Commit Graph

54 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Greg Clayton 7b0992d9cd After discussing with Chris Lattner, we require C++11, so lets get rid of the macros and just use C++11.
llvm-svn: 179805
2013-04-18 22:45:39 +00:00
Greg Clayton e01e07b6e7 Since we use C++11, we should switch over to using std::unique_ptr when C++11 is being used. To do this, we follow what we have done for shared pointers and we define a STD_UNIQUE_PTR macro that can be used and it will "do the right thing". Due to some API differences in std::unique_ptr and due to the fact that we need to be able to compile without C++11, we can't use move semantics so some code needed to change so that it can compile with either C++.
Anyone wanting to use a unique_ptr or auto_ptr should now use the "STD_UNIQUE_PTR(TYPE)" macro.

llvm-svn: 179779
2013-04-18 18:10:51 +00:00
Jim Ingham d9916eaecc breakpoint command add currently doesn't support adding commands to more than one breakpoint
at a time.  Enforce this for now (we should relax the requirement when we have a little more time.)

<rdar://problem/13314462>

llvm-svn: 176291
2013-02-28 19:30:07 +00:00
Daniel Malea 93a64300f8 Fix Linux build warnings due to redefinition of macros:
- add new header lldb-python.h to be included before other system headers
- short term fix (eventually python dependencies must be cleaned up)

Patch by Matt Kopec!

llvm-svn: 169341
2012-12-05 00:20:57 +00:00
Greg Clayton 3bcdfc0ec1 <rdar://problem/12798131>
Cleaned up the option parsing code to always pass around the short options as integers. Previously we cast this down to "char" and lost some information. I recently added an assert that would detect duplicate short character options which was firing during the test suite.

This fix does the following:
- make sure all short options are treated as "int"
- make sure that short options can be non-printable values when a short option is not required or when an option group is mixed into many commands and a short option is not desired
- fix the help printing to "do the right thing" in all cases. Previously if there were duplicate short character options, it would just not emit help for the duplicates
- fix option parsing when there are duplicates to parse options correctly. Previously the option parsing, when done for an OptionGroup, would just start parsing options incorrectly by omitting table entries and it would end up setting the wrong option value

llvm-svn: 169189
2012-12-04 00:32:51 +00:00
Greg Clayton 13b1213de3 Updated the "breakpoint command add" documentation and fixed the web site docs for the signature of the python breakpoint callback functions.
llvm-svn: 166789
2012-10-26 17:53:21 +00:00
Filipe Cabecinhas bc6e85cb53 Change the NULL to a 0 since we need a uint32_t
llvm-svn: 163625
2012-09-11 16:09:27 +00:00
Enrico Granata 40d557107f <rdar://problem/11975483> Removing user-visible references to 'dict' as a parameter name for Python summary-generating functions since it is a Python keyword.
llvm-svn: 161467
2012-08-08 02:06:30 +00:00
Greg Clayton 23f59509a8 Ran the static analyzer on the codebase and found a few things.
llvm-svn: 160338
2012-07-17 03:23:13 +00:00
Jim Ingham 5a98841673 Make raw & parsed commands subclasses of CommandObject rather than having the raw version implement an
Execute which was never going to get run and another ExecuteRawCommandString.  Took the knowledge of how
to prepare raw & parsed commands out of CommandInterpreter and put it in CommandObject where it belongs.

Also took all the cases where there were the subcommands of Multiword commands declared in the .h file for
the overall command and moved them into the .cpp file.

Made the CommandObject flags work for raw as well as parsed commands.

Made "expr" use the flags so that it requires you to be paused to run "expr".

llvm-svn: 158235
2012-06-08 21:56:10 +00:00
Enrico Granata 5f5ab60274 <rdar://problem/11328896> Fixing a bug where regex commands were saved in the history even if they came from a 'command sourced' file - this fix introduces a command sourcing depth and disables history for all levels of depth > 0, which means no commands go into history when being sourced from a file. we need an integer depth because command files might themselves source other command files, ...
llvm-svn: 157727
2012-05-31 01:09:06 +00:00
Jim Ingham c9efdbb0d4 Fix the docs for "breakpoint command add" to specify the arguments passed into the python function.
llvm-svn: 155517
2012-04-25 01:05:21 +00:00
Enrico Granata 8d4a8010cf Adding a new --python-function (-F) option to breakpoint command add. The option allows the user to specify a Python function name instead of a Python oneliner or interactive script input as a breakpoint command
llvm-svn: 154026
2012-04-04 17:30:31 +00:00
Enrico Granata a73b7df7de Using the new ScriptInterpreterObject in the implementation of synthetic children to enhance type safety
Several places in the ScriptInterpreter interface used StringList objects where an std::string would suffice - Fixed
Refactoring calls that generated special-purposes functions in the Python interpreter to use helper functions instead of duplicating blobs of code

llvm-svn: 152164
2012-03-06 23:42:15 +00:00
Greg Clayton 1ac04c3088 Thread hardening part 3. Now lldb_private::Thread objects have std::weak_ptr
objects for the backlink to the lldb_private::Process. The issues we were
running into before was someone was holding onto a shared pointer to a 
lldb_private::Thread for too long, and the lldb_private::Process parent object
would get destroyed and the lldb_private::Thread had a "Process &m_process"
member which would just treat whatever memory that used to be a Process as a
valid Process. This was mostly happening for lldb_private::StackFrame objects
that had a member like "Thread &m_thread". So this completes the internal
strong/weak changes.

Documented the ExecutionContext and ExecutionContextRef classes so that our
LLDB developers can understand when and where to use ExecutionContext and 
ExecutionContextRef objects.

llvm-svn: 151009
2012-02-21 00:09:25 +00:00
Jim Ingham ec1da844f8 Remove unneeded includes.
llvm-svn: 150843
2012-02-17 21:59:03 +00:00
Greg Clayton 86edbf41d1 Cleaned up many error codes. For any who is filling in error strings into
lldb_private::Error objects the rules are:
- short strings that don't start with a capitol letter unless the name is a
  class or anything else that is always capitolized
- no trailing newline character
- should be one line if possible

Implemented a first pass at adding "--gdb-format" support to anything that
accepts format with optional size/count.

llvm-svn: 142999
2011-10-26 00:56:27 +00:00
Greg Clayton cf0e4f0daf Re-organized the contents of RangeMap.h to be more concise and also allow for a Range, RangeArray, RangeData (range + data), or a RangeDataArray. We have many range implementations in LLDB and I will be converting over to using the classes in RangeMap.h so we can have one set of code that does ranges and searching of ranges.
Fixed up DWARFDebugAranges to use the new range classes.

Fixed the enumeration parsing to take a lldb_private::Error to avoid a lot of duplicated code. Now when an invalid enumeration is supplied, an error will be returned and that error will contain a list of the valid enumeration values.

llvm-svn: 141382
2011-10-07 18:58:12 +00:00
Greg Clayton c14ee32db5 Converted the lldb_private::Process over to use the intrusive
shared pointers.

Changed the ExecutionContext over to use shared pointers for
the target, process, thread and frame since these objects can
easily go away at any time and any object that was holding onto
an ExecutionContext was running the risk of using a bad object.

Now that the shared pointers for target, process, thread and
frame are just a single pointer (they all use the instrusive
shared pointers) the execution context is much safer and still
the same size. 

Made the shared pointers in the the ExecutionContext class protected
and made accessors for all of the various ways to get at the pointers,
references, and shared pointers.

llvm-svn: 140298
2011-09-22 04:58:26 +00:00
Caroline Tice d61c10bc79 Add 'batch_mode' to CommandInterpreter. Modify InputReaders to
not write output (prompts, instructions,etc.) if the CommandInterpreter
is in batch_mode.

Also, finish updating InputReaders to write to the asynchronous stream,
rather than using the Debugger's output file directly.

llvm-svn: 133162
2011-06-16 16:27:19 +00:00
Jim Ingham 5b52f0c785 Added Debugger::GetAsync{Output/Error}Stream, and use it to print parse errors when we go to run a breakpoint condition.
llvm-svn: 132517
2011-06-02 23:58:26 +00:00
Caroline Tice 93e0f19f1d Change the command 'breakpoint command remove' to 'breakpoint command delete',
to be more consistent with other commands.

llvm-svn: 131848
2011-05-22 07:14:46 +00:00
Caroline Tice b5059acc5f Fix places that were writing directly to the debugger's output
handles to go through the appropriate channels instead.

llvm-svn: 131415
2011-05-16 19:20:50 +00:00
Caroline Tice 969ed3d10f This patch captures and serializes all output being written by the
command line driver, including the lldb prompt being output by
editline, the asynchronous process output & error messages, and
asynchronous messages written by target stop-hooks.

As part of this it introduces a new Stream class,
StreamAsynchronousIO.  A StreamAsynchronousIO object is created with a
broadcaster, who will eventually broadcast the stream's data for a
listener to handle, and an event type indicating what type of event
the broadcaster will broadcast.  When the Write method is called on a
StreamAsynchronousIO object, the data is appended to an internal
string.  When the Flush method is called on a StreamAsynchronousIO
object, it broadcasts it's data string and clears the string.

Anything in lldb-core that needs to generate asynchronous output for
the end-user should use the StreamAsynchronousIO objects.

I have also added a new notification type for InputReaders, to let
them know that a asynchronous output has been written. This is to
allow the input readers to, for example, refresh their prompts and
lines, if desired.  I added the case statements to all the input
readers to catch this notification, but I haven't added any code for
handling them yet (except to the IOChannel input reader).

llvm-svn: 130721
2011-05-02 20:41:46 +00:00
Greg Clayton f6b8b58184 Added two new classes for command options:
lldb_private::OptionGroup
    lldb_private::OptionGroupOptions

OptionGroup lets you define a class that encapsulates settings that you want
to reuse in multiple commands. It contains only the option definitions and the
ability to set the option values, but it doesn't directly interface with the
lldb_private::Options class that is the front end to all of the CommandObject
option parsing. For that the OptionGroupOptions class can be used. It aggregates
one or more OptionGroup objects and directs the option setting to the 
appropriate OptionGroup class. For an example of this, take a look at the 
CommandObjectFile and how it uses its "m_option_group" object shown below
to be able to set values in both the FileOptionGroup and PlatformOptionGroup
classes. The members used in CommandObjectFile are:

    OptionGroupOptions m_option_group;
    FileOptionGroup m_file_options;
    PlatformOptionGroup m_platform_options;

Then in the constructor for CommandObjectFile you can combine the option
settings. The code below shows a simplified version of the constructor:

CommandObjectFile::CommandObjectFile(CommandInterpreter &interpreter) :
    CommandObject (...),
    m_option_group (interpreter),
    m_file_options (),
    m_platform_options(true)
{
    m_option_group.Append (&m_file_options);
    m_option_group.Append (&m_platform_options);
    m_option_group.Finalize();
}

We append the m_file_options and then the m_platform_options and then tell
the option group the finalize the results. This allows the m_option_group to
become the organizer of our prefs and after option parsing we end up with
valid preference settings in both the m_file_options and m_platform_options
objects. This also allows any other commands to use the FileOptionGroup and
PlatformOptionGroup classes to implement options for their commands.

Renamed:
    virtual void Options::ResetOptionValues();
to:
    virtual void Options::OptionParsingStarting();

And implemented a new callback named:

    virtual Error Options::OptionParsingFinished();
    
This allows Options subclasses to verify that the options all go together
after all of the options have been specified and gives the chance for the
command object to return an error. It also gives a chance to take all of the
option values and produce or initialize objects after all options have
completed parsing.

Modfied:

    virtual Error
    SetOptionValue (int option_idx, const char *option_arg) = 0;
    
to be:

    virtual Error
    SetOptionValue (uint32_t option_idx, const char *option_arg) = 0;

(option_idx is now unsigned).

llvm-svn: 129415
2011-04-13 00:18:08 +00:00
Greg Clayton eb0103f2d0 Modified the ArchSpec to take an optional "Platform *" when setting the triple.
This allows you to have a platform selected, then specify a triple using
"i386" and have the remaining triple items (vendor, os, and environment) set
automatically.

Many interpreter commands take the "--arch" option to specify an architecture
triple, so now the command options needed to be able to get to the current
platform, so the Options class now take a reference to the interpreter on
construction.

Modified the build LLVM building in the Xcode project to use the new
Xcode project level user definitions:

LLVM_BUILD_DIR - a path to the llvm build directory
LLVM_SOURCE_DIR - a path to the llvm sources for the llvm that will be used to build lldb
LLVM_CONFIGURATION - the configuration that lldb is built for (Release, 
Release+Asserts, Debug, Debug+Asserts).

I also changed the LLVM build to not check if "lldb/llvm" is a symlink and
then assume it is a real llvm build directory versus the unzipped llvm.zip
package, so now you can actually have a "lldb/llvm" directory in your lldb
sources.

llvm-svn: 129112
2011-04-07 22:46:35 +00:00
Greg Clayton 32e0a7509c Many improvements to the Platform base class and subclasses. The base Platform
class now implements the Host functionality for a lot of things that make 
sense by default so that subclasses can check:

int
PlatformSubclass::Foo ()
{
    if (IsHost())
        return Platform::Foo (); // Let the platform base class do the host specific stuff
    
    // Platform subclass specific code...
    int result = ...
    return result;
}

Added new functions to the platform:

    virtual const char *Platform::GetUserName (uint32_t uid);
    virtual const char *Platform::GetGroupName (uint32_t gid);

The user and group names are cached locally so that remote platforms can avoid
sending packets multiple times to resolve this information.

Added the parent process ID to the ProcessInfo class. 

Added a new ProcessInfoMatch class which helps us to match processes up
and changed the Host layer over to using this new class. The new class allows
us to search for processs:
1 - by name (equal to, starts with, ends with, contains, and regex)
2 - by pid
3 - And further check for parent pid == value, uid == value, gid == value, 
    euid == value, egid == value, arch == value, parent == value.
    
This is all hookup up to the "platform process list" command which required
adding dumping routines to dump process information. If the Host class 
implements the process lookup routines, you can now lists processes on 
your local machine:

machine1.foo.com % lldb
(lldb) platform process list 
PID    PARENT USER       GROUP      EFF USER   EFF GROUP  TRIPLE                   NAME
====== ====== ========== ========== ========== ========== ======================== ============================
99538  1      username   usergroup  username   usergroup  x86_64-apple-darwin      FileMerge
94943  1      username   usergroup  username   usergroup  x86_64-apple-darwin      mdworker
94852  244    username   usergroup  username   usergroup  x86_64-apple-darwin      Safari
94727  244    username   usergroup  username   usergroup  x86_64-apple-darwin      Xcode
92742  92710  username   usergroup  username   usergroup  i386-apple-darwin        debugserver


This of course also works remotely with the lldb-platform:

machine1.foo.com % lldb-platform --listen 1234

machine2.foo.com % lldb
(lldb) platform create remote-macosx
  Platform: remote-macosx
 Connected: no
(lldb) platform connect connect://localhost:1444
  Platform: remote-macosx
    Triple: x86_64-apple-darwin
OS Version: 10.6.7 (10J869)
    Kernel: Darwin Kernel Version 10.7.0: Sat Jan 29 15:17:16 PST 2011; root:xnu-1504.9.37~1/RELEASE_I386
  Hostname: machine1.foo.com
 Connected: yes
(lldb) platform process list 
PID    PARENT USER       GROUP      EFF USER   EFF GROUP  TRIPLE                   NAME
====== ====== ========== ========== ========== ========== ======================== ============================
99556  244    username   usergroup  username   usergroup  x86_64-apple-darwin      trustevaluation
99548  65539  username   usergroup  username   usergroup  x86_64-apple-darwin      lldb
99538  1      username   usergroup  username   usergroup  x86_64-apple-darwin      FileMerge
94943  1      username   usergroup  username   usergroup  x86_64-apple-darwin      mdworker
94852  244    username   usergroup  username   usergroup  x86_64-apple-darwin      Safari

The lldb-platform implements everything with the Host:: layer, so this should
"just work" for linux. I will probably be adding more stuff to the Host layer
for launching processes and attaching to processes so that this support should
eventually just work as well.

Modified the target to be able to be created with an architecture that differs
from the main executable. This is needed for iOS debugging since we can have
an "armv6" binary which can run on an "armv7" machine, so we want to be able
to do:

% lldb
(lldb) platform create remote-ios
(lldb) file --arch armv7 a.out

Where "a.out" is an armv6 executable. The platform then can correctly decide
to open all "armv7" images for all dependent shared libraries.

Modified the disassembly to show the current PC value. Example output:

(lldb) disassemble --frame
a.out`main:
   0x1eb7:  pushl  %ebp
   0x1eb8:  movl   %esp, %ebp
   0x1eba:  pushl  %ebx
   0x1ebb:  subl   $20, %esp
   0x1ebe:  calll  0x1ec3                   ; main + 12 at test.c:18
   0x1ec3:  popl   %ebx
-> 0x1ec4:  calll  0x1f12                   ; getpid
   0x1ec9:  movl   %eax, 4(%esp)
   0x1ecd:  leal   199(%ebx), %eax
   0x1ed3:  movl   %eax, (%esp)
   0x1ed6:  calll  0x1f18                   ; printf
   0x1edb:  leal   213(%ebx), %eax
   0x1ee1:  movl   %eax, (%esp)
   0x1ee4:  calll  0x1f1e                   ; puts
   0x1ee9:  calll  0x1f0c                   ; getchar
   0x1eee:  movl   $20, (%esp)
   0x1ef5:  calll  0x1e6a                   ; sleep_loop at test.c:6
   0x1efa:  movl   $12, %eax
   0x1eff:  addl   $20, %esp
   0x1f02:  popl   %ebx
   0x1f03:  leave
   0x1f04:  ret
   
This can be handy when dealing with the new --line options that was recently
added:

(lldb) disassemble --line
a.out`main + 13 at test.c:19
   18  	{
-> 19  		printf("Process: %i\n\n", getpid());
   20  	    puts("Press any key to continue..."); getchar();
-> 0x1ec4:  calll  0x1f12                   ; getpid
   0x1ec9:  movl   %eax, 4(%esp)
   0x1ecd:  leal   199(%ebx), %eax
   0x1ed3:  movl   %eax, (%esp)
   0x1ed6:  calll  0x1f18                   ; printf

Modified the ModuleList to have a lookup based solely on a UUID. Since the
UUID is typically the MD5 checksum of a binary image, there is no need
to give the path and architecture when searching for a pre-existing
image in an image list.

Now that we support remote debugging a bit better, our lldb_private::Module
needs to be able to track what the original path for file was as the platform
knows it, as well as where the file is locally. The module has the two 
following functions to retrieve both paths:

const FileSpec &Module::GetFileSpec () const;
const FileSpec &Module::GetPlatformFileSpec () const;

llvm-svn: 128563
2011-03-30 18:16:51 +00:00
Greg Clayton e0d378b334 Fixed the LLDB build so that we can have private types, private enums and
public types and public enums. This was done to keep the SWIG stuff from
parsing all sorts of enums and types that weren't needed, and allows us to
abstract our API better.

llvm-svn: 128239
2011-03-24 21:19:54 +00:00
Jim Ingham 85e8b81492 - Changed all the places where CommandObjectReturn was exporting a StreamString to just exporting
a Stream, and then added GetOutputData & GetErrorData to get the accumulated data.
- Added a StreamTee that will tee output to two provided lldb::StreamSP's.
- Made the CommandObjectReturn use this so you can Tee the results immediately to
the debuggers output file, as well as saving up the results to return when the command
is done executing.
- HandleCommands now uses this so that if you have a set of commands that continue the target
you will see the commands come out as they are processed.
- The Driver now uses this to output the command results as you go, which makes the interface
more reactive seeming.

llvm-svn: 126015
2011-02-19 02:53:09 +00:00
Jim Ingham e16c50a11a Factor all the code that does "Execute a list of lldb command interpreter commands" into a single function in the Interpreter, and then use that in all the places that used to do this by hand.
llvm-svn: 125807
2011-02-18 00:54:25 +00:00
Greg Clayton 51b1e2d271 Use Host::File in lldb_private::StreamFile and other places to cleanup host
layer a bit more.

llvm-svn: 125149
2011-02-09 01:08:52 +00:00
Jim Ingham 8f3432c916 The code to check whether the number of arguments was 0 was not necessary, VerifyBreakpointIDs will turn an empty argument into the last specified breakpoint.
llvm-svn: 124000
2011-01-21 22:13:25 +00:00
Caroline Tice efed613172 Add the ability to catch and do the right thing with Interrupts (often control-c)
and end-of-file (often control-d).

llvm-svn: 119837
2010-11-19 20:47:54 +00:00
Caroline Tice 04a339a084 Flush the prompts immediately in the breakpoint command input readers, to make
sure they come out at the correct times.

llvm-svn: 117470
2010-10-27 18:34:42 +00:00
Caroline Tice 405fe67f14 Modify existing commands with arguments to use the new argument mechanism
(for standardized argument names, argument help, etc.)

llvm-svn: 115570
2010-10-04 22:28:36 +00:00
Caroline Tice deaab2220e Modify command options to use the new arguments mechanism. Now all command option
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
2010-10-01 19:59:14 +00:00
Caroline Tice 867b185d8d Update help text for breakpoint command one-liners.
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
2010-09-21 23:25:40 +00:00
Caroline Tice 650b92683a Re-write/clean up code that generated Python breakpoint commands.
Add a warning if no command was attached to the breakpoint.
Update the help slightly.

llvm-svn: 114467
2010-09-21 19:25:28 +00:00
Greg Clayton ed8a705cea General command line help cleanup:
- 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
2010-09-18 03:37:20 +00:00
Greg Clayton a701509229 Fixed the way set/show variables were being accessed to being natively
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
2010-09-18 01:14:36 +00:00
Johnny Chen 4550154d31 Fixed some comments.
llvm-svn: 113673
2010-09-11 00:23:59 +00:00
Johnny Chen 39d7d4f056 Added [-o <one-liner>] to the "breakpoint command add" lldb command to be able
to specify a one-liner (either scripting or lldb command) inline.

Refactored CommandObjectBreakpointCommandAdd::Execute() a little bit and added
some comments.

Sn now, we use:

breakpoint command add -p 1 -o "conditional_break.stop_if_called_from_a()"

to specify a Python one-liner as the callback for breakpoint #1.

llvm-svn: 113672
2010-09-11 00:18:09 +00:00
Johnny Chen 0e1cb4e0d4 Fixed the breakage of "breakpoint command add -p 1 2" caused by r113596 as
pointed out by Jim Ingham.  The convenient one-liner specification should only
apply when there is only one breakpoint id being specified for the time being.

llvm-svn: 113609
2010-09-10 20:15:13 +00:00
Johnny Chen 3495f25aa7 Updated help text for "breakpoint command add" to reflect r113596 changeset.
llvm-svn: 113607
2010-09-10 19:34:12 +00:00
Johnny Chen 94de55d5c2 Added the capability to specify a one-liner Python script as the callback
command for a breakpoint, for example:

(lldb) breakpoint command add -p 1 "conditional_break.stop_if_called_from_a()"

The ScriptInterpreter interface has an extra method:

    /// Set a one-liner as the callback for the breakpoint command.
    virtual void 
    SetBreakpointCommandCallback (CommandInterpreter &interpreter,
                                  BreakpointOptions *bp_options,
                                  const char *oneliner);

to accomplish the above.

Also added a test case to demonstrate lldb's use of breakpoint callback command
to stop at function c() only when its immediate caller is function a().  The
following session shows the user entering the following commands:

1) command source .lldb (set up executable, breakpoint, and breakpoint command)
2) run (the callback mechanism will skip two breakpoints where c()'s immeidate caller is not a())
3) bt (to see that indeed c()'s immediate caller is a())
4) c (to continue and finish the program)

test/conditional_break $ ../../build/Debug/lldb
(lldb) command source .lldb
Executing commands in '.lldb'.
(lldb) file a.out
Current executable set to 'a.out' (x86_64).
(lldb) breakpoint set -n c
Breakpoint created: 1: name = 'c', locations = 1
(lldb) script import sys, os
(lldb) script sys.path.append(os.path.join(os.getcwd(), os.pardir))
(lldb) script import conditional_break
(lldb) breakpoint command add -p 1 "conditional_break.stop_if_called_from_a()"
(lldb) run
run
Launching '/Volumes/data/lldb/svn/trunk/test/conditional_break/a.out'  (x86_64)
(lldb) Checking call frames...
Stack trace for thread id=0x2e03 name=None queue=com.apple.main-thread:
  frame #0: a.out`c at main.c:39
  frame #1: a.out`b at main.c:34
  frame #2: a.out`a at main.c:25
  frame #3: a.out`main at main.c:44
  frame #4: a.out`start
c called from b
Continuing...
Checking call frames...
Stack trace for thread id=0x2e03 name=None queue=com.apple.main-thread:
  frame #0: a.out`c at main.c:39
  frame #1: a.out`b at main.c:34
  frame #2: a.out`main at main.c:47
  frame #3: a.out`start
c called from b
Continuing...
Checking call frames...
Stack trace for thread id=0x2e03 name=None queue=com.apple.main-thread:
  frame #0: a.out`c at main.c:39
  frame #1: a.out`a at main.c:27
  frame #2: a.out`main at main.c:50
  frame #3: a.out`start
c called from a
Stopped at c() with immediate caller as a().
a(1) returns 4
b(2) returns 5
Process 20420 Stopped
* thread #1: tid = 0x2e03, 0x0000000100000de8 a.out`c + 7 at main.c:39, stop reason = breakpoint 1.1, queue = com.apple.main-thread
  36   	
  37   	int c(int val)
  38   	{
  39 ->	    return val + 3;
  40   	}
  41   	
  42   	int main (int argc, char const *argv[])
(lldb) bt
bt
thread #1: tid = 0x2e03, stop reason = breakpoint 1.1, queue = com.apple.main-thread
  frame #0: 0x0000000100000de8 a.out`c + 7 at main.c:39
  frame #1: 0x0000000100000dbc a.out`a + 44 at main.c:27
  frame #2: 0x0000000100000e4b a.out`main + 91 at main.c:50
  frame #3: 0x0000000100000d88 a.out`start + 52
(lldb) c
c
Resuming process 20420
Process 20420 Exited
a(3) returns 6
(lldb) 

llvm-svn: 113596
2010-09-10 18:21:10 +00:00
Caroline Tice e3d2631567 Clean up, clarify and standardize help text, and fix a few help text formatting problems.
llvm-svn: 113408
2010-09-08 21:06:11 +00:00
Jim Ingham 2976d00adb Change "Current" as in GetCurrentThread, GetCurrentStackFrame, etc, to "Selected" i.e. GetSelectedThread. Selected makes more sense, since these are set by some user action (a selection). I didn't change "CurrentProcess" since this is always controlled by the target, and a given target can only have one process, so it really can't be selected.
llvm-svn: 112221
2010-08-26 21:32:51 +00:00
Greg Clayton b132097b45 I enabled some extra warnings for hidden local variables and for hidden
virtual functions and caught some things and did some general code cleanup.

llvm-svn: 108299
2010-07-14 00:18:15 +00:00
Greg Clayton c982c768d2 Merged Eli Friedman's linux build changes where he added Makefile files that
enabled LLVM make style building and made this compile LLDB on Mac OS X. We
can now iterate on this to make the build work on both linux and macosx.

llvm-svn: 108009
2010-07-09 20:39:50 +00:00
Greg Clayton 6611103cfe Very large changes that were needed in order to allow multiple connections
to the debugger from GUI windows. Previously there was one global debugger
instance that could be accessed that had its own command interpreter and
current state (current target/process/thread/frame). When a GUI debugger
was attached, if it opened more than one window that each had a console
window, there were issues where the last one to setup the global debugger
object won and got control of the debugger.

To avoid this we now create instances of the lldb_private::Debugger that each 
has its own state:
- target list for targets the debugger instance owns
- current process/thread/frame
- its own command interpreter
- its own input, output and error file handles to avoid conflicts
- its own input reader stack

So now clients should call:

    SBDebugger::Initialize(); // (static function)

    SBDebugger debugger (SBDebugger::Create());
    // Use which ever file handles you wish
    debugger.SetErrorFileHandle (stderr, false);
    debugger.SetOutputFileHandle (stdout, false);
    debugger.SetInputFileHandle (stdin, true);

    // main loop
    
    SBDebugger::Terminate(); // (static function)
    
SBDebugger::Initialize() and SBDebugger::Terminate() are ref counted to
ensure nothing gets destroyed too early when multiple clients might be
attached.

Cleaned up the command interpreter and the CommandObject and all subclasses
to take more appropriate arguments.

llvm-svn: 106615
2010-06-23 01:19:29 +00:00