use the python API that is exposed through SWIG to do some cool stuff.
Also fixed synchronous debugging so that all process control APIs exposed
through the python API will now wait for the process to stop if you set
the async mode to false (see disasm.py).
llvm-svn: 115738
bool ValueObject::GetIsConstant() const;
void ValueObject::SetIsConstant();
This will stop anything from being re-evaluated within the value object so
that constant result value objects can maintain their frozen values without
anything being updated or changed within the value object.
Made it so the ValueObjectConstResult can be constructed with an
lldb_private::Error object to allow for expression results to have errors.
Since ValueObject objects contain error objects, I changed the expression
evaluation in ClangUserExpression from
static Error
ClangUserExpression::Evaluate (ExecutionContext &exe_ctx,
const char *expr_cstr,
lldb::ValueObjectSP &result_valobj_sp);
to:
static lldb::ValueObjectSP
Evaluate (ExecutionContext &exe_ctx, const char *expr_cstr);
Even though expression parsing is borked right now (pending fixes coming from
Sean Callanan), I filled in the implementation for:
SBValue SBFrame::EvaluateExpression (const char *expr);
Modified all expression code to deal with the above changes.
llvm-svn: 115589
results. The clang opaque type for the expression result will be added to the
Target's ASTContext, and the bytes will be stored in a DataBuffer inside
the new object. The class is named: ValueObjectConstResult
Now after an expression is evaluated, we can get a ValueObjectSP back that
contains a ValueObjectConstResult object.
Relocated the value object dumping code into a static function within
the ValueObject class instead of being in the CommandObjectFrame.cpp file
which is what contained the code to dump variables ("frame variables").
llvm-svn: 115578
the stdc++ library module. Right now, it doesn't do any disassembly at all. It
merely locates the stdc++ library. Also tests the SBProcess object description
and verifies it is in a 'Stopped' state.
llvm-svn: 115536
instance:
settings set frame-format <string>
settings set thread-format <string>
This allows users to control the information that is seen when dumping
threads and frames. The default values are set such that they do what they
used to do prior to changing over the the user defined formats.
This allows users with terminals that can display color to make different
items different colors using the escape control codes. A few alias examples
that will colorize your thread and frame prompts are:
settings set frame-format 'frame #${frame.index}: \033[0;33m${frame.pc}\033[0m{ \033[1;4;36m${module.file.basename}\033[0;36m ${function.name}{${function.pc-offset}}\033[0m}{ \033[0;35mat \033[1;35m${line.file.basename}:${line.number}}\033[0m\n'
settings set thread-format 'thread #${thread.index}: \033[1;33mtid\033[0;33m = ${thread.id}\033[0m{, \033[0;33m${frame.pc}\033[0m}{ \033[1;4;36m${module.file.basename}\033[0;36m ${function.name}{${function.pc-offset}}\033[0m}{, \033[1;35mstop reason\033[0;35m = ${thread.stop-reason}\033[0m}{, \033[1;36mname = \033[0;36m${thread.name}\033[0m}{, \033[1;32mqueue = \033[0;32m${thread.queue}}\033[0m\n'
A quick web search for "colorize terminal output" should allow you to see what
you can do to make your output look like you want it.
The "settings set" commands above can of course be added to your ~/.lldbinit
file for permanent use.
Changed the pure virtual
void ExecutionContextScope::Calculate (ExecutionContext&);
To:
void ExecutionContextScope::CalculateExecutionContext (ExecutionContext&);
I did this because this is a class that anything in the execution context
heirarchy inherits from and "target->Calculate (exe_ctx)" didn't always tell
you what it was really trying to do unless you look at the parameter.
llvm-svn: 115485
operator naming stuff. We now get the constructor and destructor names right
after passing in the type, and we get the correct conversion operator name
after passing in the return type when getting the DeclarationNameInfo.
llvm-svn: 115398
ARG: (struct objc_selector *) _cmd
to
ARG: (SEL) _cmd
The change most likely resulted from an update from the llvm tot with a newer clang.
llvm-svn: 115372
To not skip long running tests, pass '-l' to the test driver (dotest.py).
An example:
@unittest2.skipIf(TestBase.skipLongRunningTest(), "Skip this long running test")
def test_foundation_disasm(self):
...
o Added a long running disassemble test to the foundation directory, which iterates
the code symbols from Foundation.framework and kicks off a disassemble command for
for the named function symbol. Found a crasher: rdar://problem/8504895.
o Plus added/updated some comments for the TestBase class.
llvm-svn: 115368
arguments are specified in a standardized way, will have a standardized name, and
have functioning help.
The next step is to start writing useful help for all the argument types.
llvm-svn: 115335
command options; makes it easier to ensure that the same type of
argument will have the same name everywhere, hooks up help for command
arguments, so that users can ask for help when they are confused about
what an argument should be; puts in the beginnings of the ability to
do tab-completion for certain types of arguments, allows automatic
syntax help generation for commands with arguments, and adds command
arguments into command options help correctly.
Currently only the breakpoint-id and breakpoint-id-range arguments, in
the breakpoint commands, have been hooked up to use the new mechanism.
The next steps will be to fix the command options arguments to use
this mechanism, and to fix the rest of the regular command arguments
to use this mechanism. Most of the help text is currently missing or
dummy text; this will need to be filled in, and the existing argument
help text will need to be cleaned up a bit (it was thrown in quickly,
mostly for testing purposes).
Help command now works for all argument types, although the help may not
be very helpful yet.
Those commands that take "raw" command strings now indicate it in their
help text.
llvm-svn: 115318
sets some breakpoints and invokes 'disassemble' when the breakpoint hits, which
just disassembles the bytes in the current function, i.e., frame #0's function.
llvm-svn: 115249
# rdar://problem/8493023
# test/types failures for Test*TypesExpr.py: element offset computed wrong and sign error?
Two failures remain for test_short* test cases.
llvm-svn: 115229
Added the start of Host specific launch services, though it currently isn't
hookup up to anything. We want to be able to launch a process and use the
native launch services to launch an app like it would be launched by the
user double clicking on the app. We also eventually want to be able to run
a command line app in a newly spawned terminal to avoid terminal sharing.
Fixed an issue with the new DWARF forward type declaration stuff. A crasher
was found that was happening when trying to properly expand the forward
declarations.
llvm-svn: 115213
to using Clang to get type sizes. This fixes a bug
where the type size for a double[2] was being wrongly
reported as 8 instead of 16 bytes, causing problems
for IRForTarget.
Also improved logging so that the next bug in this
area will be easier to find.
llvm-svn: 115208
it inside Makefile.rules to return clang++ on clang and llvm-g++ on llvm-gcc.
Removed CPLUSPLUSFLAGS which is simply wrong and CPPFLAGS which is unnecessary.
llvm-svn: 115125
crossing major breakpoint boundaries (must be within a single breakpoint if specifying locations).
Add .* as a means of specifying all the breakpoint locations under a major breakpoint, e.g. "3.*"
means "all the breakpoint locations of breakpoint 3".
Fix error message to make more sense, if user attempts to specify a breakpoint command when there
isn't a target yet.
llvm-svn: 115077
The failures are similar in nature to the radar already filed:
# rdar://problem/8492646
# test/foundation fails after updating to tot r115023
# self->str displays nothing as output
llvm-svn: 115052
test_data_type_and_expr_with_dwarf().
rdar://problem/8492646
test/foundation fails after updating to tot r115023: self->str displays nothing as output
llvm-svn: 115050
Also chnaged the expected string for 'frame variable this' from '(class C *const) this ='
to 'C *const) this =' for the time being, while investigating the different output for
tot r115023.
runCmd: frame variable this
output: (struct C *const) this = 0x0000000100000c2e
llvm-svn: 115042
This gets us the new clang::CXXRecordDecl improvments in clang so that when we
add fields, methods and other things to the clang::CXXRecordDecl, the correct
bits are automatically set by clang::CXXRecordDecl itself instead of having
SEMA and our lldb_private::ClangASTContext functions that create types for
DWARF do it all manually. This allows the clang::ASTContext deep copying of
types to work correctly and it means that the expression parser can now
evaluate expressions in the context of a class method correctly. Previously
when a class was copied from the DWARF generated ASTContext over into the
expression ASTContext, we were losing CXXRecordDecl bits in the conversion
which caused all classes to think they were at offset zero because the the
bools for empty, POD, and others would end up being incorrect.
llvm-svn: 115023
adding methods to C++ and objective C classes. In order to make methods, we
need the function prototype which means we need the arguments. Parsing these
could cause a circular reference that caused an assertion.
Added a new typedef for the clang opaque types which are just void pointers:
lldb::clang_type_t. This appears in lldb-types.h.
This was fixed by enabling struct, union, class, and enum types to only get
a forward declaration when we make the clang opaque qual type for these
types. When they need to actually be resolved, lldb_private::Type will call
a new function in the SymbolFile protocol to resolve a clang type when it is
not fully defined (clang::TagDecl::getDefinition() returns NULL). This allows
us to be a lot more lazy when parsing clang types and keeps down the amount
of data that gets parsed into the ASTContext for each module.
Getting the clang type from a "lldb_private::Type" object now takes a boolean
that indicates if a forward declaration is ok:
clang_type_t lldb_private::Type::GetClangType (bool forward_decl_is_ok);
So function prototypes that define parameters that are "const T&" can now just
parse the forward declaration for type 'T' and we avoid circular references in
the type system.
llvm-svn: 115012
- the guard variable for the static result
variable was being mistaken for the actual
result value, causing IRForTarget to fail
- LLVM builtins like memcpy were not being
properly resolved; now they are resolved
to the corresponding function in the target
llvm-svn: 114990
command on the various basic types, similar to TestIntegerTypes.py and
TestFloatTypes.py, which exercise 'frame variable' on the various basic types.
Right now, they don't employ the self.expect() facility to compare against the
golden output. They just invoke the self.runCmd() method to run the 'expr'
command. Decorated the two classes with @unittest2.skip decorators for the time
being.
llvm-svn: 114987
Error in object runtime language detection code (spurious '; ')
Also replace false by NULL in a place where the compiler expects a pointer instead of a bool.
llvm-svn: 114957
method. Renamed it to be AbstractBase.py, which contains the GenericTester class that
both IntegerTypesTestCase and FloatTypesTestCase inherit from.
llvm-svn: 114926
type tester method into its own abstarct base class 'AbstractBase'. And
added TestIntegerTypes.py and TestFloatTypes.py.
Added an option "-p reg-exp-pattern" to the test driver to specify a regular
expression pattern to match against eligible filenames as our test cases.
An example:
/Volumes/data/lldb/svn/trunk/test $ ./dotest.py -v -p "TestFloat.*" types
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Collected 4 tests
test_double_type_with_dsym (TestFloatTypes.FloatTypesTestCase)
Test that double-type variables are displayed correctly. ... ok
test_double_type_with_dwarf (TestFloatTypes.FloatTypesTestCase)
Test that double-type variables are displayed correctly. ... ok
test_float_type_with_dwarf (TestFloatTypes.FloatTypesTestCase)
Test that float-type variables are displayed correctly. ... ok
test_float_types_with_dsym (TestFloatTypes.FloatTypesTestCase)
Test that float-type variables are displayed correctly. ... ok
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 4 tests in 5.592s
OK
llvm-svn: 114923
Added a special "clean" target to the types/Makefile to clean up all the *.o/.d
files.
The generic_type_tester() method is modified to take a set of atoms, instead of
type string as a required parameter, for example:
o unsigned int => set(['unsigned', 'int'])
o unsigned long long => set(['unsigned', 'long long'])
o long long => set(['long long'])
llvm-svn: 114871
an auto-generated Python function, and pass the stoppoint context frame and
breakpoint location as parameters to the function (named 'frame' and 'bp_loc'),
to be used inside the breakpoint command Python code, if desired.
llvm-svn: 114849
Change default 'set' behavior so that all instance settings for the specified variable will be
updated, unless the "-n" ("--no_override") command options is specified.
llvm-svn: 114808
Added a virtual destructor to ClangUtilityFunction with a body to it cleans
itself up.
Moved our SharingPtr into the lldb_private namespace to keep it easy to make
an exports file that exports only what is needed ("lldb::*").
llvm-svn: 114771
Extended generic_type_tester() method to take an additional keyword argument
quoteDisplay (default to False) to facilitate comparison with frame variable
display output of character types.
llvm-svn: 114769
interface in ClangASTContext. Also added two bool returning functions that
indicated if an opaque clang qual type is a CXX class type, and if it is an
ObjC class type.
Objective C classes now will get their methods added lazily as they are
encountered. The reason for this is currently, unlike C++, the
DW_TAG_structure_type and owns the ivars, doesn't not also contain the
member functions. This means when we parse the objective C class interface
we either need to find all functions whose names start with "+[CLASS_NAME"
or "-[CLASS_NAME" and add them all to the class, or when we parse each objective
C function, we slowly add it to the class interface definition. Since objective
C's class doesn't change internal bits according to whether it has certain types
of member functions (like C++ does if it has virtual functions, or if it has
user ctors/dtors), I currently chose to lazily populate the class when each
functions is parsed. Another issue we run into with ObjC method declarations
is the "self" and "_cmd" implicit args are not marked as artificial in the
DWARF (DW_AT_artifical), so we currently have to look for the parameters by
name if we are trying to omit artificial function args if the language of the
compile unit is ObjC or ObjC++.
llvm-svn: 114722
testing various combinations of displaying variales of basic types.
The generic_type_tester() works by first capturing the golden output produced
by the printf stmts of ./a.out, creating a list of (var, value) pairs, and then
running the a.out to a stop point, and comparing the 'frame variable var' output
against the list of (var, value) pairs.
Modified int_type() and added long_type() to use generic_type_tester().
Also modified TestBase.expect() such that substring matching also return ok if
the substring starts at the 0-th position.
llvm-svn: 114708
- Sema is now exported (and there was much rejoicing.)
- Storage classes are now centrally defined.
Also fixed some bugs that the new LLVM picked up.
llvm-svn: 114622
into python-extensions.swig, which gets included into lldb.swig, and
adds them back into the classes when swig generates it's C++ file. This
keeps the Python stuff out of the general API classes.
Also fixed a small bug in the copy constructor for SBSymbolContext.
llvm-svn: 114602
actually test-and-compare anything yet. The lldbtest.TestBase has an added
method setTearDownCleanup(dictionary=None) to facilitate running the cleanup
right after each data type test is run. The test case can pass a dictionary
object when registering the test case cleanup.
There is currently only int_type test in the repository.
llvm-svn: 114600
whether a given register number is treated as volatile
or not for a given architecture/platform.
approx 450 lines of boilerplate, 50 lines of actual code. :)
llvm-svn: 114537
themselves. Right now, it tests a breakpoint both before and after it has been
resolved.
Updated lldbtest.TestBase.expect() with an additional keyword argument 'exe' (
default to True), which if set to False, will treat the mandatory first argument
as just the string to be matched/or not-matched against the golden input.
llvm-svn: 114501
Fix minor bug in 'commands alias'; alias commands can now handle command options
and arguments in the same alias. Also fixes problem that disallowed "process launch --" as
an alias.
Fix typo in comment in Python script interpreter.
llvm-svn: 114499
of 'breakpoint command add/list/remove' commands to set breakpoint callbacks,
list them, and then remove one.
Modified the lldbtest.TestBase.expect() method to add two additional keyword
arguments:
o matching (default to True), which, if set to False, reverses the semantics of
'expect' to 'expect not'
o patterns (default to None), which specifies a list of regexp patterns to match
against the output from running the command
TestBreakpointCommand.py uses the matching=False and the patterns=[...] expect()
API.
llvm-svn: 114480
for C++ classes. Replaced it with a less hacky approach:
- If an expression is defined in the context of a
method of class A, then that expression is wrapped as
___clang_class::___clang_expr(void*) { ... }
instead of ___clang_expr(void*) { ... }.
- ___clang_class is resolved as the type of the target
of the "this" pointer in the method the expression
is defined in.
- When reporting the type of ___clang_class, a method
with the signature ___clang_expr(void*) is added to
that class, so that Clang doesn't complain about a
method being defined without a corresponding
declaration.
- Whenever the expression gets called, "this" gets
looked up, type-checked, and then passed in as the
first argument.
This required the following changes:
- The ABIs were changed to support passing of the "this"
pointer as part of trivial calls.
- ThreadPlanCallFunction and ClangFunction were changed
to support passing of an optional "this" pointer.
- ClangUserExpression was extended to perform the
wrapping described above.
- ClangASTSource was changed to revert the changes
required by the hack.
- ClangExpressionParser, IRForTarget, and
ClangExpressionDeclMap were changed to handle
different manglings of ___clang_expr flexibly. This
meant no longer searching for a function called
___clang_expr, but rather looking for a function whose
name *contains* ___clang_expr.
- ClangExpressionParser and ClangExpressionDeclMap now
remember whether "this" is required, and know how to
look it up as necessary.
A few inheritance bugs remain, and I'm trying to resolve
these. But it is now possible to use "this" as well as
refer implicitly to member variables, when in the proper
context.
llvm-svn: 114384
order to customize the running of the test suite. For the time being, the
supported customizations are:
o redirecting stdout and/or stderr
o specifying a list of compilers to build the test programs
o specifying a list of architectures to build the test programs for
Also checked into the examples/test directory some example files which
demonstrate the usage for the above customizations.
$ ./dotest.py -v -c ~/.lldbtest-config persistent_variables
$ cat ~/.lldbtest-config
sys.stderr = open("/tmp/lldbtest-stderr", "w")
sys.stdout = open("/tmp/lldbtest-stdout", "w")
compilers = ["gcc", "llvm-gcc"]
archs = ["x86_64", "i386"]
$ cat /tmp/lldbtest-stderr
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Collected 1 test
Configuration: arch=x86_64 compiler=gcc
test_persistent_variables (TestPersistentVariables.PersistentVariablesTestCase)
Test that lldb persistent variables works correctly. ... ok
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 1 test in 1.397s
OK
Configuration: arch=x86_64 compiler=llvm-gcc
test_persistent_variables (TestPersistentVariables.PersistentVariablesTestCase)
Test that lldb persistent variables works correctly. ... ok
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 1 test in 1.282s
OK
Configuration: arch=i386 compiler=gcc
test_persistent_variables (TestPersistentVariables.PersistentVariablesTestCase)
Test that lldb persistent variables works correctly. ... ok
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 1 test in 1.297s
OK
Configuration: arch=i386 compiler=llvm-gcc
test_persistent_variables (TestPersistentVariables.PersistentVariablesTestCase)
Test that lldb persistent variables works correctly. ... ok
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 1 test in 1.269s
OK
$ cat /tmp/lldbtest-stdout
$
llvm-svn: 114380
the parent of Process settings; add 'default-arch' as a
class-wide setting for Target. Replace lldb::GetDefaultArchitecture
with Target::GetDefaultArchitecture & Target::SetDefaultArchitecture.
Add 'use-external-editor' as user setting to Debugger class & update
code appropriately.
Add Error parameter to methods that get user settings, for easier
reporting of bad requests.
Fix various other minor related bugs.
Fix test cases to work with new changes.
llvm-svn: 114352
replacing the "(lldb)" prompt, the "frame #1..." displays when doing
stack backtracing and the "thread #1....". This will allow you to see
exactly the information that you want to see where you want to see it.
This currently isn't hookup up to the prompts yet, but it will be soon.
So what is the format of the prompts? Prompts can contain variables that
have access to the current program state. Variables are text that appears
in between a prefix of "${" and ends with a "}". Some of the interesting
variables include:
// The frame index (0, 1, 2, 3...)
${frame.index}
// common frame registers with generic names
${frame.pc}
${frame.sp}
${frame.fp}
${frame.ra}
${frame.flags}
// Access to any frame registers by name where REGNAME is any register name:
${frame.reg.REGNAME}
// The current compile unit file where the frame is located
${file.basename}
${file.fullpath}
// Function information
${function.name}
${function.pc-offset}
// Process info
${process.file.basename}
${process.file.fullpath}
${process.id}
${process.name}
// Thread info
${thread.id}
${thread.index}
${thread.name}
${thread.queue}
${thread.stop-reason}
// Target information
${target.arch}
// The current module for the current frame (the shared library or executable
// that contains the current frame PC value):
${module.file.basename}
${module.file.fullpath}
// Access to the line entry for where the current frame is when your thread
// is stopped:
${line.file.basename}
${line.file.fullpath}
${line.number}
${line.start-addr}
${line.end-addr}
Many times the information that you might have in your prompt might not be
available and you won't want it to print out if it isn't valid. To take care
of this you can enclose everything that must resolve into a scope. A scope
is starts with '{' and ends with '}'. For example in order to only display
the current file and line number when the information is available the format
would be:
"{ at {$line.file.basename}:${line.number}}"
Broken down this is:
start the scope: "{"
format whose content will only be displayed if all information is available:
"at {$line.file.basename}:${line.number}"
end the scope: "}"
We currently can represent the infomration we see when stopped at a frame:
frame #0: 0x0000000100000e85 a.out`main + 4 at test.c:19
with the following format:
"frame #${frame.index}: ${frame.pc} {${module.file.basename}`}{${function.name}{${function.pc-offset}}{ at ${line.file.basename}:${line.number}}\n"
This breaks down to always print:
"frame #${frame.index}: ${frame.pc} "
only print the module followed by a tick if we have a valid module:
"{${module.file.basename}`}"
print the function name with optional offset:
"{${function.name}{${function.pc-offset}}"
print the line info if it is available:
"{ at ${line.file.basename}:${line.number}}"
then finish off with a newline:
"\n"
Notice you can also put newlines ("\n") and tabs and everything else you
are used to putting in a format string when desensitized with the \ character.
Cleaned up some of the user settings controller subclasses. All of them
do not have any global settings variables and were all implementing stubs
for the get/set global settings variable. Now there is a default version
in UserSettingsController that will do nothing.
llvm-svn: 114306
- All single character options will now be printed together
- Changed all options that contains underscores to contain '-' instead
- Made the help come out a little flatter by showing the long and short
option on the same line.
- Modified the short character for "--ignore-count" options to "-i"
llvm-svn: 114265
Fixed an issue with ClangASTContext::GetIndexOfChildMemberWithName()
where objective C ivars were not being found correctly if they were
the second or higher child.
llvm-svn: 114258
accessed by the objects that own the settings. The previous approach wasn't
very usable and made for a lot of unnecessary code just to access variables
that were already owned by the objects.
While I fixed those things, I saw that CommandObject objects should really
have a reference to their command interpreter so they can access the terminal
with if they want to output usaage. Fixed up all CommandObjects to take
an interpreter and cleaned up the API to not need the interpreter to be
passed in.
Fixed the disassemble command to output the usage if no options are passed
down and arguments are passed (all disassebmle variants take options, there
are no "args only").
llvm-svn: 114252
the running of the test suite. Right now, it doesn't do anything with the
config file.
Pass "-c myConfigFile" to specify the config file.
llvm-svn: 114245
to evaluate expressions. Marked with @expectedFailure decorators for the time
being.
Enhanced the lldbtest.TestBase.expect() API to allow an additional keyword arg
named "error". If the client passes "error=True", it signifies that an error
while running the command is expected. The golden input is then compared
against the return object's error output.
llvm-svn: 114228
(lldb) breakpoint set -S description
and a compilation unit defined instance method with:
(lldb) breakpoint set -n '-[MyString initWithNSString:]'
llvm-svn: 114134
build tree relative search path in order to locate the lldb.py module. When
'-i' is present, the test driver relies on the PYTHONPATH environment variable
to locate the lldb.py module.
llvm-svn: 114094
This will remove the confusion experienced when previous test runs left some
files (both intermediate or by-product as a result of the test).
lldbtest.TestBase defines a classmethod tearDownClass(cls) which invokes the
platform-specific cleanup() function as defined by the plugin; after that, it
invokes a subclass-specific function classCleanup(cls) if defined; and, finally,
it restores the old working directory.
An example of classCleanup(cls) is in settings/TestSettings.py:
@classmethod
def classCleanup(cls):
system(["/bin/sh", "-c", "rm output.txt"])
where it deletes the by-product "output.txt" as a result of running a.out.
llvm-svn: 114058
(lldb) settings set process.run-args A B C
(lldb) settings set process.env-vars ["MY_ENV_VAR"]=YES
commands. The main.cpp checks whether A, B, C is passed to main and whether
the $MY_ENV_VAR env variable is defined and outputs the findings to a file.
llvm-svn: 114031
lldb.py module. The priorities to search for are Debug, Release, then
BuildAndIntegration. You can always override this with a valid PYTHONPATH
environment variable before running the test driver.
For example:
$ PYTHONPATH=/Find/My/LLDB/Module/Here ./dotest.py -v .
Python runtime will try to locate the lldb.py module from
/Find/My/LLDB/Module/Here first before trying the Debug, Release, and then
BuildAndIntegration directories.
llvm-svn: 113991