function because of a '1u' making it a 32-bit value
when it really needed to be a 64-bit value. Trivial to fix
once I figured out what was going on.
clang static analzyer fixit.
llvm-svn: 220022
in GetFullUnwindPlanForFrame() - the code was mostly checking
that we had an active Process and ABI but not always.
clang static analyzer fixit.
llvm-svn: 219772
This implements Host::LaunchProcess for windows, and in doing so
does some minor refactor to move towards a more modular process
launching design.
The original motivation for this is that launching processes on
windows needs some very windows specific code, which would live
most appropriately in source/Host/windows somewhere. However,
there is already some common code that all platforms use when
launching a process before delegating to the platform specific
stuff, which lives in source/Host/common/Host.cpp which would
be nice to reuse without duplicating.
This commonality has been abstracted into MonitoringProcessLauncher,
a class which abstracts out the notion of launching a process using
an arbitrary algorithm, and then monitoring it for state changes.
The windows specific launching code lives in ProcessLauncherWindows,
and the posix specific launching code lives in ProcessLauncherPosix.
When launching a process MonitoringProcessLauncher is created, and
then an appropriate delegate launcher is created and given to the
MonitoringProcessLauncher.
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5781
llvm-svn: 219731
With this change, both local-process llgs and remote-target llgs stdout/stderr
handling from inferior work correctly.
Several log lines have been added around PTY and stdout/stderr redirection
logic on the lldb client side.
Regarding remote llgs execution, see the following:
With these changes, remote llgs with $O now works properly:
$ lldb
(lldb) platform select remote-linux
(lldb) target create ~/some/inferior/exe
(lldb) gdb-remote {some-target}:{port}
(lldb) run
The sequence above will correctly redirect stdout/stderr over gdb-remote $O,
as is needed for remote debugging. That sequence assumes there is a lldb-gdbserver
exe running on the target with {some-host}:{port}.
You can replace the gdb-remote command with a '(lldb) platform connect
connect://{target-ip}:{target-port}'. If you do this and have a
lldb-platform running on the remote end, it will go ahead and launch
llgs for lldb for each target instance that is run/attached.
For local debugging with llgs, the following sequence also works, and
uses local PTYs instead to avoid $O and extra gdb-remote messages:
$ lldb
(lldb) settings set platform.plugin.linux.use-llgs true
(lldb) target create ~/some/inferior/exe
(lldb) run
The above will run the inferior using llgs on the local host, and
will use PTYs rather than $O redirection.
This change also removes the logging that happened after the fork but
before the exec when llgs is launching a new inferior process. Some
aspect of the file handling during that portion of code would not do
the right thing with log handling. We might want to go back later
and have that communicate over a pipe from the child to parent to pass
along any messages that previously were logged in that section of code.
llvm-svn: 219578
See http://reviews.llvm.org/D5695 for details.
This change does the following:
Enable lldb-gdbserver (llgs) usage for local-process Linux debugging.
To turn on local llgs debugging support, which is disabled by default, enable this setting:
(lldb) settings set platform.plugin.linux.use-llgs-for-local true
Adds a stream-based Dump() function to FileAction.
Pushes some platform methods that Linux (and FreeBSD) will want to share with MacOSX from PlatformDarwin into PlatformPOSIX.
Reviewed by Greg Clayton.
llvm-svn: 219457
Adds a test to verify that a thread resume request marks the thread as running
after doing the resume callback. This test fails without the corresponding
ThreadStateCoordinator.cpp change.
Fixes the code where that state was not maintained.
llvm-svn: 219412
the backtrace, try falling back to the architecture default
unwind plan and see if we can backtrace a little further.
<rdar://problem/18556719>
llvm-svn: 219247
As part of getting ConnectionFileDescriptor working on Windows,
there is going to be alot of platform specific work to be done.
As a result, the implementation is moving into Host. This patch
performs the code move and fixes up call-sites appropriately.
Reviewed by: Greg Clayton
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5548
llvm-svn: 219143
Added tests and impl to make sure the following errors are reported:
* Notifying a created thread that we are already tracking.
* Notifying a thread death for a thread we don't know about.
llvm-svn: 218900
Now that ThreadStateCoordinator errors out on threads in unexpected states,
it has enough information to know which threads need stop requests fired
when we want to do a deferred callback on a thread's behalf. This change
adds a new method, CallAfterRunningThreadsStop(...), which no longer
takes a set of thread ids that require stop requests. It's much harder
to misuse this method and (with newer error logic) it's harder to
correctly use the original method. Expect the original method that takes
the set of thread ids to stop to disappear in the near future.
Adds several tests for CallAfterRunningThreadsStop().
llvm-svn: 218897
Added tests to verify that the coordinator signals an error if
the given thread to resume is unknown, and if the thread is through to
be running already.
Modified resume handling code to match tests.
llvm-svn: 218872
ThreadStateCoordinator changes:
* Most commands that run in the queue now take an error handler that
will be called with an error string if an error occurs during processing.
Errors generally stop the operation in progress. The errors are checked
at time of execution. This is intended to help flush out ptrace/waitpid/state management
issues as quickly as possible.
* Threads now must be known to the coordinator before stops can be reported,
resumes can be requested, thread deaths can be reported, or deferred stop
notifications can be made. Failure to know the thread will cause the coordinator
to call the error callback for the event being processed. Threads are introduced
to the system by the NotifyThreadCreate method.
* The NotifyThreadCreate method now takes the initial state of the thread being
introduces to the system. We no longer just assume the thread is running.
The test cases were cleaned up, too:
* A gtest test fixture is now used, which allows creating less verbose helper
methods that setup common pieces of callback code for some method invocations.
Net result: the tests are simpler to read and shorter to write.
llvm-svn: 218833
ThreadIDFunc => ThreadIDFunction
LogFunc => LogIDFunction
We try to avoid abbreviations/shortened names. Adjusted function parameter names
as well to replace _func with _function.
llvm-svn: 218773
r218568 added an explicit #include of the Linux ProcessMonitor.h to
POSIXThread.cpp, rather than including just "ProcessMonitor.h" and
relying on the build infrastructure for the appropriate paths.
For now add #ifdefs in the source to use the FreeBSD or Linux header
as appropriate; a cleaner fix (and perhaps some refactoring of the
POSIX classes) should still be done later.
llvm-svn: 218762
There is a state transition that seems potentially buggy that I am capturing and
logging here, and including an explicit test to demonstrate expected behavior. See new test
for detailed description. Added logging around this area since, if we hit it, we
may have a usage bug, or a new state transition we really need to investigate.
This is around this scenario:
Thread C deferred stop notification awaiting thread A and thread B to stop.
Thread A stops.
Thread A requests resume.
Thread B stops.
Here we will explicitly signal the deferred stop notification after thread B
stops even though thread A is now resumed. Copious logging happens here.
llvm-svn: 218683
the user level. It adds the ability to invent new stepping modes implemented by python classes,
and to view the current thread plan stack and to some extent alter it.
I haven't gotten to documentation or tests yet. But this should not cause any behavior changes
if you don't use it, so its safe to check it in now and work on it incrementally.
llvm-svn: 218642
The thread resume block is executed in the normal flow of thread
state queued event processing. The tests verify that it is executed
when we track the thread to be stopped and skipped when we track
it to already be running.
llvm-svn: 218638
Also added a test for the reset handling. The reset/state clearing happens
as a processed queue event. The only diff vs. standard processing is that
the exec clears the queue before queueing the activity to clear internal state.
i.e. once we get an exec, we really stop doing any other queue-based activity.
llvm-svn: 218629
A new thread arriving while a pending signal notification
is outstanding will (1) add the new thread to the list of
stops expected before the deferred signal notification is
fired, (2) send a stop request for the new thread, and
(3) track the new thread as currently running.
llvm-svn: 218578
See http://reviews.llvm.org/D5495 for more details.
These are changes that are part of an effort to support building llgs, within the AOSP source tree, using the Android.mk
build system, when using the llvm/clang/lldb git repos from AOSP replaced with the experimental ones currently in
github.com/tfiala/aosp-{llvm,clang,lldb,compiler-rt}.
llvm-svn: 218568
Tested two pending stops before notification, where one of the pending stop
requirements was already known to be stopped.
Tested pending thread stop before notification, then reporting thread with
pending stop died and verifies pending notification is made.
llvm-svn: 218559
Glad I did - caught a bug where the auto variable was not a reference
to a set and instead was a copy. I need to review rules on that!
llvm-svn: 218558
This change does the following:
* Remove test/c++/...
* Add gtest.
* Add gtest/unittest directory for unittesting individual classes.
* Add an initial Plugins/Process?linux/ThreadStateCoordinatorTest.cpp.
- currently failing a test (intentional).
- added a bare-bones ThreadStateCoordinator.cpp to Plugins/Process/Linux,
more soon. Just enough to prove out running gtest on Ubuntu and MacOSX.
* Added recursive make machinery so that doing a 'make' in gtest/ is
sufficient to kick off the existing test several directories down.
- Caveat - I currently short circuit from gtest/unittest/Makefile directly to
the one and only gtest/unittest/Plugins/Process/Linux directory. We'll need
to add the intervening layers. I haven't done this yet since to fix the
Xcode test failure correspondence, I may need to add a python layer which
might just handle the directory crawling.
* Added an Xcode project to the lldb workspace for gtest.
- Runs the recursive make system in gtest/Makefile.
- Default target is 'test'. test and clean are supported.
- Currently does not support test failure file/line correspondence.
Requires a bit of text transformation to hook that up.
llvm-svn: 218460
Changes include:
- fix it so you can select the "host" platform using "platform select host"
- change all callbacks that create platforms to returns shared pointers
- fix TestImageListMultiArchitecture.py to restore the "host" platform by running "platform select host"
- Add a new "PlatformSP Platform::Find(const ConstString &name)" method to get a cached platform
- cache platforms that are created and re-use them instead of always creating a new one
llvm-svn: 218145
The $A handler was unnecessarily waiting for the launched app to hit a stop
before returning. Removed this code.
Renamed the llgs inferior launching code to LaunchProcessForDebugging ()
to prevent it from possibly being mistaken as code that lldb-platform uses
to launch a debugserver process. We probably want to look at breaking out
llgs-specific and lldb-platform-specific code into separate derived classes,
with common code in a shared base class.
llvm-svn: 218075
There are several places where multiple threads are accessing the same variables simultaneously without any kind of protection. I propose using std::atomic<> to make it safer. I did a special build of lldb, using the google tool 'thread sanitizer' which identified many cases of multiple threads accessing the same memory. std::atomic is low overhead and does not use any locks for simple types such as int/bool.
See http://reviews.llvm.org/D5302 for more details.
Change by Shawn Best.
llvm-svn: 217818
Instead of forcing the remote arch type to MachO all the time, we
inspect the OS/vendor that the remote debug server reports and use it to
set the arch type to MachO, ELF or COFF accordingly.
See thread here for more context:
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/lldb-commits/Week-of-Mon-20140915/012968.html
Change by Stephane Sezer.
Tested:
MacOSX 10.9.4 x86_64
Ubuntu 14.04 x86_64
llvm-svn: 217779
This is useful for checking inconsistencies between what the remote debug server thinks we are debugging and we think we are debugging. This follows the check for pointer byte size done just above.
Change by Stephane Sezer.
Tested:
Ubuntu 14.04 x86_64, llvm-3.5-built lldb
MacOSX 10.9.4, Xcode-Beta(2014-09-09)-built lldb.
llvm-svn: 217773
* Fixes the local stack variable return pointer usage in NativeThreadLinux::GetName().
* Changes NativeThreadProtocol::GetName() to return a std::string.
* Adds a unit test to verify thread names don't regress in the future. Currently only run on Linux since I know default thread names there.
llvm-svn: 217717
Apparently, PEEKUSER/POKEUSER is something x86 specific, so I had to rework it for AArch64. This fixes assertion that occurs whenever lldb started on AArch64 device tried to read PC register (or any other register)
See http://reviews.llvm.org/D5232 for more details.
Change by Paul Osmialowski.
llvm-svn: 217691
* Sends a SIGSTOP to the process.
* Fixes busted SIGSTOP handling. Now builds a list of non-stopped
that we wait for the PTRACE group-stop for. When the final must-stop
tid gets its group stop, we propagate the process state change.
Only the signal receiving the notification of the pending SIGSTOP
is marked with the SIGSTOP signal. All the rest, if they weren't
already stopped, are marked as stopped with signal 0.
* Fixes a few broken tests.
* Marks the Linux test I added earlier as expect-pass (no longer XFAIL).
Implements fix for http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=20908.
llvm-svn: 217647
This change implements this ticket:
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=20899
Adds the qThreadStopInfo RSP command for llgs and includes a test that
verifies both debugserver and llgs respond with something reasonable
on a multithreaded app.
llvm-svn: 217549
More work on the GetName/SetName arguments (thread_t vs tid_t) is needed
but this change should restore the build and basic operation.
llvm-svn: 217502
This patch moves creates a thread abstraction that represents a
thread running inside the LLDB process. This is a replacement for
otherwise using lldb::thread_t, and provides a platform agnostic
interface to managing these threads.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5198
Reviewed by: Jim Ingham
llvm-svn: 217460
This makes sure that nothing that requires Python is being built
when the LLDB_DISABLE_PYTHON flag is being passed in.
It also changes a use of CPPFLAGS to CPP.Flags since the former is overridden
when external flags are passed in while the later is not. I'm not sure exactly
why LLDB_DISABLE_PYTHON is in CXXFLAGS rather than CPPFLAGS,
but cleaning that up is for another commit.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4918
llvm-svn: 217414