lldb::addr_t SBFrame::GetCFA();
This gets the CFA (call frame address) of the frame so it allows us to take an address that is on the stack and figure out which thread it comes from.
Also modified the heap.py module to be able to find out which variable in a frame's stack frame contains an address. This way when ptr_refs finds a match on the stack, it get then report which variable contains the pointer.
llvm-svn: 238393
expr_options = lldb.SBExpressionOptions()
expr_options.SetPrefix('''
struct Foo {
int a;
int b;
int c;
}
'''
expr_result = frame.EvaluateExpression ("Foo foo = { 1, 2, 3}; foo", expr_options)
This fixed a current issue with ptr_refs, cstr_refs and malloc_info so that they can work. If expressions define their own types and then return expression results that use those types, those types get copied into the target's AST context so they persist and the expression results can be still printed and used in future expressions. Code was added to the expression parser to copy the context in which types are defined if they are used as the expression results. So in the case of types defined by expressions, they get defined in a lldb_expr function and that function and _all_ of its statements get copied. Many types of statements are not supported in this copy (array subscript, lambdas, etc) so this causes expressions to fail as they can't copy the result types. To work around this issue I have added code that allows expressions to specify an expression specific prefix. Then when you evaluate the expression you can pass the "expr_options" and have types that can be correctly copied out into the target. I added this as a way to work around an issue, but I also think it is nice to be allowed to specify an expression prefix that can be reused by many expressions, so this feature is very useful.
<rdar://problem/21130675>
llvm-svn: 238365
version of this script. We picked up a bug at some point in March
where scripts that fail to call SBDebugger::Destroy() will crash
in the Debugger C++ dtor. I want to track the change down which
introduced the change - but this script should be calling
SBDebugger::Destroy() in the first place, so do that.
llvm-svn: 233779
The previous implementation only read out the first element of the
underlying storage array. Because of it only the first 32 (on x86) or
the first 64 (on x86_64) element was displayed.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8585
llvm-svn: 233179
Summary:
GCC does not emit some DWARF required for the simplified formatter
to work. A workaround for it has been incorporated in the formatter.
The corresponding test TestDataFormatterStdMap has also been enabled
for GCC.
Test Plan: dotest.py -C <clang|gcc> -p TestDataFormatterStdMap
Reviewers: clayborg, vharron, granata.enrico
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8424
llvm-svn: 232678
Summary:
The existing formatter in C++ has been removed as it was not being used.
The associated test TestDataFormatterStdVBool.py has been enabled for
both Clang and GCC on Linux.
Test Plan: dotest.py -p TestDataFormatterStdVBool
Reviewers: vharron, clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8390
llvm-svn: 232548
- tree items can define any number of key/value pairs
- creating a tree you specify which columns you want to display and it will pick out the right key/value pairs from the new tree item dictionaries
- added new "tk-target" command to explore the target's images, sections, symbols, compile units and line tables.
llvm-svn: 219219
If you "command script import" this file, then you will have two new commands:
(lldb) tk-variables
(lldb) tk-process
Not sure how this will work on all other systems, but on MacOSX, you will get a window with a tree view that allows you to inspect your local variables by expanding variables to see the child values.
The "tk-process" allows you to inspect the currently selected process by expanding the process to see the threads, the threads to see the frames, and the frames to see the variables. Very handy if you want to view variables for all frames simultaneously.
llvm-svn: 218279
SBTarget::AddModule(const char *path,
const char *triple,
const char *uuid_cstr,
const char *symfile);
If "symfile" was filled in, it would cause us to not correctly add the module. Same goes for:
SBTarget::AddModule(SBModuleSpec ...)
Where you filled in the symfile.
<rdar://problem/16529799>
llvm-svn: 205750
- If there is only 1 frame ptr_refs now works (fixed issue with stack detection)
- Fixed test for result now that it isn't a pointer anymore
llvm-svn: 198712
This commit adds an example python file that can be used with 'target-definition-file' setting for Linux gdbserver.
This file has an extra key 'breakpoint-pc-offset' that LLDB uses to determine how much to change the PC
after hitting the breakpoint.
llvm-svn: 192962
- Made the dynamic register context for the GDB remote plug-in inherit from the generic DynamicRegisterInfo to avoid code duplication
- Finished up the target definition python setting stuff.
- Added a new "slice" key/value pair that can specify that a register is part of another register:
{ 'name':'eax', 'set':0, 'bitsize':32, 'encoding':eEncodingUint, 'format':eFormatHex, 'slice': 'rax[31:0]' },
- Added a new "composite" key/value pair that can specify that a register is made up of two or more registers:
{ 'name':'d0', 'set':0, 'bitsize':64 , 'encoding':eEncodingIEEE754, 'format':eFormatFloat, 'composite': ['s1', 's0'] },
- Added a new "invalidate-regs" key/value pair for when a register is modified, it can invalidate other registers:
{ 'name':'cpsr', 'set':0, 'bitsize':32 , 'encoding':eEncodingUint, 'format':eFormatHex, 'invalidate-regs': ['r8', 'r9', 'r10', 'r11', 'r12', 'r13', 'r14', 'r15']},
This now completes the feature that allows a GDB remote target to completely describe itself.
llvm-svn: 192858
When debugging with the GDB remote in LLDB, LLDB uses special packets to discover the
registers on the remote server. When those packets aren't supported, LLDB doesn't
know what the registers look like. This checkin implements a setting that can be used
to specify a python file that contains the registers definitions. The setting is:
(lldb) settings set plugin.process.gdb-remote.target-definition-file /path/to/module.py
Inside module there should be a function:
def get_dynamic_setting(target, setting_name):
This dynamic setting function is handed the "target" which is a SBTarget, and the
"setting_name", which is the name of the dynamic setting to retrieve. For the GDB
remote target definition the setting name is 'gdb-server-target-definition'. The
return value is a dictionary that follows the same format as the OperatingSystem
plugins follow. I have checked in an example file that implements the x86_64 GDB
register set for people to see:
examples/python/x86_64_target_definition.py
This allows LLDB to debug to any archticture that is support and allows users to
define the registers contexts when the discovery packets (qRegisterInfo, qHostInfo)
are not supported by the remote GDB server.
A few benefits of doing this in Python:
1 - The dynamic register context was already supported in the OperatingSystem plug-in
2 - Register contexts can use all of the LLDB enumerations and definitions for things
like lldb::Format, lldb::Encoding, generic register numbers, invalid registers
numbers, etc.
3 - The code that generates the register context can use the program to calculate the
register context contents (like offsets, register numbers, and more)
4 - True dynamic detection could be used where variables and types could be read from
the target program itself in order to determine which registers are available since
the target is passed into the python function.
This is designed to be used instead of XML since it is more dynamic and code flow and
functions can be used to make the dictionary.
llvm-svn: 192646
Added "mach_o.py" which is a mach-o parser that can dump mach-o file contents and also extract sections. It uses the "file_extract" module and the "dict_utils" module.
llvm-svn: 189959
print five words of memory at the beginning of the stack frame so it's
easier to track where an incorrect saved-fp or saved-pc may have come from.
llvm-svn: 185903
The script was able to point out and save 40 bytes in each lldb_private::Section by being very careful where we need to have virtual destructors and also by re-ordering members.
llvm-svn: 184364
Change the simple-minded stack walk to not depend on lldb to unwind
the first frame.
Collect a list of Modules and Addresses seen while backtracing (with
both methods), display the image list output for all of those modules,
plus disassemble and image show-unwind any additional frames that
the simple backtrace was able to unwind through instead of just the
lldb unwind algorithm frames.
Remove checks for older lldb's that didn't support -a for disassemble
or specifying the assembler syntax on x86 targets.
llvm-svn: 184280
- specify the architecture
- specify the platform
- specify if only external symbols should be dumped
- specify if types in the function signatures should be canonicalized
llvm-svn: 183961
Improved the makefile "clean" to include deleting all ".d.[0-9]+" files.
Added options to the "lldb/examples/lookup" example and made it build using the LLDB_BUILD_DIR. If this is not set, it will default to "/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/SharedFrameworks" on Darwin.
Added options to the "lldb/examples/function" example and made it build using the LLDB_BUILD_DIR.
llvm-svn: 183949
This example shows someone could iterate over all functions and do something intelligent with them, like create function signatures. Then two different builds could be compared to verify the API hasn't changed.
llvm-svn: 183923
This module uses Python's sys.settrace() mechanism so setup a hook that can log every significant operation
This is a first step in providing a good debugging experience of Python embedded in LLDB
This module comprises an OO infrastructure that wraps Python's tracing and inspecting mechanisms, plus a very simple logging tracer
Output from this tracer looks like:
call print_keyword_args from <module> @ 243 args are kwargs are {'first_name': 'John', 'last_name': 'Doe'}
running print_keyword_args @ 228 locals are {'kwargs': {'first_name': 'John', 'last_name': 'Doe'}}
running print_keyword_args @ 229 locals are {'key': 'first_name', 'value': 'John', 'kwargs': {'first_name': 'John', 'last_name': 'Doe'}}
first_name = John
running print_keyword_args @ 228 locals are {'key': 'first_name', 'value': 'John', 'kwargs': {'first_name': 'John', 'last_name': 'Doe'}}
running print_keyword_args @ 229 locals are {'key': 'last_name', 'value': 'Doe', 'kwargs': {'first_name': 'John', 'last_name': 'Doe'}}
last_name = Doe
running print_keyword_args @ 228 locals are {'key': 'last_name', 'value': 'Doe', 'kwargs': {'first_name': 'John', 'last_name': 'Doe'}}
return from print_keyword_args value is None locals are {'key': 'last_name', 'value': 'Doe', 'kwargs': {'first_name': 'John', 'last_name': 'Doe'}}
llvm-svn: 181343
finish-swig-Python-LLDB.sh to create a new lldb.diagnose subdirectory
in the LLDB framework; the first diagnostic command in this directory
is diagnose-unwind. There may be others added in the future.
Users can load these diagnostic tools into their session with
"script import lldb.diagnose".
llvm-svn: 180768
lldb-179 version numberings and the new lldb-300 version numberings.
Remove the pretense that someone might run this from the command
line; this is only used from within a live lldb debug session. Fix
the loading so it can be loaded via "script import lldb.macosx" or
the script can be loaded individually like "command script import
unwind_diagnose.py"
llvm-svn: 180085
unwind instructions for a function/symbol which contains that
address.
Update the unwind_diagnose.py script to use this instead of doing
image show-unwind by name to avoid cases where there are multiple
name definitions.
llvm-svn: 180079
It will be installed in the LLDB.framework and can be loaded with
(lldb) script import lldb.macosx
after which a "unwind-diagnose" command will be registered. Select
the thread which has a bad backtrace and run this command -- a lot
of information about the stack frames, and an alternate backtrace
algorithm, will be used. The information will often be sufficient
for a remote person to figure out why the backtrace failed.
<rdar://problem/13679300>
llvm-svn: 180077
crashlog.py was always subtracting 1 to point to the previous instruction when symbolicating ARM backtraces. Many times the backtraces will include bit zero set to 1 to indicate thumb, so we need to make sure we mask the address and then backup one for non frame zero frames.
llvm-svn: 178812
ptr_refs command frequently doesn't work when run in large applicaton. This was due to the default timeout of 500ms. The timeouts have now been increased and all expression evaluations have been modified.
llvm-svn: 178628
This is a very basic implementation of a library that easily allows to drive LLDB.framework to write test cases for performance
This is separate from the LLDB testsuite in test/ in that:
a) this uses C++ instead of Python to avoid measures being affected by SWIG
b) this is in very early development and needs lots of tweaking before it can be considered functionally complete
c) this is not meant to test correctness but to help catch performance regressions
There is a sample application built against the library (in darwin/sketch) that uses the famous sample app Sketch as an inferior to measure certain basic parameters of LLDB's behavior.
The resulting output is a PLIST much like the following:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">
<plist version="1.0">
<array>
<dict>
<key>fetch-frames</key>
<real>0.13161715522222225</real>
</dict>
<dict>
<key>file-line-bkpt</key>
<real>0.029111678750000002</real>
</dict>
<dict>
<key>fetch-modules</key>
<real>0.00026376766666666668</real>
</dict>
<dict>
<key>fetch-vars</key>
<real>0.17820429311111111</real>
</dict>
<dict>
<key>run-expr</key>
<real>0.029676525769230768</real>
</dict>
</array>
</plist>
Areas for improvement:
- code cleanups (I will be out of the office for a couple days this coming week, but please keep ideas coming!)
- more metrics and test cases
- better error checking
This toolkit also comprises a simple event-loop-driven controller for LLDB, similar yet much simpler to what the Driver does to implement the lldb command-line tool.
llvm-svn: 176715
I used this to verify that the debug map line tables were the same as previous LLDB releases prior to my change in the DWARF in .o file linking.
llvm-svn: 176610
If you try to access any child > 0 without having touched child 0, LLDB won't be able to reconstruct type information from the debug info.
Previously, we would fail.
Now, we simply go fetch child 0 and then come back.
llvm-svn: 174795
C++11 lambdas that don't capture anything can be used as static callback functions!
Heavily modified this python module to be able to not require a dylib in order to traverse the heap allocations.
Re-implemented the ptr_refs, objc_refs, malloc_info and cstr_refs to use complex expressions that use lambdas to do all static callback function work.
llvm-svn: 173989
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
Added the ability for OS plug-ins to lazily populate the thread this. The python OS plug-in classes can now implement the following method:
class OperatingSystemPlugin:
def create_thread(self, tid, context):
# Return a dictionary for a new thread to create it on demand
This will add a new thread to the thread list if it doesn't already exist. The example code in lldb/examples/python/operating_system.py has been updated to show how this call us used.
Cleaned up the code in PythonDataObjects.cpp/h:
- renamed all classes that started with PythonData* to be Python*.
- renamed PythonArray to PythonList. Cleaned up the code to use inheritance where
- Centralized the code that does ref counting in the PythonObject class to a single function.
- Made the "bool PythonObject::Reset(PyObject *)" function be virtual so each subclass can correctly check to ensure a PyObject is of the right type before adopting the object.
- Cleaned up all APIs and added new constructors for the Python* classes to they can all construct form:
- PyObject *
- const PythonObject &
- const lldb::ScriptInterpreterObjectSP &
Cleaned up code in ScriptInterpreterPython:
- Made calling python functions safer by templatizing the production of value formats. Python specifies the value formats based on built in C types (long, long long, etc), and code often uses typedefs for uint32_t, uint64_t, etc when passing arguments down to python. We will now always produce correct value formats as the templatized code will "do the right thing" all the time.
- Fixed issues with the ScriptInterpreterPython::Locker where entering the session and leaving the session had a bunch of issues that could cause the "lldb" module globals lldb.debugger, lldb.target, lldb.process, lldb.thread, and lldb.frame to not be initialized.
llvm-svn: 172873
The Python data formatters use a per-process cache that was previously keying off the PID. Moving that to be based on this new notion of unique ID.
llvm-svn: 172633
Making MightHaveChildren() always return true regardless for our own data formatters
This is meant to optimize performance for common most-often-not-empty container classes
llvm-svn: 169759
Change the wording of NSNumber summary from absurd value to unexpected value when a tagged pointer shows up that does not match our knowledge of the internals
llvm-svn: 169751
Adding the new has_children (or MightHaveChildren() in C++) for the existing synthetic children providers
In a few cases, the new call is going to be much more efficient than the previous num_children > 0 check
When the optimization was marginal (e.g. std::vector<>), the choice was to use num_children in order to keep
implementation details in one function instead of duplicating code
Next step is to provide test cases
llvm-svn: 166506