This function would fail in debug builds, as the two usages of the
LLDB_PYTHON_RELATIVE_LIBDIR macro would expand to two distinct strings.
The path iterator macros don't support that.
Use a temporary variable to ensure everything points to a single string.
We have a plugin.process.gdb-remote.packet-timeout setting, which can be
used to control how long the lldb client is willing to wait before
declaring the server side dead. Our test suite makes use of this
feature, and sets the setting value fairly high, as the low default
value can cause flaky tests, particularly on slower bots.
After fixing TestPlatformConnect (one of the few tests exercising the
remote platform capabilities of lldb) in 4b284b9ca, it immediately
started being flaky on the arm bots. It turns out this is because the
packet-timeout setting is not being applied to platform connections.
This patch makes the platform connections also respect the value of this
setting. It also adds a test which checks that the timeout value is
being honored.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97769
Apply changes from https://reviews.llvm.org/D91014 to other places where DWARF entries are being processed.
Test case is provided by @jankratochvil.
The test is marked to run only on x64 and exclude Windows and Darwin, because the assembly is not OS-independent.
(First attempt https://reviews.llvm.org/D96778 broke the build bots)
Reviewed By: jankratochvil
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97765
GDB remote protocol does not specify length of g packet for register read. It depends on remote to include all or exclude certain registers from g packet. In case a register or set of registers is not included as part of g packet then we should fall back to p packet for reading all registers excluded from g packet by remote. This patch adds support for above feature and adds a test-case for the same.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97498
This patch introduces Scripted Processes to lldb.
The goal, here, is to be able to attach in the debugger to fake processes
that are backed by script files (in Python, Lua, Swift, etc ...) and
inspect them statically.
Scripted Processes can be used in cooperative multithreading environments
like the XNU Kernel or other real-time operating systems, but it can
also help us improve the debugger testing infrastructure by writting
synthetic tests that simulates hard-to-reproduce process/thread states.
Although ScriptedProcess is not feature-complete at the moment, it has
basic execution capabilities and will improve in the following patches.
rdar://65508855
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95713
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
This patch adds a ScriptedProcess interface to the ScriptInterpreter and
more specifically, to the ScriptInterpreterPython.
This interface will be used in the C++ `ScriptProcess` Process Plugin to
call the script methods.
At the moment, not all methods are implemented, they will upstreamed in
upcoming patches.
This patch also adds helper methods to the ScriptInterpreter to
convert `SBAPI` Types (SBData & SBError) to `lldb_private` types
(DataExtractor & Status).
rdar://65508855
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95711
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
Add frame variable dereference suppport to libc++ `std::unique_ptr`.
This change allows for commands like `v *thing_up` and `v thing_up->m_id`. These commands now work the same way they would with raw pointers, and as they would with expression. This is done by adding an unaccounted for child member named `$$dereference$$`.
Without this change, the command would have to be written as `v *thing_up.__value_` or v thing_up.__value_->m_id` which exposes internal structure and is more clumsy to type.
Additionally, the existing tests were updated. See also https://reviews.llvm.org/D97165 which added deref support for `std::shared_ptr`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97524
LLDB uses utility functions to run code in the inferior for its own
internal purposes, such as reading classes from the Objective-C runtime
for example. Because these expressions should be transparent to the
user, we ignore breakpoints and unwind the stack on errors, which
makes them hard to debug.
This patch adds a new setting target.debug-utility-expression that, when
enabled, changes these options to facilitate debugging. It enables
breakpoints, disables unwinding and writes out the utility function
source code to disk so it shows up in the source view.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97249
LLDB tracks where any imported `clang::Decl` originally came from via a simple
map from 'imported decl' to 'original decl'. That information is used to later
complete parts of the Decl when more information is requested about a certain
Decl (e.g., via the ExternalASTSource interface from Clang).
When finding the 'original decl' for a given decl, the ASTImporterDelegate
essentially just recursively follows the previously mentioned map from
'imported' to 'original decl' until it can find any further 'original decl'. The
final found decl is then the one that will be imported. The recursion is
necessary as in LLDB we don't just import decls from one ASTContext to another,
but also from one ASTContext to another via a (potentially temporary)
ASTContext. For example, the expression parser creates a temporary ASTContext
for parsing the current expression.
The problem with the recursion is however that if we somehow get a cycle into
our mapping, then the ASTImporterDelegate will just infinite recurse. As the
infinite recursion usually happens after the cycle was already created in a code
path such as completing a type, the crash backtraces we get for these bugs are
not very useful. However having the backtrace where the faulty map entry is
created usually makes the code trivial to fix (as there should be some rogue
CopyType call or something similar nearby. See for example D96366).
This patch tries to make these issues easier to track down by putting a bunch of
sanity asserts in the code that fills out the map. All the asserts are just
checking that there is no direct cycle (ASTContext maps to itself) when updating
the origin tracking map.
The assert in the ASTImportDelegate constructor is an `lldbassert` (which also
is getting checked in release builds with disabled asserts) as the code path
there is pretty cold and we can reliably detect a rogue CopyType call from
there.
I also had to update some code in
`ClangASTImporter::ASTImporterDelegate::Imported`. This code already had a
safety check for creating a cycle in the origin tracking map, but it still
constructed an ASTImporter while checking for the cycle (by requesting a
delegate via `GetDelegate` and passing two identical ASTContexts which looks
like a rogue CopyType call to the checks).
Reviewed By: shafik
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97300
In DWARF v4 compile units go in .debug_info and type units go in
.debug_types. However, in v5 both kinds of units are in .debug_info.
Therefore we can't decide whether to use the CU or TU index just by
looking at which section we're reading from. We have to wait until we
have read the unit type from the header.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96194
Add `frame variable` dereference suppport to libc++ `std::shared_ptr`.
This change allows for commands like `v *thing_sp` and `v thing_sp->m_id`. These
commands now work the same way they do with raw pointers. This is done by adding an
unaccounted for child member named `$$dereference$$`.
Also, add API tests for `std::shared_ptr`, previously there were none.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97165
This issue was introduced in https://reviews.llvm.org/D92187.
The guard I'm changing were is supposed to act when linux is loading the linker for the second time (due to differences in paths like symlinks).
This is done by checking `module_sp != m_interpreter_module.lock()` however this will be true when `m_interpreter_module` wasn't initialized, making linux unload the linker module (the most visible result here is that lldb will stop getting notified about new modules loaded by the process, because it can't set the rendezvous breakpoint again after the stepping over it once).
The `m_interpreter_module` is not getting initialize when it goes through this path: dbfdb139f7/lldb/source/Plugins/DynamicLoader/POSIX-DYLD/DynamicLoaderPOSIXDYLD.cpp (L332), which happens when lldb was able to read the address from the dynamic section of the executable.
What I'm not sure about though, is if when we go through this path if we still load the linker twice on linux. If that's the case then it means we need to somehow set the m_interpreter_module instead of the fix I provide here. I've only tested this on Android.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96637
Our code for locating the shared library directory works via dladdr (or
the windows equivalent) to locate the path of an address known to reside
in liblldb. This works great for C++ programs, but there's a catch.
When (lib)lldb is used from python (like in our test suite), this dladdr
call will return a path to the _lldb.so (or such) file in the python
directory. To compensate for this, we have code which attempts to
resolve this symlink, to ensure we get the canonical location. However,
here's the second catch.
On windows, this file is not a symlink (but a copy), so this logic
fails. Since most of our other paths are derived from the liblldb
location, all of these paths will be wrong, when running the test suite.
One effect of this was the failure to find lldb-server in D96202.
To fix this issue, I add some windows-specific code to locate the
liblldb directory. Since it cannot rely on symlinks, it works by
manually walking the directory tree -- essentially doing the opposite of
what we do when computing the python directory.
To avoid python leaking back into the host code, I implement this with
the help of a callback which can be passed to HostInfo::Initialize in
order to assist with the directory location. The callback lives inside
the python plugin.
I also strenghten the existing path test to ensure the returned path is
the right one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96779
Add a new state for UnwindPlan::Row which indicates that any
register not listed is not defined, and should not be found in
stack frames newer than this one and passed up the stack. Mostly
intended for use with architectural default unwind plans that are
used for jitted stack frames, where we have no unwind information
or start address. lldb has no way to tell if registers were
spilled in the jitted frame & overwritten, so passing register
values up the stack is not safe to show the user.
Architectural default unwind plans are also used as a fast unwind
plan on x86_64 in particular, and are used as the fallback unwind
plans when lldb thinks it may be able to work around a problem
which causes the unwinder to stop walking the stack early.
For fast unwind plans, when we don't find a register location in
the arch default unwind plan, we fall back to computing & using
the full unwind plan. One small part of this patch is to know that
a register marked as Undefined in the fast unwind plan is a special
case, and we should continue on to the full unwind plan to find what
the real unwind rule is for this register.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96829
<rdar://problem/70398009>
LLDB does not like to import Python files with dashes or dots in their
name. While the former are technically allowed, it is discouraged. Dots
are allowed for subpackages but not in module names. This patch improves
the user experience by printing a useful error.
Before this patch:
error: module importing failed: SyntaxError('invalid syntax',
('<string>', 1, 11, 'import foo-bar\n'))
After this patch:
error: module importing failed: Python discourages dashes in module
names: foo-bar
rdar://74263511
[1] https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/#package-and-module-names
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96833
Ensure that the llvm::Error instances are always considered handled
by replacing LLDB_LOG with LLDB_LOG_ERROR.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96558
The new FreeBSDRemote plugin has reached feature parity with the legacy
plugin, so we can finally remove the latter. The new plugin will
be renamed to FreeBSD in a separate commit to avoid confusion.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96555
The comment for ValueType claims that all values <1 are errors, but
not all switch statements take this into account. This patch
introduces an explicit Error case and deletes all default: cases, so
we get warned about incomplete switch coverage.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D96537
It looks like a previous change switched these from LLDB_LOGF but did not update the format strings.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96550
It is possible for the GetSectionHeaderByIndex lookup to fail because
the previous FindSectionContainingFileAddress lookup found a segment
instead of a section. This is possible if the binary does not have
a PLT (which means that lld will in some circumstances set DT_JMPREL
to 0, which is typically an address that is part of the ELF headers
and not in a section) and may also be possible if the section headers
have been stripped. To handle this possibility, replace the assert
with an if.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93438
`QueueThreadPlanForStepInRange` accepts a `step_into_target`, but the constructor for
`ThreadPlanStepInRange` does not. Instead, a caller would optionally call
`SetStepInTarget()` in a separate statement.
This change adds `step_into_target` as a constructor argument. This simplifies
construction of `ThreadPlanSP`, by avoiding a subsequent downcast and conditional
assignment. This constructor is already used in downstream repos.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96539
Clang emits a warning when accessing an Objective-C getter but not using the result.
This gets triggered when just trying to print a getter value in the expression parser (where
Clang just sees a normal expression like `obj.getter` while parsing).
This patch just disables the warning in the expression parser (similar to what we do with
the C++ equivalent of just accessing a member variable but not doing anything with it).
Reviewed By: kastiglione
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94307
BlockPointerSyntheticFrontEnd does a CopyType which results in it copying the type
back into its own context. This will result in a call to ASTImporterDelegate::setOrigin
with &decl->getASTContext() == origin.ctx this can result in an infinite recursion
later on in ASTImporter since it will attempt to find the decl in its origin which will be itself.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96366
Introduce a minimal support for the 32-bit powerpc platform. This
includes support for GPR and FPR registers. I also needed to add
software breakpoint opcode for PPC32/PPC64 (big endian), and to fix
offsets in RegisterInfos_powerpc.h (used only by FreeBSD register
context to be globally unique rather than relative to each struct).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95947
These two `AppleThreadPlanStepThrough` thread plans have parameterized behavior
that is unutilized. To make their interface and implementation simpler, this
change inlines those outside parameters.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96276
Introduce mips64 support to match the legacy FreeBSD plugin. Similarly
to the legacy plugin, the code does not support FPU registers at the
moment. The support for them will be submitted separately as it
requires changes to the register context shared by both plugins.
This also includes software single-stepping support that is moved from
the Linux plugin into a common Utility class. The FreeBSD code also
starts explicitly ignoring EINVAL from PT_CLEARSTEP since this is easier
to implement than checking whether hardware single-stepping were used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95802
Native register descriptions in LLDB specify lldb register numbers in
value_regs and invalidate_regs lists. These register numbers may not
match with Process gdb-remote register numbers which are generated by
native process after counting all registers in its register sets.
It was coincidentally not causing any problems as we never came across
a native target with dynamically changing register sets and register
numbers generated by counter matched with LLDB native register numbers.
This came up while testing target AArch64 SVE which can choose register
sets based on underlying hardware.
This patch fixes this behavior and always tries to use remote register
numbers while reading/writing registers over gdb-remote protocol.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77043
This patch tries to improve memory-read from core files
(in order to improve disassembly functionality).
I am using RHEL 7.7 (linux kernel 3.10) and for a lot of cases,
I was not able to disassemble some functions from backtrace when
debugging crashes from core files. It outputs some dummy code.
The cause of the problem was the fact we are returning all the zeros
from ProcessElfCore::ReadMemory() that is being called within
Disassembler::ParseInstructions() and it disassembles some dummy
opcodes from the buffer returned. Therefore, we are removing zero
bytes filling (padding) completely.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93939
Introduce a NativeRegisterContextFreeBSD for 32-bit ARM platform.
This includes support for GPR + VFP registers as exposed by FreeBSD's
ptrace(2) API. Hardware breakpoints or watchpoints are not supported
due to missing kernel support. The code is roughly based on the arm64
context.
It also includes an override for GetSoftwareBreakpointTrapOpcode() based
on the matching code in the PlatformFreeBSD plugin.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95696
Introduce arm64 support in the FreeBSDRemote plugin. The code
is roughly based on Linux and reuses the same POSIX RegisterInfos
(but the buffers need to be a few bytes larger due to stricter struct
member alignment in FreeBSD structures -- luckily, they do not affect
the actual member offsets). It supports reading and writing
general-purpose and FPU registers. SVE and hardware watchpoint support
is missing due to the limitations of FreeBSD ptrace(2) API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95297
Identical to previous commits that just add a standard library template to the
supported template list and test it. Adding this rather obscure class to the
template list is mostly caused by the std::deque test unexpectedly referencing
this type when testing against newer libc++ versions on macOS.
Fixes TestQueueFromStdModule and TestQueueFromStdModule on macOS.
Fixes rdar://73213589
37510f69b4 tried to fix GCC 5.x compilation
by making the enum which is used as a unordered_map key unscoped. However it
seems that in GCC 5.x, enum keys are not supported *at all* in unordered_maps
(at least that's what some trial&error on godbolt tells me). This updates the
workaround to just use an int until GCC 5.x support is dropped.
Migrate to the `FileEntryRef` overload of `SourceManager::createFileID`
(using `FileManager::getOptionalFileRef`) in
`ClangExpressionParser::ParseInternal`.
No functionality change here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92957
Adds support for running a Lua function when a breakpoint is hit.
Example:
breakpoint command add -s lua -F abc
The above runs the Lua function 'abc' passing 2 arguments. 'frame', 'bp_loc' and 'extra_args'.
A third parameter 'extra_args' is only present when there is structured data
declared in the command line.
Example:
breakpoint command add -s lua -F abc -k foo -v bar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93649
Finishing out the support (to the best of my knowledge/based on current
testing running the whole check-lldb with a clang forcibly using
DW_AT_ranges on all DW_TAG_subprograms) for this feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94064
Implements the required functions on gdb-remote so the '--include-existing' flag of process attach works correctly on Linux.
Reviewed By: labath, clayborg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94672
ObjCBOOLSummaryProvider was incorrectly treating BOOL as unsigned and this is now fixed.
Also adding tests for one bit bit-fields of BOOL and unsigned char.
GCC/libstdc++ before 6.1 can't handle scoped enums as unordered_map keys. LLVM
(and some build) bots officially support some GCC 5.x versions, so this patch
just makes the enum unscoped until we can require GCC 6.x.
Currently when LLDB has enough data in the debug information to import the `std` module,
it will just try to import it. However when debugging libraries where the sources aren't
available anymore, importing the module will generate a confusing diagnostic that
the module couldn't be built.
For the fallback mode (where we retry failed expressions with the loaded module), this
will cause the second expression to fail with a module built error instead of the
actual parsing issue in the user expression.
This patch adds checks that ensures that we at least have any source files in the found
include paths before we try to import the module. This prevents the module from being
loaded in the situation described above which means we don't emit the bogus 'can't
import module' diagnostic and also don't waste any time retrying the expression in the
fallback mode.
For the unit tests I did some refactoring as they now require a VFS with the files in it
and not just the paths. The Python test just builds a binary with a fake C++ module,
then deletes the module before debugging.
Fixes rdar://73264458
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95096
Combined with 'da98651 - Revert "DR2064:
decltype(E) is only a dependent', this change (5a391d3) caused verifier
errors when building Chromium. See https://crbug.com/1168494#c1 for a
reproducer.
Additionally it reverts changes that were dependent on this one, see
below.
> Following up on PR48517, fix handling of template arguments that refer
> to dependent declarations.
>
> Treat an id-expression that names a local variable in a templated
> function as being instantiation-dependent.
>
> This addresses a language defect whereby a reference to a dependent
> declaration can be formed without any construct being value-dependent.
> Fixing that through value-dependence turns out to be problematic, so
> instead this patch takes the approach (proposed on the core reflector)
> of allowing the use of pointers or references to (but not values of)
> dependent declarations inside value-dependent expressions, and instead
> treating template arguments as dependent if they evaluate to a constant
> involving such dependent declarations.
>
> This ends up affecting a bunch of OpenMP tests, due to OpenMP
> imprecisely handling instantiation-dependent constructs, bailing out
> early instead of processing dependent constructs to the extent possible
> when handling the template.
>
> Previously committed as 8c1f2d15b8, and
> reverted because a dependency commit was reverted.
This reverts commit 5a391d38ac.
It also restores clang/test/SemaCXX/coroutines.cpp to its state before
da986511fb.
Revert "[c++20] P1907R1: Support for generalized non-type template arguments of scalar type."
> Previously committed as 9e08e51a20, and
> reverted because a dependency commit was reverted. This incorporates the
> following follow-on commits that were also reverted:
>
> 7e84aa1b81 by Simon Pilgrim
> ed13d8c667 by me
> 95c7b6cadb by Sam McCall
> 430d5d8429 by Dave Zarzycki
This reverts commit 4b574008ae.
Revert "[msabi] Mangle a template argument referring to array-to-pointer decay"
> [msabi] Mangle a template argument referring to array-to-pointer decay
> applied to an array the same as the array itself.
>
> This follows MS ABI, and corrects a regression from the implementation
> of generalized non-type template parameters, where we "forgot" how to
> mangle this case.
This reverts commit 18e093faf7.
This patch builds on previously submitted SVE patches regarding expedited
register set and per thread register infos. (D82853 D82855 and D82857)
We need to resize SVE register based on value received in expedited list.
Also we need to resize SVE registers when we write vg register using
register write vg command. The resize will result in a updated offset
for all of fpr and sve register set. This offset will be configured
in native register context by RegisterInfoInterface and will also be
be updated on client side in GDBRemoteRegisterContext.
A follow up patch will provide a API test to verify this change.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82863
Previously committed as 9e08e51a20, and
reverted because a dependency commit was reverted. This incorporates the
following follow-on commits that were also reverted:
7e84aa1b81 by Simon Pilgrim
ed13d8c667 by me
95c7b6cadb by Sam McCall
430d5d8429 by Dave Zarzycki
This patch pull offset calculation logic out of DynamicRegisterInfo::Finalize
into a separate function. We are going to call this function whenever we
update SVE register sizes.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94008
In gdb-remote process we have register infos defind as a refernce object of
GDBRemoteDynamicRegisterInfo class. In past register infos have remained
constant througout the life time of a process.
This has changed after AArch64 SVE support where register infos will have
per-thread configuration. SVE registers will have per-thread size and can
be updated while running. This patch aims to build up for that support by
changing GDBRemoteDynamicRegisterInfo reference to a shared pointer deinfed
per-thread.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82857
When a program maps one of its own modules for reading, and then
crashes, breakpad can emit two entries for that module in the
ModuleList. We have logic to identify this case by checking permissions
on mapped memory regions and report just the module with an executable
region. As currently written, though, the check is asymmetric -- the
entry with the executable region must be the second one encountered for
the preference to kick in.
This change makes the logic symmetric, so that the first-encountered
module will similarly be preferred if it has an executable region but
the second-encountered module does not. This happens for example when
the module in question is the executable itself, which breakpad likes to
report first -- we need to ignore the other entry for that module when
we see it later, even though it may be mapped at a lower virtual
address.
Reviewed By: clayborg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94629
The test was marked as remote-only, which means it was run ~never, and
accumulated various problems. This commit modifies the test to run
locally and includes a couple of other fixes necessary to make it run:
- moves the "invoke" method into the "Base" test class
- adds []'s around the IP address in a couple more places to make things
work with IPv6
The test is now marked as skipped when running the remote test suite. It
would be possible to make it run both locally and remotely, but this
would require writing a lot special logic for the remote case, and that
is not worth it.
This commit vAttachWait in lldb-server, so --waitfor can be used on
Linux
Reviewed By: labath, clayborg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93895
Replace uses of GetModuleAtIndexUnlocked and
GetModulePointerAtIndexUnlocked with the ModuleIterable and
ModuleIterableNoLocking where applicable.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94271
Adds the RISC-V ArchSpec bits contributed by @simoncook as part of D62732,
plus logic to distinguish between riscv32 and riscv64 based on ELF class.
The patch follows the implementation approach previously used for MIPS.
It defines RISC-V architecture subtypes and inspects the ELF header,
namely the ELF class, to detect the right subtype.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86292
gcc already produces debug info with this form
-freorder-block-and-partition
clang produces this sort of thing with -fbasic-block-sections and with a
coming-soon tweak to use ranges in DWARFv5 where they can allow greater
reuse of debug_addr than the low/high_pc forms.
This fixes the case of breaking on a function name, but leaves broken
printing a variable - a follow-up commit will add that and improve the
test case to match.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94063
Add optional memory tagging extension on AArch64.
Use isAArch64() instead of listing the AArch64 triples,
which fixes us not recognising aarch64_be.
Reviewed By: omjavaid
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94084
1 - Partial Statements
The interpreter loop runs every line it receives, so partial
Lua statements are not being handled properly. This is a problem for
multiline breakpoint scripts since the interpreter loop, for this
particular case, is just an abstraction to a partially parsed function
body declaration.
This patch addresses this issue and as a side effect improves the
general Lua interpreter loop as well. It's now possible to write partial
statements in the 'script' command.
Example:
(lldb) script
>>> do
..> local a = 123
..> print(a)
..> end
123
The technique implemented is the same as the one employed by Lua's own REPL implementation.
Partial statements always errors out with the '<eof>' tag in the error
message.
2 - CheckSyntax in Lua.h
In order to support (1), we need an API for just checking the syntax of string buffers.
3 - Multiline scripted breakpoints
Finally, with all the base features implemented this feature is
straightforward. The interpreter loop behaves exactly the same, the
difference is that it will aggregate all Lua statements into the body of
the breakpoint function. An explicit 'quit' statement is needed to exit the
interpreter loop.
Example:
(lldb) breakpoint command add -s lua
Enter your Lua command(s). Type 'quit' to end.
The commands are compiled as the body of the following Lua function
function (frame, bp_loc, ...) end
..> print(456)
..> a = 123
..> quit
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93481
In split DWARF v5 files, the DWO id is no longer in the DW_AT_GNU_dwo_id
attribute. It's in the CU header instead. This change makes lldb look in
both places.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93444
Copy changes, including:
- NativeProcessNetBSD::GetLoadedModuleFileSpec()
and NativeProcessNetBSD::GetFileLoadAddress() methods
- split x86 register sets by CPU extensions
- use offset/size-based register reading/writing
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93541
As of Linux 5.10, the kernel may report either of the two following
crash reasons:
- SEGV_MTEAERR: async MTE tag check fault
- SEGV_MTESERR: sync MTE tag check fault
Teach LLDB about them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93495
This patch introduces a LLDB_SCOPED_TIMER macro to hide the needlessly
repetitive creation of scoped timers in LLDB. It's similar to the
LLDB_LOG(F) macro.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93663
Use RegSetKind enum for register sets everything, rather than int.
Always spell it as 'RegSetKind', without unnecessary 'enum'. Add
missing switch case. While at it, use uint32_t for regnums
consistently.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93450
Replace the wrong code in GetRegisterSetCount() with a constant return.
The original code passed register index in place of register set index,
effectively getting always true. Correcting the code to check for
register set existence is not possible as LLDB supports only eliminating
last register sets. Just return the full number for now which should
be NFC.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93396
To get LLDB one step closer to fulfil the software redundancy requirements of
modern aircrafts, we apparently decided to have two separately maintained
implementations of `CreateTypedef` in TypeSystemClang. Let's pass on the idea of
an LLDB-powered jetliner and deleted one implementation.
On a more serious note: This function got duplicated a long time ago when the
idea of CompilerType with a backing TypeSystemClang subclass happened
(56939cb310). One implementation was supposed to
be called from CompilerType::CreateTypedef and the other has just always been
around to create typedefs. By accident one of the implementations is only used
by the PDB parser while the CompilerType::CreateTypedef backend is used by the
rest of LLDB.
We also had some patches over the year that only fixed one of the two functions
(D18099 for example only fixed up the CompilerType::CreateTypedef
implementation). D51162 and D86140 both fixed the same missing `addDecl` call
for one of the two implementations.
This patch:
* deletes the `CreateTypedefType` function as its only used by the PDB parser
and the `CreateTypedef` implementation is anyway needed as it's the backend
implementation of CompilerType.
* replaces the calls in the PDB parser by just calling the CompilerType wrapper.
* moves the documentation to the remaining function.
* moves the check for empty typedef names that was only in the deleted
implementation to the other (I don't think this fixes anything as I believe
all callers are already doing the same check).
I'll fix up the usual stuff (not using StringRef, not doing early exit) in a NFC
follow-up.
This patch is not NFC as the PDB parser now calls the function that has the fix
from D18099.
Reviewed By: labath, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93382
Fix the POSIX-DYLD plugin to update the cached executable path after
attaching. Previously, the path was cached in DYLDRendezvous
constructor and not updated afterwards. This meant that if LLDB was
attaching to a process (e.g. via connecting to lldb-server), the code
stored the empty path before DidAttach() resolved it. The fix updates
the cached path in DidAttach().
This fixes a new instance of https://llvm.org/pr17880
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92264
Explicitly consider the libraries reported on the initial rendezvous
breakpoint hit added. This is necessary on FreeBSD since the dynamic
loader issues only a single 'consistent' state rendezvous breakpoint hit
for all the libraries present in DT_NEEDED. It is also helpful on Linux
where it ensures that ld-linux is considered loaded as well
as the shared system libraries reported afterwards.
Reenable memory maps on FreeBSD since this fixed the issue triggered
by them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92187
7ad49aec12 added a __memory subdirectory to libc++
but the code we use to find libc++ from the debug info support files wasn't
prepared to encounter unknown subdirectories within libc++. The import-std-module
tests automatically fell back to not importing the std module which caused
them to fail.
This patch removes our hardcoded exception for the 'experimental' subdirectory
and instead just ignores all subdirectories of c++/vX/ when searching the
support files.
TargetList::CreateTarget automatically adds created target to the list, however,
CommandObjectTargetCreate does some additional preparation after creating a target
and which can fail. The command should remove created target if it failed. Since
the function has many ways to return, scope guard does this work safely.
Changes to the TargetList make target adding and selection more transparent.
Other changes remove unnecessary SetSelectedTarget after CreateTarget.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93052
Right now we have one large AST for all types in LLDB. All ODR violations in
types we reconstruct are resolved by just letting the ASTImporter handle the
conflicts (either by merging types or somehow trying to introduce a duplicated
declaration in the AST). This works ok for the normal types we build from debug
information as most of them are just simple CXXRecordDecls or empty template
declarations.
However, with a loaded `std` C++ module we have alternative versions of pretty
much all declarations in the `std` namespace that are much more fleshed out than
the debug information declarations. They have all the information that is lost
when converting to DWARF, such as default arguments, template default arguments,
the actual uninstantiated template declarations and so on.
When we merge these C++ module types into the big scratch AST (that might
already contain debug information types) we give the ASTImporter the tricky task
of somehow creating a consistent AST out of all these declarations. Usually this
ends in a messy AST that contains a mostly broken mix of both module and debug
info declarations. The ASTImporter in LLDB is also importing types with the
MinimalImport setting, which usually means the only information we have when
merging two types is often just the name of the declaration and the information
that it contains some child declarations. This makes it pretty much impossible
to even implement a better merging logic (as the names of C++ module
declarations and debug info declarations are identical).
This patch works around this whole merging problem by separating C++ module
types from debug information types. This is done by splitting up the single
scratch AST into two: One default AST for debug information and a dedicated AST
for C++ module types.
The C++ module AST is implemented as a 'specialised AST' that lives within the
default ScratchTypeSystemClang. When we select the scratch AST we can explicitly
request that we want such a isolated sub-AST of the scratch AST. I kept the
infrastructure more general as we probably can use the same mechanism for other
features that introduce conflicting types (such as programs that are compiled
with a custom -wchar-size= option).
There are just two places where we explicitly have request the C++ module AST:
When we export persistent declarations (`$mytype`) and when we create our
persistent result variable (`$0`, `$1`, ...). There are a few formatters that
were previously assuming that there is only one scratch AST which I cleaned up
in a preparation revision here (D92757).
Reviewed By: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92759
Several data formatters assume their types are in the Target's scratch AST and
build new types from that scratch AST instance. However, types from different
ASTs shouldn't be mixed, so this (unchecked) assumption may lead to problems if
we ever have more than one scratch AST or someone somehow invokes data
formatters on a type that are not in the scratch AST.
Instead we can use in all the formatters just the TypeSystem of the type we're
formatting. That's much simpler and avoids all the headache of finding the right
TypeSystem that matches the one of the formatted type.
Right now LLDB only has one scratch TypeSystemClang instance and we format only
types that are in the scratch AST, so this doesn't change anything in the
current way LLDB works. The intention here is to allow follow up refactorings
that introduce multiple scratch ASTs with the same Target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92757
By now LLDB can import the 'std' C++ module to improve expression evaluation,
but there are still a few problems to solve before we can do this by default.
One is that importing the C++ module is slightly slower than normal expression
evaluation (mostly because the disk access and loading the initial lookup data
is quite slow in comparison to the barebone Clang setup the rest of the LLDB
expression evaluator is usually doing). Another problem is that some complicated
types in the standard library aren't fully supported yet by the ASTImporter, so
we end up types that fail to import (which usually appears to the user as if the
type is empty or there is just no result variable).
To still allow people to adopt this mode in their daily debugging, this patch
adds a setting that allows LLDB to automatically retry failed expression with a
loaded C++ module. All success expressions will behave exactly as they would do
before this patch. Failed expressions get a another parse attempt if we find a
usable C++ module in the current execution context. This way we shouldn't have
any performance/parsing regressions in normal debugging workflows, while the
debugging workflows involving STL containers benefit from the C++ module type
info.
This setting is off by default for now with the intention to enable it by
default on macOS soon-ish.
The implementation is mostly just extracting the existing parse logic into its
own function and then calling the parse function again if the first evaluation
failed and we have a C++ module to retry the parsing with.
Reviewed By: shafik, JDevlieghere, aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92784
The reproducers currently use a static variable to track the API
boundary. This is obviously incorrect when the SB API is used
concurrently. While I do not plan to support that use-case (right now),
I do want to avoid us crashing. As a first step, correctly track API
boundaries across multiple threads.
Before this patch SB API calls made by the embedded script interpreter
would be considered "behind the API boundary" and correctly ignored.
After this patch, we need to tell the reproducers to ignore the
scripting thread as a "private thread".
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92811
LLDB is ignoring compilation errors for one-line breakpoint scripts.
This patch fixes the issues and now the error message of the
ScriptInterpreter is shown to the user.
I had to remove a new-line character for the Lua interpreter since it
was duplicated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92729
Copy the Linux implementation of GetLoadedModuleFileSpec()
and GetFileLoadAddress() into NativeProcessFreeBSD. This does not seem
to change anything at the moment but reducing the differences between
the plugins should help us in the long term.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92314
Explicitly consider the libraries reported on the initial eTakeSnapshot
action added, through adding them to the added soentry list
in DYLDRendezvous::SaveSOEntriesFromRemote(). This is necessary
on FreeBSD since the dynamic loader issues only a single 'consistent'
state rendezvous breakpoint hit for all the libraries present
in DT_NEEDED (while Linux issues an added-consistent event pair).
Reenable memory maps on FreeBSD since this fixed the issue triggered
by them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92187
Force gdb-remote plugin when attaching using the derivatives
of PlatformPOSIX class. This is consistent with the behavior
for launching processes (via DebugProcess() method) and guarantees
consistent plugin choice on FreeBSD.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92667
We keep referring to the single object created by this class as
'scratch AST/Context/TypeSystem' so at this point we might as well rename the
class. It's also not involved at all in expression evaluation, so the
'ForExpressions' prefix is a bit misleading.
Extract remote debugging logic from PlatformMacOSX and move it into
PlatformRemoteMacOSX so it can benefit from all the logic necessary for
remote debugging.
Until now, remote macOS debugging was treated almost identical to local
macOS debugging. By moving in into its own class, we can have it inherit
from PlatformRemoteDarwinDevice and all the functionality it provides,
such as looking at the correct DeviceSupport directory.
rdar://68167374
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92452
The code that gets the ScriptInterpreter was not considering the
case that it receives a Lua interpreter.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92249
We currently reject all templates that have either zero args or that have a
parameter pack without a name. Both cases are actually allowed in C++, so
rejecting them leads to LLDB instead falling back to a dummy 'void' type. This
leads to all kind of errors later on (most notable, variables that have such
template types appear to be missing as we can't have 'void' variables and
inheriting from such a template type will cause Clang to hit some asserts when
finding that the base class is 'void').
This just removes the too strict tests and adds a few tests for this stuff (+
some combinations of these tests with preceding template parameters).
Things that I left for follow-up patches:
* All the possible interactions with template-template arguments which seem like a whole new source of possible bugs.
* Function templates which completely lack sanity checks.
* Variable templates are not implemented.
* Alias templates are not implemented too.
* The rather strange checks that just make sure that the separate list of
template arg names and values always have the same length. I believe those
ought to be asserts, but my current plan is to move both those things into a
single list that can't end up in this inconsistent state.
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere, shafik
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92425
This patch carries forward our aim to remove offset field from qRegisterInfo
packets and XML register description. I have created a new function which
returns if offset fields are dynamic meaning client can calculate offset on
its own based on register number sequence and register size. For now this
function only returns true for NativeRegisterContextLinux_arm64 but we can
test this for other architectures and make it standard later.
As a consequence we do not send offset field from lldb-server (arm64 for now)
while other stubs dont have an offset field so it wont effect them for now.
On the client side we have replaced previous offset calculation algorithm
with a new scheme, where we sort all primary registers in increasing
order of remote regnum and then calculate offset incrementally.
This committ also includes a test to verify all of above functionality
on Arm64.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91241
This came up while putting together our new strategy to create g/G packets
in compliance with GDB RSP protocol where register offsets are calculated in
increasing order of register numbers without any unused spacing.
RegisterInfoPOSIX_arm64::GPR size was being calculated after alignment
correction to 8 bytes which meant there was a 4 bytes unused space between
last gpr (cpsr) and first vector register V. We have put LLVM_PACKED_START
decorator on RegisterInfoPOSIX_arm64::GPR to make sure single byte
alignment is enforced. Moreover we are now doing to use arm64 user_pt_regs
struct defined in ptrace.h for accessing ptrace user registers.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92063
Both functions are effectively returning a single string literal. Change
the interface to return a llvm::StringRef instead of populating a vector
of std::strings or returning a std::string respectively.
Our type formatters/summaries match on the internal type name we generate in LLDB for Clang types.
These names were generated using Clang's default printing policy. However Clang's
default printing policy got tweaked over the last month to make the generated type
names more readable (by for example excluding inline/anonymous namespaces and
removing template arguments that have their default value). This broke the formatter
system where LLDB's matching logic now no longer can format certain types as
the new type names generated by Clang's default printing policy no longer match
the type names that LLDB/the user specified.
I already introduced LLDB's own type printing policy and fixed the inline/anonymous
namespaces in da121fff11 (just to get the
test suite passing again).
This patch is restoring the old type printing behaviour where always include the template
arguments in the internal type name (even if they match the default args). This should get
template type formatters/summaries working again in the rare situation where we do
know template default arguments within LLDB. This can only happen when either having
a template that was parsed in the expression parser or when we get type information from a C++ module.
The Clang change that removed defaulted template arguments from Clang's printing policy was
e7f3e2103c
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92311
These callbacks are set using the following:
breakpoint command add -s lua -o "print('hello world!')"
The user supplied script is executed as:
function (frame, bp_loc, ...)
<body>
end
So the local variables 'frame', 'bp_loc' and vararg are all accessible.
Any global variables declared will persist in the Lua interpreter.
A user should never hold 'frame' and 'bp_loc' in a global variable as
these userdatas are context dependent.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91508
This patch ovverides GetExpeditedRegisterSet for
NativeRegisterContextLinux_arm64 to send vector granule register in
expedited register set if SVE mode is selected.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82855
This patch adds capability to introduce a custom expedited register set
in gdb remote. Currently we send register set 0 as expedited register set
but for the case of AArch64 SVE we intend to send additional information
about SVE registers size/offset configuration which can be calculated
from vg register. Therefore we will expedited Vg register in case of
AArch64 is in SVE mode to speedup register configuration calculations.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82853
Previously we used UINT16_MAX to mean no port/no specifc
port. This leads to confusion because 65535 is a valid
port number.
Instead use an optional. If you want a specific port call
LaunchGDBServer as normal, otherwise pass an empty optional
and it will be set to the port that gets chosen.
(or left empty in the case where we fail to find a port)
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92035
Previously if you did:
$ lldb-server platform --server <...> --min-gdbserver-port 12346
--max-gdbserver-port 12347
(meaning only use port 12346 for gdbservers)
Then tried to launch two gdbservers on the same connection,
the second one would return port 65535. Which is a real port
number but it actually means lldb-server didn't find one it was
allowed to use.
send packet: $qLaunchGDBServer;<...>
read packet: $pid:1919;port:12346;#c0
<...>
send packet: $qLaunchGDBServer;<...>
read packet: $pid:1927;port:65535;#c7
This situation should be an error even if port 65535 does happen
to be available on the current machine.
To fix this make PortMap it's own class within
GDBRemoteCommunicationServerPlatform.
This almost the same as the old typedef but for
GetNextAvailablePort() returning an llvm::Expected.
This means we have to handle not finding a port,
by returning an error packet.
Also add unit tests for this new PortMap class.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91634
This is partly in preparation for an upcoming change that can change the
order in which DeclContext lookup results are presented.
In passing, fix some obvious errors where name lookup's notion of a
"static member function" missed static member function templates, and
where its notion of "same set of declarations" was confused by the same
declarations appearing in a different order.
This patch fixes a minor typo in RegisterContextPOSIXProcessMonitor_arm64
constructor where memset target was wrongly specified as m_fpr instead of
m_gpr_arm64.
Add a 'can_connect' parameter to Process plugin initialization, and use
it to filter plugins to these capable of remote connections. This is
used to prevent 'process connect' from picking up a plugin that can only
be used locally, e.g. the legacy FreeBSD plugin.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91810
Restore Linux-alike regset names for AVX/MPX registers
as TestLldbGdbServer seems to depend on them. At the same time, fix
TestRegisters to be aware that they are not available on FreeBSD
and NetBSD, at least until we figure out a better way of reporting
unsupported register sets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91923
Translate between abridged and full ftag values in order to expose
the latter in the gdb-remote protocol while the former are used by
FXSAVE/XSAVE... This matches the gdb behavior.
The Shell/Register tests now rely on the new behavior, and therefore
are run on non-Darwin systems only. The Python (API) test relies
on the legacy behavior, and is run on Darwin only.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91504
Commit f3aa9e36d9 fixed the embedded OS
build by removing all passed args for `GetName`/`GetDemangledName`. The motivation
for this was that these arguments were apparently removed in
commit 22b044877d. However, only `GetName`'s language
argument was removed but the mangling preference argument was *not* removed
(and unfortunately had a default argument). So when that commit removed all
the args it didn't just fix the build but it also changed all the mangling
preferences to 'demangled' for all `GetName` calls.
Also some `GetName` calls were outside the TARGET_OS_EMBEDDED ifdef, so
this change ended up breaking the following tests on macOS:
lldb-api :: lang/objc/objc-static-method-stripped/TestObjCStaticMethodStripped.py
lldb-api :: lang/objc/objc-super/TestObjCSuper.py
From what I can see f3aa9e36d9 removed 12 ePreferMangled args and this patch
re-adds 12 args with roughly the same line numbers, so this *should* restore the
old behaviour and also keep the embedded build working. On the other hand,
ObjectFileMachO::ParseSymtab is a very successful attempt at writing
the longest possible function within LLVM, so this fix is partly based
on the engineering principle known as "hoping for the best".
This extends the "memory region" command to
show tagged regions on AArch64 Linux when the MTE
extension is enabled.
(lldb) memory region the_page
[0x0000fffff7ff8000-0x0000fffff7ff9000) rw-
memory tagging: enabled
This is done by adding an optional "flags" field to
the qMemoryRegion packet. The only supported flag is
"mt" but this can be extended.
This "mt" flag is read from /proc/{pid}/smaps on Linux,
other platforms will leave out the "flags" field.
Where this "mt" flag is received "memory region" will
show that it is enabled. If it is not or the target
doesn't support memory tagging, the line is not shown.
(since majority of the time tagging will not be enabled)
Testing is added for the existing /proc/{pid}/maps
parsing and the new smaps parsing.
Minidump parsing has been updated where needed,
though it only uses maps not smaps.
Target specific tests can be run with QEMU and I have
added MTE flags to the existing helper scripts.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87442
GDBRemoteCommunicationClient::SendGetSupportedTraceType is checking whether the
response is `!response.IsNormalResponse()` and infers from that that it is an error response.
However, it could be either "unsupported" or "error". If we get an unsupported response,
the code then tries to generate an llvm::Expected from the non-error response which then asserts.
Debugserver doesn't implement `jLLDBTraceSupportedType`, so we get an unsupported response
whenever this function is called on macOS.
This fixes the TestAproposWithProcess on macOS (where the `apropos` command will query
the CommandObjectTraceStart which then sends the trace type query package).
Reviewed By: wallace, shafik
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91801
Translate between abridged and full ftag values in order to expose
the latter in the gdb-remote protocol while the former are used by
FXSAVE/XSAVE... This matches the gdb behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91504
The FXSAVE/XSAVE data can have two different layouts on x86_64. When
called as FXSAVE/XSAVE..., the Instruction Pointer and Address Pointer
registers are reported using a 16-bit segment identifier and a 32-bit
offset. When called as FXSAVE64/XSAVE64..., they are reported using
a complete 64-bit offsets instead.
LLDB has historically followed GDB and unconditionally used to assume
the 32-bit layout, with the slight modification of possibly
using a 32-bit segment register (i.e. extending the register into
the reserved 16 upper bits). When the underlying operating system used
FXSAVE64/XSAVE64..., the pointer was split into two halves,
with the upper half repored as the segment registers. While
reconstructing the full address was possible on the user end (and e.g.
the FPU register tests did that), it certainly was not the most
convenient option.
Introduce a two additional 'fip' and 'fdp' registers that overlap
with 'fiseg'/'fioff' and 'foseg'/'foff' respectively, and report
the complete 64-bit address.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91497
Depends on D90490.
The stop command is simple and invokes the new method Trace::StopTracingThread(thread).
On the other hand, the start command works by delegating its implementation to a CommandObject provided by the Trace plugin. This is necessary because each trace plugin needs different options for this command. There's even the chance that a Trace plugin can't support live tracing, but instead supports offline decoding and analysis, which means that "thread trace dump instructions" works but "thread trace start" doest. Because of this and a few other reasons, it's better to have each plugin provide this implementation.
Besides, I'm using the GetSupportedTraceType method introduced in D90490 to quickly infer what's the trace plug-in that works for the current process.
As an implementation note, I moved CommandObjectIterateOverThreads to its header so that I can use it from the IntelPT plugin. Besides, the actual start and stop logic for intel-pt is not part of this diff.
Reviewed By: clayborg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90729