When it resolves symbol-only variables, the expression parser
currently looks only in the global module list. It should prefer
the current module.
I've fixed that behavior by making it search the current module
first, and only search globally if it finds nothing. I've also
added a test case.
After review, I moved the core of the lookup algorithm into
SymbolContext for use by other code that needs it.
Thanks to Greg Clayton and Pavel Labath for their help.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33083
llvm-svn: 303223
This renames the LLDB error class to Status, as discussed
on the lldb-dev mailing list.
A change of this magnitude cannot easily be done without
find and replace, but that has potential to catch unwanted
occurrences of common strings such as "Error". Every effort
was made to find all the obvious things such as the word "Error"
appearing in a string, etc, but it's possible there are still
some lingering occurences left around. Hopefully nothing too
serious.
llvm-svn: 302872
All references to Host and Core have been removed, so this
class can now safely be lowered into Utility.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30559
llvm-svn: 296909
*** to conform to clang-format’s LLVM style. This kind of mass change has
*** two obvious implications:
Firstly, merging this particular commit into a downstream fork may be a huge
effort. Alternatively, it may be worth merging all changes up to this commit,
performing the same reformatting operation locally, and then discarding the
merge for this particular commit. The commands used to accomplish this
reformatting were as follows (with current working directory as the root of
the repository):
find . \( -iname "*.c" -or -iname "*.cpp" -or -iname "*.h" -or -iname "*.mm" \) -exec clang-format -i {} +
find . -iname "*.py" -exec autopep8 --in-place --aggressive --aggressive {} + ;
The version of clang-format used was 3.9.0, and autopep8 was 1.2.4.
Secondly, “blame” style tools will generally point to this commit instead of
a meaningful prior commit. There are alternatives available that will attempt
to look through this change and find the appropriate prior commit. YMMV.
llvm-svn: 280751
We had support that assumed that thread local data for a variable could be determined solely from the module in which the variable exists. While this work for linux, it doesn't work for Apple OSs. The DWARF for thread local variables consists of location opcodes that do something like:
DW_OP_const8u (x)
DW_OP_form_tls_address
or
DW_OP_const8u (x)
DW_OP_GNU_push_tls_address
The "x" is allowed to be anything that is needed to determine the location of the variable. For Linux "x" is the offset within the TLS data for a given executable (ModuleSP in LLDB). For Apple OS variants, it is the file address of the data structure that contains a pthread key that can be used with pthread_getspecific() and the offset needed.
This fix passes the "x" along to the thread:
virtual lldb::addr_t
lldb_private::Thread::GetThreadLocalData(const lldb::ModuleSP module, lldb::addr_t tls_file_addr);
Then this is passed along to the DynamicLoader::GetThreadLocalData():
virtual lldb::addr_t
lldb_private::DynamicLoader::GetThreadLocalData(const lldb::ModuleSP module, const lldb::ThreadSP thread, lldb::addr_t tls_file_addr);
This allows each DynamicLoader plug-in do the right thing for the current OS.
The DynamicLoaderMacOSXDYLD was modified to be able to grab the pthread key from the data structure that is in memory and call "void *pthread_getspecific(pthread_key_t key)" to get the value of the thread local storage and it caches it per thread since it never changes.
I had to update the test case to access the thread local data before trying to print it as on Apple OS variants, thread locals are not available unless they have been accessed at least one by the current thread.
I also added a new lldb::ValueType named "eValueTypeVariableThreadLocal" so that we can ask SBValue objects for their ValueType and be able to tell when we have a thread local variable.
<rdar://problem/23308080>
llvm-svn: 274366
Summary:
The "file" variable in a LineEntry was mapped using target.source-map, except when stepping through inlined code. This patch adds a new variable to LineEntry, "original_file", that contains the original file from the debug info. "file" will continue to (possibly) be mapped.
Some code has been changed to use "original_file". This is code dealing with symbols. Code dealing with source files will still use "file". Reviewers, please confirm that these particular changes are correct.
Tests run on Ubuntu 12.04 show no regression.
Reviewers: clayborg, jingham
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20135
llvm-svn: 269250
This patch reworks the breakpoint filter-by-language patch to use the
symbol context instead of trying to guess the language solely from the
symbol's name. This has the advantage that symbols compiled with debug
info will have their actual language known. Symbols without debug info
will still do the same "guess"ing because Symbol::GetLanguage() is
implemented using Mangled::GuessLanguage(). The recognition of ObjC
names was merged into Mangled::GuessLanguage.
Reviewed by: jingham, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15326
llvm-svn: 255808
Summary:
In bug 24074, the type information is not shown
correctly. This commit includes the following -
-> Changes for displaying correct type based on
current lexical scope for the command "image
lookup -t"
-> The corresponding testcase.
-> This patch was reverted due to segfaults in
FreeBSD and Mac, I fixed the problems for both now.
Reviewers: emaste, granata.enrico, jingham, clayborg
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13290
llvm-svn: 249673
Summary:
In bug 24074, the type information is not shown
correctly. This commit includes the following -
-> Changes for displaying correct type based on
current lexical scope for the command "image
lookup -t"
-> The corresponding testcase.
Reviewers: jingham, ovyalov, spyffe, richard.mitton, clayborg
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12404
llvm-svn: 248366
Create a new "lldb_private::CompilerDeclContext" class that will replace all direct uses of "clang::DeclContext" when used in compiler agnostic code, yet still allow for conversion to clang::DeclContext subclasses by clang specific code. This completes the abstraction of type parsing by removing all "clang::" references from the SymbolFileDWARF. The new "lldb_private::CompilerDeclContext" class abstracts decl contexts found in compiler type systems so they can be used in internal API calls. The TypeSystem is required to support CompilerDeclContexts with new pure virtual functions that start with "DeclContext" in the member function names. Converted all code that used lldb_private::ClangNamespaceDecl over to use the new CompilerDeclContext class and removed the ClangNamespaceDecl.cpp and ClangNamespaceDecl.h files.
Removed direct use of clang APIs from SBType and now use the abstract type systems to correctly explore types.
Bulk renames for things that used to return a ClangASTType which is now CompilerType:
"Type::GetClangFullType()" to "Type::GetFullCompilerType()"
"Type::GetClangLayoutType()" to "Type::GetLayoutCompilerType()"
"Type::GetClangForwardType()" to "Type::GetForwardCompilerType()"
"Value::GetClangType()" to "Value::GetCompilerType()"
"Value::SetClangType (const CompilerType &)" to "Value::SetCompilerType (const CompilerType &)"
"ValueObject::GetClangType ()" to "ValueObject::GetCompilerType()"
many more renames that are similar.
llvm-svn: 245905
Summary:
This enables us to avoid casts to "void *" in some cases and avoids a couple of "casts off const
qualifiers" warnings.
Reviewers: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11388
llvm-svn: 242874
A few extras were fixed
- Symbol::GetAddress() now returns an Address object, not a reference. There were places where people were accessing the address of a symbol when the symbol's value wasn't an address symbol. On MacOSX, undefined symbols have a value zero and some places where using the symbol's address and getting an absolute address of zero (since an Address object with no section and an m_offset whose value isn't LLDB_INVALID_ADDRESS is considered an absolute address). So fixing this required some changes to make sure people were getting what they expected.
- Since some places want to access the address as a reference, I added a few new functions to symbol:
Address &Symbol::GetAddressRef();
const Address &Symbol::GetAddressRef() const;
Linux test suite passes just fine now.
<rdar://problem/21494354>
llvm-svn: 240702
changing it was in r219544 - after living on that for a few
months, I wanted to take another crack at this.
The disassembly-format setting still exists and the old format
can be user specified with a setting like
${current-pc-arrow}${addr-file-or-load}{ <${function.name-without-args}${function.concrete-only-addr-offset-no-padding}>}:
This patch was discussed in http://reviews.llvm.org/D7578
<rdar://problem/19726421>
llvm-svn: 229186
The refactor was motivated by some comments that Greg made
http://reviews.llvm.org/D6918
and also to break a dependency cascade that caused functions linking
in string->int conversion functions to pull in most of lldb
llvm-svn: 226199
This is done by adding a "Variable *" to SymbolContext and allowing SymbolFile::ResolveSymbolContext() so if an address is resolved into a symbol context, we can include the global or static variable for that address.
This means you can now find global variables that are merged globals when doing a "image lookup --verbose --address 0x1230000". Previously we would resolve a symbol and show "_MergedGlobals123 + 1234". But now we can show the global variable name.
The eSymbolContextEverything purposely does not include the new eSymbolContextVariable in its lookup since stack frame code does many lookups and we don't want it triggering the global variable lookups.
<rdar://problem/18945678>
llvm-svn: 226084
output style can be customized. Change the built-in default to be
more similar to gdb's disassembly formatting.
The disassembly-format for a gdb-like output is
${addr-file-or-load} <${function.name-without-args}${function.concrete-only-addr-offset-no-padding}>:
The disassembly-format for the lldb style output is
{${function.initial-function}{${module.file.basename}`}{${function.name-without-args}}:\n}{${function.changed}\n{${module.file.basename}`}{${function.name-without-args}}:\n}{${current-pc-arrow} }{${addr-file-or-load}}:
The two backticks in the lldb style formatter triggers the sub-expression evaluation in
CommandInterpreter::PreprocessCommand() so you can't use that one as-is ... changing to
use ' characters instead of ` would work around that.
<rdar://problem/9885398>
llvm-svn: 219544
In almost all cases, the misuse is about "%lu" being used instead of the correct "%zu" (even though these are compatible on 64-bit platforms in practice). There are even a couple of cases where "%ld" (ie., signed int) is used instead of "%zu", and one where "%lu" is used instead of "%" PRIu64.
Fixes bug #17551.
Patch by "/dev/humancontroller"
llvm-svn: 193832
325,000 breakpoints for running "breakpoint set --func-regex ." on lldb itself (after hitting a breakpoint at main so that LLDB.framework is loaded) used to take up to an hour to set, now we are down under a minute. With warm file caches, we are at 40 seconds, and that is with setting 325,000 breakpoint through the GDB remote API. Linux and the native debuggers might be faster. I haven't timed what how much is debug info parsing and how much is the protocol traffic to/from GDB remote.
That there were many performance issues. Most of them were due to storing breakpoints in the wrong data structures, or using the wrong iterators to traverse the lists, traversing the lists in inefficient ways, and not optimizing certain function name lookups/symbol merges correctly.
Debugging after that is also now very efficient. There were issues with replacing the breakpoint opcodes in memory that was read, and those routines were also fixed.
llvm-svn: 183820
"source list -n <func>" can now show more than one location that matches a function name. It will unique multiple of the same source locations so they don't get displayed. It also handles inline functions correctly.
llvm-svn: 182067
std::string
Module::GetSpecificationDescription () const;
This returns the module as "/usr/lib/libfoo.dylib" for normal files (calls "std::string FileSpec::GetPath()" on m_file) but it also might include the object name in case the module is for a .o file in a BSD archive ("/usr/lib/libfoo.a(bar.o)"). Cleaned up necessary logging code to use it.
llvm-svn: 180717
Symbol table function names should support lookups like symbols with debug info.
To fix this I:
- Gutted the way FindFunctions is used, there used to be way too much smarts only in the DWARF plug-in
- Made it more efficient by chopping the name up once and using simpler queries so that SymbolFile and Symtab plug-ins don't need to do as much
- Filter the results at a higher level
- Make the lldb_private::Symtab able to chop up C++ mangled names and make as much sense out of them as possible and also be able to search by basename, fullname, method name, and selector name.
llvm-svn: 178608
LLDB is crashing when logging is enabled from lldb-perf-clang. This has to do with the global destructor chain as the process and its threads are being torn down.
All logging channels now make one and only one instance that is kept in a global pointer which is never freed. This guarantees that logging can correctly continue as the process tears itself down.
llvm-svn: 178191
StackFrame assumes m_sc is additive, but m_sc can lose its target. So now the SymbolContext::Clear() method takes a bool that indicates if the target should be cleared. Modified all existing code to properly set the bool argument.
llvm-svn: 175953
Major fixed to allow reading files that are over 4GB. The main problems were that the DataExtractor was using 32 bit offsets as a data cursor, and since we mmap all of our object files we could run into cases where if we had a very large core file that was over 4GB, we were running into the 4GB boundary.
So I defined a new "lldb::offset_t" which should be used for all file offsets.
After making this change, I enabled warnings for data loss and for enexpected implicit conversions temporarily and found a ton of things that I fixed.
Any functions that take an index internally, should use "size_t" for any indexes and also should return "size_t" for any sizes of collections.
llvm-svn: 173463
Make breakpoint setting by file and line much more efficient by only looking for inlined breakpoint locations if we are setting a breakpoint in anything but a source implementation file. Implementing this complex for a many reasons. Turns out that parsing compile units lazily had some issues with respect to how we need to do things with DWARF in .o files. So the fixes in the checkin for this makes these changes:
- Add a new setting called "target.inline-breakpoint-strategy" which can be set to "never", "always", or "headers". "never" will never try and set any inlined breakpoints (fastest). "always" always looks for inlined breakpoint locations (slowest, but most accurate). "headers", which is the default setting, will only look for inlined breakpoint locations if the breakpoint is set in what are consudered to be header files, which is realy defined as "not in an implementation source file".
- modify the breakpoint setting by file and line to check the current "target.inline-breakpoint-strategy" setting and act accordingly
- Modify compile units to be able to get their language and other info lazily. This allows us to create compile units from the debug map and not have to fill all of the details in, and then lazily discover this information as we go on debuggging. This is needed to avoid parsing all .o files when setting breakpoints in implementation only files (no inlines). Otherwise we would need to parse the .o file, the object file (mach-o in our case) and the symbol file (DWARF in the object file) just to see what the compile unit was.
- modify the "SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap" to subclass lldb_private::Module so that the virtual "GetObjectFile()" and "GetSymbolVendor()" functions can be intercepted when the .o file contenst are later lazilly needed. Prior to this fix, when we first instantiated the "SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap" class, we would also make modules, object files and symbol files for every .o file in the debug map because we needed to fix up the sections in the .o files with information that is in the executable debug map. Now we lazily do this in the DebugMapModule::GetObjectFile()
Cleaned up header includes a bit as well.
llvm-svn: 162860
Fixed the DisassemblerLLVMC disassembler to parse more efficiently instead of parsing opcodes over and over. The InstructionLLVMC class now only reads the opcode in the InstructionLLVMC::Decode function. This can be done very efficiently for ARM and architectures that have fixed opcode sizes. For x64 it still calls the disassembler to get the byte size.
Moved the lldb_private::Instruction::Dump(...) function up into the lldb_private::Instruction class and it now uses the function that gets the mnemonic, operandes and comments so that all disassembly is using the same code.
Added StreamString::FillLastLineToColumn() to allow filling a line up to a column with a character (which is used by the lldb_private::Instruction::Dump(...) function).
Modified the Opcode::GetData() fucntion to "do the right thing" for thumb instructions.
llvm-svn: 156532
This fix really needed to happen as a previous fix I had submitted for
calculating symbol sizes made many symbols appear to have zero size since
the function that was calculating the symbol size was calling another function
that would cause the calculation to happen again. This resulted in some symbols
having zero size when they shouldn't. This could then cause infinite stack
traces and many other side affects.
llvm-svn: 152244
more of the local path, platform path, associated symbol file, UUID, arch,
object name and object offset. This allows many of the calls that were
GetSharedModule to reduce the number of arguments that were used in a call
to these functions. It also allows a module to be created with a ModuleSpec
which allows many things to be specified prior to any accessors being called
on the Module class itself.
I was running into problems when adding support for "target symbol add"
where you can specify a stand alone debug info file after debugging has started
where I needed to specify the associated symbol file path and if I waited until
after construction, the wrong symbol file had already been located. By using
the ModuleSpec it allows us to construct a module with as little or as much
information as needed and not have to change the parameter list.
llvm-svn: 151476
interface (.i) files for each class.
Changed the FindFunction class from:
uint32_t
SBTarget::FindFunctions (const char *name,
uint32_t name_type_mask,
bool append,
lldb::SBSymbolContextList& sc_list)
uint32_t
SBModule::FindFunctions (const char *name,
uint32_t name_type_mask,
bool append,
lldb::SBSymbolContextList& sc_list)
To:
lldb::SBSymbolContextList
SBTarget::FindFunctions (const char *name,
uint32_t name_type_mask = lldb::eFunctionNameTypeAny);
lldb::SBSymbolContextList
SBModule::FindFunctions (const char *name,
uint32_t name_type_mask = lldb::eFunctionNameTypeAny);
This makes the API easier to use from python. Also added the ability to
append a SBSymbolContext or a SBSymbolContextList to a SBSymbolContextList.
Exposed properties for lldb.SBSymbolContextList in python:
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.modules => list() or all lldb.SBModule objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.compile_units => list() or all lldb.SBCompileUnits objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.functions => list() or all lldb.SBFunction objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.blocks => list() or all lldb.SBBlock objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.line_entries => list() or all lldb.SBLineEntry objects in the list
lldb.SBSymbolContextList.symbols => list() or all lldb.SBSymbol objects in the list
This allows a call to the SBTarget::FindFunctions(...) and SBModule::FindFunctions(...)
and then the result can be used to extract the desired information:
sc_list = lldb.target.FindFunctions("erase")
for function in sc_list.functions:
print function
for symbol in sc_list.symbols:
print symbol
Exposed properties for the lldb.SBSymbolContext objects in python:
lldb.SBSymbolContext.module => lldb.SBModule
lldb.SBSymbolContext.compile_unit => lldb.SBCompileUnit
lldb.SBSymbolContext.function => lldb.SBFunction
lldb.SBSymbolContext.block => lldb.SBBlock
lldb.SBSymbolContext.line_entry => lldb.SBLineEntry
lldb.SBSymbolContext.symbol => lldb.SBSymbol
Exposed properties for the lldb.SBBlock objects in python:
lldb.SBBlock.parent => lldb.SBBlock for the parent block that contains
lldb.SBBlock.sibling => lldb.SBBlock for the sibling block to the current block
lldb.SBBlock.first_child => lldb.SBBlock for the first child block to the current block
lldb.SBBlock.call_site => for inline functions, return a lldb.declaration object that gives the call site file, line and column
lldb.SBBlock.name => for inline functions this is the name of the inline function that this block represents
lldb.SBBlock.inlined_block => returns the inlined function block that contains this block (might return itself if the current block is an inlined block)
lldb.SBBlock.range[int] => access the address ranges for a block by index, a list() with start and end address is returned
lldb.SBBlock.ranges => an array or all address ranges for this block
lldb.SBBlock.num_ranges => the number of address ranges for this blcok
SBFunction objects can now get the SBType and the SBBlock that represents the
top scope of the function.
SBBlock objects can now get the variable list from the current block. The value
list returned allows varaibles to be viewed prior with no process if code
wants to check the variables in a function. There are two ways to get a variable
list from a SBBlock:
lldb::SBValueList
SBBlock::GetVariables (lldb::SBFrame& frame,
bool arguments,
bool locals,
bool statics,
lldb::DynamicValueType use_dynamic);
lldb::SBValueList
SBBlock::GetVariables (lldb::SBTarget& target,
bool arguments,
bool locals,
bool statics);
When a SBFrame is used, the values returned will be locked down to the frame
and the values will be evaluated in the context of that frame.
When a SBTarget is used, global an static variables can be viewed without a
running process.
llvm-svn: 149853
so that we don't have "fprintf (stderr, ...)" calls sprinkled everywhere.
Changed all needed locations over to using this.
For non-darwin, we log to stderr only. On darwin, we log to stderr _and_
to ASL (Apple System Log facility). This will allow GUI apps to have a place
for these error and warning messages to go, and also allows the command line
apps to log directly to the terminal.
llvm-svn: 147596
process IDs, and thread IDs, but was mainly needed for for the UserID's for
Types so that DWARF with debug map can work flawlessly. With DWARF in .o files
the type ID was the DIE offset in the DWARF for the .o file which is not
unique across all .o files, so now the SymbolFileDWARFDebugMap class will
make the .o file index part (the high 32 bits) of the unique type identifier
so it can uniquely identify the types.
llvm-svn: 142534
Specifically, the expression parser used to use
functions attached to SymbolContext to do lookups,
but nowadays it searches a ModuleList or Module
directly instead. These functions had no
remaining clients so I removed them to prevent
bit rot.
I also removed a stray callback function from
ClangExpressionDeclMap.
llvm-svn: 141899
down through Module and SymbolVendor into SymbolFile.
Added checks to SymbolFileDWARF that restrict symbol
searches when a namespace is passed in.
llvm-svn: 141847
Fixed an assertion that was causing a crash. The bug describes a case where we have an inlined block that doesn't contain the frame PC that was used to lookup the symbol context in the first place. This really shouldn't happen, so
now we log if we run into this and don't assert.
llvm-svn: 141338