Summary:
.. handling for windows path was completely broken because the function was
expecting \ as path separators, but we were passing it normalized file paths,
where these have been replaced by forward slashes. Apart from this, the function
was incorrect for posix paths as well in some corner cases, as well as being
generally hard to follow.
The corner cases were:
- /../bar -> should be same as /bar
- /bar/.. -> should be same as / (slightly dodgy as the former depends on /bar actually
existing, but since we're doing it in an abstract way, I think the
transformation is reasonable)
I rewrite the function to fix these corner cases and handle windows paths more
correctly. The function should now handle the posix paths (modulo symlinks, but
we cannot really do anything about that without a real filesystem). For windows
paths, there are a couple of corner cases left, mostly to do with drive letter
handling, which cannot be fixed until the rest of the class understands drive
letters better.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26081
llvm-svn: 285593
Summary:
This plugin resembles the already existing Windows-only Minidump plugin.
The WinMinidumpPlugin uses the Windows API for parsing Minidumps
while this plugin is cross-platform because it includes a Minidump
parser (which is already commited)
It is able to produce a backtrace, to read the general puprose regiters,
inspect local variables, show image list, do memory reads, etc.
For now the only arches that this supports are x86_32 and x86_64.
This is because I have only written register contexts for those.
Others will come in next CLs.
I copied the WinMinidump tests and adapted them a little bit for them to
work with the new plugin (and they pass)
I will add more tests, aiming for better code coverage.
There is still functionality to be added, see TODOs in code.
Reviewers: labath, zturner
Subscribers: beanz, mgorny, modocache, lldb-commits, amccarth
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25905
llvm-svn: 285587
Summary:
This, like the x86_64 case, reads the register values from the minidump
file, and emits a binary buffer that is ordered using the offsets from
the RegisterInfoInterface argument. That way we can reuse an existing
register context.
Added unit tests.
Reviewers: labath, zturner
Subscribers: beanz, mgorny, modocache, amccarth, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25832
llvm-svn: 285584
Note that the parsing code here is still incorrect wrt. the new draft of the
dwarf 5 spec (seconds arguments to DW_LLE_startx_length should be uleb128, not
u32). Once we have compilers actually emitting dwarf conformant with the new
spec, we'll need to revisit this and figure out the proper behavior there.
This should unbreak the linux bot.
llvm-svn: 285562
Summary:
Convert tests using LLDB headers to use generateSource to put the right include paths in place regardless of whether or not you're building a framework.
This also abstracted generateSource out of TestPublicAPIHeaders.py into lldbtest.py.
Reviewers: tfiala, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25887
llvm-svn: 285542
Summary:
dotest.py has a framework option that is not respected. This patch makes the framework path properly configurable via the --framework option.
This patch also adds a function to the lldbtest.Base class named "hasDarwinFramework" which allows us to not rely on the host platform to determine if a framework is present. If running on Darwin, and not building a framework, this will follow the *nix code paths which are appropriate for Darwin.
Reviewers: tfiala
Subscribers: lldb-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25886
llvm-svn: 285541
LLDB_EXPORT_ALL_SYMBOLS used to instruct the build to export all
the symbols in liblldb on CMake builds. This change limits the
CMake define to only add in the lldb_private namespace to the
symbols that normally get exported, such that we export all the
symbols in the public lldb namespace and the lldb_private namespace.
This is a fix for:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=30822
Reviewers: labath, beanz
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26093
llvm-svn: 285484
Most of them fail right now and are commented out. The main problem is handling
of backslashes on windows, but also the posix path code has a couple of issues.
llvm-svn: 285393
This reverts commit r285357.
I committed this patch accidentally out of order. Will recommit when the change this depends on is landed.
llvm-svn: 285361
Summary:
Convert tests using LLDB headers to use generateSource to put the right include paths in place regardless of whether or not you're building a framework.
This also abstracted generateSource out of TestPublicAPIHeaders.py into lldbtest.py.
Reviewers: tfiala, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25887
llvm-svn: 285357
Summary: This tool is only built on Darwin, and the name darwin-debug matches the Xcode project. We should have this in sync unless there is a good reason not to.
Reviewers: zturner, tfiala, labath
Subscribers: labath, mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25745
llvm-svn: 285356
Summary:
Check whether the setting the breakpoint failed during instruction emulation. If
it did, the next pc is likely in unmapped memory, and the inferior will crash
anyway after the next instruction. Do not return an error in this case, but just
continue stepping.
Reenabled the crash during step test for android/linux.
Reviewers: labath
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, tberghammer, danalbert, srhines, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25926
Author: Jason Majors <jmajors@google.com>
llvm-svn: 285187
Otherwise, they tend to generate filename too long errors.
They already contain the same test name in the directory, file, and class names,
so no information is really lost here.
llvm-svn: 284987
The "value regs" field was filled incorrectly. It is supposed to list the
registers that *this* register is a sub-register of, not the other way around.
This manifested itself in "register read" showing only the smaller sub-registers
(and a bunch of tests not passing). I am not sure if the "invalidates" field is
correct either, but it's usage seems to be inconsistent, so I'll leave that as-is
for now.
llvm-svn: 284981
It's quite sad that we have to edit so many files just to add a register. I am
going to investigate how to merge these definitions somehow, but for now this
should at least get arm64 linux working again.
llvm-svn: 284970
DynamicLoaderDarwinKernel::CheckForKernelImageAtAddress to debug
corefiles that may not be correctly formed.
<rdar://problem/28884846>
llvm-svn: 284900
Summary: Not everyone names their code sign identity "lldb_codesign", so it is nice to allow this to be overridden.
Reviewers: zturner, tfiala
Subscribers: labath, mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25714
llvm-svn: 284893
* Display the strong/weak count in the summary
* Display the pointed object as a synthetic member
* Create synthetic children for weak/strong count
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25726
llvm-svn: 284828
This tests that lldb handles the situation when a single instruction triggers
multiple watchpoint hits. It currently fails on arm due to what appears to be a
lldb-server bug (pr30758).
llvm-svn: 284819
This reverts commit r284795, as it breaks watchpoint handling on arm (and
presumable all architectures that report watchpoint hits without executing the
tripping instruction).
There seems to be something fundamentally wrong with this patch: it uses
process_sp->AddPreResumeAction to re-enable the watchpoint, but the whole point
of the step-over-watchpoint logic (which AFAIK is the only user of this class) is
to disable the watchpoint *after* we resume to do the single step.
I have no idea how to fix this except by reverting the offending patch.
llvm-svn: 284817
This can happen if you debug an iOS corefile on
a mac, where PlatformPOSIX::GetHostname ends up
not providing a hostname because we're working
with a platform of remote-ios.
llvm-svn: 284799
Also, watchpoint commands, like breakpoint commands, need to run in async mode.
This was causing intermittent failures in TestWatchpointCommandPython.py, which is now solid.
llvm-svn: 284795
by grubbing the break list output. If you pass a number of locations into
the run_break_* functions, they will check that this is right for you.
llvm-svn: 284791
This time it should actually work. The previous implementaiton was not
getting the linker or compiler flag set correctly in all the right
situations. By moving the check down and basing it of whether or not CXX
is set I we can have the logic to add the flags exist only once for the
linker and once for the compiler instead of duplicating it.
llvm-svn: 284756
Summary:
I misunderstood the format of the register context layout.
I thought it was a dynamically changing structure, and that it's size
depended on context_flags.
It turned out that it always has the same fixed layout and size,
and the context_flags says which fields of the
struct have valid values.
This required a minor redesign of the register context class.
The layout inconsistency, however, was not a "problem" before (e.g. the plugin was working)
because there also was a bug with checking context_flags - the code was
parsing the entire struct regardless of context_flags.
This bug is also fixed in this commit.
Reviewers: labath, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits, amccarth
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25677
llvm-svn: 284741
This patch fixes ARM/AArch64 watchpoint bug which was taking inferior out of control while stepping over watchpoints.
Also adds a test case that tests above problem.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25057
llvm-svn: 284706
RegisterInfos_arm64.h. These register definitions include the
offset into the register context, which will vary depending on the
endianness of the arm64 target system (e.g. s8 is at offset 0 in
v8 on little-endian, it is at offset 12 on big-endian) and I've
only added the little-endian definitions to the table. If we want
to add a big-endian arm64 target, we'll need a separate table which
uses the big-endian offsets for these registers. I changed the
name of the register table from g_register_infos_arm64 to
g_register_infos_arm64_le to make it explicit that this is the
little-endian version of that table, and updated users of the table
to use the new name.
I added support for the "w", "s", and "d" registers to
RegisterContextDarwin_arm64 but it was more an example than anything
useful -- this plugin is only used when working with core files and
darwin core files do not (today) include the floating point register
context, so it only added the support for the "w" pseudo registers.
When we're connected to a real arm64 device, we use the ProcessGDBRemote
code.
llvm-svn: 284666
Summary:
"Initialization of function-local statics is guaranteed to occur only once even when called from
multiple threads, and may be more efficient than the equivalent code using std::call_once."
<http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/thread/call_once>
I'd add that it's also more readable.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17710
llvm-svn: 284601
Summary:
it was added back in 2013, but there are no uses of it. I started refactoring
it, but then it occured to me it would better to delete it.
Reviewers: clayborg, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25393
llvm-svn: 284599
Summary:
Now the Minidump parser can parse the:
1) MemoryInfoList - containing region info about memory ranges (readable,
writable, executable)
2) Memory64List - this is the stuct used when the Minidump is a
full-memory one.
3) Adding filtering of the module list (shared libraries list) - there
can be mutliple records in the module list under the same name but with
different load address (e.g. when the binary has non contigious
sections). FilterModuleList eliminates the duplicated modules, leaving
the one with the lowest load addr.
Added unit tests for everything.
Reviewers: labath, zturner
Subscribers: beanz, mgorny, modocache, lldb-commits, amccarth
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25569
llvm-svn: 284593
Use the LLVM_CMAKE_PATH variable to locate the GetSVN.cmake script.
The variable was already available in stand-alone builds, and is also
set by LLVM since r284581.
llvm-svn: 284584
This patch is causing a lot of issues on bots that I didn't see in local testing. I'm going to have to work on this. Reverting for now while I sort it out.
llvm-svn: 284565
Summary:
If a user has their shell set to a non-POSIX conferment shell the TestTerminal.py tests fail because the shell blurb constructed here may not work in their shell.
In my specific case fish-shell (The Friendly Interactive Shell - http://fishshell.com) does not support $?, it instead uses $status (because it is friendly).
This patch removes the assumption of your default shell by running the constructed bash command via "/bin/bash -c ...". This should be safer for users mutating their shell environment.
Reviewers: tfiala
Subscribers: joerg, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25750
llvm-svn: 284552
Summary:
CMake has no builtin mechanism for cache invalidation. As a general convention you want to not expand user-specified variables in other cached variables because they will not get updated when the user changes their specified value.
This patch moves the "-C" option for dotest.py into the LLDB_TEST_COMMON_ARGS and out of the CMake cache. In order to prevent issues with out-of-date cache files on builders I've added code to scrub "-C ${LLDB_TEST_COMPILER}" out of the CMake caches, by Force writing the variable. This code can be removed in a few days once the change has trickled through CI systems.
Reviewers: tfiala, labath, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25751
llvm-svn: 284551
Summary:
When building the LLDB test programs, if your CC is clang it actually isn't safe to make CXX a string replace of "clang -> clang++". This falls down on unix configurations if your compiler is clang-${version}.
A safer approach is to use the "--driver-mode=g++" option to tell clang to act like clang++.
Reviewers: tfiala, zturner, labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25753
llvm-svn: 284550
Summary:
The dependencies of our libraries (only liblldb, really) we marked as public, which caused all
their dependencies to be repeated when linking any executables to them. This is a problem because
then all the .a files could end up being linked twice, once to liblldb and once
again to to the executable linking against liblldb (lldb, lldb-mi). As it turns out,
our build actually depends on this behavior:
- on windows, lldb does not have getopt, so it pulls it from inside liblldb, even
though getopt is not a part of the exported interface of liblldb (maybe some of
the bsd variants have this problem as well)
- lldb-mi uses llvm, which again is not exported by liblldb
This change does not actually fix these problems (that is going to be a hard
one), but it does make them explicit by moving this magic from add_lldb_library
to the places the executable targets are defined. That way, I can link the
additional .a files only on targets that really need it, and the other targets
can build cleanly and make sure we don't regress further. It also fixes the
LLVM_LINK_LLVM_DYLIB build on linux.
Reviewers: zturner, beanz
Subscribers: ki.stfu, lldb-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25680
llvm-svn: 284466
Summary:
When the local lldb doesn't have access to a copy of the modules in the target, e.g. winphone, with this change now we read these modules from memory.
There are mainly 2 changes:
1. create pecoff object files from memory
2. read from memory when the local file is not available
Reviewers: sas, fjricci, zturner
Subscribers: #lldb
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24284
llvm-svn: 284422
StringRef is passed through all of these APIs but never actually
used. Just remove it from the API for now and if people want to use it
they can add it back.
llvm-svn: 284362
Summary:
This patch adds support for installing public headers in LLDB.framework, and symlinking the headers into the build directory.
While writing the patch I discovered a bug in CMake that prevents applying POST_BUILD steps to framework targets (https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/cmake/issues/16363).
I've implemented the support using POST_BUILD steps wrapped under a CMake version check with a TODO so that we can track the fix.
Reviewers: tfiala, zturner, spyffe
Subscribers: lldb-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25570
llvm-svn: 284250
Summary:
ObjectFileELF::RefineModuleDetailsFromNote() identifies Linux core dumps by searching for
library paths starting with /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu or /lib/i386-linux-gnu. This change widens the
test to allow for linux installations which have addition directories in the path.
Reviewers: ted, hhellyer, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25179
llvm-svn: 284114
Summary:
If Python is installed to a location that contains spaces
(e.g. "C:\Program Files\Python3") then the build fails while attempting
to run the modify-python-lldb.py script because the path to the Python
executable is not double-quoted before being passed to the shell. The
fix consists of letting Python handle the formatting of the command
line, since subprocess.Popen() is perfectly capable of handling paths
containing spaces if it's given the command and arguments as a list
instead of a single pre-formatted string.
Reviewers: zturner, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25396
llvm-svn: 284100
Summary:
This patch adds the following fixes to the check-lldb targets:
* Adds missing dependencies on lldb tools so they get built before tests execute
* Adds Ninja USES_TERMINAL to the target so that the output streams to stdout as it executes
* Uses a generator expression to find the lldb executable, this is more robust than constructing the path manually
Reviewers: tfiala, zturner
Subscribers: mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25490
llvm-svn: 284046
Summary:
Going from LLDB_SRC instead of the file path is safer when looking for compiler-rt. Also need to add support for looking inside the LLVM runtimes subdirectory.
Eventually we should just get CMake to provide these paths during configuration.
Reviewers: tfiala, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25489
llvm-svn: 284045
Summary:
When running on Darwin, the test suite assumes a specific directory structure for the build directory. This works for the Xcode project builds, but fails for CMake builds regardless of whether or not you are generating the LLDB framework.
This patch allows the Darwin code path to fall back to the more generic code path used by other platforms in the event that LLDB.h isn't where the test suite expects it.
This allows API tests to run on Darwin when building with CMake with the framework build enabled or disabled.
Reviewers: tfiala, zturner
Subscribers: labath, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25488
llvm-svn: 284043
Summary: Default installations of OS X do not have system headers installed at /usr/include. This patch allows the LLDB test executables to properly compile when built on a system without headers at /usr/include by specifying a default value for the apple-sdk flag as "macosx".
Reviewers: tfiala, zturner
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25487
llvm-svn: 284042
Summary:
The test suite calls realpath on the lldb executable then append "-mi" to it to find the path of the lldb-mi executable. This does not work when using CMake builds on *nix platforms. On *nix platforms when a version number is set on executables CMake generates the binary as ${name}-${version} with a symlink named ${name} pointing to it.
This results in the lldb executable being named lldb-4.0.0, and since lldb-4.0.0-mi doesn't ever match the lldb-mi executable these tests are always disabled.
This patch looks for lldb-mi in the same directory as lldb.
Reviewers: zturner, tfiala
Subscribers: ki.stfu, enlight, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25486
llvm-svn: 284041
prologue, then loads & stores x20 on the stack from a different
location in the middle of the function, and then restores the
reg in the epilogue. The saving/restoring of x20 in the middle
of the function should be ignored.
llvm-svn: 283969
MSVC does not like the declaration of a terminate() function (I guess it looks
too much like std::terminate()). While I'm there, move the setup/teardown code
into the functions gtest provides for that purpose.
llvm-svn: 283870
plan generator.
Fix a small bug in EmulateInstructionARM64::GetFramePointerRegister
which was returning the stack pointer reg instead of fp, prevented
the unwinder from recognizing the switch to using the fp in a
function. (<rdar://problem/28663117>)
Add a new eContextRestoreStackPointer context hint so that the arm64
emulator can flag when the frame pointer value is copied back in to
the stack pointer and that should be used to compute the canonical
frame address again in an epilogue sequence. (<rdar://problem/28704862>)
Small changes to UnwindAssemblyInstEmulation to have a method we can
call without a live process/thread/etc for unit tests.
<rdar://problem/28663117>
<rdar://problem/28704862>
<rdar://problem/28509178>
llvm-svn: 283847
On Linux, there is no "debugserver" process, and the RUN-line substitution will
fail if you try to substitute '%debugserver' with None.
Fixes PR30492.
llvm-svn: 283520
Summary:
GetDisplayDemangledName will already return a ConstString() when
there is neither a mangled name or a demangled name, so we don't need to special
case here. This will fix GetDisplayName in cases where m_mangled contains
only a demangled name and not a mangled name.
Reviewers: clayborg, granata.enrico, sas
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25201
llvm-svn: 283491
Summary:
This patch adds support for handling the SIGSEGV signal with 'si_code ==
SEGV_BNDERR', which is thrown when a bound violation is caught by the
Intel(R) MPX technology.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25329
llvm-svn: 283474
Summary:
Let the inferior test code determine if CPU and kernel support Intel(R)
MPX and cleanup test script.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25328
llvm-svn: 283461
This is better for a number of reasons. Mostly style, but also:
1) Signed-unsigned comparison warnings disappear since there is
no loop index.
2) Iterating with the range-for style gives you back an entry
that has more than just a const char*, so it's more efficient
and more useful.
3) Makes code safter since the type system enforces that it's
impossible to index out of bounds.
llvm-svn: 283413
insturction profiling. Add a test that verifies that we reject a
32-bit only instruction in 64-bit (long) mode.
This wraps up all the testing I want to add for
x86AssemblyInspectionEngine.
llvm-svn: 283404
- Add new `lldb_private::lldb_renderscript::RSReduceBreakpointResolver`
class that can set breakpoints on kernels that are constituent
functions of named reduction groups. Also support debugging of subsets
of the the reduction group with the `-t, --function-role` flag which
takes a comma-separated list of reduction function types
outconverter,combiner,initializer,accumulator (defaults to all)
- Add 2 new helper methods to `RenderScriptRuntime`,
1. `CreateReductionBreakpoint(name, types)`: instantiates a new
RSReduceBreakpointResolver and inserts that resolver into the running
process.
2. `PlaceBreakpointOnReduction`: which is a public helper function.
- hook up the above functionality to the command-line with new
`CommandObject*` classes that handle parsing of function roles and
dispatch to the runtime. These are namespaced under the snappy
`language renderscript reduction breakpoint ...` subcommand
- [incidental] Factor multiple common uses of
`FindFirstSymbolWithNameAndType(ConstString(".rs.info")` into static
`IsRenderScriptScriptModule(ModuleSP module)` function, and replace
original uses.
llvm-svn: 283362
Tests are failing and build is failing on windows and darwin.
Will fix and commit it later
-------------------------------------------------------------
Revert "xfailing minidump tests again ... :("
This reverts commit 97eade002c9e43c1e0d11475a4888083a8965044.
Revert "Fixing new Minidump plugin tests"
This reverts commit 0dd93b3ab39c8288696001dd50b9a093b813b09c.
Revert "Add the new minidump files to the Xcode project."
This reverts commit 2f638a1d046b8a88e61e212220edc40aecd2ce44.
Revert "xfailing tests for Minidump plugin"
This reverts commit 99311c0b22338a83e6a00c4fbddfd3577914c003.
Revert "Adding a new Minidump post-mortem debugging plugin"
This reverts commit b09a7e4dae231663095a84dac4be3da00b03a021.
llvm-svn: 283352
When -Werror is used, we don't have control over the generated
code from SWIG, and it often has warnings. Just disable them for
this file when -Werror is used, they are usually not important
anyway.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25246
llvm-svn: 283343
Pay more attention to comment alignement (Since _The Great Reformat_ (a015ff50)
comments are no longer properly aligned) and variable naming conventions.
- Manually reflow and cleanup comments and array literals
- Be more economical with our naming conventions
- Be internally consistent with regard to local variable/member function
naming
llvm-svn: 283335
- This change updates the signature of
`RenderScriptRuntime::PlaceBreakpointOnKernel` to take a default
RSCoordinate pointer of nullptr. We use this as the predicate value for
the breakpoint coordinate rather than trying to fit a sentinel `-1` into
a signed version.
```
- void
- PlaceBreakpointOnKernel(Stream &strm, const char *name, const std::array<int, 3> coords, Error &error,
- lldb::TargetSP target);
```
```
+ bool
+ PlaceBreakpointOnKernel(lldb::TargetSP target, Stream &messages, const char *name,
+ const lldb_renderscript::RSCoordinate *coords = nullptr);
```
The above change makes the API for setting breakpoints on kernels
cleaner as it returns a failure value rather than modify a sentinel in
the caller. The optional arguments are now last and have a default
(falsey) value.
- RSCoordinate objects are now comparable with operator== and have
zero initializers which should make them easier to work on.
- Added a `FMT_COORD` macro for use in logging format strings which
should make format strings a little less verbose.
llvm-svn: 283320
which specifies a file path and UUID but not an architecture, open
the file at that path and try every one of the architectures in the
file to see if there is a UUID match. Currently we'll pick the
first slice of a multi-architecture file and return that as the
match, and when the UUID doesn't match because it's the wrong
architecture, we'll end up ignoring the file.
<rdar://problem/28487804>
llvm-svn: 283295
Summary:
This plugin resembles the already existing Windows-only Minidump plugin.
The WinMinidumpPlugin uses the Windows API for parsing Minidumps
while this plugin is cross-platform because it includes a Minidump
parser (which is already commited)
It is able to produce a backtrace, to read the general puprose regiters,
inspect local variables, show image list, do memory reads, etc.
For now the only arch that this supports is x86 64 bit
This is because I have only written a register context for that arch.
Others will come in next CLs.
I copied the WinMinidump tests and adapted them a little bit for them to
work with the new plugin (and they pass)
I will add more tests, aiming for better code coverage.
There is still functionality to be added, see TODOs in code.
Reviewers: labath, zturner
Subscribers: beanz, mgorny, amccarth, lldb-commits, modocache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25196
llvm-svn: 283259
Summary:
This patch is necessary because individual test cases are not required
to have unique names. Therefore, test cases must now
be specified explicitly in the form <TestCase>.<TestMethod>.
Because it works by regex matching, passing just <TestCase> will
still disable an entire file.
This also allows for multiple exclusion files to be specified.
Reviewers: zturner, labath, jingham, tfiala
Subscribers: lldb-commits, sas
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24988
llvm-svn: 283238
unittests. If I have time, I'd like to see if I can write some
tests of the eh_frame augmentation which is a wholly separate code
path (it seems like maybe it should be rolled into the main instruction
scanning codepath, to be honest, and operate on the generated
UnwindPlan instead of bothering with raw instructions at all).
Outside the eh_frame augmentation, I'm comfortable that this unwind
generator is being tested well now.
llvm-svn: 283186
Summary:
Use os.getcwd() instead of get_process_working_directory() as prefix for
souce file.
Reviewers: labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25217
llvm-svn: 283171
There were a number of issues with the Args class preventing
efficient use of strings and incoporating LLVM's StringRef class.
The two biggest were:
1. Backing memory stored in a std::string, so we would frequently
have to use const_cast to get a mutable buffer for passing to
various low level APIs.
2. backing std::strings stored in a std::list, which doesn't
provide random access.
I wanted to solve these two issues so that we could provide
StringRef access to the underlying arguments, and also a way
to provide range-based access to the underlying argument array
while still providing convenient c-style access via an argv style
const char**.
The solution here is to store arguments in a single "entry" class
which contains the backing memory, a StringRef with precomputed
length, and the quote char. The backing memory is a manually
allocated const char* so that it is not invalidated when the
container is resized, and there is a separate argv array provided
for c-style access.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25099
llvm-svn: 283157
These are missing dependencies that have been exposed in builds as a result of my change to make lldb libraries depend on CLANG_TABLEGEN_TARGETS instead of libclang.
llvm-svn: 283081
Summary: The code added in svn r264332 causes "(lldb) " to be printed in the
middle of program console output. This fix restores the behavior for non-Windows
platforms to before the patch.
Reviewers: ted, zturner, clayborg
Subscribers: amccarth, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D25137
llvm-svn: 283031
assembly inspection class is designed to detect. This is only about
half of the instructions that it needs to recognize - I'll complete
this in a separate checkin.
The larger full-function style test cases I'd checked in previously
covered nearly all of these already, but I wanted simpler test cases
too, so if they fail in the future, it will be easier to spot the
issue.
llvm-svn: 283010
The lldbutil.run_break_set_by_file_and_line has already checked that the number of
locations was 1, so don't check it again. And certainly don't check it again by
grubbing in break list output.
Also, we know the Thread's IsStopped state is wrong, and have a test for that, so
don't keep testing it in other files where that isn't the primary thing we're testing.
I removed the xfail for Darwin. If this also passes on other systems, we can remove
the xfails from them as we find that out.
llvm-svn: 282993
'push 0x20(%esp)' which clang can generate when emitting
-fomit-frame-pointer code for 32-bit.
Add a unit test program which includes this instruction.
Also fix a bug in the refactoring/rewrite of the x86 assembly
instruction profiler where I'd hard coded it as a 64-bit disassembler
instead of using the ArchSpec to pick a 32-bit or 64-bit disassembler
from llvm. When the disassembler would hit an instruction
that is invalid in 64-bit mode, it would stop disassembling the function.
This likely led to the TestSBData testsuite failure on linux with 32-bit
i386 and gcc-4.9; I'll test that in a bit.
The newly added unit test program is 32-bit i386 code and it includes
an instruction which is invalid in 64-bit mode so it will catch this.
<rdar://problem/28557876>
llvm-svn: 282991
This change addresses the corner case bug in the test
infrastructure where a test file times out *outside*
of any running test method. In those cases, the issue
was charged to the file, not to a test method within
the file. When that file is re-run successfully,
none of the test-method-level successes would clear
the file-level issue.
This change fixes that: for all test files that are
getting rerun (whether by being marked flaky or
via the --rerun-all-issues flag), file-level test
issues are searched for in each of those files. Each
file-level issue found in the rerun file list then
gets cleared.
A test of this feature is added to issue_verification,
using the technique there of moving the *.py.park file
to *.py to do an end-to-end validation.
This change also adds a .gitignore entry for pyenv
project-level files and fixes up a few minor pep8
formatting violations in files I touched.
Fixes:
llvm.org/pr27423
llvm-svn: 282990
Remove the test for thread stopped states from this test.
That isn't set properly now, and its setting doesn't matter till we actually support non-stop debugging, so
we shouldn't have unrelated tests failing from it.
Also changed some code that was trying and failing to grub command line output, and replaced
it by SB API calls.
llvm-svn: 282976
Summary:
This lets people link against LLVM and their own version of the UTF
library.
I determined this only affects llvm, clang, lld, and lldb by running
$ git grep -wl 'UTF[0-9]\+\|\bConvertUTF\bisLegalUTF\|getNumBytesFor' | cut -f 1 -d '/' | sort | uniq
clang
lld
lldb
llvm
Tested with
ninja lldb
ninja check-clang check-llvm check-lld
(ninja check-lldb doesn't complete for me with or without this patch.)
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: klimek, beanz, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24996
llvm-svn: 282822
IRExecutionUnit.h includes Module.h, which through a long chain of includes eventually includes Attributes.gen.
This fixes a build issue reported to lldb-dev by Hal. Thanks Hal!
llvm-svn: 282803
a large stack frame with lots of spilled registers.
While writing the i386 version of this test, it looks
like I found a bug in the 32-bit instruction profiler
code. I may ned to fix the assembly inspection engine
before I can finish writing that test, so I'm only
committing the 64-bit one tonight.
<rdar://problem/28509178>
llvm-svn: 282683
a linux bot test failure. That one is fixed; hopefully there won't
be any others turned up this time.
The eh_frame augmentation code wasn't working right after the
reorg/rewrite of the classes. It works correctly now for the one
test that was failing - but we'll see what the test bots come up
with.
<rdar://problem/28509178>
llvm-svn: 282659
This changes the Xcode target used by the Green Dragon Xcode CI.
When calling xcodebuild with LLDB_PYTHON_TESTSUITE_ARCH set, the
arch's xUnit XML output is now set to an arch-specific filename:
$(BUILD_DIR)/test-results-$(LLDB_PYTHON_TESTSUITE_ARCH).xml.
The change also ensures that the Python testsuite sees the Xcode
build settings passed in through environment variables.
llvm-svn: 282605
A testbot found a regression introduced in the testsuite with
the changes in r282565 on Ubuntu (TestStepNoDebug.ReturnValueTestCase).
I'll get this set up on an ubuntu box and figure out what is happening
there -- likely a problem with the eh_frame augmentation, which isn't
used on macosx.
llvm-svn: 282566
x86AssemblyInspectionEngine and the current UnwindAssembly_x86 to
allow for the core engine to be exercised by unit tests.
The UnwindAssembly_x86 class will have access to Targets, Processes,
Threads, RegisterContexts -- it will be working in the full lldb
environment.
x86AssemblyInspectionEngine is layered away from all of that, it is
given some register definitions and a bag of bytes to profile.
I wrote an initial unittest for a do-nothing simple x86_64/i386
function to start with. I'll be adding more.
The x86 assembly unwinder was added to lldb early in its bringup;
I made some modernization changes as I was refactoring the code
to make it more consistent with how we write lldb today.
I also added RegisterContextMinidump_x86_64.cpp to the xcode project
file so I can run the unittests from that.
The testsuite passes with this change, but there was quite a bit of
code change by the refactoring and it's possible there are some
issues. I'll be testing this more in the coming days, but it looks
like it is behaving correctly as far as I can tell with automated
testing.
<rdar://problem/28509178>
llvm-svn: 282565
Summary:
This is a register context converter from Minidump to Linux reg context.
This knows the layout of the register context in the Minidump file
(which is the same as in Windows FYI) and as a result emits a binary data
buffer that matches the Linux register context binary layout.
This way we can reuse the existing RegisterContextLinux_x86_64 and
RegisterContextCorePOSIX_x86_64 classes.
Reviewers: labath, zturner
Subscribers: beanz, mgorny, lldb-commits, amccarth
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24919
llvm-svn: 282529
We only use the .o-style debug info here regardless, so having
it run all three debuginfo styles was a waste.
This also strips out the custom build function and uses the
TestBase.build() method.
llvm-svn: 282508
This is the Linux counterpart to the sampling support I added
on the macOS side.
This change also introduces zip-file compression if the size of
the sample output is greater than 10 KB. The Linux side can be
quite large and the textual content is averaging over a 10x
compression factor on tests that I force to time out. When
compression takes place, the filename becomes:
{session_dir}/{TestFilename.py}-{pid}.sample.zip
This support relies on the linux 'perf' tool. If it isn't
present, the behavior is to ignore pre-kill processing of
the timed out test process.
Note calling the perf tool under the timeout command appears
to nuke the profiled process. This was causing the timeout
kill logic to fail due to the process having disappeared.
I modified the kill logic to catch the case of the process
not existing, and I have it ignore the kill request in that
case. Any other exception is still raised.
Reviewers: labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24890
llvm-svn: 282436
This allows debugging of the JIT and other analyses of the internals of the
expression parser. I've also added a testcase that verifies that the setting
works correctly when off and on.
llvm-svn: 282434
CommandData breakpoint commands didn't know whether they were
Python or Command line commands, so they couldn't serialize &
deserialize themselves properly. Fix that.
I also changed the "breakpoint list" command to note in the output
when the commands are Python commands. Fortunately only one test
was relying on this explicit bit of text output.
llvm-svn: 282432
Summary:
This alters the generation of LLDB_REVISION to be heavily based on how clang generates its version header. There are two benefits of this aproach.
(1) The LLDB_REVISION is generated at build time, so it will be updated after an SCM pull/update even if CMake doesn't re-run
(2) This works on Windows
As noted this code is a simplified implementation of the code from clang.
Reviewers: tfiala, zturner
Subscribers: beanz, mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24846
llvm-svn: 282314
Summary:
The current implementation of the test suite allows the user to run
a certain subset of tests using '-p', but does not allow the inverse,
where a user wants to run all but some number of known failing tests.
Implement this functionality.
Reviewers: labath, zturner, tfiala
Subscribers: jingham, sas, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24629
llvm-svn: 282298
This code was adding an explicit dependency on libclang because lldb needs clang headers, changing this to instead depend on the clang tablegen targets means we don't have to depend on building the clang bits in libclang that lldb doesn't need.
Note this is still a bit of a hack because we're adding the dependency to all lldb libraries, instead of just the ones that need it.
llvm-svn: 282196
This change is very mechanical. All it does is change the
signature of `Options::GetDefinitions()` and `OptionGroup::
GetDefinitions()` to return an `ArrayRef<OptionDefinition>`
instead of a `const OptionDefinition *`. In the case of the
former, it deletes the sentinel entry from every table, and
in the case of the latter, it removes the `GetNumDefinitions()`
method from the interface. These are no longer necessary as
`ArrayRef` carries its own length.
In the former case, iteration was done by using a sentinel
entry, so there was no knowledge of length. Because of this
the individual option tables were allowed to be defined below
the corresponding class (after all, only a pointer was needed).
Now, however, the length must be known at compile time to
construct the `ArrayRef`, and as a result it is necessary to
move every option table before its corresponding class. This
results in this CL looking very big, but in terms of substance
there is not much here.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24834
llvm-svn: 282188
This started failing recently:
TestDarwinLogSourceDebug.py
It looks like the behavior of specifying the OS_ACTIVITY_MODE
env var with no value used to work for no-info/no-debug content.
That doesn't appear to be the case now. Switch to specifying
the proper value ('default') when no info-level and no debug-level
content is expected.
llvm-svn: 282172
Also fixed up a couple misbehaving functions. It is perfectly
legal to have env vars with no values (i.e. the '=' and following
need not be present).
llvm-svn: 282171
The test exposed a bug in the StructuredData Serialization code, which did not
escape the backslash properly. This manifested itself as windows breakpoint
serialization roundtrip test not succeeding (as windows paths included
backslashes).
llvm-svn: 282167
Summary:
When extracting options for long options (starting with `--`), the use of
`MIUtilString::SplitConsiderQuotes` to split all the arguments was being
conditioned on the option type to be expected. This was wrong as this caused
other options to be parsed incorrectly since it was not taking into account the
presence of quotes.
Patch by Ed Munoz <edmunoz@microsoft.com>
Reviewers: edmunoz, ki.stfu
Subscribers: ki.stfu, lldb-commits
Projects: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24202
llvm-svn: 282135
The method was hard-coded to check only the 0th element of the array.
This manifested as NSLog messages behaving incorrectly on macOS.
(This is independent of the broken DarwinLog feature).
llvm-svn: 282128
The switch coveres all possible values. If a new one is added in the
future the compiler will start warning, providing a notification that
the switch needs updating.
llvm-svn: 282111
Summary:
This patch adds a CMake option LLDB_BUILD_FRAMEWORK, which builds libLLDB as a macOS framework instead of as a *nix shared library.
With this patch any LLDB executable that has the INCLUDE_IN_FRAMEWORK option set will be built into the Framework's resources directory, and a symlink to the exeuctable will be placed under the build directory's bin folder. Creating the symlinks allows users to run commands from the build directory without altering the workflow.
The framework generated by this patch passes the LLDB test suite, but has not been tested beyond that. It is not expected to be fully ready to ship, but it is a first step.
With this patch binaries that are placed inside the framework aren't being properly installed. Fixing that would increase the patch size significantly, so I'd like to do that in a follow-up.
Reviewers: zturner, tfiala
Subscribers: beanz, lldb-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24749
llvm-svn: 282110
This change introduces optional marking of the column within a source
line where a thread is stopped. This marking will show up when the
source code for a thread stop is displayed, when the debug info
knows the column information, and if the optional column marking is
enabled.
There are two separate methods for handling the marking of the stop
column:
* via ANSI terminal codes, which are added inline to the source line
display. The default ANSI mark-up is to underline the column.
* via a pure text-based caret that is added in the appropriate column
in a newly-inserted blank line underneath the source line in
question.
There are some new options that control how this all works.
* settings set stop-show-column
This takes one of 4 values:
* ansi-or-caret: use the ANSI terminal code mechanism if LLDB
is running with color enabled; if not, use the caret-based,
pure text method (see the "caret" mode below).
* ansi: only use the ANSI terminal code mechanism to highlight
the stop line. If LLDB is running with color disabled, no
stop column marking will occur.
* caret: only use the pure text caret method, which introduces
a newly-inserted line underneath the current line, where
the only character in the new line is a caret that highlights
the stop column in question.
* none: no stop column marking will be attempted.
* settings set stop-show-column-ansi-prefix
This is a text format that indicates the ANSI formatting
code to insert into the stream immediately preceding the
column where the stop column character will be marked up.
It defaults to ${ansi.underline}; however, it can contain
any valid LLDB format codes, e.g.
${ansi.fg.red}${ansi.bold}${ansi.underline}
* settings set stop-show-column-ansi-suffix
This is the text format that specifies the ANSI terminal
codes to end the markup that was started with the prefix
described above. It defaults to: ${ansi.normal}. This
should be sufficient for the common cases.
Significant leg-work was done by Adrian Prantl. (Thanks, Adrian!)
differential review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20835
reviewers: clayborg, jingham
llvm-svn: 282105
r282079 converted the regular expression interface to accept
and return StringRefs instead of char pointers. In one case
a null pointer check was converted to an empty string check,
but this was an incorrect conversion because an empty string
is a valid regular expression. Removing this check should
fix the test failures.
llvm-svn: 282090
This updates getters and setters to use StringRef instead of
const char *. I tested the build on Linux, Windows, and OSX
and saw no build or test failures. I cannot test any BSD
or Android variants, however I expect the required changes
to be minimal or non-existant.
llvm-svn: 282079
This patch refactors the way the XState type is checked and, in order to
simplify the code, it removes the usage of the 'cpuid' instruction: just checking
if the ptrace calls done throuhg ReadFPR is enough to verify both if there is
HW support and if there is kernel support. Also the XCR0 bits are enough to check if
there is both HW and kernel support for AVX and MPX.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24764
llvm-svn: 282072
Serialize breakpoint names & the hardware_requested attributes.
Also added a few missing affordances to SBBreakpoint whose absence
writing the tests pointed out.
<rdar://problem/12611863>
llvm-svn: 282036
This converts Args::Unshift, Args::AddOrReplaceEnvironmentVariable,
and Args::ContainsEnvironmentVariable to use StringRefs. The code
is also simplified somewhat as a result.
llvm-svn: 281942
This patch also marks the const char* versions as =delete to prevent
their use. This has the potential to cause build breakages on some
platforms which I can't compile. I have tested on Windows, Linux,
and OSX. Best practices for fixing broken callsites are outlined in
Args.h in a comment above the deleted function declarations.
Eventually we can remove these =delete declarations, but for now they
are important to make sure that all implicit conversions from
const char * are manually audited to make sure that they do not invoke a
conversion from nullptr.
llvm-svn: 281919
This change adds support for the gtests that require input data
in the Inputs files. This is done through a new Xcode script
phase that runs the scripts/Xcode/prepare-gtest-run-dir.sh script.
That script simply copies the contents of all unittests/**/Inputs
dirs into ${TARGET_BUILD_DIR}/Inputs before running the test.
This change also renames the Xcode 'gtest-for-debugging' to
'gtest-build', and makes the gtest "build and run" target
depend on gtest-build. This reduces replication within the
targets. gtest .c/.cpp files now should only be added to
the gtest-build target.
llvm-svn: 281913
Where possible, remove the const char* version. To keep the
risk and impact here minimal, I've only done the simplest
functions.
In the process, I found a few opportunities for adding some
unit tests, so I added those as well.
Tested on Windows, Linux, and OSX.
llvm-svn: 281799
Initial implementation of support for tracking
[RenderScript Reductions](https://developer.android.com/guide/topics/renderscript/compute.html#reduction-in-depth)
With this patch, `language renderscript module dump` properly lists reductions
that are part of loaded RenderScript modules as well the the consituent
functions and their roles, within the reduction.
This support required new tracking mechanisms for the `#pragma(reduce)`
mechanism, and extension of `RSModuleDescriptor::ParseRSInfo` to support
the metadata output by `bcc`. This work was also an opportunity to
refactor/improve parse code:
- `RSModuleDescriptor::ParseExportReduceCount` now has a complete
implementation and the debugger can correctly track reductions on
receipt of a module hook.
- `RSModuleDescriptor::Dump` now dumps Reductions as well as `ForEach`
kernels. Also, fixed indentation of the output, and made indentation
groupings in the source clearer.
- `RSModuleDescriptor::ParseRSInfo` now returns true if the `".rs.info"`
packet has nonzero linecount, rather than rejecting RenderScripts that
don't contain kernels (an unlikely situation, but possibly valid). This
was changed because scripts that only contained reductions were not
being tracked in `RenderScriptRuntime::LoadModule`.
- Refactor `RSModuleInfo::ParseRSInfo` and add reduction spec parser stub
- Prepared ParseRSInfo to more easily be able to add new parser types
- Use llvm::StringRef and llvm::StringMap helpers to make the parsing code cleaner
- factor out forEachCount, globalVarCount, and pragmaCount parsing block to their own methods
- Add ExportReduceCount Parser
- Use `llvm::StringRef` in `RSKernelDescriptor` constructor
- removed now superfluous `MAXLINE` macros as we've switched from `const
char *` to `llvm::StringRef`
llvm-svn: 281717
The pexpect-based tests properly checked for the stub reporting
DarwinLog support. The event-based ones did not. This is fixed
here. Swift CI bots are not currently building debugserver on
macOS, so they don't have the DarwinLog support even when they
pass the macOS 10.12 check.
llvm-svn: 281696
Summary:
This patch supplies basic infrastructure for LLDB to use LIT, and ports a few basic test cases from the LLDB test suite into LIT.
With this patch the LLDB lit system is not capable or intended to fully replace the existing LLDB test suite, but this first patch enables people to write lit tests for LLDB.
The lit substitution for %cc and %cxx default to the host compiler unless the CMake option LLDB_TEST_CLANG is On, in which case the in-tree clang will be used.
The target check-lldb-lit will run all lit tests including the lit-based executor for the unit tests. Alternatively there is a target generated for each subdirectory under the lit directory, so check-lldb-unit and check-lldb-expr will run just the tests under their respective directories.
The ported tests are not removed from the existing suite, and should not be until such a time when the lit runner is mature and in use by bots and workflows.
Reviewers: zturner, labath, jingham, tfiala
Subscribers: beanz, mgorny, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24591
llvm-svn: 281651
This makes the code easier to grok, and since this is a very low
level function it also is very helpful to have this take a StringRef
since it means anyone higher up the chain who has a StringRef would
have to first convert it to a null-terminated string. This way it
can work equally well with StringRefs or const char*'s, which will
enable the conversion of higher up functions to StringRef.
Tested on Windows, Linux, and OSX and saw no regressions.
llvm-svn: 281642
This Xcode build variable defaults to x86_64. It can be set to i386
to cause the lldb-python-test-suite target run the tests in the
specified architecture.
This flag is being added for the zorg build script so that Green Dragon
can run the test suite against both x86_64 and i386 macOS targets.
llvm-svn: 281639
It is a new attribute emitted by clang as a GNU extension and will
be part of Dwarf5. The purpose of the attribute is to specify a compile
unit level base value for all DW_AT_ranges to reduce the number of
relocations have to be done by the linker.
Fixes (at least partially): https://llvm.org/pr28826
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24514
llvm-svn: 281595
Thanks to Zachary Turner for the suggestion. It's distasteful that the actual
type of the lambda can't be spelled out, but it should be evident from the
definition of the lambda body.
llvm-svn: 281536
Moved the guts of the code from CommandObjectBreakpoint to Target (should
have done it that way in the first place.) Added an SBBreakpointList class
so there's a way to specify which breakpoints to serialize and to report the
deserialized breakpoints.
<rdar://problem/12611863>
llvm-svn: 281520
Summary:
This patch uses the instruction CPUID to verify that FXSAVE, XSAVE, AVX
and MPX are supported by the target hardware. In case the HW supports XSAVE,
and at least one of the extended register sets, it further checks if the
target software has the kernel support for such features, by verifying that
their XSAVE part is correctly managed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24559
llvm-svn: 281507
VS 2015 and higher begin making use of c++14 in their standard
library headers. As such, -std=c++11 makes it so you can't compile
trivial programs. Bump this to -std=c++14 when this situation is
detected.
llvm-svn: 281420
using to enqueue all the jobs wasn't enough time on a slow/overloaded
system. Instead use a global to indicate when all the work has
been enqueued, let's see if this makes the CIs work more reliably.
llvm-svn: 281418
I'm was trying to do some cleanup and code modernization and in
doing so I needed to change ParseMachCPUDashSubtypeTriple to take
a StringRef. To ensure I don't break anything, I'm adding some
unit tests for this function. As a side benefit, this also expands
test coverage of this function to all platforms, since in general
this code would rarely be exercised on non Mac platforms, and never
in the test suite.
llvm-svn: 281387
Plumb unique_ptrs<> all the way through the baton interface.
NFC, this is a minor improvement to remove the possibility of an
accidental pointer ownership issue.
Reviewed By: jingham
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24495
llvm-svn: 281360
Summary:
Added parsing of the MiscInfo data stream.
The main member of it that we care about is the process_id
On Linux generated Minidump (from breakpad) we don't have
the MiscInfo, we have the /proc/$pid/status from where we can get the
pid.
Also parsing the module list - the list of all of the loaded
modules/shared libraries.
Parsing the exception stream.
Parsing MinidumpStrings.
I have unit tests for all of that.
Also added some tests using a Minidump generated from Windows tools (not
from breakpad)
Reviewers: labath, zturner
Subscribers: beanz, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24385
llvm-svn: 281348
the expectedFlakeyDarwin annotation.
I've been running this test in isolation on my macOS Sierra system
and haven't seen a failure in 20-30 runs. The number of simultaneous
debug sessions that it spins up could be a problem when the testbots
are running under load, so I'm reducing this from 20 simultaneous
debug sessions to see if we can get enough stability to leave this
enabled.
llvm-svn: 281291
Still to come:
1) SB API's
2) Testcases
3) Loose ends:
a) serialize Thread options
b) serialize Exception resolvers
4) "break list --file" should list breakpoints contained in a file and
"break read -f 1 3 5" should then read in only those breakpoints.
<rdar://problem/12611863>
llvm-svn: 281273
It looks like the message-content-retrieval aspect of DarwinLog
support is flaky, not just the regex match against it. Slightly
less frequently than the regex matching, I am seeing the
direct string-match variant of log-message-content matching
also fail.
Tracked by:
llvm.org/pr30299
rdar://28237450
llvm-svn: 281251
The class is only used in the debugserver. The rest of lldb has the StringExtractor class.
Xcode project will need to be updated after this.
llvm-svn: 281226
Summary: This patch adds a new test and fixes extra new-line before exit
Reviewers: abidh
Subscribers: ki.stfu, dawn, lldb-commits, abidh
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D9740
llvm-svn: 281199
Summary:
It fixes the following compile warnings:
1. '0' flag ignored with precision and ‘%d’ gnu_printf format
2. enumeral and non-enumeral type in conditional expression
3. format ‘%d’ expects argument of type ‘int’, but argument 4 has type ...
4. enumeration value ‘...’ not handled in switch
5. cast from type ‘const uint64_t* {aka ...}’ to type ‘int64_t* {aka ...}’ casts away qualifiers
6. extra ‘;’
7. comparison between signed and unsigned integer expressions
8. variable ‘register_operand’ set but not used
9. control reaches end of non-void function
Reviewers: jingham, emaste, zturner, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24331
llvm-svn: 281191
This change does the following:
* Changes the signature for the continuation delegate method that handles
async structured data from accepting an already-parsed structured data
element to taking just the packet contents.
* Moves the conversion of the JSON-async: packet contents from
GDBRemoteClientBase to the continuation delegate method.
* Adds a new unit test for verifying that the $JSON-asyc: packets get
decoded and that the decoded packets get forwarded on to the delegate
for further processing. Thanks to Pavel for making that whole section of
code easily unit testable!
* Tightens up the packet verification on reception of a $JSON-async:
packet contents. The code prior to this change is susceptible to a
segfault if a packet is carefully crafted that starts with $J but
has a total length shorter than the length of "$JSON-async:".
Reviewers: labath, clayborg, zturner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23884
llvm-svn: 281121
Summary:
LLVM guys did some clean-up of the Attribute getters/setters
and because of that the build was failing.
Reviewers: ldrumm
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24382
llvm-svn: 281030
The behaviour of FileSpec differed between host OS versions. Hardcode the path
syntax to posix, as we don't care about that in this test.
llvm-svn: 281025
The switch coveres all possible values. If a new one is added in the
future the compiler will start warning, providing a notification that
the switch needs updating.
llvm-svn: 280933
Summary:
- Added an API to public interface that provides permissions (RWX) of
individual sections of an object file
- Earlier, there was no way to find out this information through SB
APIs
- A possible use case of this API is:
when a user wants to know the sections that have executable machine
instructions and want to write a tool on top of LLDB based on this
information
- Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24251
llvm-svn: 280924
It turns out that self.dbg.GetSelectedPlatform().GetTriple() is not a good way
to get the triple of the process, as it returns the incorrect triple in case of a
32-bit process running on a 64-bit platform.
Instead, go the long way round and ask the stub for the process triple. This
fixes the test for i386.
llvm-svn: 280922
Summary:
This adds the jModulesInfo packet, which is the equivalent of qModulesInfo, but it enables us to
query multiple modules at once. This makes a significant speed improvement in case the
application has many (over a hundred) modules, and the communication link has a non-negligible
latency. This functionality is accessed by ProcessGdbRemote::PrefetchModuleSpecs(), which does
the caching. GetModuleSpecs() is modified to first consult the cache before asking the remote
stub. PrefetchModuleSpecs is currently only called from POSIX-DYLD dynamic loader plugin, after
it reads the list of modules from the inferior memory, but other uses are possible.
This decreases the attach time to an android application by about 40%.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: tberghammer, lldb-commits, danalbert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24236
llvm-svn: 280919
mode in lldb works. I've been discussing this with Jim Ingham,
Greg Clayton, and Kate Stone for the past week or two.
Previously lldb would print three source lines (centered on the
line table entry line for the current line) followed by the assembly.
It would print the context information (module`function + offset)
before those three lines of source.
Now lldb will print up to two lines before/after the line table
entry. It prints two '*' characters for the line table line to
make it clear what line is showing assembly. There is one line of
whitespace before/after the source lines so the separation between
source & assembly is clearer. I don't print the context line
(module`function + offset). I stop printing context lines if it's
a different line table entry, or if it's a source line I've already
printed as context to another source line. If I have two line table
entries one after another for the same source line (I get these often
with clang - with different column information in them), I only print
the source line once.
I'm also using the target.process.thread.step-avoid-regexp setting
(which keeps you from stepping into STL functions that have been inlined
into your own code) and avoid printing any source lines from functions
that match that regexp.
When lldb disassembles into a new function, it will try to find the
declaration line # for the function and print all of the source lines
between the decl and the first line table entry (usually a { curly brace)
so we have a good chance of including the arguments, at least with the
debug info emitted by clang.
Finally, the # of source lines of context to show has been separated
from whether we're doing mixed source & assembly or not. Previously
specifying 0 lines of context would turn off mixed source & assembly.
I think there's room for improvement, and maybe some bugs I haven't
found yet, but it's in good enough shape to upstream and iterate at
this point.
I'm not sure how best to indicate which source line is the actual line
table # versus context lines. I'm using '**' right now. Both Kate
and Greg had the initial idea to reuse '->' (normally used to indicate
"currently executing source line") - I tried it but I wasn't thrilled,
I'm too used to the established meaning of ->.
Greg had the interesting idea of avoiding context source lines only
in two line table entries in the same source file. So we'd print
two lines before & after a source line, and then the next line table
entry (if it was on the next source line after those two context lines)
we'd display only the following two lines -- the previous two had just
been printed. If an inline source line was printed between these two,
though, we'd print the context lines for both of them. It's an
interesting idea, and I want to see how it works with both -O0 and -O3
codegen where we have different amounts of inlining.
<rdar://problem/27961419>
llvm-svn: 280906
macro, so writing ::dispatch_release did not work as expected.
Remove the global anon namespace :: designation; the header will
get us the correct declaration.
llvm-svn: 280903
Function::GetStartLineSourceInfo before we try to
return the start line information about a function;
this function requires it to have been initialized.
llvm-svn: 280902
After the reformat, the unittests do not compile due to missing due to redefinition errors
between PosixApi.h and ucrt/direct.h. This is a bit of a shot in the dark, as I have not tested
it on windows, but I am restoring the original include order, so it should hopefully fix it.
llvm-svn: 280793