Commit Graph

84 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Enrico Granata 770eb05aa5 Fixing an issue where saying 'po foo' made both the summary and the description for foo come out. If one is po'ing something they most probably only care about the description - We will not omit the summary
llvm-svn: 153608
2012-03-28 22:17:37 +00:00
Enrico Granata 86cc982974 Massive enumeration name changes: a number of enums in ValueObject were not following the naming pattern
Changes to synthetic children:
 - the update(self): function can now (optionally) return a value - if it returns boolean value True, ValueObjectSyntheticFilter will not clear its caches across stop-points
   this should allow better performance for Python-based synthetic children when one can be sure that the child ValueObjects have not changed
 - making a difference between a synthetic VO and a VO with a synthetic value: now a ValueObjectSyntheticFilter will not return itself as its own synthetic value, but will (correctly)
   claim to itself be synthetic
 - cleared up the internal synthetic children architecture to make a more consistent use of pointers and references instead of shared pointers when possible
 - major cleanup of unnecessary #include, data and functions in ValueObjectSyntheticFilter itself
 - removed the SyntheticValueType enum and replaced it with a plain boolean (to which it was equivalent in the first place)
Some clean ups to the summary generation code
Centralized the code that clears out user-visible strings and data in ValueObject
More efficient summaries for libc++ containers

llvm-svn: 153061
2012-03-19 22:58:49 +00:00
Enrico Granata 0c489f58cd 1) solving a bug where, after Jim's fixes to stack frames, synthetic children were not recalculated when necessary, causing them to get out of sync with live data
2) providing an updated list of tagged pointers values for the objc_runtime module - hopefully this one is final
3) changing ValueObject::DumpValueObject to use an Options class instead of providing a bulky list of parameters to pass around
   this change had been laid out previously, but some clients of DumpValueObject() were still using the old prototype and some arguments
   were treated in a special way and passed in directly instead of through the Options class
4) providing new GetSummaryAsCString() and GetValueAsCString() calls in ValueObject that are passed a formatter object and a destination string
   and fill the string by formatting themselves using the formatter argument instead of the default for the current ValueObject
5) removing the option to have formats and summaries stick to a variable for the current stoppoint
   after some debate, we are going with non-sticky: if you say frame variable --format hex foo, the hex format will only be applied to the current command execution and not stick when redisplaying foo
   the other option would be full stickiness, which means that foo would be formatted as hex for its whole lifetime
   we are open to suggestions on what feels "natural" in this regard

llvm-svn: 151801
2012-03-01 04:24:26 +00:00
Greg Clayton a73d269294 There is no need to hold onto an ExecutionContext as a member variable.
ExecutionContext objects have shared pointers to Target, Process, Thread
and Frame objects and they can end up being held onto for too long.

llvm-svn: 149133
2012-01-27 18:18:23 +00:00
Greg Clayton 6efba4fc97 Fixed formats being able to be applied recursively when using:
target variable -f <format> [args]
frame variable -f <format> [args]
expression -f <format> -- expr

llvm-svn: 149080
2012-01-26 21:08:30 +00:00
Sean Callanan 20bb3aa53a The "desired result type" code in the expression
parser has hitherto been an implementation waiting
for a use.  I have now tied the '-o' option for
the expression command -- which indicates that the
result is an Objective-C object and needs to be
printed -- to the ExpressionParser, which
communicates the desired type to Clang.

Now, if the result of an expression is determined
by an Objective-C method call for which there is
no type information, that result is implicitly
cast to id if and only if the -o option is passed
to the expression command.  (Otherwise if there
is no explicit cast Clang will issue an error.
This behavior is identical to what happened before
r146756.)

Also added a testcase for -o enabled and disabled.

llvm-svn: 147099
2011-12-21 22:22:58 +00:00
Sean Callanan c0a6e0619d Added a function to the Host that gets a dummy target
for it, so that people who want to use LLDB as a
calculator can run simple expressions without needing
a target or process.

llvm-svn: 143147
2011-10-27 21:22:25 +00:00
Greg Clayton 5009f9d501 Added support for the new ".apple_objc" accelerator tables. These tables are
in the same hashed format as the ".apple_names", but they map objective C
class names to all of the methods and class functions. We need to do this 
because in the DWARF the methods for Objective C are never contained in the
class definition, they are scattered about at the translation unit level and
they don't even have attributes that say the are contained within the class
itself. 

Added 3 new formats which can be used to display data:

    eFormatAddressInfo
    eFormatHexFloat
    eFormatInstruction
    
eFormatAddressInfo describes an address such as function+offset and file+line,
or symbol + offset, or constant data (c string, 2, 4, 8, or 16 byte constants).
The format character for this is "A", the long format is "address".

eFormatHexFloat will print out the hex float format that compilers tend to use.
The format character for this is "X", the long format is "hex float".

eFormatInstruction will print out disassembly with bytes and it will use the
current target's architecture. The format character for this is "i" (which
used to be being used for the integer format, but the integer format also has
"d", so we gave the "i" format to disassembly), the long format is 
"instruction".

Mate the lldb::FormatterChoiceCriterion enumeration private as it should have
been from the start. It is very specialized and doesn't belong in the public 
API.

llvm-svn: 143114
2011-10-27 17:55:14 +00:00
Greg Clayton 86edbf41d1 Cleaned up many error codes. For any who is filling in error strings into
lldb_private::Error objects the rules are:
- short strings that don't start with a capitol letter unless the name is a
  class or anything else that is always capitolized
- no trailing newline character
- should be one line if possible

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

llvm-svn: 142999
2011-10-26 00:56:27 +00:00
Greg Clayton 1deb796238 Updated all commands that use a "--format" / "-f" options to use the new
OptionGroupFormat. Updated OptionGroupFormat to be able to also use the
"--size" and "--count" options. Commands that use a OptionGroupFormat instance
can choose which of the options they want by initializing OptionGroupFormat
accordingly. Clients can either get only the "--format", "--format" + "--size",
or "--format" + "--size" + "--count". This is in preparation for upcoming
chnages where there are alternate ways (GDB format specification) to set a
format. 

llvm-svn: 142911
2011-10-25 06:44:01 +00:00
Greg Clayton c14ee32db5 Converted the lldb_private::Process over to use the intrusive
shared pointers.

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

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

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

llvm-svn: 140298
2011-09-22 04:58:26 +00:00
Sean Callanan 3bfdaa2a47 This patch modifies the expression parser to allow it
to execute expressions even in the absence of a process.
This allows expressions to run in situations where the
target cannot run -- e.g., to perform calculations based
on type information, or to inspect a binary's static
data.

This modification touches the following files:

lldb-private-enumerations.h
  Introduce a new enum specifying the policy for
  processing an expression.  Some expressions should
  always be JITted, for example if they are functions
  that will be used over and over again.  Some
  expressions should always be interpreted, for
  example if the target is unsafe to run.  For most,
  it is acceptable to JIT them, but interpretation
  is preferable when possible.

Target.[h,cpp]
  Have EvaluateExpression now accept the new enum.

ClangExpressionDeclMap.[cpp,h]
  Add support for the IR interpreter and also make
  the ClangExpressionDeclMap more robust in the 
  absence of a process.

ClangFunction.[cpp,h]
  Add support for the new enum.

IRInterpreter.[cpp,h]
  New implementation.

ClangUserExpression.[cpp,h]
  Add support for the new enum, and for running 
  expressions in the absence of a process.

ClangExpression.h
  Remove references to the old DWARF-based method
  of evaluating expressions, because it has been
  superseded for now.

ClangUtilityFunction.[cpp,h]
  Add support for the new enum.

ClangExpressionParser.[cpp,h]
  Add support for the new enum, remove references
  to DWARF, and add support for checking whether
  the expression could be evaluated statically.

IRForTarget.[h,cpp]
  Add support for the new enum, and add utility
  functions to support the interpreter.

IRToDWARF.cpp
  Removed

CommandObjectExpression.cpp
  Remove references to the obsolete -i option.

Process.cpp 
  Modify calls to ClangUserExpression::Evaluate
  to pass the correct enum (for dlopen/dlclose)

SBValue.cpp
  Add support for the new enum.

SBFrame.cpp
  Add support for he new enum.

BreakpointOptions.cpp
  Add support for the new enum.

llvm-svn: 139772
2011-09-15 02:13:07 +00:00
Enrico Granata 9128ee2f7a Redesign of the interaction between Python and frozen objects:
- introduced two new classes ValueObjectConstResultChild and ValueObjectConstResultImpl: the first one is a ValueObjectChild obtained from
   a ValueObjectConstResult, the second is a common implementation backend for VOCR and VOCRCh of method calls meant to read through pointers stored
   in frozen objects ; now such reads transparently move from host to target as required
 - as a consequence of the above, removed code that made target-memory copies of expression results in several places throughout LLDB, and also
   removed code that enabled to recognize an expression result VO as such
 - introduced a new GetPointeeData() method in ValueObject that lets you read a given amount of objects of type T from a VO
   representing a T* or T[], and doing dereferences transparently
   in private layer it returns a DataExtractor ; in public layer it returns an instance of a newly created lldb::SBData
 - as GetPointeeData() does the right thing for both frozen and non-frozen ValueObject's, reimplemented ReadPointedString() to use it
   en lieu of doing the raw read itself
 - introduced a new GetData() method in ValueObject that lets you get a copy of the data that backs the ValueObject (for pointers,
   this returns the address without any previous dereferencing steps ; for arrays it actually reads the whole chunk of memory)
   in public layer this returns an SBData, just like GetPointeeData()
 - introduced a new CreateValueFromData() method in SBValue that lets you create a new SBValue from a chunk of data wrapped in an SBData
   the limitation to remember for this kind of SBValue is that they have no address: extracting the address-of for these objects (with any
   of GetAddress(), GetLoadAddress() and AddressOf()) will return invalid values
 - added several tests to check that "p"-ing objects (STL classes, char* and char[]) will do the right thing
Solved a bug where global pointers to global variables were not dereferenced correctly for display
New target setting "max-string-summary-length" gives the maximum number of characters to show in a string when summarizing it, instead of the hardcoded 128
Solved a bug where the summary for char[] and char* would not be shown if the ValueObject's were dumped via the "p" command
Removed m_pointers_point_to_load_addrs from ValueObject. Introduced a new m_address_type_of_children, which each ValueObject can set to tell the address type
 of any pointers and/or references it creates. In the current codebase, this is load address most of the time (the only notable exception being file
 addresses that generate file address children UNLESS we have a live process)
Updated help text for summary-string
Fixed an issue in STL formatters where std::stlcontainer::iterator would match the container's synthetic children providers
Edited the syntax and help for some commands to have proper argument types

llvm-svn: 139160
2011-09-06 19:20:51 +00:00
Sean Callanan bccce81340 Added support for persistent types to the
expression parser.  You can use a persistent
type like this:

(lldb) expr struct $foo { int a; int b; };
(lldb) struct $foo i; i.a = 2; i.b = 3; i
($foo) $0 = {
  (int) a = 2
  (int) b = 3
}

typedefs work similarly.

This patch affects the following files:

test/expression_command/persistent_types/*
  A test case for persistent types,
  in particular structs and typedefs.

ClangForward.h
  Added TypeDecl, needed to declare some
  functions in ASTResultSynthesizer.h

ClangPersistentVariables.[h,cpp]
  Added a list of persistent types to the
  persistent variable store.

ASTResultSynthesizer.[h,cpp]
  Made the AST result synthesizer iterate
  across TypeDecls in the expression, and
  record any persistent types found.  Also
  made a minor documentation fix.

ClangUserExpression.[h,cpp]
  Extended the user expression class to
  keep the state needed to report the
  persistent variable store for the target
  to the AST result synthesizers. 

  Also introduced a new error code for
  expressions that executed normally but
  did not return a result.

CommandObjectExpression.cpp
  Improved output for expressions (like 
  declarations of new persistent types) that
  don't return a result.  This is no longer
  treated as an error.

llvm-svn: 138383
2011-08-23 21:20:51 +00:00
Enrico Granata 22c55d180d *Some more optimizations in usage of ConstString
*New setting target.max-children-count gives an upper-bound to the number of child objects that will be displayed at each depth-level
  This might be a breaking change in some scenarios. To override the new limit you can use the --show-all-children (-A) option
  to frame variable or increase the limit in your lldbinit file
*Command "type synthetic" has been split in two:
  - "type synthetic" now only handles Python synthetic children providers
  - the new command "type filter" handles filters
  Because filters and synthetic providers are both ways to replace the children of a ValueObject, only one can be effective at any given time.

llvm-svn: 137416
2011-08-12 02:00:06 +00:00
Enrico Granata c3e320a7a0 Fixed a bug where a variable could not be formatted in a summary if its datatype already had a custom format
Fixed a bug where Objective-C variables coming out of the expression parser could crash the Python synthetic providers:
 - expression parser output has a "frozen data" component, which is a byte-exact copy of the value (in host memory),
   if trying to read into memory based on the host address, LLDB would crash. we are now passing the correct (target)
   pointer to the Python code
Objective-C "id" variables are now formatted according to their dynamic type, if the -d option to frame variable is used:
 - Code based on the Objective-C 2.0 runtime is used to obtain this information without running code on the target

llvm-svn: 136695
2011-08-02 17:27:39 +00:00
Enrico Granata d55546b27a when typing a summary string you can use the %S symbol to explicitly indicate that you want the summary to be used to print the target object
(e.g. ${var%S}). this might already be the default if your variable is of an aggregate type
new feature: synthetic filters. you can restrict the number of children for your variables to only a meaningful subset
 - the restricted list of children obeys the typical rules (e.g. summaries prevail over children)
 - one-line summaries show only the filtered (synthetic) children, if you type an expanded summary string, or you use Python scripts, all the real children are accessible
 - to provide a synthetic children list use the "type synth add" command, as in:
   type synth add foo_type --child varA --child varB[0] --child varC->packet->flags[1-4]
   (you can use ., ->, single-item array operator [N] and bitfield operator [N-M]; array slice access is not supported, giving simplified names to expression paths is not supported)
 - a new -S option to frame variable and target variable lets you override synthetic children and instead show real ones

llvm-svn: 135731
2011-07-22 00:16:08 +00:00
Greg Clayton 07e66e3ebe Added KDP resume, suspend, set/remove breakpoint, and kernel version support.
Also we now display a live update of the kexts that we are loading.

llvm-svn: 135563
2011-07-20 03:41:06 +00:00
Johnny Chen 4480530a0f Patch by Matt Johnson to silence G++ warnings!
Used hand merge to apply the diffs.  I did not apply the diffs for FormatManager.h and
the diffs for memberwise initialization for ValueObject.cpp because they changed since.
I will ask my colleague to apply them later.

llvm-svn: 135508
2011-07-19 19:48:13 +00:00
Enrico Granata 0c5ef693a2 Some descriptive text for the Python script feature:
- help type summary add now gives some hints on how to use it
frame variable and target variable now have a --no-summary-depth (-Y) option:
 - simply using -Y without an argument will skip one level of summaries, i.e.
   your aggregate types will expand their children and display no summary, even
   if they have one. children will behave normally
 - using -Y<int>, as in -Y4, -Y7, ..., will skip as many levels of summaries as
   given by the <int> parameter (obviously, -Y and -Y1 are the same thing). children
   beneath the given depth level will behave normally
 -Y0 is the same as omitting the --no-summary-depth parameter entirely
 This option replaces the defined-but-unimplemented --no-summary

llvm-svn: 135336
2011-07-16 01:22:04 +00:00
Greg Clayton 5fd05903d4 Cleanup error output on expressions.
llvm-svn: 133834
2011-06-24 22:31:10 +00:00
Caroline Tice d61c10bc79 Add 'batch_mode' to CommandInterpreter. Modify InputReaders to
not write output (prompts, instructions,etc.) if the CommandInterpreter
is in batch_mode.

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

llvm-svn: 133162
2011-06-16 16:27:19 +00:00
Caroline Tice 15356e7f4f Replace direct uses of the Debugger's output stream with
uses of the asynchronous stream.

llvm-svn: 133076
2011-06-15 19:35:17 +00:00
Caroline Tice 6e8dc334db More prompt-timing cleanups: Make multi-line expressions
use the asynchronous stream mechanism rather than writing
directly to the Debugger's output & error streams.

llvm-svn: 132930
2011-06-13 20:20:29 +00:00
Greg Clayton 007d5be653 lldb-59.
llvm-svn: 132304
2011-05-30 00:49:24 +00:00
Jim Ingham 2837b766f5 Change "frame var" over to using OptionGroups (and thus the OptionGroupVariableObjectDisplay).
Change the boolean "use_dynamic" over to a tri-state, no-dynamic, dynamic-w/o running target,
and dynamic with running target.

llvm-svn: 130832
2011-05-04 03:43:18 +00:00
Caroline Tice 969ed3d10f This patch captures and serializes all output being written by the
command line driver, including the lldb prompt being output by
editline, the asynchronous process output & error messages, and
asynchronous messages written by target stop-hooks.

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

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

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

llvm-svn: 130721
2011-05-02 20:41:46 +00:00
Greg Clayton 68ebae61d1 Added the ability to specify dumping options (show types, show location,
depth control, pointer depth, and more) when dumping memory and viewing as
a type.

llvm-svn: 130436
2011-04-28 20:55:26 +00:00
Greg Clayton 7260f6206f Centralized a lot of the status information for processes,
threads, and stack frame down in the lldb_private::Process,
lldb_private::Thread, lldb_private::StackFrameList and the 
lldb_private::StackFrame classes. We had some command line
commands that had duplicate versions of the process status
output ("thread list" and "process status" for example). 

Removed the "file" command and placed it where it should
have been: "target create". Made an alias for "file" to
"target create" so we stay compatible with GDB commands.

We can now have multple usable targets in lldb at the
same time. This is nice for comparing two runs of a program
or debugging more than one binary at the same time. The
new command is "target select <target-idx>" and also to see
a list of the current targets you can use the new "target list"
command. The flow in a debug session can be:

(lldb) target create /path/to/exe/a.out
(lldb) breakpoint set --name main
(lldb) run
... hit breakpoint
(lldb) target create /bin/ls
(lldb) run /tmp
Process 36001 exited with status = 0 (0x00000000) 
(lldb) target list
Current targets:
  target #0: /tmp/args/a.out ( arch=x86_64-apple-darwin, platform=localhost, pid=35999, state=stopped )
* target #1: /bin/ls ( arch=x86_64-apple-darwin, platform=localhost, pid=36001, state=exited )
(lldb) target select 0
Current targets:
* target #0: /tmp/args/a.out ( arch=x86_64-apple-darwin, platform=localhost, pid=35999, state=stopped )
  target #1: /bin/ls ( arch=x86_64-apple-darwin, platform=localhost, pid=36001, state=exited )
(lldb) bt
* thread #1: tid = 0x2d03, 0x0000000100000b9a a.out`main + 42 at main.c:16, stop reason = breakpoint 1.1
  frame #0: 0x0000000100000b9a a.out`main + 42 at main.c:16
  frame #1: 0x0000000100000b64 a.out`start + 52

Above we created a target for "a.out" and ran and hit a
breakpoint at "main". Then we created a new target for /bin/ls
and ran it. Then we listed the targest and selected our original
"a.out" program, so we showed two concurent debug sessions
going on at the same time.

llvm-svn: 129695
2011-04-18 08:33:37 +00:00
Jim Ingham 78a685aa2d Add support for "dynamic values" for C++ classes. This currently only works for "frame var" and for the
expressions that are simple enough to get passed to the "frame var" underpinnings.  The parser code will
have to be changed to also query for the dynamic types & offsets as it is looking up variables.

The behavior of "frame var" is controlled in two ways.  You can pass "-d {true/false} to the frame var
command to get the dynamic or static value of the variables you are printing.

There's also a general setting:

target.prefer-dynamic-value (boolean) = 'true'

which is consulted if you call "frame var" without supplying a value for the -d option.

llvm-svn: 129623
2011-04-16 00:01:13 +00:00
Greg Clayton f6b8b58184 Added two new classes for command options:
lldb_private::OptionGroup
    lldb_private::OptionGroupOptions

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

    OptionGroupOptions m_option_group;
    FileOptionGroup m_file_options;
    PlatformOptionGroup m_platform_options;

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

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

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

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

And implemented a new callback named:

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

Modfied:

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

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

(option_idx is now unsigned).

llvm-svn: 129415
2011-04-13 00:18:08 +00:00
Greg Clayton 8b82f087a0 Moved the execution context that was in the Debugger into
the CommandInterpreter where it was always being used.

Make sure that Modules can track their object file offsets correctly to
allow opening of sub object files (like the "__commpage" on darwin).

Modified the Platforms to be able to launch processes. The first part of this
move is the platform soon will become the entity that launches your program
and when it does, it uses a new ProcessLaunchInfo class which encapsulates
all process launching settings. This simplifies the internal APIs needed for
launching. I want to slowly phase out process launching from the process
classes, so for now we can still launch just as we used to, but eventually
the platform is the object that should do the launching.

Modified the Host::LaunchProcess in the MacOSX Host.mm to correctly be able
to launch processes with all of the new eLaunchFlag settings. Modified any
code that was manually launching processes to use the Host::LaunchProcess
functions.

Fixed an issue where lldb_private::Args had implicitly defined copy 
constructors that could do the wrong thing. This has now been fixed by adding
an appropriate copy constructor and assignment operator.

Make sure we don't add empty ModuleSP entries to a module list.

Fixed the commpage module creation on MacOSX, but we still need to train
the MacOSX dynamic loader to not get rid of it when it doesn't have an entry
in the all image infos.

Abstracted many more calls from in ProcessGDBRemote down into the 
GDBRemoteCommunicationClient subclass to make the classes cleaner and more
efficient.

Fixed the default iOS ARM register context to be correct and also added support
for targets that don't support the qThreadStopInfo packet by selecting the
current thread (only if needed) and then sending a stop reply packet.

Debugserver can now start up with a --unix-socket (-u for short) and can 
then bind to port zero and send the port it bound to to a listening process
on the other end. This allows the GDB remote platform to spawn new GDB server
instances (debugserver) to allow platform debugging.

llvm-svn: 129351
2011-04-12 05:54:46 +00:00
Johnny Chen f16066e842 Really fix the test suite crasher this time.
llvm-svn: 129165
2011-04-08 22:39:17 +00:00
Greg Clayton eb0103f2d0 Modified the ArchSpec to take an optional "Platform *" when setting the triple.
This allows you to have a platform selected, then specify a triple using
"i386" and have the remaining triple items (vendor, os, and environment) set
automatically.

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

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

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

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

llvm-svn: 129112
2011-04-07 22:46:35 +00:00
Jim Ingham 6035b67d2c Convert ValueObject to explicitly maintain the Execution Context in which they were created, and then use that when they update themselves. That means all the ValueObject evaluate me type functions that used to require a Frame object now do not. I didn't remove the SBValue API's that take this now useless frame, but I added ones that don't require the frame, and marked the SBFrame taking ones as deprecated.
llvm-svn: 128593
2011-03-31 00:19:25 +00:00
Greg Clayton 32e0a7509c Many improvements to the Platform base class and subclasses. The base Platform
class now implements the Host functionality for a lot of things that make 
sense by default so that subclasses can check:

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

Added new functions to the platform:

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

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

Added the parent process ID to the ProcessInfo class. 

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

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


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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

llvm-svn: 128239
2011-03-24 21:19:54 +00:00
Sean Callanan 92adcac9ec Implemented a major overhaul of the way variables are handled
by LLDB.  Instead of being materialized into the input structure
passed to the expression, variables are left in place and pointers
to them are materialzied into the structure.  Variables not resident
in memory (notably, registers) get temporary memory regions allocated
for them.

Persistent variables are the most complex part of this, because they
are made in various ways and there are different expectations about
their lifetime.  Persistent variables now have flags indicating their
status and what the expectations for longevity are.  They can be
marked as residing in target memory permanently -- this is the
default for result variables from expressions entered on the command
line and for explicitly declared persistent variables (but more on
that below).  Other result variables have their memory freed.

Some major improvements resulting from this include being able to
properly take the address of variables, better and cleaner support
for functions that return references, and cleaner C++ support in
general.  One problem that remains is the problem of explicitly
declared persistent variables; I have not yet implemented the code
that makes references to them into indirect references, so currently
materialization and dematerialization of these variables is broken.

llvm-svn: 123371
2011-01-13 08:53:35 +00:00
Greg Clayton 8b2fe6dcbd Modified LLDB expressions to not have to JIT and run code just to see variable
values or persistent expression variables. Now if an expression consists of
a value that is a child of a variable, or of a persistent variable only, we
will create a value object for it and make a ValueObjectConstResult from it to
freeze the value (for program variables only, not persistent variables) and
avoid running JITed code. For everything else we still parse up and JIT code
and run it in the inferior. 

There was also a lot of clean up in the expression code. I made the 
ClangExpressionVariables be stored in collections of shared pointers instead
of in collections of objects. This will help stop a lot of copy constructors on
these large objects and also cleans up the code considerably. The persistent
clang expression variables were moved over to the Target to ensure they persist
across process executions.

Added the ability for lldb_private::Target objects to evaluate expressions.
We want to evaluate expressions at the target level in case we aren't running
yet, or we have just completed running. We still want to be able to access the
persistent expression variables between runs, and also evaluate constant 
expressions. 

Added extra logging to the dynamic loader plug-in for MacOSX. ModuleList objects
can now dump their contents with the UUID, arch and full paths being logged with
appropriate prefix values.

Thread hardened the Communication class a bit by making the connection auto_ptr
member into a shared pointer member and then making a local copy of the shared
pointer in each method that uses it to make sure another thread can't nuke the
connection object while it is being used by another thread.

Added a new file to the lldb/test/load_unload test that causes the test a.out file
to link to the libd.dylib file all the time. This will allow us to test using
the DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable after moving libd.dylib somewhere else.

llvm-svn: 121745
2010-12-14 02:59:59 +00:00
Jim Ingham f48169bb4f Moved the code in ClangUserExpression that set up & ran the thread plan with timeouts, and restarting with all threads into a utility function in Process. This required a bunch of renaming.
Added a ThreadPlanCallUserExpression that differs from ThreadPlanCallFunction in that it holds onto a shared pointer to its ClangUserExpression so that can't go away before the thread plan is done using it.

Fixed the stop message when you hit a breakpoint while running a user expression so it is more obvious what has happened.

llvm-svn: 120386
2010-11-30 02:22:11 +00:00
Caroline Tice efed613172 Add the ability to catch and do the right thing with Interrupts (often control-c)
and end-of-file (often control-d).

llvm-svn: 119837
2010-11-19 20:47:54 +00:00
Jim Ingham 399f1cafa6 Added the equivalent of gdb's "unwind-on-signal" to the expression command, and a parameter to control it in ClangUserExpression, and on down to ClangFunction.
llvm-svn: 118290
2010-11-05 19:25:48 +00:00
Greg Clayton 8f343b09e9 Added support for loading and unloading shared libraries. This was done by
adding support into lldb_private::Process:

    virtual uint32_t
    lldb_private::Process::LoadImage (const FileSpec &image_spec, 
                                      Error &error);

    virtual Error
    lldb_private::Process::UnloadImage (uint32_t image_token);

There is a default implementation that should work for both linux and MacOSX.
This ability has also been exported through the SBProcess API:

    uint32_t
    lldb::SBProcess::LoadImage (lldb::SBFileSpec &image_spec, 
                                lldb::SBError &error);

    lldb::SBError
    lldb::SBProcess::UnloadImage (uint32_t image_token);

Modified the DynamicLoader plug-in interface to require it to be able to 
tell us if it is currently possible to load/unload a shared library:

    virtual lldb_private::Error
    DynamicLoader::CanLoadImage () = 0;

This way the dynamic loader plug-ins are allows to veto whether we can 
currently load a shared library since the dynamic loader might know if it is
currenlty loading/unloading shared libraries. It might also know about the
current host system and know where to check to make sure runtime or malloc
locks are currently being held.

Modified the expression parser to have ClangUserExpression::Evaluate() be
the one that causes the dynamic checkers to be loaded instead of other code
that shouldn't have to worry about it.

llvm-svn: 118227
2010-11-04 01:54:29 +00:00
Sean Callanan 322f529b37 Added a user-settable variable, 'target.expr-prefix',
which holds the name of a file whose contents are
prefixed to each expression.  For example, if the file
~/lldb.prefix.header contains:

typedef unsigned short my_type;

then you can do this:

(lldb) settings set target.expr-prefix '~/lldb.prefix.header'
(lldb) expr sizeof(my_type)
(unsigned long) $0 = 2

When the variable is changed, the corresponding file
is loaded and its contents are fetched into a string
that is stored along with the target.  This string
is then passed to each expression and inserted into
it during parsing, like this:

typedef unsigned short my_type;
                             
void                           
$__lldb_expr(void *$__lldb_arg)          
{                              
    sizeof(my_type);                        
}

llvm-svn: 117627
2010-10-29 00:29:03 +00:00
Greg Clayton 8f92f0a35c Fixed an expression parsing issue where if you were stopped somewhere without
debug information and you evaluated an expression, a crash would occur as a
result of an unchecked pointer.

Added the ability to get the expression path for a ValueObject. For a rectangle
point child "x" the expression path would be something like: "rect.top_left.x".
This will allow GUI and command lines to get ahold of the expression path for
a value object without having to explicitly know about the hierarchy. This
means the ValueObject base class now has a "ValueObject *m_parent;" member.
All ValueObject subclasses now correctly track their lineage and are able
to provide value expression paths as well.

Added a new "--flat" option to the "frame variable" to allow for flat variable
output. An example of the current and new outputs:

(lldb) frame variable 
argc = 1
argv = 0x00007fff5fbffe80
pt = {
  x = 2
  y = 3
}
rect = {
  bottom_left = {
    x = 1
    y = 2
  }
  top_right = {
    x = 3
    y = 4
  }
}
(lldb) frame variable --flat 
argc = 1
argv = 0x00007fff5fbffe80
pt.x = 2
pt.y = 3
rect.bottom_left.x = 1
rect.bottom_left.y = 2
rect.top_right.x = 3
rect.top_right.y = 4


As you can see when there is a lot of hierarchy it can help flatten things out.
Also if you want to use a member in an expression, you can copy the text from
the "--flat" output and not have to piece it together manually. This can help
when you want to use parts of the STL in expressions:

(lldb) frame variable --flat
argc = 1
argv = 0x00007fff5fbffea8
hello_world._M_dataplus._M_p = 0x0000000000000000
(lldb) expr hello_world._M_dataplus._M_p[0] == '\0'

llvm-svn: 116532
2010-10-14 22:52:14 +00:00
Greg Clayton 32c4085ba2 Restored the ability to set the format for expressions after changing the expression results over to ValueObjectSP objects.
llvm-svn: 115733
2010-10-06 03:09:11 +00:00
Greg Clayton b71f384455 Added the notion that a value object can be constant by adding:
bool ValueObject::GetIsConstant() const;
    void ValueObject::SetIsConstant();

This will stop anything from being re-evaluated within the value object so
that constant result value objects can maintain their frozen values without
anything being updated or changed within the value object.

Made it so the ValueObjectConstResult can be constructed with an 
lldb_private::Error object to allow for expression results to have errors.

Since ValueObject objects contain error objects, I changed the expression
evaluation in ClangUserExpression from 

    static Error
    ClangUserExpression::Evaluate (ExecutionContext &exe_ctx, 
                                  const char *expr_cstr, 
                                  lldb::ValueObjectSP &result_valobj_sp);

to:

    static lldb::ValueObjectSP
    Evaluate (ExecutionContext &exe_ctx, const char *expr_cstr);
    
Even though expression parsing is borked right now (pending fixes coming from
Sean Callanan), I filled in the implementation for:
    
    SBValue SBFrame::EvaluateExpression (const char *expr);
    
Modified all expression code to deal with the above changes.

llvm-svn: 115589
2010-10-05 03:13:51 +00:00
Greg Clayton 0184f01936 Moved expression evaluation from CommandObjectExpression into
ClangUserExpression::Evaluate () as a public static function so anyone can
evaluate an expression.

llvm-svn: 115581
2010-10-05 00:31:29 +00:00
Greg Clayton 1d3afba3a3 Added a new ValueObject type that will be used to freeze dry expression
results. The clang opaque type for the expression result will be added to the
Target's ASTContext, and the bytes will be stored in a DataBuffer inside
the new object. The class is named: ValueObjectConstResult

Now after an expression is evaluated, we can get a ValueObjectSP back that
contains a ValueObjectConstResult object.

Relocated the value object dumping code into a static function within
the ValueObject class instead of being in the CommandObjectFrame.cpp file
which is what contained the code to dump variables ("frame variables").

llvm-svn: 115578
2010-10-05 00:00:42 +00:00
Caroline Tice 405fe67f14 Modify existing commands with arguments to use the new argument mechanism
(for standardized argument names, argument help, etc.)

llvm-svn: 115570
2010-10-04 22:28:36 +00:00