Summary: These are not needed by lldb-server. Removing them shrinks the server by about 0.5%.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18206
llvm-svn: 264735
Summary: These are not needed in lldb-server. Removing them shrinks the server size by about 1.5%.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18188
llvm-svn: 263625
PDB is Microsoft's debug information format, and although we
cannot yet generate it, we still must be able to consume it.
Reason for this is that debug information for system libraries
(e.g. kernel32, C Runtime Library, etc) only have debug info
in PDB format, so in order to be able to support debugging
of system code, we must support it.
Currently this code should compile on every platform, but on
non-Windows platforms the PDB plugin will return 0 capabilities,
meaning that for now PDB is only supported on Windows. This
may change in the future, but the API is designed in such a way
that this will require few (if any) changes on the LLDB side.
In the future we can just flip a switch and everything will
work.
This patch only adds support for line tables. It does not return
information about functions, types, global variables, or anything
else. This functionality will be added in a followup patch.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17363
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton
llvm-svn: 262528
Summary:
I've run into an issue when running unit tests, where the underlying problem turned out to be
that we were creating Timer objects (through several layers of indirection) without calling
Timer::Initialize. Since Timer's thread-local storage was not properly initialized, we were
overwriting gtest's own thread-local storage, causing test failures.
Instead of requiring that every test calls Timer::Initialize(), I remove the function altogether:
The thread-local storage can be initialized on-demand, and the g_file variable initialized to
stdout and never changed, so I have simply removed it.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner, tberghammer
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16722
llvm-svn: 259356
Summary: Other platform parts needed to build this code are already merged.
Reviewers: emaste, clayborg
Subscribers: joerg, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15066
llvm-svn: 254865
Summary:
This reverts commit 2354cd73101e58540b8b39783df462d06023309f as it
introduced a bunch regressions on the linux bot.
Reviewers: emaste, krytarowski
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14844
llvm-svn: 253615
Summary:
These changes are still incomplete, but we are almost there.
Changes:
- CMake and gmake code
- SWIG code
- minor code additions
Reviewers: emaste, joerg
Subscribers: youri, akat1, brucem, lldb-commits, joerg
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14042
llvm-svn: 252403
Summary:
This is a resubmission of r252179, but correctly ignores the source
files for other platforms.
Reviewers: granata.enrico, tberghammer, zturner, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14389
llvm-svn: 252205
This cleans up type systems to be more pluggable. Prior to this we had issues:
- Module, SymbolFile, and many others has "ClangASTContext &GetClangASTContext()" functions. All have been switched over to use "TypeSystem *GetTypeSystemForLanguage()"
- Cleaned up any places that were using the GetClangASTContext() functions to use TypeSystem
- Cleaned up Module so that it no longer has dedicated type system member variables:
lldb::ClangASTContextUP m_ast; ///< The Clang AST context for this module.
lldb::GoASTContextUP m_go_ast; ///< The Go AST context for this module.
Now we have a type system map:
typedef std::map<lldb::LanguageType, lldb::TypeSystemSP> TypeSystemMap;
TypeSystemMap m_type_system_map; ///< A map of any type systems associated with this module
- Many places in code were using ClangASTContext static functions to place with CompilerType objects and add modifiers (const, volatile, restrict) and to make typedefs, L and R value references and more. These have been made into CompilerType functions that are abstract:
class CompilerType
{
...
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Return a new CompilerType that is a L value reference to this type if
// this type is valid and the type system supports L value references,
// else return an invalid type.
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
CompilerType
GetLValueReferenceType () const;
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Return a new CompilerType that is a R value reference to this type if
// this type is valid and the type system supports R value references,
// else return an invalid type.
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
CompilerType
GetRValueReferenceType () const;
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Return a new CompilerType adds a const modifier to this type if
// this type is valid and the type system supports const modifiers,
// else return an invalid type.
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
CompilerType
AddConstModifier () const;
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Return a new CompilerType adds a volatile modifier to this type if
// this type is valid and the type system supports volatile modifiers,
// else return an invalid type.
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
CompilerType
AddVolatileModifier () const;
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Return a new CompilerType adds a restrict modifier to this type if
// this type is valid and the type system supports restrict modifiers,
// else return an invalid type.
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
CompilerType
AddRestrictModifier () const;
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Create a typedef to this type using "name" as the name of the typedef
// this type is valid and the type system supports typedefs, else return
// an invalid type.
//----------------------------------------------------------------------
CompilerType
CreateTypedef (const char *name, const CompilerDeclContext &decl_ctx) const;
};
Other changes include:
- Removed "CompilerType TypeSystem::GetIntTypeFromBitSize(...)" and CompilerType TypeSystem::GetFloatTypeFromBitSize(...) and replaced it with "CompilerType TypeSystem::GetBuiltinTypeForEncodingAndBitSize(lldb::Encoding encoding, size_t bit_size);"
- Fixed code in Type.h to not request the full type for a type for no good reason, just request the forward type and let the type expand as needed
llvm-svn: 247953
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
The call to ProcessWindowsLog::Initialize() is protected by #if defined(_MSC_VER).
But the call to ProcessWindowsLog::Terminate() was using __WIN32__. This commit
makes it use _MSC_VER too.
Committing as it seems obvious change.
llvm-svn: 246859
Previously embedded interpreters were handled as ad-hoc source
files compiled into source/Interpreter. This made it hard to
disable a specific interpreter, or to add support for other
interpreters and allow the developer to choose which interpreter(s)
were enabled for a particular build.
This patch converts script interpreters over to a plugin-based system.
Script interpreters now live in source/Plugins/ScriptInterpreter, and
the canonical LLDB interpreter, ScriptInterpreterPython, is moved there
as well.
Any new code interfacing with the Python C API must live in this location
from here on out. Additionally, generic code should never need to
reference or make assumptions about the presence of a specific interpreter
going forward.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11431
Reviewed By: Greg Clayton
llvm-svn: 243681
Summary: This aligns the library names used by the Makefile build to be the same as those create by the CMake build to make switching between the two easier. The only major difficulty was lldbHost which was one library in the CMake system and several in the Makefile system. Most of the other changes are trivial renames.
Reviewers: labath
Subscribers: emaste, tberghammer, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11154
llvm-svn: 242196
Summary:
This commit moves the Windows DyanamicLoader to the common DynamicLoader
directory. This is required to remote debug Windows targets.
This commit also initializes the Windows DYLD plugin in
SystemInitializerCommon (similarly to both POSIX and MacOSX DYLD
plugins) so that we can automatically instantiate this class when
connected to a windows process.
Test Plan: Build.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits, abdulras
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10882
llvm-svn: 241697
Summary:
Currently, the local-only path fails about 50% of the tests, which means that: a) nobody is using
it; and b) the remote debugging path is much more stable. This commit removes the local-only
linux debugging code (ProcessLinux) and makes remote-loopback the only way to debug local
applications (the same architecture as OSX). The ProcessPOSIX code is moved to the FreeBSD
directory, which is now the only user of this class. Hopefully, FreeBSD will soon move to the new
architecture as well and then this code can be removed completely.
Test Plan: Test suite passes via remote stub.
Reviewers: emaste, vharron, ovyalov, clayborg
Subscribers: tberghammer, emaste, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10661
llvm-svn: 240543
Summary:
Implementation of assembly profiler for MIPS32 using EmulateInstruction which currently scans only prologue/epilogue assembly instructions. It uses llvm::MCDisassembler to decode assembly instructions.
Reviewers: clayborg, jasonmolenda
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9769
llvm-svn: 237420
Linux arm don't support hardware stepping (neither mismatch
breakpoints). This patch implement signle stepping with doing a software
emulation of the next instruction and then setting a temporary
breakpoint at the address where the thread will stop next.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8976
llvm-svn: 234987
In an effort to reduce binary size for components not wishing to
link against all of LLDB, as well as a parallel effort to reduce
link dependencies on Python, this patch splits out the notion of
LLDB initialization into "full" and "common" initialization.
All code related to initializing the full LLDB suite lives directly
in API now. Previously it was only referenced from API, but because
it was defined in lldbCore, it would get implicitly linked against
by everything including lldb-server, causing a considerable
increase in binary size.
By moving this to the API layer, it also creates a better layering
for the ongoing effort to make the embedded interpreter replacable
with one from a different language (or even be completely removeable).
One semantic change necessary to get this all working was to remove
the notion of a shared debugger refcount. The debugger is either
initialized or uninitialized now, and calling Initialize() multiple
times will simply have no effect, while the first Terminate() will
now shut it down no matter how many times Initialize() was called.
This behaves nicely with all of our supported usage patterns though,
and allows us to fix a number of nasty hacks from before.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8462
llvm-svn: 233758
This creates a new top-level folder called Initialization which
is intended to hold code specific to LLDB system initialization.
Currently this holds the Initialize() and Terminate() functions,
as well as the fatal error handler.
This provides a means to break the massive dependency cycle which
is caused by the fact that Debugger depends on Initialize and
Terminate which then depends on the entire LLDB project. With
this structure, it will be possible for applications to invoke
lldb_private::Initialize() directly, and have that invoke
Debugger::Initialize.
llvm-svn: 232768