArchSpec were both unspecified unknowns. This no longer happens,
which fixes issues with global module cache lookup in some
situations.
* Added ArchSpec::DumpTriple(Stream&) that now properly prints
unspecified unknowns as '*' and specified unknows as 'unknown'.
This makes it trivial to tell the difference between the two.
Converted printing code over ot using DumpTriple() rather than
building from scratch.
* Fixed up a couple places that were not guaranteeing that an
unspecified unknown was recorded as such.
llvm-svn: 250253
GP registers for o32 applications were always giving zero value because SetType() on the RegisterValue was causing the accessor functions to pickup the value from m_scalar of RegisterValue which is zero.
In this patch byte size and byte order of register value is set at the time of setting the value of the register.
llvm-svn: 249020
.ARM.exidx/.ARM.extab sections contain unwind information used on ARM
architecture from unwinding from an exception.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13245
llvm-svn: 248903
The Go runtime schedules user level threads (goroutines) across real threads.
This adds an OS plugin to create memory threads for goroutines.
It supports the 1.4 and 1.5 go runtime.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5871
llvm-svn: 247852
SUMMARY:
This patch provides support for MIPS specific DT_MIPS_RLD_MAP_REL tag in LLDB.
This tag allows debugging of MIPS position independent executables and provides access to shared library information.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: mohit.bhakkad, sagar, jaydeep, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12794
llvm-svn: 247666
Change the mapping symbol handling to handle the case when the mapping
symbols are prefixed with an arbitrary prefix. This isn't strictly standard
compliance, but if all symbols in an object file is prefixed with objcopy
then the prefix will be added to the mapping symbol also. We still want to
treat these symbols as mapping symbols to get the correct address class data.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12755
llvm-svn: 247400
* Create new dwo symbol file class
* Add handling for .dwo sections
* Change indexes in SymbolFileDWARF to store compile unit offset next to
DIE offset
* Propagate queries from dwarf compile unit to the dwo compile unit
where applicable
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12291
llvm-svn: 247132
Summary:
This doesn't exist in other LLVM projects any longer and doesn't
do anything.
Reviewers: chaoren, labath
Subscribers: emaste, tberghammer, lldb-commits, danalbert
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12586
llvm-svn: 246749
These are 2 new value currently in experimental status used when split
debug info is enabled.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12238
llvm-svn: 245931
Create a new "lldb_private::CompilerDeclContext" class that will replace all direct uses of "clang::DeclContext" when used in compiler agnostic code, yet still allow for conversion to clang::DeclContext subclasses by clang specific code. This completes the abstraction of type parsing by removing all "clang::" references from the SymbolFileDWARF. The new "lldb_private::CompilerDeclContext" class abstracts decl contexts found in compiler type systems so they can be used in internal API calls. The TypeSystem is required to support CompilerDeclContexts with new pure virtual functions that start with "DeclContext" in the member function names. Converted all code that used lldb_private::ClangNamespaceDecl over to use the new CompilerDeclContext class and removed the ClangNamespaceDecl.cpp and ClangNamespaceDecl.h files.
Removed direct use of clang APIs from SBType and now use the abstract type systems to correctly explore types.
Bulk renames for things that used to return a ClangASTType which is now CompilerType:
"Type::GetClangFullType()" to "Type::GetFullCompilerType()"
"Type::GetClangLayoutType()" to "Type::GetLayoutCompilerType()"
"Type::GetClangForwardType()" to "Type::GetForwardCompilerType()"
"Value::GetClangType()" to "Value::GetCompilerType()"
"Value::SetClangType (const CompilerType &)" to "Value::SetCompilerType (const CompilerType &)"
"ValueObject::GetClangType ()" to "ValueObject::GetCompilerType()"
many more renames that are similar.
llvm-svn: 245905
The POSIX linker generally reports the load bias for the loaded
libraries but in some case it is useful to handle a library based on
absolute load address. Example usecases:
* Windows linker uses absolute addresses
* Library list came from different source (e.g. /proc/<pid>/maps)
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12233
llvm-svn: 245834
This was breaking disassembly for arm machines that we force to be
thumb mode all the time because we were only checking for llvm::Triple::arm.
i.e.
armv6m (ARM Cortex-M0)
armv7m (ARM Cortex-M3)
armv7em (ARM Cortex-M4)
<rdar://problem/22334522>
llvm-svn: 245645
for eh_frame and stabs register numberings. This is not
complete but it's a step in the right direction. It's almost
entirely mechanical.
lldb informally uses "gcc register numbering" to mean eh_frame.
Why? Probably because there's a notorious bug with gcc on i386
darwin where the register numbers in eh_frame were incorrect.
In all other cases, eh_frame register numbering is identical to
dwarf.
lldb informally uses "gdb register numbering" to mean stabs.
There are no official definitions of stabs register numbers
for different architectures, so the implementations of gdb
and gcc are the de facto reference source.
There were some incorrect uses of these register number types
in lldb already. I fixed the ones that I saw as I made
this change.
This commit changes all references to "gcc" and "gdb" register
numbers in lldb to "eh_frame" and "stabs" to make it clear
what is actually being represented.
lldb cannot parse the stabs debug format, and given that no
one is using stabs any more, it is unlikely that it ever will.
A more comprehensive cleanup would remove the stabs register
numbers altogether - it's unnecessary cruft / complication to
all of our register structures.
In ProcessGDBRemote, when we get register definitions from
the gdb-remote stub, we expect to see "gcc:" (qRegisterInfo)
or "gcc_regnum" (qXfer:features:read: packet to get xml payload).
This patch changes ProcessGDBRemote to also accept "ehframe:"
and "ehframe_regnum" from these remotes.
I did not change GDBRemoteCommunicationServerLLGS or debugserver
to send these new packets. I don't know what kind of interoperability
constraints we might be working under. At some point in the future
we should transition to using the more descriptive names.
Throughout lldb we're still using enum names like "gcc_r0" and "gdb_r0",
for eh_frame and stabs register numberings. These should be cleaned
up eventually too.
The sources link cleanly on macosx native with xcode build. I
don't think we'll see problems on other platforms but please let
me know if I broke anyone.
llvm-svn: 245141
SUMMARY:
The patch detects MIPS application specific extensions (ASE) like micromips by reading
ELF header.e_flags and SHT_MIPS_ABIFLAGS section. MIPS triple does not contain ASE
information like micromips, mips16, DSP, MSA etc. These can be read from header.e_flags
or SHT_MIPS_ABIFLAGS section.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: mohit.bhakkad, sagar, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11133
llvm-svn: 242381
On Android the oatdata and the oatexec symbols in
system@framework@boot.oat covers the full .text section what causes
issues with displaying unusable symbol name to the user and very slow
unwinding speed because the instruction emulation based unwind plans
try to emulate all instructions in these symbols. Don't add these
symbols to the symbol list as they have no use for the debugger and
they are causing a lot of trouble.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11065
llvm-svn: 242017
Summary: Use string::find(char) for single character strings.
Reviewers: abidh, ki.stfu, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10943
llvm-svn: 241390
* Add in-memory object file handling to the core dynamic loader
* Fix in memory object file handling in ObjectFileELF (previously
only part of the file was loaded before parsing)
* Fix load address setting in ObjectFileELF for 32-bit targets
when the load bias is negative
* Change hack in DYLDRendezvous.cpp to be more specific and not to
interfere with object files with fixed load address
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10800
llvm-svn: 241057
Whatever problem I saw that caused me to disable this
initially is not a problem today.
<rdar://problem/21173317>
<rdar://problem/20266253>
llvm-svn: 240737
A few extras were fixed
- Symbol::GetAddress() now returns an Address object, not a reference. There were places where people were accessing the address of a symbol when the symbol's value wasn't an address symbol. On MacOSX, undefined symbols have a value zero and some places where using the symbol's address and getting an absolute address of zero (since an Address object with no section and an m_offset whose value isn't LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS is considered an absolute address). So fixing this required some changes to make sure people were getting what they expected.
- Since some places want to access the address as a reference, I added a few new functions to symbol:
Address &Symbol::GetAddressRef();
const Address &Symbol::GetAddressRef() const;
Linux test suite passes just fine now.
<rdar://problem/21494354>
llvm-svn: 240702
* Add and fix the emulation of several instruction.
* Disable frame pointer usage on Android.
* Specify return address register for the unwind plan instead of explict
tracking the value of RA.
* Replace prologue detection heuristics (unreliable in several cases)
with a logic to follow the branch instructions and restore the CFI
value based on them. The target address for a branch should have the
same CFI as the source address (if they are in the same function).
* Handle symbols in ELF files where the symbol size is not specified
with calcualting their size based on the next symbol (already done
in MachO files).
* Fix architecture in FuncUnwinders with filling up the inforamtion
missing from the object file with the architecture of the target.
* Add code to read register wehn the value is set to "IsSame" as it
meanse the value of a register in the parent frame is the same as the
value in the current frame.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10447
llvm-svn: 240533
Setting the OSType in the ArchSpec triple is needed to correctly setup
up the register context plugin. ArchSpec::SetArchitecture, for Mach-O
only, sets the OSType. For ELF it was left to the ObjectFileELF to fill
in the missing OSType.
This change moves the ObjectFileELF logic into ArchSpec.
A new optional 'os' parameter has been added to SetArchitecture.
For ELF, this value is the from the ELF header.e_ident[EI_OSABI].
The default value is 0 or ELFOSABI_NONE.
The real work of determining the OSType was done by the ObjectFileELF
helper function GetOsFromOSABI. This logic has been moved
SetArchitecture.
GetOsFromOSABI has been commented as being deprectated. It is left in
to support asserts.
For ELF the vendor value returned from SetArchitecture should be
UnknownVendor. An unneeded resetting in ObjectFileELF has been removed
and replaced with an assert.
This fixes a problem reading a core file on FreeBSD/ARM because the spec
triple was arm-unknown-unknown.
Patch by Tom Rix.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9292
llvm-svn: 239148
The ELF data contains two different errors in some ELF files on android.
* The link field of the symbol table don't point to the plt section or
to the dynsym section even when it is present in the ELF files.
* The size of the plt entries aren't specified in the section header of
the plt section.
This CL adds some workarounds for these two issue with finding the
sections by name if the link field is empty and by using a heuristic to
calculate the size and offset of the plt entries.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9560
llvm-svn: 236818
Patch by Jaydeep Patil
Added MIPS32 and MIPS64 core revisions. This would be followed by register context and emulate-instruction for MIPS32.
DYLDRendezvous.cpp:
On Linux link map struct does not contain extra load offset field.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: bhushan, mohit.bhakkad, sagar, lldb-commits.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9190
llvm-svn: 235574
The debug info section contains some $d mapping symbol what is
overlapping with code sections in other sections of the object file
causing problem in the address class detection. This CL ignores these
symboles from the address class map as the debug info sections don't use
this map.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9050
llvm-svn: 235171
ELF symbol tables on aarch64 may contains some mapping symbols. They
provide information about the underlying data but interfere with symbol
look-up of lldb. They are already ignored on arm32. With this CL they
will be ignored on aarch64 also.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8776
llvm-svn: 234307
So that we don't have to update every single #include in the entire
codebase to #include this new header (which used to get included by
lldb-private-log.h, we automatically #include "Logging.h" from
within "Log.h".
llvm-svn: 232653
In android a .note.android.ident section header is added to the elf
files to provide information for the debuggers that it is an android
specific module. This CL add logic to parse it out from the elf files
and set the module specification based on it.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8377
llvm-svn: 232625
Summary:
Symbol table generation code was failing to take into account the debug symbols because
the object file was looking only into its own section list when doing the generation, even though
the debug symbols from another object file were correctly detected and loaded by the
SymbolVendor. This changes the code to use the unified section list, which fixes this problem.
Test Plan:
I do not intend do submit this yet since it causes (or more like, exposes) the issue
in D7884, but I wanted to put this out here, so that anyone who wants to take a look at it can do
so. (And I also wanted to know if this is the right approach to the problem :).
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7913
llvm-svn: 231229
Summary:
Symbols in ELF files can be versioned, but LLDB currently does not understand these. This problem
becomes apparent once one loads glibc with debug info. Here (in the .symtab section) the versions
are embedded in the name (name@VERSION), which causes issues when evaluating expressions
referencing memcpy for example (current glibc contains memcpy@@GLIBC_2.14 and
memcpy@GLIBC_2.2.5).
This problem was not evident without debug symbols as the .dynsym section
stores the bare names and the actual versions are present in a separate section (.gnu.version_d),
which LLDB ignores. This resulted in two definitions of memcpy in the symbol table.
This patch adds support for storing annotated names to the Symbol class. If
Symbol.m_contains_linker_annotations is true then this symbol is annotated. Unannotated name can
be obtained by calling StripLinkerAnnotations on the corresponding ObjectFile. ObjectFileELF
implements this to strip @VERSION suffixes when requested. Symtab uses this function to add the
bare name as well as the annotated name to the name lookup table.
To preserve the size of the Symbol class, I had to steal one bit from the m_type field.
Test Plan:
This fixes TestExprHelpExamples.py when run with a glibc with debug symbols. Writing
an environment agnostic test case would require building a custom shared library with symbol
versions and testing symbol resolution against that, which is somewhat challenging.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8036
llvm-svn: 231228
This is implemented by making a new FileSystem function:
bool
FileSystem::IsLocal(const FileSpec &spec)
Then using this in a new function:
DataBufferSP
FileSpec::MemoryMapFileContentsIfLocal(off_t file_offset, size_t file_size) const;
This function only mmaps data if the file is a local file since that means we can reliably page in data. We were experiencing crashes where people would use debug info files on network mounted file systems and that mount would go away and cause the next access to a page that wasn't paged in to crash LLDB.
We now avoid this by just copying the data into a heap buffer and keeping a permanent copy to avoid the crash. Updated all previous users of FileSpec::MemoryMapFileContentsIfLocal() in ObjectFile subclasses over to use the new FileSpec::MemoryMapFileContentsIfLocal() function.
<rdar://problem/19470249>
llvm-svn: 230283
Background: dyld binaries often have extra symbols in their symbol table like "malloc" and "free" for the early bringup of dyld and we often don't want to set breakpoints in dynamic linker binaries. We also don't want to call the "malloc" or "free" function in dyld when a user writes an expression like "(void *)malloc(123)" so we need to avoid doing name lookups in dyld. We mark Modules as being dynamic link editors and this helps do correct lookups for breakpoints by name and function lookups.
<rdar://problem/19716267>
llvm-svn: 228261
When you create a target, it tries to look for the platform's list
of supported architectures for a match. The match it finds can
contain specific triples, like i386-pc-windows-msvc. Later, we
overwrite this value with the most generic triple that can apply
to any platform with COFF support, causing some of the fields of
the triple to get overwritten.
This patch changes the behavior to only merge in values from the COFF
triple if the fields of the matching triple were unknown/unspecified
to begin with.
This fixes load address resolution on Windows, since it enables the
DynamicLoaderWindows to be used instead of DynamicLoaderStatic.
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7120
llvm-svn: 226849
section for x86_64 and i386 targets on Darwin systems. Currently only the
compact unwind encoding for normal frame-using functions is supported but it
will be easy handle frameless functions when I have a bit more free time to
test it. The LSDA and personality routines for functions are also retrieved
correctly for functions from the compact unwind section.
This new code is very fresh -- it passes the lldb testsuite and I've done
by-hand inspection of many functions and am getting correct behavior for all
of them. There may need to be some bug fixing over the next couple weeks as
I exercise and test it further. But I think it's fine right now so I'm
committing it.
<rdar://problem/13220837>
llvm-svn: 223625
ObjectFileMachO. It's close but we seem to be missing some
of the memory region segments - not exactly sure how that's
happening. The register context writing into the LC_THREAD
load commands is working correctly though.
Slightly reordered the arm64 definitions in ArchSpec.cpp so
when we look for an arm64 core file definiton we're getting
a cpu subtype of CPU_ANY which we can't put in the mach
header of a core file. Make the first definition we find by
linear search have the currently correct '1' cpu subtype.
llvm-svn: 221743
Summary:
This adds preliminary support for PowerPC/PowerPC64, for FreeBSD. There are
some issues still:
* Breakpoints don't work well on powerpc64.
* Shared libraries don't yet get loaded for a 32-bit process on powerpc64 host.
* Backtraces don't work. This is due to PowerPC ABI using a backchain pointer
in memory, instead of a dedicated frame pointer register for the backchain.
* Breakpoints on functions without debug info may not work correctly for 32-bit
powerpc.
Reviewers: emaste, tfiala, jingham, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5988
llvm-svn: 220944
Recognise the SHT_NOBITS property in kalimba ELF, and determine this to be
of type zerofilled. Subsequently recognise this type to represent bytes
on the target's DATA address space, and therefore be sized accordingly.
llvm-svn: 219782
works, as do breakpoints, run and pause, display zeroth frame.
See
http://reviews.llvm.org/D5503
for a fuller description of the changes in this commit.
llvm-svn: 218596
This allows us to fixup the address of the symbol as soon as we parse it
so that lldb is not confused thinking there are two different symbols in
the binary (one with the thumb bit, one without). Also, differentiating
between THUMB and ARM symbols allows the debugger to place the right
type of breakpoint.
Change by Stephane Sezer.
llvm-svn: 217841
ELF objects contain marker symbols to differentiate between ARM and
THUMB functions. Instead of storing them internally and having garbage
show up when symbols are searched for by the user, we can just skip them
and not store them at all, as we never actually need them.
Change by Stephane Sezer.
Tested:
Ubuntu 14.04 x86_64
MacOSX 10.9.4 x86_64
llvm-svn: 217782
Add entries to core_definitions and elf_arch_entries for
those variants. Select the subtype for the variant by parsing
the e_flags field of the elf header.
llvm-svn: 216541
with binaries in the dyld shared cache (esp on iOS) where the file
address for the executable binary (maybe from memory, maybe from
an expanded copy of the dyld shared cache) is different from the
file address in the dSYM. In that case, ObjectFileMachO replaces
the file addresses from the original binary with the dSYM file
addresses (usually 0-based) -- lldb doesn't have a notion of two
file addresses for a given module so they need to agree.
There was a cache of file addresses over in the Symtab so I added
a method to the Module and the objects within to clear any file address
caches if they exist, and added an implementation in the Symtab
module to do that.
<rdar://problem/16929569>
llvm-svn: 216258
This patch creates a HostInfo class, a static class used to answer
basic queries about the host platform. As part of this change,
some functionality is moved from Host to HostInfo, and relevant
fixups are performed in the rest of the codebase.
This is part of a larger effort to isolate more code in the Host
layer into platform-specific groups, to make it easier to make
platform specific changes for a particular Host without breaking
other hosts.
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4963
llvm-svn: 215992
i386, i486, i486sx, and i686 are all indistinguishable as far as
PE/COFF files are concerned. This patch adds support for all of
these architectures to PlatformWindows.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4658
llvm-svn: 214092
File::SeekFromStart returns an off_t representing the position of the
file after seeking. This return value is always going to be one of two
values: the input or -1 in the case of failure.
ObjectFileMachO compares an expression of type off_t from the return of
File::SeekFromStart(segment.fileoff) and compares it for equality with
segment.fileoff.
The type of segment_command_64::fileoff is unsigned while off_t is
signed, comparing them emits a diagnostic under GCC.
Instead, we can just compare SeekFromSTart with -1 to see if we
successfully seeked.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4634
llvm-svn: 213822
GCC emits a warning:
warning: enumeral and non-enumeral type in conditional expression [enabled by default]
which does not seem to have a flag to control it. Simply add an explicit cast
for the boolean value.
llvm-svn: 213715
This fixes all of the hidden ivar test cases and any case where we try to find the full definition of an objective C class.
This also means hidden ivars show up again.
<rdar://problem/15458957>
llvm.org/pr20270
llvm.org/pr20269
llvm.org/pr20272
llvm-svn: 213328
This change comprises of additions and some minor changes in order that
"kalimba" is listed as a supported platform and that debugging any
kalimbas results in PlatformKalimba being associated with the target.
The changes are as follows:
* The PlatformKalimba implementation itself
* A tweak to ArchSpec
* .note parsing for Kalimba in ObjectFileELF.cpp
* Plugin registration
* Makefile additions
Change by Matthew Gardiner
Minor tweak for cmake and Xcode by Todd Fiala
Tested:
Ubuntu 14.04 x86_64, clang 3.5-built lldb, all tests pass.
MacOSX 10.9.4, Xcode 6.0 Beta 1-built lldb, all tests pass.
llvm-svn: 213158
If we have any section headers in the collection, we already parsed them.
Therefore, don't reparse the section headers when the section_headers collection
is not empty.
See this thread for more details:
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/lldb-commits/Week-of-Mon-20140707/011721.html
Change by Matthew Gardiner
llvm-svn: 212822
off_t is a type which is used for file offsets. Even more
specifically, it is only used by a limited number of C APIs that
deal with files. Any usage of off_t where the variable is not
intended to be used with one of these APIs is a bug, by definition.
This patch corrects some easy mis-uses of off_t, generally by
converting them to lldb::offset_t, but sometimes by using other
types such as size_t, when appropriate.
The use of off_t to represent these offsets has worked fine in
practice on linux-y platforms, since we used _FILE_OFFSET_64 to
guarantee that off_t was a uint64. On Windows, however,
_FILE_OFFSET_64 is unrecognized, and off_t will always be 32-bit.
So the usage of off_t on Windows actually leads to legitimate bugs.
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4358
llvm-svn: 212192
Previously ObjectFileELF was simplifying and assuming the object file it was
looking at was the same as the host architecture/triple. This would break
attempts to run, say, lldb on MacOSX against lldb-gdbserver on Linux since
the MacOSX lldb would say that the linux elf file was really an Apple MacOSX
architecture. Chaos would ensue.
This change allows the elf file to parse ELF notes for Linux, FreeBSD and
NetBSD, and determine the OS appropriately from them. It also initializes
the OS type from the ELF header OSABI if it is set (which it is for FreeBSD
but not for Linux).
Added a test with freebsd and linux images that verify that
'(lldb) image list -t -A' prints out the expected architecture for each.
llvm-svn: 211907
Not all supported compilers have GCC intrinsics, so this patch
uses the correct portable alternative.
Additionally, this patch fixes an off-by-one error. __builtin_ffs
returns the 1-based index of the least-significant 1-bit, but the
function expects the base 2 logarithm of the number, which is
equivalent to the 0-based index of the least-significant 1-bit.
Reviewed by: Keno Fischer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4284
llvm-svn: 211669
The patch is as is with the functionality left disabled for apple vendors because of performance regressions. If this is enabled it ends up searching for symbols in all shared libraries that are loadeded.
llvm-svn: 211638
Address the 'variable set but not used' warning from GCC. In some cases a few
additional calls were removed where there should be no visible side effects of
the calls (i.e. should not effect any cached state).
llvm-svn: 210879
(lldb) file /bin/ls
(lldb) b malloc
(lldb) run
(lldb) process save-core /tmp/ls.core
Each ObjectFile plug-in now has the option to save core files by registering a new static callback.
llvm-svn: 210864
Changes include:
- ObjectFileMachO can now determine if a binary is "*-apple-ios" or "*-apple-macosx" by checking the min OS and SDK load commands
- ArchSpec now says "<arch>-apple-macosx" is equivalent to "<arch>-apple-ios" since the simulator mixes and matches binaries (some from the system and most from the iOS SDK).
- Getting process inforamtion on MacOSX now correctly classifies iOS simulator processes so they have "*-apple-ios" architectures in the ProcessInstanceInfo
- PlatformiOSSimulator can now list iOS simulator processes correctly instead of showing nothing by using:
(lldb) platform select ios-simulator
(lldb) platform process list
- debugserver can now properly return "*-apple-ios" for the triple in the process info packets for iOS simulator executables
- GDBRemoteCommunicationClient now correctly passes along the triples it gets for process info by setting the OS in the llvm::Triple correctly
<rdar://problem/17060217>
llvm-svn: 209852
This is a purely mechanical change explicitly casting any parameters for printf
style conversion. This cleans up the warnings emitted by gcc 4.8 on Linux.
llvm-svn: 205607
This is a mechanical change addressing the various sign comparison warnings that
are identified by both clang and gcc. This helps cleanup some of the warning
spew that occurs during builds.
llvm-svn: 205390
These changes were written by Greg Clayton, Jim Ingham, Jason Molenda.
It builds cleanly against TOT llvm with xcodebuild. I updated the
cmake files by visual inspection but did not try a build. I haven't
built these sources on any non-Mac platforms - I don't think this
patch adds any code that requires darwin, but please let me know if
I missed something.
In debugserver, MachProcess.cpp and MachTask.cpp were renamed to
MachProcess.mm and MachTask.mm as they picked up some new Objective-C
code needed to launch processes when running on iOS.
llvm-svn: 205113
Add a GetFoundationVersion() to AppleObjCRuntime
This API is used to return and cache the major version of Foundation.framework, which is potentially a useful piece of data to key off of to enable or disable certain ObjC related behaviors (especially in data formatters)
llvm-svn: 204756
This change makes significant improvements in the performance of
calculating a UUID within ObjectFileELF, and handles both running
processes and core files correctly. This does lazy evaluation of
UUID generation and caches the result when calculated.
Change by Piotr Rak.
llvm-svn: 204749
(lldb) b puts
(lldb) expr -g -i0 -- (int)puts("hello")
First we will stop at the entry point of the expression before it runs, then we can step over a few times and hit the breakpoint in "puts", then we can continue and finishing stepping and fininsh the expression.
Main features:
- New ObjectFileJIT class that can be easily created for JIT functions
- debug info can now be enabled when parsing expressions
- source for any function that is run throught the JIT is now saved in LLDB process specific temp directory and cleaned up on exit
- "expr -g --" allows you to single step through your expression function with source code
<rdar://problem/16382881>
llvm-svn: 204682