Commit Graph

73 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Richard Mitton f86248d9ba Added a 'jump' command, similar to GDBs.
This allows the PC to be directly changed to a different line.
It's similar to the example python script in examples/python/jump.py, except implemented as a builtin.

Also this version will track the current function correctly even if the target line resolves to multiple addresses. (e.g. debugging a templated function)

llvm-svn: 190572
2013-09-12 02:20:34 +00:00
Greg Clayton fd814c5a64 <rdar://problem/14717184>
LLDB needs in memory module load level settings to control how much information is read from memory when loading in memory modules. This change adds a new setting:

(lldb) settings set target.memory-module-load-level [minimal|partial|complete]

minimal will load only sections (no symbols, or function bounds via function starts or EH frame)
partial will load sections + bounds
complete will load sections + bounds + symbols

llvm-svn: 188246
2013-08-13 01:42:25 +00:00
Michael Sartain cc791bbfab Fix "source list -n printf" on Linux (printf is symbol alias for __printf)
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1109

llvm-svn: 186104
2013-07-11 16:40:56 +00:00
Enrico Granata 9730339bdf Improving the previous checkin about target.load-script-from-symbol-file
There are two settings:
target.load-script-from-symbol-file is a boolean that says load or no load (default: false)
target.warn-on-script-from-symbol-file is also a boolean, it says whether you want to be warned when a script file is not loaded due to security (default: true)

the auto loading on change for target.load-script-from-symbol-file is preserved

llvm-svn: 182336
2013-05-21 00:00:30 +00:00
Enrico Granata caa84cbc01 Forgot to check for empty error strings in the previous checkin
llvm-svn: 182325
2013-05-20 22:40:54 +00:00
Enrico Granata 84a53dfb49 <rdar://problem/13878726>
This changes the setting target.load-script-from-symbol-file to be a ternary enum value:
default (the default value) will NOT load the script files but will issue a warning suggesting workarounds
yes will load the script files
no will not load the script files AND will NOT issue any warning

if you change the setting value from default to yes, that will then cause the script files to be loaded
(the assumption is you didn't know about the setting, got a warning, and quickly want to remedy it)

if you have a settings set command for this in your lldbinit file, be sure to change "true" or "false" into an appropriate "yes" or "no" value

llvm-svn: 182323
2013-05-20 22:29:23 +00:00
Jason Molenda c16b4af0d7 Remove the UUID::GetAsCString() method which required a buffer to save the
UUID string in; added UUID::GetAsString() which returns the uuid string in
a std::string.  Updated callers to use the new method.

llvm-svn: 181078
2013-05-03 23:56:12 +00:00
Greg Clayton b5ad4ec7a3 Cleanup logging to use the new "std::string FileSpec::GetPath()" function. Also added a similar function for modules:
std::string
Module::GetSpecificationDescription () const;

This returns the module as "/usr/lib/libfoo.dylib" for normal files (calls "std::string FileSpec::GetPath()" on m_file) but it also might include the object name in case the module is for a .o file in a BSD archive ("/usr/lib/libfoo.a(bar.o)"). Cleaned up necessary logging code to use it.

llvm-svn: 180717
2013-04-29 17:25:54 +00:00
Greg Clayton 43fe217b11 <rdar://problem/13506727>
Symbol table function names should support lookups like symbols with debug info. 

To fix this I:
- Gutted the way FindFunctions is used, there used to be way too much smarts only in the DWARF plug-in
- Made it more efficient by chopping the name up once and using simpler queries so that SymbolFile and Symtab plug-ins don't need to do as much
- Filter the results at a higher level
- Make the lldb_private::Symtab able to chop up C++ mangled names and make as much sense out of them as possible and also be able to search by basename, fullname, method name, and selector name.

llvm-svn: 178608
2013-04-03 02:00:15 +00:00
Greg Clayton 5160ce5c72 <rdar://problem/13521159>
LLDB is crashing when logging is enabled from lldb-perf-clang. This has to do with the global destructor chain as the process and its threads are being torn down.

All logging channels now make one and only one instance that is kept in a global pointer which is never freed. This guarantees that logging can correctly continue as the process tears itself down.

llvm-svn: 178191
2013-03-27 23:08:40 +00:00
Greg Clayton c7bece56fa <rdar://problem/13069948>
Major fixed to allow reading files that are over 4GB. The main problems were that the DataExtractor was using 32 bit offsets as a data cursor, and since we mmap all of our object files we could run into cases where if we had a very large core file that was over 4GB, we were running into the 4GB boundary.

So I defined a new "lldb::offset_t" which should be used for all file offsets.

After making this change, I enabled warnings for data loss and for enexpected implicit conversions temporarily and found a ton of things that I fixed.

Any functions that take an index internally, should use "size_t" for any indexes and also should return "size_t" for any sizes of collections.

llvm-svn: 173463
2013-01-25 18:06:21 +00:00
Enrico Granata efe637d440 Minor cleanups to the new ModuleList notification APIs: passing in the ModuleList as part of the callbacks, and not copying the notifier as part of copy constructing and assigning
llvm-svn: 167592
2012-11-08 19:16:03 +00:00
Enrico Granata 1759848be0 <rdar://problem/12586350>
This commit does three things:
(a) introduces a new notification model for adding/removing/changing modules to a ModuleList, and applies it to the Target's ModuleList, so that we make sure to always trigger the right set of actions
whenever modules come and go in a target. Certain spots in the code still need to "manually" notify the Target for several reasons, so this is a work in progress
(b) adds a new capability to the Platforms: locating a scripting resources associated to a module. A scripting resource is a Python file that can load commands, formatters, ... and any other action
of interest corresponding to the loading of a module. At the moment, this is only implemented on Mac OS X and only for files inside .dSYM bundles - the next step is going to be letting
the frameworks themselves hold their scripting resources. Implementors of platforms for other systems are free to implement "the right thing" for their own worlds
(c) hooking up items (a) and (b) so that targets auto-load the scripting resources as the corresponding modules get loaded in a target. This has a few caveats at the moment:
 - the user needs to manually add the .py file to the dSYM (soon, it will also work in the framework itself)
 - if two modules with the same name show up during the lifetime of an LLDB session, the second one won't be able to load its scripting resource, but will otherwise work just fine

llvm-svn: 167569
2012-11-08 02:22:02 +00:00
Greg Clayton 3a18e31945 Added a new "module" log channel which covers module creation, deletion, and common module list actions.
Also added a new option for "log enable" which is "--stack" which will print out a stack backtrace for each log line.

This was used to track down the leaking module issue I fixed last week.

llvm-svn: 165438
2012-10-08 22:41:53 +00:00
Enrico Granata 83805259e1 <rdar://problem/12408181> Fixing a bug where we would try to look for types in a module, and then fail to look for them anywhere else because the same SymbolContext was being passed everywhere
llvm-svn: 165169
2012-10-03 21:31:35 +00:00
Greg Clayton 6f4d8af713 <rdar://problem/12125274>
Intentionally leak the module list to avoid unnecessary freeing of modules + object files + symbol files when the program is exiting.

llvm-svn: 164184
2012-09-18 23:50:22 +00:00
Greg Clayton 1f7460716b <rdar://problem/11757916>
Make breakpoint setting by file and line much more efficient by only looking for inlined breakpoint locations if we are setting a breakpoint in anything but a source implementation file. Implementing this complex for a many reasons. Turns out that parsing compile units lazily had some issues with respect to how we need to do things with DWARF in .o files. So the fixes in the checkin for this makes these changes:
- Add a new setting called "target.inline-breakpoint-strategy" which can be set to "never", "always", or "headers". "never" will never try and set any inlined breakpoints (fastest). "always" always looks for inlined breakpoint locations (slowest, but most accurate). "headers", which is the default setting, will only look for inlined breakpoint locations if the breakpoint is set in what are consudered to be header files, which is realy defined as "not in an implementation source file". 
- modify the breakpoint setting by file and line to check the current "target.inline-breakpoint-strategy" setting and act accordingly
- Modify compile units to be able to get their language and other info lazily. This allows us to create compile units from the debug map and not have to fill all of the details in, and then lazily discover this information as we go on debuggging. This is needed to avoid parsing all .o files when setting breakpoints in implementation only files (no inlines). Otherwise we would need to parse the .o file, the object file (mach-o in our case) and the symbol file (DWARF in the object file) just to see what the compile unit was.
- modify the "SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap" to subclass lldb_private::Module so that the virtual "GetObjectFile()" and "GetSymbolVendor()" functions can be intercepted when the .o file contenst are later lazilly needed. Prior to this fix, when we first instantiated the "SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap" class, we would also make modules, object files and symbol files for every .o file in the debug map because we needed to fix up the sections in the .o files with information that is in the executable debug map. Now we lazily do this in the DebugMapModule::GetObjectFile()

Cleaned up header includes a bit as well.

llvm-svn: 162860
2012-08-29 21:13:06 +00:00
Greg Clayton 1d60909e81 <rdar://problem/11740973>
Fixed issues that could happen when the UUID doesn't change in a binary and old stale debug info could end up being used.

llvm-svn: 160145
2012-07-12 22:51:12 +00:00
Greg Clayton 4e0fe8ab95 <rdar://problem/11791234>
Fixed a case where the python interpreter could end up holding onto a previous lldb::SBProcess (probably in lldb.process) when run under Xcode. Prior to this fix, the lldb::SBProcess held onto a shared pointer to a lldb_private::Process. This in turn could cause the process to still have a thread list with stack frames. The stack frames would have module shared pointers in the lldb_private::SymbolContext objects. 

We also had issues with things staying in the shared module list too long when we found things by UUID (we didn't remove the out of date ModuleSP from the global module cache).

Now all of this is fixed and everything goes away between runs.

llvm-svn: 160140
2012-07-12 20:32:19 +00:00
Greg Clayton 8921ce8396 Fix the copy constructor and assignement operator for ModuleList to be thread safe.
llvm-svn: 159285
2012-06-27 19:59:26 +00:00
Jim Ingham 3ee12ef26e We were accessing the ModuleList in the target without locking it for tasks like
setting breakpoints.  That's dangerous, since while we are setting a breakpoint,
the target might hit the dyld load notification, and start removing modules from
the list.  This change adds a GetMutex accessor to the ModuleList class, and
uses it whenever we are accessing the target's ModuleList (as returned by GetImages().)

<rdar://problem/11552372>

llvm-svn: 157668
2012-05-30 02:19:25 +00:00
Jim Ingham 4a94c91077 If we notice that a module with a given file path is replaced by another with the same file
path on rerunning, evict the old module from the target module list, inform the breakpoints
about this so they can do something intelligent as well.

rdar://problem/11273043

llvm-svn: 157008
2012-05-17 18:38:42 +00:00
Jim Ingham 10ebffa48a Don't expose the pthread_mutex_t underlying the Mutex & Mutex::Locker classes.
No one was using it and Locker(pthread_mutex_t *) immediately asserts for 
pthread_mutex_t's that don't come from a Mutex anyway.  Rather than try to make
that work, we should maintain the Mutex abstraction and not pass around the
platform implementation...

Make Mutex::Locker::Lock take a Mutex & or a Mutex *, and remove the constructor
taking a pthread_mutex_t *.  You no longer need to call Mutex::GetMutex to pass
your mutex to a Locker (you can't in fact, since I made it private.)

llvm-svn: 156221
2012-05-04 23:02:50 +00:00
Greg Clayton 37a0a24a5f No functionality changes, mostly cleanup.
Cleaned up the Mutex::Locker and the ReadWriteLock classes a bit.

Also cleaned up the GDBRemoteCommunication class to not have so many packet functions. Used the "NoLock" versions of send/receive packet functions when possible for a bit of performance.

llvm-svn: 154458
2012-04-11 00:24:49 +00:00
Greg Clayton 0cd7086604 <rdar://problem/11202426>
Work around a deadlocking issue where "SBDebugger::MemoryPressureDetected ()" is being called and is causing a deadlock. We now just try and get the lock when trying to trim down the unique modules so we don't deadlock debugger GUI programs until we can find the root cause.

llvm-svn: 154339
2012-04-09 20:22:01 +00:00
Greg Clayton 780af51505 Fixed ModuleList::FindTypes() so that when a symbol context is supplied that contains a valid module, it will search that module first, then if we are still looking for matches (we have found less that "max_matches"), search in all of the other modules as well.
llvm-svn: 154186
2012-04-06 18:09:43 +00:00
Greg Clayton 29399a24c6 In a prior commit, I changed the parameters around on a ModuleList::FindTypes where the old parameters that existing clients were using would have been compatible, so I renamed ModuleList::FindTypes to ModuleList::FindTypes2. Then I made fixes and verified I updated and fixed all client code, but I forgot to rename the function back to ModuleList::FindTypes(). I am doing that now and also cleaning up the C++ dynamic type code a bit.
llvm-svn: 154182
2012-04-06 17:41:13 +00:00
Greg Clayton 84db9105d2 <rdar://problem/11113279>
Fixed type lookups to "do the right thing". Prior to this fix, looking up a type using "foo::bar" would result in a type list that contains all types that had "bar" as a basename unless the symbol file was able to match fully qualified names (which our DWARF parser does not). 

This fix will allow type matches to be made based on the basename and then have the types that don't match filtered out. Types by name can be fully qualified, or partially qualified with the new "bool exact_match" parameter to the Module::FindTypes() method.

This fixes some issue that we discovered with dynamic type resolution as well as improves the overall type lookups in LLDB.

llvm-svn: 153482
2012-03-26 23:03:23 +00:00
Greg Clayton 2af282a16b Fixed the ability to load a module from a path by using just a UUID. After
the migration to ModuleSpec objects this broke and is now fixed.

Also fixed a case in the darwin kernel dynamic loader where we just need to
trust the load address of the kernel if we can't read it from memory.

llvm-svn: 153164
2012-03-21 04:25:00 +00:00
Greg Clayton 9ff1ba2546 Make sure that if a UUID was passed in, and we found a match, that should be enough for us.
llvm-svn: 153076
2012-03-20 01:31:19 +00:00
Greg Clayton d804d28556 <rdar://problem/8196933>
Use the metadata in the dSYM bundle Info.plist to remap source paths when they keys are available.

llvm-svn: 152836
2012-03-15 21:01:31 +00:00
Greg Clayton b9a01b3990 Made a ModuleSpec class in Module.h which can specify a module using one or
more of the local path, platform path, associated symbol file, UUID, arch,
object name and object offset. This allows many of the calls that were
GetSharedModule to reduce the number of arguments that were used in a call
to these functions. It also allows a module to be created with a ModuleSpec
which allows many things to be specified prior to any accessors being called
on the Module class itself. 

I was running into problems when adding support for "target symbol add"
where you can specify a stand alone debug info file after debugging has started
where I needed to specify the associated symbol file path and if I waited until
after construction, the wrong  symbol file had already been located. By using
the ModuleSpec it allows us to construct a module with as little or as much
information as needed and not have to change the parameter list.

llvm-svn: 151476
2012-02-26 05:51:37 +00:00
Greg Clayton e72dfb321c <rdar://problem/10103468>
I started work on being able to add symbol files after a debug session
had started with a new "target symfile add" command and quickly ran into
problems with stale Address objects in breakpoint locations that had 
lldb_private::Section pointers into modules that had been removed or 
replaced. This also let to grabbing stale modules from those sections. 
So I needed to thread harded the Address, Section and related objects.

To do this I modified the ModuleChild class to now require a ModuleSP
on initialization so that a weak reference can created. I also changed
all places that were handing out "Section *" to have them hand out SectionSP.
All ObjectFile, SymbolFile and SymbolVendors were inheriting from ModuleChild
so all of the find plug-in, static creation function and constructors now
require ModuleSP references instead of Module *. 

Address objects now have weak references to their sections which can
safely go stale when a module gets destructed. 

This checkin doesn't complete the "target symfile add" command, but it
does get us a lot clioser to being able to do such things without a high
risk of crashing or memory corruption.

llvm-svn: 151336
2012-02-24 01:59:29 +00:00
Greg Clayton c859e2d524 Full core file support has been added for mach-o core files.
Tracking modules down when you have a UUID and a path has been improved.

DynamicLoaderDarwinKernel no longer parses mach-o load commands and it
now uses the memory based modules now that we can load modules from memory.

Added a target setting named "target.exec-search-paths" which can be used
to supply a list of directories to use when trying to look for executables.
This allows one or more directories to be used when searching for modules
that may not exist in the SDK/PDK. The target automatically adds the directory
for the main executable to this list so this should help us in tracking down
shared libraries and other binaries. 

llvm-svn: 150426
2012-02-13 23:10:39 +00:00
Sean Callanan 9df05fbb7f Extended function lookup to allow the user to
indicate whether inline functions are desired.
This allows the expression parser, for instance,
to filter out inlined functions when looking for
functions it can call.

llvm-svn: 150279
2012-02-10 22:52:19 +00:00
Greg Clayton c3776bf288 First pass at mach-o core file support is in. It currently works for x86_64
user space programs. The core file support is implemented by making a process
plug-in that will dress up the threads and stack frames by using the core file
memory. 

Added many default implementations for the lldb_private::Process functions so
that plug-ins like the ProcessMachCore don't need to override many many 
functions only to have to return an error.

Added new virtual functions to the ObjectFile class for extracting the frozen
thread states that might be stored in object files. The default implementations
return no thread information, but any platforms that support core files that
contain frozen thread states (like mach-o) can make a module using the core
file and then extract the information. The object files can enumerate the 
threads and also provide the register state for each thread. Since each object
file knows how the thread registers are stored, they are responsible for 
creating a suitable register context that can be used by the core file threads.

Changed the process CreateInstace callbacks to return a shared pointer and
to also take an "const FileSpec *core_file" parameter to allow for core file
support. This will also allow for lldb_private::Process subclasses to be made
that could load crash logs. This should be possible on darwin where the crash
logs contain all of the stack frames for all of the threads, yet the crash
logs only contain the registers for the crashed thrad. It should also allow
some variables to be viewed for the thread that crashed.

llvm-svn: 150154
2012-02-09 06:16:32 +00:00
Greg Clayton c96605461c <rdar://problem/10560053>
Fixed "target modules list" (aliased to "image list") to output more information
by default. Modified the "target modules list" to have a few new options:

"--header" or "-h" => show the image header address
"--offset" or "-o" => show the image header address offset from the address in the file (the slide applied to the shared library)

Removed the "--symfile-basename" or "-S" option, and repurposed it to 
"--symfile-unique" "-S" which will show the symbol file if it differs from
the executable file.

ObjectFile's can now be loaded from memory for cases where we don't have the
files cached locally in an SDK or net mounted root. ObjectFileMachO can now
read mach files from memory.

Moved the section data reading code into the ObjectFile so that the object
file can get the section data from Process memory if the file is only in
memory.

lldb_private::Module can now load its object file in a target with a rigid 
slide (very common operation for most dynamic linkers) by using:

bool 
Module::SetLoadAddress (Target &target, lldb::addr_t offset, bool &changed)

lldb::SBModule() now has a new constructor in the public interface:

SBModule::SBModule (lldb::SBProcess &process, lldb::addr_t header_addr);

This will find an appropriate ObjectFile plug-in to load an image from memory
where the object file header is at "header_addr".

llvm-svn: 149804
2012-02-05 02:38:54 +00:00
Greg Clayton e1cd1be6d6 Switching back to using std::tr1::shared_ptr. We originally switched away
due to RTTI worries since llvm and clang don't use RTTI, but I was able to 
switch back with no issues as far as I can tell. Once the RTTI issue wasn't
an issue, we were looking for a way to properly track weak pointers to objects
to solve some of the threading issues we have been running into which naturally
led us back to std::tr1::weak_ptr. We also wanted the ability to make a shared 
pointer from just a pointer, which is also easily solved using the 
std::tr1::enable_shared_from_this class. 

The main reason for this move back is so we can start properly having weak
references to objects. Currently a lldb_private::Thread class has a refrence
to its parent lldb_private::Process. This doesn't work well when we now hand
out a SBThread object that contains a shared pointer to a lldb_private::Thread
as this SBThread can be held onto by external clients and if they end up
using one of these objects we can easily crash.

So the next task is to start adopting std::tr1::weak_ptr where ever it makes
sense which we can do with lldb_private::Debugger, lldb_private::Target,
lldb_private::Process, lldb_private::Thread, lldb_private::StackFrame, and
many more objects now that they are no longer using intrusive ref counted
pointer objects (you can't do std::tr1::weak_ptr functionality with intrusive
pointers).

llvm-svn: 149207
2012-01-29 20:56:30 +00:00
Greg Clayton 29ad7b914f Added a ModuleList::Destroy() method which will reclaim the std::vector
memory by doing a swap.

Also added a few utilty functions that can be enabled for debugging issues
with modules staying around too long when external clients still have references
to them.

llvm-svn: 149138
2012-01-27 18:45:39 +00:00
Jim Ingham 50b3d507bd Let the Module FindType do the stripping of namespace components, that's not expensive
and doing it both at the ModuleList and Module levels means we look 4 times for a negative
search.  Also, don't do the search for the stripped name if that is the same as the original
one.

llvm-svn: 148054
2012-01-12 22:35:29 +00:00
Greg Clayton 44435ed07a Big change in the way ObjectFile file contents are managed. We now
mmap() the entire object file contents into memory with MAP_PRIVATE.
We do this because object file contents can change on us and currently
this helps alleviate this situation. It also make the code for accessing
object file data much easier to manage and we don't end up opening the
file, reading some data and closing the file over and over.

llvm-svn: 148017
2012-01-12 05:25:17 +00:00
Greg Clayton e38a5edd9e Added code in the Host layer that can report system log messages
so that we don't have "fprintf (stderr, ...)" calls sprinkled everywhere.
Changed all needed locations over to using this.

For non-darwin, we log to stderr only. On darwin, we log to stderr _and_
to ASL (Apple System Log facility). This will allow GUI apps to have a place
for these error and warning messages to go, and also allows the command line
apps to log directly to the terminal.

llvm-svn: 147596
2012-01-05 03:57:59 +00:00
Jim Ingham 9683ff1211 Handle stepping through a trampoline where the jump target is calculated a runtime - and so doesn't match
the name of the PLT entry.  This solution assumes a naming convention agreed upon by us and the system folks,
and isn't general.  The general solution requires actually finding & calling the resolver function if it
hasn't been called yet.  That's more tricky.

llvm-svn: 144981
2011-11-19 00:19:25 +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
Sean Callanan b96ff33b0e Removed namespace qualification from symbol queries.
llvm-svn: 141866
2011-10-13 16:49:47 +00:00
Sean Callanan b6d70ebc0a Added ClangNamespaceDecl * parameters to several
core Module functions that the expression parser
will soon be using.

llvm-svn: 141766
2011-10-12 02:08:07 +00:00
Greg Clayton cac9c5f971 Added to the public API to allow symbolication:
- New SBSection objects that are object file sections which can be accessed
  through the SBModule classes. You can get the number of sections, get a 
  section at index, and find a section by name.
- SBSections can contain subsections (first find "__TEXT" on darwin, then
  us the resulting SBSection to find "__text" sub section).
- Set load addresses for a SBSection in the SBTarget interface
- Set the load addresses of all SBSection in a SBModule in the SBTarget interface
- Add a new module the an existing target in the SBTarget interface
- Get a SBSection from a SBAddress object

This should get us a lot closer to being able to symbolicate using LLDB through
the public API.

llvm-svn: 140437
2011-09-24 00:52:29 +00:00
Jason Molenda 7e589a6011 Change Error::SetErrorStringWithFormat() prototype to use an
__attribute__ format so the compiler knows that this method takes
printf style formatter arguments and checks that it's being used
correctly.  Fix a couple dozen incorrect SetErrorStringWithFormat()
calls throughout the sources.

llvm-svn: 140115
2011-09-20 00:26:08 +00:00
Greg Clayton 7e9b1fd045 We were leaking a stack frame in StackFrameList in Thread.cpp which could
cause extra shared pointer references to one or more modules to be leaked.
This would cause many object files to stay around the life of LLDB, so after
a recompile and rexecution, we would keep adding more and more memory. After
fixing the leak, we found many cases where leaked stack frames were still
being used and causing crashes in the test suite. These are now all resolved.

llvm-svn: 137516
2011-08-12 21:40:01 +00:00
Greg Clayton 0c02e4eaea Fix the broken build that happened with my last checkin.
llvm-svn: 137300
2011-08-11 04:30:39 +00:00